To the general public, show business may just mean the artistic part, but the dollar and cents element is the reality every performer has to face.
‐‐ Liza Minnelli
To the great majority of white Americans, the Negro problem has distinctly negative connotations. It suggests something difficult to settle and equally difficult to leave alone. It is embarrassing. It makes for moral uneasiness.
‐‐ Gunnar Myrdal
To the house of a friend if you're pleased to retire, You must all things admit, you must all things admire; You must pay with observance the price of your treat, You must eat what is praised, and must praise what you eat.
‐‐ George Crabbe
To the humblest among them, who may be listening to me now, I want to say that the masterpiece to which you are paying historic homage this evening is a painting which he has saved.
‐‐ Andre Malraux
To the image of the characters, I do change my appearance. For example, I gain weight and I lose weight sometimes, and I grow my hair and cut it. Acting is all about physical expression, so I need to change my appearance for all the characters.
‐‐ Min-sik Choi
To the indefinite, uncertain mind of the American radical the most contradictory ideas and methods are possible. The result is a sad chaos in the radical movement, a sort of intellectual hash, which has neither taste nor character.
‐‐ Emma Goldman
To the intelligent man with an interest in human nature it must often appear strange that so much of the energy of the scientific world has been spent on the study of the body and so little on the study of the mind.
‐‐ Edward Thorndike
To the Kenyan families, school doesn't really matter because none of them are going on to college. Almost all of drop out of school and so, they're spending their time learning things that are important to them.
‐‐ Robert Sternberg
To the last, I grapple with thee; From Hell's heart, I stab at thee; For hate's sake, I spit my last breath at thee.
‐‐ Herman Melville
To the living we owe respect, but to the dead we owe only the truth.
‐‐ Voltaire
To the lover of wilderness, Alaska is one of the most wonderful countries in the world.
‐‐ John Muir
To the man who loves art for its own sake, it is frequently in its least important and lowliest manifestations that the keenest pleasure is to be derived.
‐‐ Arthur Conan Doyle
To the man who reads 'Scouting for Boys' superficially, there is a disappointing lack of religion in the book. But to him who tries it in practice, the basic religion underlying it soon becomes apparent.
‐‐ Robert Baden-Powell
To the mass of mankind - meaning also womankind - marriage may be the only possible thing; but to the individual, it may be the one thing impossible.
‐‐ Thomas Bailey Aldrich
To the mass of mankind religion of some kind is a necessity.
‐‐ Alfred Russel Wallace
To the Master's honor all must turn, each in its track, without a sound, forever tracing Newton's ground.
‐‐ Albert Einstein
To the media, I have become a symbolic figure, critical of China. According to the government, I am a dangerous threat.
‐‐ Ai Weiwei
To the medical man, astrology is invaluable in diagnosing diseases and prescribing a remedy, for it reveals the hidden cause of all ailments.
‐‐ Max Heindel
To the millions of Americans who've attempted to use HealthCare.gov to shop and enroll in health-care coverage, I want to apologize to you that the Web site has not worked as well as it should. We know how desperately you need affordable coverage.
‐‐ Marilyn Tavenner
To the mind, God is a perfect criminal. He has done such a perfect crime by creating this world that mind cannot trace how He did it. That is why the mind always freaks out about God.
‐‐ Prem Rawat
To the mind that is still, the whole universe surrenders.
‐‐ Lao Tzu
To the moralist prostitution does not consist so much in the fact that the woman sells her body, but rather that she sells it out of wedlock.
‐‐ Emma Goldman
To the Muslim woman, the hijab provides a sense of empowerment. It is a personal decision to dress modestly according to the command of a genderless Creator; to assert pride in self, and embrace one's faith openly, with independence and courageous conviction.
‐‐ Randa Abdel-Fattah
To the new 'Apprentice' candidates I would say to follow your gut instincts, be yourself and get ready to work hard for the next few months. Oh, and try to have some fun!
‐‐ Bill Rancic
To the next generation, your war is here; you don't have to find it.
‐‐ Marcus Luttrell
To the old saying that man built the house but woman made of it a 'home' might be added the modern supplement that woman accepted cooking as a chore but man has made of it a recreation.
‐‐ Emily Post
To the old, the new is usually bad news.
‐‐ Eric Hoffer
To the organizer, compromise is a key and beautiful word. It is always present in the pragmatics of operation... If you start with nothing, demand 100 percent, then compromise for 30 percent, you're 30 percent ahead.
‐‐ Saul Alinsky
To the Parisians, and especially to the children, all Americans are now 'heros du cinema.' This is particularly disconcerting to sensitive war correspondents, if any, aware, as they are, that these innocent thanks belong to those American combat troops who won the beachhead and then made the breakthrough. There are few such men in Paris.
‐‐ A. J. Liebling
To the patient, any operation is momentous.
‐‐ Joseph Murray
To the people here, we are outsiders. Foreigners.
‐‐ Roberto Clemente
To the people I forgot, you weren't on my mind for some reason and you probably don't deserve any thanks anyway.
‐‐ Eminem
To the people out there, baseball is a simple sport. But it is complex. It is never easy.
‐‐ Dave Winfield
To the perfect, if it be perfect, there is nothing that can be added; therefore, the will is not capable of any other desire, when that which is of the perfect is present with it, highest and best.
‐‐ Giordano Bruno
To the person that deals in visualizations, I suppose there is something rather exciting about a whole set of people - they all going symmetrically, up or down, in a military sort of precision.
‐‐ Leo Ornstein
To the person with a firm purpose all men and things are servants.
‐‐ Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
To the poet fated to be a poet, self-expression is as natural and as involuntary as breathing is to us ordinary mortals.
‐‐ Octavio Paz
To the present writer a careful study of the facts now available seems to leave no doubt that civilization was born at the southeast corner of the Mediterranean.
‐‐ James Henry Breasted
To the press alone, chequered as it is with abuses, the world is indebted for all the triumphs which have been gained by reason and humanity over error and oppression.
‐‐ James Madison
To the proud, the applause of the world rings in their ears; to the humble, the applause of heaven warms their hearts.
‐‐ Ezra Taft Benson
To the question how one kind of labor can be measured against another, how the labor of the artisan can be measured against the labor of the artist, how the labor of the strong can be measured against the labor of the weak, the communists can give no answer.
‐‐ Benjamin N. Cardozo
To the rest of us the supreme vindication of the scholar's view lies in their invincible allegiance to the Jewish heritage - a steadfastness that has been matched only by that of their rescuers.
‐‐ Henrietta Szold
To the revolutionary mind the American vista must have been almost as incredible as Genghis Khan's first view of China - so rich, so soft, so unaware.
‐‐ Garet Garrett
To the scientist there is the joy in pursuing truth which nearly counteracts the depressing revelations of truth.
‐‐ H. P. Lovecraft
To the small group of editors and designers who would launch Wired in January 1993, technology represented the future's best hope; but to the media, the tech boom was yesterday's story.
‐‐ Gary Wolf
To the socialist no nation is free whose national existence is based upon the enslavement of another people, for to him colonial peoples, too, are peoples, and, as such, parts of the national state.
‐‐ Karl Liebknecht
To the soldier, luck is merely another word for skill.
‐‐ Patrick MacGill
To the soul, there is no past and no future; all is, and will be ever, in now. For artificial purposes time is mutually agreed on, but there is really no such thing.
‐‐ Richard Jefferies
To the Spains will come a very powerful king, by land and sea subjugating the South; This will cause harm, lowering again the crescent, clipping the wings of those of Friday.
‐‐ Nostradamus