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Word: begged (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...good heart, I have a halfway good brain, and I believe in myself," he says. "People gravitate toward me." And it's true. In welfare waiting rooms, small children toddle over to him unprompted. On the subway, the same place where he used to jump the turnstile and beg for coins, he is now the chatty middle-aged man in a leather jacket, thriving on the laughter of strangers. At the hospital he visits every week to take his tuberculosis medicine, he shouts, "Hi, Mom!" to every old lady he sees. And no matter how stoic the women looked just...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Outside The Gates | 1/21/2002 | See Source »

...work ban extended to widows, who were left no recourse but to beg. In a nation with as many as a million widows--out of a population of just 20 million--that decree alone produced a silent disaster. Sabza Gul, 32, now begs at the Kabul bus station and makes about 50[cents] on a good day. Some years ago, when she was still living in a village north of the city, her husband went blind. The family became dependent on whatever money their son Humayoun, 17, could earn as a field worker. The fields were close to the occasional...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: About Face | 12/3/2001 | See Source »

...work ban extended to widows, who were left no recourse but to beg. In a nation with as many as a million widows?out of a population of just 20 million?that decree alone produced a silent disaster. Sabza Gul, 32, now begs at the Kabul bus station and makes about 50 on a good day. Some years ago, when she was still living in a village north of the city, her husband went blind. The family became dependent on whatever money their son Humayoun, 17, could earn as a field worker. The fields were close to the occasional fighting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: About Face | 12/3/2001 | See Source »

...work ban extended to widows, who were left no recourse but to beg. In a nation with as many as a million widows--out of a population of just 20 million--that decree alone produced a silent disaster. Sabza Gul, 32, now begs at the Kabul bus station and makes about 50[cents] on a good day. Some years ago, when she was still living in a village north of the city, her husband went blind. The family became dependent on whatever money their son Humayoun, 17, could earn as a field worker. The fields were close to the occasional...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: About Face for Afghan Women | 11/25/2001 | See Source »

...pain. The 40% drop in Japanese tourists means $4 million a day less for the state economy?or more than $1 billion by year's end. Already the downturn has forced 12,000 residents onto unemployment lines. Things are so bad that Governor Ben Cayetano toured Japan recently to beg tourists to return...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Travel Watch: In Japan Today, There's No Place Like Home | 11/11/2001 | See Source »

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