Word: forget
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...difference came from the fact that the Tigers were veterans and were nominally Princeton's first crew while the Harvard eight was made up of lighter and less experienced men. Starting off quite well, the Princeton men kept up a higher stroke longer and by this means forget into a lead of more than a length at the half-mile mark. From then on the race was all Princeton's. The mile came and the white flag fell with the Crimson crew four or five lengths in the rear. Even under such conditions Duncan was game...
...annual production of the "Beggars' Opera" by the Seniors, assisted by 1924. "With Music and with Mummery; with Morrice dance and Pageantry" will the graduating class supplicate the Freshmen for the customary wherewithal. The Seniors are under promise of good behavior; should Yearling thrift cause them to forget this promise, all future pictures will be debarred, and all future pienics endangered. Therefore let the latter play their part with largess and goodwill; it will prove "bread upon the waters" with a particular aptitude for successful navigation...
...belief that the other powers are trying to prevent the United States from sharing in the control of the former German communications system. The Allies seem to have adopted the view that American rights have been impaired by the Senate's failure to ratify the Treaty of Versailles. They forget that our rights as one of the "principal and Allied Powers" have never been resigned by us, nor left to be disposed of as the Council of the League sees...
...doubted Patriotism in the late war, so let us not forget that there is a Patriotism in peace as well as war. Now is the time for the ex-service man to work with all his ability for hospital facilities for the sick and wounded, while at the same time disclaiming all share in a bonus for himself, and in the larger interests of financial recuperation and national well-being, to prove to all people that our wartime patriotism did not end with peace. A. A. RUBET, '23. March...
...anything but a stumbling-block to advancement: the attitude of mind which brings it about is unworthy of the twentieth century; above all, the indifference of the public, which allows such a condition of affairs to go uninvestigated, is growing to be a characteristic national fault. Let us not forget that the burden of seeing that full justice, neither more or less, is done even to the most abandoned of alien "reds" rests on the conscience of every citizen of this Republic...