Top 455 Michigan Wolverines Quotes & Sayings - Page 3
Explore popular Michigan Wolverines quotes.
Last updated on April 19, 2025.
What you hear is southern Michigan, not a drawl, but a halting kind of speech where you leave spaces when there shouldn't be any. We take a breath anywhere.
I was approached by friends who encouraged me to run for an open seat - attorney general of Michigan. It was a big risk.
What's my status? I'm just a guy from Saginaw, Michigan, trying to make it. But you know, pretty nice crib.
I've always worked with a team of actors and filmmakers ever since I was a kid in Michigan making Super-8 movies.
It was headquartered in Michigan City, a long way off. I never saw Ku Klux Klan march.
I worked in Ann Arbor for two years, covering Michigan football and basketball in the early 1990s.
I played Big Mama in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof when I was 20 years old at the University of Michigan.
My biggest dream was to get out of Michigan - to discover life beyond the Sacred Heart Convent.
When the hospital sends for me, when the ambulance comes and I ease my way out of the world, I'd rather be in Detroit, Michigan, than Lenox Hill.
If you've never been to Michigan, everyone thinks it's completely rural. It's a destination state. You don't really drive through; you're going there for a reason.
My paintings repeat a feeling about Lake Michigan, or water, or fields...it's more like a poem...and that's what I want to paint.
I think the most important thing to know is I'm running for governor because I love the state of Michigan.
I think that Florida, Ohio, Michigan, Pennsylvania, all those states actually look pretty good for Hillary Clinton.
George Perles at Michigan State was the first coach that gave me responsibility as far as being a coordinator. I learned a lot from that experience.
The people of Michigan deserve leadership in Lansing that will work to continue providing them with services they depend on every day.
I had woven a tapestry of obscenity that as far as I know is still hanging in space over Lake Michigan.
I grew up in Michigan, in a very small town, Centreville. In my graduating class I had like 92 people.
Winters are so long in northern Michigan - nearly nine months of gray skies and deep snow - that summer comes as a fresh burst.
Together we can build the Michigan we believe in, because we still have what we need most - the strength, the talent, the vision and the grit of the incredible people of this state.
I had a great time at Michigan State, but no four years will compare to Saginaw High.
I auditioned at four different colleges. When I got into the University of Michigan, my parents said, 'Okay, maybe you do have talent.'
The first thing I did [in Michigan] was join a picket line of a pizzeria in Ann Harbor in 1963 that didn't allow African Americans to eat there.
I was a member of the Fab Five at the University of Michigan, but I was also on the Dean's List there. I took pride in my education.
U-M has provided me the chance to live my dream of playing college basketball and to earn a Michigan degree.
I'm actually forced to write about Michigan because as a native of that state it's the place I know best.
My number one priority is keeping our kids safe and protecting the health of the people of Michigan.
I don't want people to feel like I'm upset or bitter with C-Webb or the University of Michigan. I love them both.
You can take Saban's record when he was at Michigan State and when he was a coach in the Big Ten and put it against mine, and he can't compare.
[Sandy] Kress says [Betsy] DeVos's record on school choice in Michigan sealed the deal.
Capitalism would have never let me be a filmmaker, living in Flint, Michigan with a high school education. I was going to have to make that happen myself.
Before I broke my back, I was really looking forward to playing hockey at the University of Michigan. That was my biggest goal.
I played Big Mama in 'Cat on a Hot Tin Roof' when I was 20 years old at the University of Michigan.
It was a culture shock at first, moving from Michigan to Mississippi. But it ended up being the best decision I ever made.
Michigan is two radically different places - the North and the South which makes for good drama and contrast.
I went to the University of Michigan for one year, and fortunately they had a foreign-film cinema, and I discovered it, and I thought I died and went to heaven.
Wherever you go in Michigan, you find that toughness. I don't know if it's the weather or the hard times. It's like, if I can make it out of here, I had to be super tough.
I got a degree in psychology at the University of Michigan and can most definitely sing the greatest college fight song of all time.
I love 'The Walking Dead.' Steven Yeun who plays Glenn, is from Michigan and is a really close friend of mine as well.
Born in the Flint, Michigan, big boat sailing on the Great Lakes and skiing in the winter was how most of my youth was spent.
When I left Michigan and I came to New York, that was my goal, to be a professional dancer. And I sort of fell into singing by accident in a way.
Living in New York, you get a lot of confidence; when I go back to Michigan, I realise how obnoxious and demanding and straightforward I am.
That's one of the most exciting things about Michigan's future. We need to, we must capitalize on our alternative-energy vehicles that we can produce right here.
Growing up in Michigan, I can't think of anything so explicitly communicated to me in my whole education experience as the vileness of in-your-face racism.
Republican Michigan Congressman Justin Amash said, no president is allowed to burn the first amendment.
I had a wreck during a race in Michigan, which led to the hyperextension of my left leg and subsequent amputation.
When President Obama first came into office in 2009, I spent a fair amount of time in Michigan.
I didn't graduate. I was doing theater in Michigan the summer after my junior year and just moved on to New York.
When people ask if Marquette University is in Michigan, and I tell them my alma mater is in Milwaukee, they sometimes say, 'What's the difference?'
I was born in Norway, and when I was little I went to live in Detroit, Michigan. My father was a professor of philosophy at Wayne University, and my mother was also a teacher.
I haven't had a chance to pick where I wanted to play since 2007 when I chose to go to Michigan State.
I wrote the Michigan 2020, which was a free college plan, before Bernie Sanders ever offered it on the national level.
I grew up in Michigan, in a very small town, Centreville. In my graduating class, I had like 92 people.
Even drunk, I knew any escape plan that involved going to Detroit, Michigan, was a harbinger of doom.
I grew up in Michigan. I feel like a lot of my childhood was in solitude, in the woods or making tree forts.
The water crisis in Flint, Michigan, has shown us what can happen when we ignore the warning signs of lead poisoning and corroding pipes.
There is a racial element: It's undeniable. We've had inequitable funding of schools for decades in the state of Michigan.
My parents live in northern Michigan, and every year, in the summer, we visit them for a few weeks.
I'm still just a loud-mouth girl from Michigan. I thought I might've grown out of that, but people are always reminding me that I haven't.
I'm just a hometown boy from Grand Rapids, Michigan - where I still live - who is trying do what he feels that he's been called to do.
Michigan has always been a swing state, so we understand that the goal is to have two political parties, debating the issues with empathy and respect.
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