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The fable also is used as an analogy for levels of commitment to a game, team etc. For example, variations of this quote have been attributed to football coach Mike Leach who said, on the officials in the 2007 Tech-Texas game in Austin: "It's a little like breakfast; you eat ham and eggs. As coaches and players, we're like the ham.
Better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all; Better to light one candle than to curse the darkness; Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt; Better wear out than rust out; Beware of Greeks bearing gifts (Trojan War, Virgil in the Aeneid) [8] Big fish eat little fish
Only a few minutes into his team’s first practice of the 2023-24 season, Logan Strand already had an inkling that the months ahead might be grim. It was glaringly obvious to the Free Lutheran ...
In August 1924 an Everyone's correspondent in London wrote "this picture has even been a bigger success than it was in Australia; so much for the morbid taste of the present-day patron." [ 27 ] In November 1924 Wilson was in Canada and Everyone's said the film "is proving one of the biggest successes in the film world."
More than 1,400 in the NFL are taking part in "My Cause My Cleats" initiative. Why New England's Christian Gonzalez promotes mental health awareness.
It’s so great to find that one special person you want to annoy for the rest of your life.” All love stories have a beginning, and the best ones settle into the comfortable territory of that ...
The specific phrasing "with great power comes great responsibility" evolved from Spider-Man's first appearance in the 1962 Amazing Fantasy #15, written by Stan Lee.It is not spoken by any character, but instead appears in a narrative caption of the comic book's last panel: [21] [22] [23]
Research has shown that 90% of emotional experiences are disclosed within a few days of the event, [49] and 62% of the "most memorable events of the day" are told by end of that day. [48] Those events that get forgotten cannot be included in the narrator's story of the self, and therefore cannot play a role in their identity.