Word: forgottenness
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...apart from the official, possible with an adviser, which can be made of the greatest service to the student. Does this sound like advice to to "swipe?" It is far from it. Until the swiping theory, with its substitution of false for true relations between instructor and student is forgotten, no real good can come of intercourse between...
Students have become so accustomed to the idea of the Glee Club's singing in the Yard that the other musical clubs are almost forgotten. There is no reason why they, too, should not do their part to make the evenings in the Yard pleasant. On Class Day the playing by the Banjo Club has always been a great success, and there are few instruments heard to better advantage in the open air than the mandolin and guitar...
...shall now discuss the qualities of genius and art. It is common for genius to look with contempt upon art. This should not be so. If you discard art you are sure to fail. Many geniuses have been forgotten because they have failed to observe art. Genius produces, art reproduces. In acting reproduction is the most important. Night after night a part must be played and give the same effect every time. If the actor grows weary, he produces a weary audience. Mr. Macready, the famous actor, once said to Mrs. Warner that one of his great speeches, which used...
...athletic activity. When this fame spreads over whole sections of the country, and college athletics become the most prominent matter of news in the daily papers, it is small wonder that the natural place of football, which attracts more intense interest than any other sport, should be entirely forgotten...
...deal that is indirect violation of the spirit of gentlemanly sport. When the whole attention is directed to the end the means which attain it are often by that very fact thought justified. This should not be so. The true sportsmanlike spirit, so often referred to yet so often forgotten, should be present at all times and under all circumstances, unflinchingly condemning the slightest deviation from gentlemanly play. Where rules must always fail, the cultivation of this spirit will raise football to its proper plane as probably the finest of athletic games...