Word: forgets
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...President to pivot from his focus abroad to mending fences at home. Bush's "hardware in the heartland" tour follows the battle plan for his re-election effort: from now until November 2004, he will blend martial images with rhetoric about tax cuts and never let the nation forget that we're at war both abroad and at home. "Sure, he talked about his domestic agenda," says a White House official of the St. Louis event, "but there were F-18s in the background." Yes, Bush will focus on kitchen-table concerns, but there will always be the shadow...
...Castro himself. Payá, an engineer and devout Roman Catholic who cycles each day to his job as a hospital-equipment repairman, is right when he calls the MCL Cuba's first real dissident force in 44 years - the first, anyway, to convince tens of thousands of Cubans to forget their fear and sign petitions seeking a referendum on democratic freedoms. That effort won Payá the European Union's Sakharov Prize for human rights last December; but it also moved Castro, 76, to respond with a wave of arrests. Castro has been careful not to jail the internationally popular...
...kitschy decor, the Barking Crab fits nicely into the genre of salty New England seafood shacks—multitudes of which line the coast. Unlike other generic seaside establishments, the Barking Crab has more to offer than a nice view. Typically, when a restaurant snags a stellar location, they forget to bring their food up to the same level—instead serving over-battered, over-fried assortments of semi-fresh seafood. After many bellyache-inducing meals of lackluster fisherman’s platters, it was refreshing to have seafood that wasn’t all breading and grease...
...There is that opportunity to be distracted because someone puts up a big sign that says NCAA and you forget what you’ve been practicing and trying to make automatic all season,” Fish added. “I don’t expect that from this team...
...fact, what moves the audience in Pascal’s play and in Sacks’ production are the stories interspersed and interrupted by gunshots and glaring lights—brief glimpses into the characters’ lives, the narratives they scrape together to forget or to testify to their suffering and the memories they cling to in order to preserve their sense of self and humanity. The sensation of brushing against a woman’s leg in a train ride and the spectacle of a tight-rope walker comprise two of the nights’ most subtly compelling...