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Word: forgot (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...point I forgot to set the level on myself. An irate listener eventually called to say that he couldn't hear me during the record breaks and I suddenly realized that I was the only person who had been able to hear those witty comments I'd been making over the past two hours. The temptation to kick the transmitter was overwhelming...

Author: By Louise A. Reid, | Title: The WHRB Orgy: A 12-Hour Marathon | 2/12/1972 | See Source »

...things began to change. We stopped the constant scudding and scurrying about in the search for records. This was due both to our finally adjusting to the rhythm of things and the fact that we were so tired that the moment that we went to get a record, we forgot what had been requested. However, since we had not forgotten what records we liked, we played them. As we sifted through the piles of records, calls sporadically came in, a response to our often repeated plea: "Keep your announcer awake. Call...

Author: By Louise A. Reid, | Title: The WHRB Orgy: A 12-Hour Marathon | 2/12/1972 | See Source »

Paul collected the goal, his sixth of the season, taking a pass from Bob Goodenow at the corner of the crease and flipping a backhander over Eberly. Dave Hynes made it 6-3 at 15:38 with a five-footer, and Northeastern forgot about its distant upset hopes...

Author: By Evan W. Thomas, | Title: Crimson Hockey Team Rips Northeastern, 8-3 | 2/8/1972 | See Source »

...trouble is, once you get down into the stream you begin to read around and you realize how little you know. The problem becomes how to keep it from becoming just an historical novel. Once, I thought if I forgot a lot, then I could really begin it. But I've talked enough about it, it's been in my mind long enough, that I must really do it in a carefree and rapid way and get it out of my system...

Author: By Michael Sragow, | Title: Updike Redux | 2/2/1972 | See Source »

...unusual challenges for newsmen. In 1944, for instance, he consented, through an intermediary, to a telephone interview with Robert Elson, then in our Washington bureau. Hughes insisted that when he called, Elson was to identify himself by saying: "Hello, Mr. Howard Hughes. How was the weather?" Trouble was, Elson forgot the code question. This necessitated a new round of calls before Hughes was convinced that Elson was not an impostor. In 1948, when we did a cover story on Hughes, he did utter one prophetic statement about his future: "I'll make news...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Jan. 24, 1972 | 1/24/1972 | See Source »

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