“Hang (hang without fail, so the people see) no fewer than one hundred known kulaks, rich men, bloodsuckers.” PeopleMenKnownRichFailingHundredFewerRich ManBloodsuckers Author:Vladimir Lenin
“If I can procure three hundred good substantial names of persons, or bodies, or institutions, I cannot fail to do well for my family, although I must abandon my life to its success, and undergo many sad perplexities and perhaps never see again my own beloved America.” IfsWellsPersonsI CanBodyAmericaThreeNamesMy OwnFailingHundredMy FamilyInstitutionsBelovedAbandonPerplexity Author:John James Audubon
“If you want to lift a hundred pounds, you don't expect to succeed the first time. You start with a lighter weight and work up little by little. You actually fail to life a hundred pounds, every day, until the day you succeed. But it is in the days when you are exerting yourself that the growth is occurring.” IfsWantFirstsLittlesGrowthFailingSucceedHundredFirst TimeWeightLiftsPoundsLighters Author:Norman Doidge
“Arresting a single drunk or a single vagrant who has harmed no identifiable person seems unjust, and in a sense it is. But failing to do anything about a score of drunks or a hundred vagrants may destroy an entire community.” MayPersonsSeemsCommunityFailingHundredDrunkScoreUnjustVagrantsArresting Book:On Character: Essays Source: On Character: Essays
“Everything we know has its origin in questions. Questions, we might say, are the principal intellectual instruments available to human beings. Then how is it possible that no more than one in one hundred students has ever been exposed to an extended and systematic study of the art and science of question-asking? How come Alan Bloom did not mention this, or E. D. Hirsh, Jr., or so many others who have written books on how to improve our schools? Did they simply fail to notice that the principal intellectual instrument available to human beings is not examined in school?” KnowsMenHumansArtBookMightSchoolHuman BeingsStudyFailingWrittenStudentsIntellectualHundredAskingInstrumentsAvailableExposedPrincipalSystematicArt And Science Author:Alfred A. Knopf, Sr.