Word: forgotten
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...again as he came before, we would disregard him in the same way.” Gomes’s book can be monotonous and unoriginal at times, but he deserves our praise for re-presenting this fundamental message at a time when it’s all but forgotten.—Staff writer Joshua J. Kearney can be reached at kearney@fas.harvard.edu...
...gift. “The Newman studio materials are the most significant gift the Center has received,” he says. Harvard created CTSMA in 2001 as part of an initiative to build a new museum for modern and contemporary art. Today, with the original proposals long forgotten and the current plans for a museum in Allston postponed, CTSMA has a slightly different role from the one proponents envisioned. “At this point, it is more a virtual reality than a physical one,” says the Center’s director, Carol Mancusi-Ungaro...
...Meanwhile, across town in wealthier Altamira, Chavez opponents who had seemingly forgotten how to rejoice clogged streets, set off fireworks and exchanged embraces. As the mostly student crowd chanted and played drums outside the opposition campaign headquarters, newspaper editor and former presidential candidate Teodoro Petkoff flashed a wide smile. "Last week it was evident there was a transfer of people who usually vote for Chavez, and they defeated it," he said...
...persistent opposition conviction that the results could be fraudulent, the nascent student movement helped galvanize many detractors to vote. When students took to the streets to protest the forced shutdown of the opposition-aligned television station Radio Caracas Television earlier this year, the country had all but forgotten that the universities were one of the very few sectors of society left that was not yet controlled by the government. On that occasion, young people staged their largest protests after the TV station had already gone off the air. But this time around, they hit the streets in advance...
...sumés, scribbling position papers, and garnering the occasional Crimson publicity. We hear the same campaign promises: greater representation for students, a more vibrant college social life, and more legitimacy for the UC. Unfortunately, almost immediately after the election concludes, we witness in the UC the same forgotten promises. Business as usual resumes...