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Lot #558
Douglas MacArthur

Athletic sports--the game--has become a symbol of our country?s best qualities--courage, stamina, coordinated efficiency. Many even believe in these cynical days of doubt and indecesion that though sport we can best keep alive the spirit of vitality and enterprises which has made us great. It is a vital character builder.

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Athletic sports--the game--has become a symbol of our country?s best qualities--courage, stamina, coordinated efficiency. Many even believe in these cynical days of doubt and indecesion that though sport we can best keep alive the spirit of vitality and enterprises which has made us great. It is a vital character builder.

Inspirational TLS, one page, 8 x 10.5, personal letterhead, February 8, 1961. Written to David Condon of Sports Illustrated. In part, ' The opinions I expressed at West Piont on the infinite value of athletic competition have but intensified with the passage of time. Athletic sports--the game--has become a symbol of our country's best qualities--courage, stamina, coordinated efficiency. Many even believe in these cynical days of doubt and indecesion that though sport we can best keep alive the spirit of vitality and enterprises which has made us great. It is a vital character builder. It molds the youth of our country for their future roles as custodians of the Republic. It teaches them to be strong enough to know when they are weak and brave enough to face themselves when they are afraid. It teaches them to be proud and unbending in honest defeat but humble and gentle in victory. It teaches them not to substitute wishes for actions, not to seek the path of comfort but to fac the stressand spur of difficulty and challenge, to learn to stand up in the storm but to learn compassion for those who fall. It teaches them to have a heart that will be clear, a goalthat will be high, to master themselves before they seek to master others, to learn to laugh yet never forget to weep, to reach into the future yet never forget the past, to have a sense of humor ot always be serious yet never to themselves to seriosly. It teaches them humility so that they may always remember the simplicity of true greatness, the open mind of true wisdom, the meekness of true strengh. It gives them a temer of the will a quality of the imagination, a vigor of the emotions, a freshness of the deep springs of life. It gives them a tempermental predominance of courage over timidity, of an appetite for adventure over love of ease. It creates in their hearts the love of wonder, the undaunted challenge of events, the unfailing hope of what next, and the joy and the inspiration of life. Fathers and mothrs who would make theirs into men should have them 'play the game' Most cordially, Douglas MacArthur.' In good condition, with spilt at folds but repaired on the reverse side, with small amount of paper loss along the left border. This letter was used in an article later published in S.I. in the 1960's.COA John Reznikoff/University Archives and RRAuction COA.

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