What history forgets, poetry remembers
By Sarah Wade | March 18, 2009Human history is as much a product of forgetting as it is of remembering.
Human history is as much a product of forgetting as it is of remembering.
Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist Pat Oliphant poised his hand briefly over the blank sheet, fingers dexterous with the ink they held.
In the University?s ever-bustling community of student-self governance, the latest flurry of activity concerns student leadership within the classroom.
Whoever you are, scanning these lines, you have secrets ? experiences, facts about yourself and opinions you would never share openly with other humans.But what if you could share your secrets with a complete stranger?
Try to imagine a Cavalier football game without its marching band. Cav Man demolishes his computer-animated enemy and gallops the field in triumph, cheerleaders back-flip and somersault, football players charge through smoke to a roaring crowd.