Word: forgot
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...knows howto do something besides swear. The bad-boy Brit best known for filleting aspiring chefs on Hell's Kitchen reveals his reserved(ish) side, showing off his home kitchen and chatting up celebs between rounds of chewing out cooks at his restaurant. (I didn't say he forgot how to swear.) F Word (stands for food) is enjoyable less for cooking tips than for Ramsay's political incorrectness about, say, foie gras, the buttery liver produced by force-feeding ducks and geese. "Some people think it's cruel," he says. "I think it's delicious." Just like...
...going to answer that very directly by saying I think she forgot the reviews that she wrote of the earlier book, "Plan of Attack". She said the following: "In his engrossing new book, ‘Plan of Attack’, Bob Woodward uses myriad details to chart the Bush administration’s march to war against Iraq. His often harrowing narrative not only illuminates the fateful interplay of personality and policy among administration hawks and doves, but it also underscores the role that fuzzy intelligence, Pentagon timetables, and aggressive ideas about military and foreign policy had in creating...
...almost forgot about Moby...
It’s everyone’s worst nightmare: Your alarm malfunctions, you arrive to class late for the exam you didn’t know you had, and then you realize that...you forgot to register your Mathalympics flyer before posting it on the sandwich boards between the Yard and the Science Center. Luckily, registering is as easy: simply e-mail “sandwich@fas.harvard.edu.” During an interview with FM (conducted over e-mail, of course) last week, this enigmatic fas account divulged its deepest feelings on life, liberty, and lunchmeat...
...joined the Monarchs in 1938 after their first baseman broke a leg--a move that led to his friendship with teammate Satchel Paige. O'Neil later became a Chicago Cubs scout--he signed Hall of Famers like Lou Brock--then, in 1962, a barrier-breaking coach. But he never forgot his sporting roots, and wrote,"The Lord has kept me on this earth to bear witness to the days and glories and men (and women) of the Negro leagues...