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Word: forgetting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Back in the ER, the staff members have all but forgotten the patients they saw only hours earlier. Though there will be no more bombings this day, a steady stream of patients keeps Emad busy. "Sometimes we forget that not everybody who comes here has a bullet wound or shrapnel from a bomb blast," he says. "There are many ways for people to get hurt." But it isn't long before another war wound appears in the ER: a young man shot in the hip. "Here we go," Emad whispers, almost to himself, as he gets back to work. --With...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Day in the Life Of a Baghdad ER | 5/9/2005 | See Source »

During a break in his testimony, England glanced at a court sketch of Graner, who married another Abu Ghraib defendant, and said, "Don't forget the horns and goatee." --By Mitch Frank

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Abu Ghraib Trial: The Lynndie England Saga | 5/9/2005 | See Source »

...tour of the French and Italian coasts that stretches between St. Tropez and Portofino. "There's no way we could have gone on a cruise [before easyCruise]," says South. "This has opened barriers for people like us." Great; just as long as nobody expects luxury at low prices. Forget deck quoits, pink gins and white-jacketed stewards. The only extra on this voyage is a small jacuzzi perched at the stern of the ship. The trip costs as little as $50 a night, but food and drink aren't included and most cabins are windowless. And they're orange. Orange...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Livin' On Easy Street | 5/8/2005 | See Source »

Nick doesn’t mind. “People here get way too involved competing for grades and stuff,” he says. “If it takes something like taking your clothes off at a party to help you forget, then whatever.” But Nick’s balls have their limits. “The word ‘crucifixion’ comes to mind,” he says, imagining his parents’ reaction if they found out he had “party-stripped...

Author: By David S. Marshall, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: One Night in Hollis and the World’s Your Oyster | 5/5/2005 | See Source »

...benefits of the new system are clear. No longer will a technologically clueless student have to figure out how to set up groups in Pine, Webmail, or whatever other e-mail client he or she may use. No longer will we forget to send something to someone, leaving them off of an ad hoc e-mail list. No longer will communicating be unreasonably difficult if a student group is unofficial or trying to get off the ground and gain official status. Everything is now in one nice, easy package. A student simply goes to the HCS webpage (www.hcs.harvard.edu) and clicks...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: OpenList Arrives | 5/5/2005 | See Source »

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