Word: forgot
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...white cinematography, the first ever attempted by Snowdon. Among the telling vignettes: desolate faces and palsied hands fighting dinner hour in an old folks' home; Cecil Beaton, 64, describing his "first signs , of , loneliness" and his denture problems; a' Septuagenarian marriage ceremony in which the bride momentarily forgot the name of the groom; a daughter guiltily registering her arthritic father in a home. A visit to Continental spas showed elderly people desperately trying" to reverse the clock by means of surrealistic exercise machines and lamb-gland injections. But perhaps the most poignant was the closing scene -a tottering...
...years, we can let him have Korea and Japan; about 1975, Hawaii. Or, we could allow U.S. naval and air forces to place full pressure on North Viet Nam with conventional weapons, forcing Ho to abandon this little endeavor in the South. Oh, I'm sorry! I forgot that we might hurt some civilians, or damage a Russian vessel, or call down world opinion upon ourselves. Oh well, the casualty rates aren't too awfully...
...painting, Chaim Soutine was something to behold. For months, he would ponder the idea for a painting, then in a wild outburst fling the paint onto the canvas with such vehemence that on one occasion he dis located his thumb. A model who posed for him never forgot the experience...
There was a glorious festive air at the Crimson last night. Bubbly, aspiring candidates filled the red-brick building on Plympton St. A few of the bravest ventured an interest in sports. But don't be afraid to admit that you forgot last night's show: there's another one tonight at 7:30. Take an hour--there are no classes tomorrow. If by some tragedy you can't make it tonight, don't give up. There's always room. Just come down to the Crimson before Sunday and leave a note for RDP. Those Spring sports are just around...
...Press chose to review the editorial judgment of Wilson and the Syndics. Even though the Press continued to stand behind Watson's manuscript, the Corporation decided to reject it. In Pusey's words, publication would have meant "taking sides in a controversy among scientists." Pusey and the Fellows forgot that any work--whether a memoir, detached scholarship, or pastoral poetry--is bound to offend somebody, even a good scientist...