Word: forgot
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...Look Jr., who lived on Chappaquiddick. Driving home that night, Look saw a car cross in front of. him at about 12:45 a.m., stop in a lane called Cemetery Road, back up and go down Dike Road. Look noted that the car carried Massachusetts license L7-7; he forgot the middle numbers. Farther along the road, he came upon a man and two women who declined his offer of a ride...
September 21: The New York Times politely reveals that "like hundreds of other young men in the country," Steven Ford, the President's "handsome, sandy-haired 18-year-old" violated the law by registering late for the draft. He waited until his father was president. "OOPS--HE FORGOT" was the Herald-American caption...
...would accept this near obliteration. He was always insistent that he wrote for the day and did not understand colleagues who were employed by "posterity." Although he knew his full worth in terms of a publisher's contract, he was a modest, self-effacing man who never forgot his roots or upgraded his accent. He was born in 1867 in Burslem, one of the "Five Towns" in the industrial north of England from which he drew almost all his best material. His family had just struggled out of the potteries to a tenuous hold in the middle class. Arnold...
...Nelson was put in charge of finding tenants. He won the support of his employees by recognizing the American Federation of Labor as their bargaining agent. In the early 1930s, when most of the business world was fiercely resisting labor unions, it was a bold step. Labor never forgot and returned the favor by giving Rockefeller support when he later ran for public office...
...some country music. Among the guests: Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott (in a patchwork shirt), Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns (yellow, blue and white sport jacket), Senators Abraham Ribicoff, J. William Fulbright and Herman Talmadge. In a pink pantsuit, former Presidential Secretary Rose Mary Woods forgot other matters and led a bipartisan hoedown...