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Word: forrestal (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Forrest Gump’s run across the country in Forrest Gump influence your protest style...

Author: By Scoop A. Wasserstein, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Fifteen Questions For Doris Haddock, | 10/9/2003 | See Source »

Main courses are similarly diverse, both in terms of their geographic heritage and their gastronomic success. The fried shrimp scatter ($15.95), an abundance of battered shrimp (think the entire contents of Bubba’s boat from Forrest Gump dumped into a deep-frier) served with remoulade and cocktail dipping sauces as well as french fries and coleslaw, was top-notch. A Cobb salad ($11.50) was tremendous in more ways that one, a fresh and vibrant mountain of different colors, tastes and textures. Herb-crusted salmon, however, was disgustingly oversized, eerily suggesting that the fish had been raised...

Author: By Anthony S. A. freinberg, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Industrialists of the World, Unite | 12/5/2002 | See Source »

...back then, we joked about it--if not on TV, then in movies like Dr. Strangelove. (TV worked more elliptically, through cold-war anxiety parables such as those on the Twilight Zone, which, by the way, returns this fall on UPN, hosted by Forrest Whitaker.) If a writer turned Beene's bomb-shelter scene into a bioterror scare in a sitcom set in the present, it wouldn't make it past the first-draft stage at a major network. Perhaps that's the hidden value of cultural nostalgia. It hints that the past was not better but worse than today...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Look Back In Angst | 9/23/2002 | See Source »

...officer arrested 48-year-old Terry Forrest of Boston for shoplifting at Au Bon Pain...

Author: By Jenifer L. Steinhardt, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: POLICE LOG | 8/9/2002 | See Source »

...asylum, the Chester Mental Health Center. Yoder, it may surprise you to learn, would rather be in prison. He fought a long legal battle during the 1990s to get himself prosecuted for sending menacing letters to people like Playboy CEO Christie Hefner and the late M&M tycoon Forrest Mars Sr. because he wanted to be sentenced to a fixed term rather than remain committed indefinitely. He lost that battle, so to walk free, he must now convince an Illinois court either that he is not mentally ill or that he is not a threat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: They Call Him Crazy | 7/15/2002 | See Source »

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