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Word: forget (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

With a conclusion more clearly condemning the waste and immortality of violence, The Enforcer might have been a significant film. But as it stands, with a moral you have to hallucinate to see, it becomes just another Clint Eastwood flick that you forget about the week after...

Author: By Jay Yeager, | Title: How The Bad Guys Finally Won | 1/17/1977 | See Source »

...been a particularly good year for New York City. The City, it's true, didn't go slurping down the financial tubes. But the election of Jimmy Carter certainly did nothing to reassure the quivering Metropolis--forget for a moment those Wall Street types and Rockefeller Foundation board members like Cy Vance and Mike Blumenthal. Where's this rural savant from anyway? Atlanta? Atlanta's where you go to make plane connections to somewhere important, like Miami Beach. And now, in the space of about a month, The New York Post--bang! New York magazine--zap! The Village Voice--good...

Author: By Joseph Dalton, | Title: Killer Kangaroo Ravages New York | 1/17/1977 | See Source »

...have a happy faculty of dropping them out. I just forget them. Really, as soon as I move from one thing to another, which I have done a great deal, I just pull the curtain down, and it is gone. I never waste time looking back...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE ADMINISTRATION: Parting Thoughts from the Old Hands | 1/17/1977 | See Source »

...Gilda. Done in 1946 by King Vidor, Gilda is the best of the film noir style that emphasized the dark side of the American character in the climate of national disillusionment following World War II. The film features Glenn Ford, Rita Hayworth, and an actor whose name I always forget, who plays a Rio casino owner-cum-international tungsten cartel boss. It revolves around two sinister triangles: one, a quasi-homosexual link between the tungsten boss, the boss's sword-cane, and Glenn Ford (the other, between Rita Hayworth, the Tungsten boss (who marries her), and Ford...

Author: By Jono Zeitlin, | Title: FILM | 1/13/1977 | See Source »

...from down-at-the heels disco acts. "Hello, Mr. Murdoch, this is Gladys Knight." The voice was unmistakable. She was muttering something about her new solo effort--"Midnight Train to Canberra," I think she said--and how the Pips were a thing of the past. Rupe told her to forget music for the moment: "Honey, I've got bigger things planned for you...Ever hear of New West...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ROCK | 1/13/1977 | See Source »

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