Word: forgetting
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...global policeman and certainly not George W. Bush as global shoot-'em-up sheriff. Victor Marshall Erskineville, Australia The Trouble with Elections Klein's column was right on the mark [Feb. 6]. It is amazing to me, a "Reagan Democrat," how quickly the U.S. electorate could forget President Bush's campaign positions that criticized the Clinton Administration's policy of "nation building." Isn't that precisely what Bush has us doing in Afghanistan and Iraq? As Klein said, democracy "demands that people take charge of their lives and make informed decisions." I hope Americans make informed decisions in the next...
...take aspirin face an increased risk of internal bleeding, according to Buring. She also stressed the importance of weighing the adverse effects of aspirin against the potential benefits on an individual basis. “Aspirin is a drug, and that is something people seem to forget,” she said...
...happens as far as Harvard men’s lacrosse is concerned, the Cohens carry with them something that no amount of wins could trump.“Ten or fifteen years down the line, wins and losses will probably fade, but you’re not going to forget times you were hanging out with your teammates,” Greg said. “After hard practices, hanging out on the field—just the dynamic of the team. You probably won’t forget that.”As is often the case, Steve agreed...
When a Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) officer knocks on a student’s door and asks to search his or her room, most students instinctively comply. When an officer asks “May I come in?” many students seem to ignore or forget the possibility of answering “no.” This may be because many students are unsure whether HUPD officers even need a warrant to conduct searches on University property. According to Wesley Oliver, Climenko fellow and Thayer lecturer at Harvard Law School, officers do need a warrant?...
...into the task of getting the pieces of this fragmented institution (the RSIP) operating as a whole," Batley says. "Until that happens, there will be limited success in the pursuit and prosecution of specific areas such as child sex offences. The one thing not to forget is that RAMSI is not the only player on the ground here. We would want to be guided by where the Solomon Islands government wants to take this issue...