Word: forgetting
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...seems another hasty jump out of the frying pan into the fire. England and France have demonstrated in the Suez affair how sorely our allies may be tempted to take impulsive, independent action. Our eagerness to bolster the pride and might of our allies should not cause us to forget that the first atomic-armed missile fired by any NATO finger will shoot the U.S. into an all-out nuclear...
...subways and keep the trains from stopping, they'll give you a twentyfive per cent bonus and if you work a little longer they'll give you time and a half. If you keep your hand on the throttle and your eye on the track, you can forget the men who're walking back and forth above you asking for a decent union and a decent break. And if you really like the money and care a lot for the City, they'll give you a place to sleep and some food to eat right down in the subway...
Nicholas Thompson, who directed the production, has much to learn. Nothing happened. What appeared on stage was a mere walking around of John Ford's lines. Passionate speeches were declaimed with restraint, and the speaker usually appeared to forget what he had just said, if he had even listened to himself at all. No one dared to be physical at all; people in the throes of fury or love kept their incongruous intellectual distances as they hurled power at each other only in their words. Excited Italians looking for a murderer cried, "Follow! Follow!" and slowly walked of stage...
...against this background that we must appreciate the impact upon America of the launching of the two Russian satellites. " Americans, he said, took the Russian success as "a blow in the heartland. It will be a long time indeed, before the American people can be brought to forget what they regard as a deep humiliation." So saying, Nye the observer waddled, without fear, from his typewriter...
When a crowded passenger train jumped the tracks and crashed in Medford, Mass, one morning last week, the Quincy Patriot Ledger had to race twelve miles farther for the story than the dailies in nearby Boston. Nonetheless, the alert evening Ledger (slogan: "Cover the World and Don't Forget the South Shore") had its expert wrap-up of the story (EXPRESS TRAIN WRECKED ON BRIDGE IN MEDFORD; 2 KILLED, MANY INJURED) in readers' hands long before metropolitan papers got to the South Shore with the story...