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He didn't like to rush to conclusions when working a case.
I just think people (fans) rush to conclusions too quick.
I don't know about you, but I do not wish to rush to conclusions.
We shouldn't be rushing to conclusions about Quincy, or anyone else."
In this strange case, The Shadow wasn't rushing to conclusions.
"With such an unusual material, one does not rush to conclusions," Rudney informed her.
"We need to not rush to judgment or rush to conclusions.
If only your "let's not rush to conclusions.
And, unlike Mrs Thatcher, he did not rush to conclusions.
"But you shouldn't rush to conclusions."
Don't go rushing to conclusions.
"Now don't rush to conclusions, my dear - " "Or else it's the house.
"It's premature to rush to conclusions."
Don't rush to conclusions, mathematician.
Gale rushed to conclusions.
She felt alive, her thoughts a veritable flood, rushing to conclusions like cascades churning through a black-rock canyon.
The heavy industry hype would have you see these two tenors as the next Domingo and Pavarotti, but there's no need to rush to conclusions.
"So don't rush to conclusions.'
"Let's not rush to conclusions-" "You're not listening!
Nonetheless, we must be careful not to rush to conclusions about who gains and who loses until we get hard data that examine race and ethnicity.
Fox News commentators cheered up after the president made his cameo appearance, but earlier they were quick to rush to conclusions, looking stunned and somber as they hinted that early voter surveys showed Mr. Kerry doing better than expected.
But Mr. Warner, who created a stir among Republicans this fall when he said the situation in Iraq was "drifting sideways," appealed to his colleagues not to rush to conclusions before a report by the commission, which is expected in December.
It would be helpful in future years if we could have the broad economic guidelines a bit earlier, because the trouble this time is that we have had to rush to conclusions because of the deadline at the end of this week of the 21 and 22 June meeting in Florence.
Sergei N. Ignatchenko, the chief spokesman for the F.S.B., said in an interview on Friday that it was important for investigators not to rush to conclusions and to make information public only when it was based on hard facts, which can be difficult to come by in Russia.
While Mr. Dittemore cautioned against rushing to conclusions, the combination of the photos and the finding of the wing section, if, in fact, it is part of the left wing, so far west of most of the wreckage may, within days, give greater credence to theories that the front or underside of the wing was breached.