Word: forgetful
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Enter the patriotic consumer. The argument is clear: if you fulfill your national duty this year and take on a little more debt, we could all be better off by the spring (forget, of course, that you already pay taxes according to a similar principle...
...With Paul in office its pretty hard to forget that the council exists,” says Associate Dean of the College David P. Illingworth ’71. “It takes a lot of time and a lot of effort [to achieve what Paul has] and he’s willing to devote the time...
...shouldn't) forget that. But even in the midst of our pain and frustration, we need to debate Walker's case, not simply pass judgment. There's a difference between engaging in a discussion about the ignorance of youth, personal responsibility and the power of cult figures and simply waving a white flag to the Taliban. We reserve judgment because we are Americans - other countries hang first and ask questions later...
...continent before succumbing to Asia's current big story: economic hard times. (Owner Time Inc., publisher of TIME, said it couldn't sustain the magazine in a "brutal" ad market.) In its early days, it was often a quirky read: one cover story said the world should forget about saving the endangered tiger. But Asiaweek took on politicians and business barons and became a "must read" in much of Southeast Asia. In its final year, under the editorship of Dorinda Elliott, the magazine jazzed up its look and refocused its content on the business and economic changes sweeping the region...
...easy, as an American of a certain age, to take religious freedom for granted - after all, we visit our mosques, synagogues and churches without a backwards glance. Easy, as well, to forget that not so long ago, the government had no compunction about spying on citizens? religious practices. Despite the long-standing association of the American bill of rights with absolute religious freedom, it wasn?t until the early 1970s that the federal government stopped its surveillance of places of worship. Before that, FBI director J. Edgar Hooper spent much of his term spying on the comings and goings...