A society's beliefs determines its reality.
— Marc Seifer, Wizard: the Life and Times of Nikola Tesla
It's not that people lack the tools to understand art, it's that they lack a reason to give a shit even if they did manage to get inside.
— @bradtroemel, "Repetition Midset: The Unwashed Masses"
Is it the new norm? It may be. And we are trying to have an aesthetically pleasing version of it.
— Resturant guy on radio talking about tabledivider.com
We spend at a rate such that, absent growth, the entire endowment would be gone in 20 years.
— Christopher Eisgruber, "President Eisgruber writes to the Princeton community about the state of the University and planning for the academic year ahead"
It would be interesting to look at locations of the American popular imagination, as seen in movies and TV, mapped against regional tax breaks for the film industry.
— BLDGBLOG
The first signature in his book is that of President Collidge on August 6, 1924 and the book contains the signatures of other heads of government in the world although for the larger part the signatures are those of business men in the various contries. The book was signed by many American Diplomatic and Consular Officers.
— W. Roderick Dorsey, American Consul General, Letter to The Secretary of State, Genoa, Italy, June 5, 1933
Like it or not, we live in a market-driven society, and science is part of that market.
— Rebecca Skloot, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
That goose is on borrowed time.
— Lily
By pushcart, by ricksha, by pack mule, by rail and by ship, but mostly on my back. It has 2,896 pages and it weights 58 pounds.
— Joseph Mikulec, "His Autograph Load Is Too Much For Him," The New York Times
Gey gave his lab staff careful instructinos for growing GeGe, a line of cancer cells taken from his pancreas. He hoped that his cells, like Henrietta's, would become immortal.
— Rebecca Skloot, The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
Although some people couldn't see her uniqueness, something that had haunted Frances all her life, others appreciated her almost immediately. Both Neufeld and Breiseth found Frances so facinating that they kept diaries, taking note of things she said and did.
— Kirstin Downey, The Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life and Legacy of Frances Perkins
Frances reminded him that people who are out of sight slip out of mind.
— Kirstin Downey, The Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life and Legacy of Frances Perkins
She found that some officials would enact rules on which they had only tepid interest if they foresaw the prospect of getting a blue ribbon before their peers for their accomplishments.
— Kirstin Downey, The Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life and Legacy of Frances Perkins
This is an idea I took from an Ellsworth Kelly documentary actually, he said he discovered he could play with the same elements again and again and again and you can find endless solutions.
— Alvaro
Frances had made a point of cultivating Al Smith's mother. Now she did the same with Roosevelt's.
— Kirstin Downey, The Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life and Legacy of Frances Perkins
It's funny how modesty and total bullshit come off exactly the same.
— Lily
Cigar-makers tended to be well educated and skillful at controlling their working conditions, even to the point of demanding that readers be engaged to recite great works for literature to them as they worked.
— Kirstin Downey, The Woman Behind the New Deal: The Life and Legacy of Frances Perkins
He required the various companies to exchange horses so that each had a single color.
— T. J. Stiles, Custer's Trials
But there is nothing like an ending to reveal the incompleteness of things.
— T. J. Stiles, Custer's Trials
I'm like Tom Riddle, except chicken.
— Lily to herself while preparing to microwave chicken