Word: forgetting
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...your dates and come! (By the way, remember this date--Wednesday, March 19, at 9 o'clock sharp). Christmas cheer mingled with the luxuries of the Tropics will await each and every Senior and help him forget what it feels like to have weathered four years in the reign of Cambridge. The First Corps Cadet Band, sound in wind and limb, will execute a few pieces with finish and abandon. The other entertainments are too good to be true. Come and see for yourselves, and make the Living Room worth living...
...centuries of city life. They realized that truth was not to be attained by acquiring land and knowledge, but by contact and harmony with all things. One people regards nature as an obstacle, the other as a road to its desires. The western attitude leads a man to forget his own position in the scheme of the infinite and to rely only upon himself, with the result certain disaster...
...Hall would be of "sufficient capacity to contain the probable accumulation of books during the present century." As we watch the derricks pulling down the walls of this intellectual Bastile we wonder in a somewhat patronizing air at President Quincy's quaint taste and short-sighted expectations. Let us forget his taste, and think about his short-sightedness. He made his mistake in judgment because he could not see our modern attitude towards books in education. Certainly many of us have not stopped to see our own attitude. We are simply conscious that things have changed, and we assume that...
...donkey and our mascot Will great your ardent gaze. It is her first appearance, Come cheer her loud and strong. She'll be on the stage in the baseball cage, And you can bet she'll be all the rage When she sings her siren song And don't forget to buy your hats On sale from nine to one. In Thayer Hall three you'll find they'll be They're white and green and awfully squee For twenty and worth the mon. And also seven to seven thirt. Before the big parade Which starts at eight in regal...
...been the custom of politicians to make glittering promises before entering into office and then forget them when in power. In Mr. Wilson's campaign for Governor of New Jersey he promised new employers' liability laws, new election laws, cold storage bill, and several other economic reforms. Within ninety days after Governor Wilson was elected these promises had become laws, and the power of public service corporations was broken in New Jersey...