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Word: guilts (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...seriously overlooked, role of Chief Navigator. My skill with maps has grown legendary. I am also often left with the thankless role of keeping the driver awake on long trips. While not driving can leave me feeling dependent and childlike, it also means that I can drink without guilt. Shotgun inevitable awaits me, much to the annoyance of those who, sober as a judge, must take me home...

Author: By Elisabeth A. Mayer, | Title: Baby, You Can Drive My Car | 4/13/1995 | See Source »

Officers are made to believe that if they are confident in the guilt of a suspect, they should see to it that justice is served, he said--no matter what the means...

Author: By Adam M. Kleinbaum, | Title: Dershowitz Appears on Community TV | 4/12/1995 | See Source »

...emerge, disembodied, from a black screen. From the beginning, the emphasis is on the nature of justice. The film does not excuse the youth's crime; he is shown first strangling, then beating, the taxi driver to his death before sinking him in a pond. It is not his guilt that is in question; it is the hypocrisy of a system that purports to oppose killing, yet commits that very crime itself...

Author: By Cicely V. Wedgeworth, | Title: Director of 'Red' Brings Epic 'Decalogue' to the MFA | 4/6/1995 | See Source »

...feel that many women have few options when they face an unplanned and unwanted pregnancy. The three choices a woman has in this situation are abortion, adoption or raising the child by herself. As a woman who chose abortion 11 years ago this month, I have been racked with guilt and regret. I cannot go back and see how the other alternatives would have worked out for me, but I can say that for the set of circumstances I faced at age 24, abortion was the only alternative I could find. I just wish that when I had gone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Mar. 27, 1995 | 3/27/1995 | See Source »

...text more than they complement it. This brings one of the exhibit's main conflicts to light. We are a society torn between discourses, one written and one visual, and our own delight in the visual is juxtaposed with our own delight in the visual is juxtaposed with our guilt-laden tendency to try to make sense of the written. But this conflict, both examined by Hill's work and evident in it, does not interfere with the pleasing, interesting sensory experience of the monitor-filled dark room...

Author: By Judith E. Dutton, | Title: Movement Meets Text | 3/23/1995 | See Source »

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