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Theodore Roosevelt

"That was a good mark in Latin, and I am pleased with your steady improvement in it."

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"That was a good mark in Latin, and I am pleased with your steady improvement in it."

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Akiroq Brost

"Nothing in this world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful people with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated failures. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent."

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Akiroq Brost

"The authorities of this so-called education take pride in their ship shape structure where they manufacture dumb manikins."

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Akiroq Brost

"Knowledge without education is but armed injustice."

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Akiroq Brost

"Knowing I lov'd my books, he furnish'd me From mine own library with volumes that I prize above my dukedom."

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Akiroq Brost

"The chance that you will become a master in something after the first attempt is neither here nor there. You don't get master's degree by attending school on the first day! Time will tell, so you got to persist!"

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Akiroq Brost

"People should train their brain by watching films, by listening music, by playing games, by reading quotes. If people do this, I can said from this a big percent from here you can become clever."

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Akiroq Brost

"Teachers are mind engineers! Teachers are life directors! Don't ever undermine a teacher!"

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Akiroq Brost

"Collegiate life presents a student with innumerable opportunities to engender personal growth by responding to a dynamic social, athletic, and academic environment. Students instigate personal development by making calculated and rash personal decisions pertaining to what activities to pursue and by measuring their string of reactions to new experiences."

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Akiroq Brost

"Education is the cheap defense of nations."

Explore more quotes by Theodore Roosevelt

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Theodore Roosevelt
"Books are all very well in their way, and we love them at Sagamore Hill; but children are better than books."
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Theodore Roosevelt
"I am a part of everything that I have read."
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Theodore Roosevelt
"I am an American; free born and free bred, where I acknowledge no man as my superior, except for his own worth, or as my inferior, except for his own demerit."
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Theodore Roosevelt
"One of our defects as a nation is a tendency to use what have been called "weasel words." When a weasel sucks eggs the meat is sucked out of the egg. If you use a "weasel word" after another there is nothing left of the other."
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Theodore Roosevelt
"No great intellectual thing was ever done by great effort."
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Theodore Roosevelt
"Books are almost as individual as friends. There is no earthly use in laying down general laws about them. Some meet the needs of one person, and some of another; and each person should beware of the booklover's besetting sin, of what Mr. Edgar Allan Poe calls 'the mad pride of intellectuality,' taking the shape of arrogant pity for the man who does not like the same kind of books."
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Theodore Roosevelt
"There were all kinds of things I was afraid of at first, ranging from grizzly bears to 'mean' horses and gun-fighters; but by acting as if I was not afraid I gradually ceased to be afraid."
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Theodore Roosevelt
"A people without children would face a hopeless future, a country without trees is almost as helpless."
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Theodore Roosevelt
"Order without liberty and liberty without order are equally destructive."
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Theodore Roosevelt
"To all who have known really happy family lives, that is, to all who have known or who have witnessed the greatest happiness which there can be on this earth, it is hardly necessary to say that the highest idea of the family is attainable only where the father and mother stand to each other as lovers and friends. In these homes the children are bound to father and mother by ties of love, respect, and obedience, which are simply strengthened by the fact that they are treated as reasonable beings with rights of their own, and that the rule of the household is changed to suit the changing years, as childhood passes into manhood and womanhood."
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