Word: oughtness
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...Helio Oiticica (1937-1980) and Lygia Clark (1920-1988), Venezuela's Gertrude Goldschmidt (1912-1994, a sculptor who worked under the name of Gego) and Carlos Cruz-Diez, 78, and of course that long-dead Uruguayan father figure of South American abstraction, Joaquin Torres-Garcia (1874-1949)--emphatically ought...
...when the economy was first hitting the skids. Since then, we?ve slipped into what is all but in name a recession - even though we haven't posted the required two consecutive quarters of negative growth, the revised-downward-once-already GDP Q2 growth number of a whopping 0.17 ought to convince you of that. But unemployment numbers tend to rise most on the way out of a recession, and indeed often continue to rise as a recovery gets under...
...those on the dovish flank of the Labor party ought to be well aware that there's little chance of the Palestinians being ground down by force. And the conflict is placing tremendous strain on the pro-Western Arab regimes who have kept the peace in the region for most of the past three decades. An Egyptian commentator warned last week that Sharon's path was jeopardizing "the entire network of political relations upon which the possibility of Israel's peaceful existence in the Middle East depends...
...while it's the breakdown over the Middle East that has captured the headlines, the conference may be equally imperiled by the dispute over whether and how Western nations ought to take responsibility for the pain inflicted by the Atlantic slave trade. Reparations are anathema to the countries implicated in the slave trade, and that has prompted the Europeans and the U.S. to steer clear even of a formal apology for fear this would open the way to legal action for compensation. Still, some U.S. civil rights groups are pushing for the conference to address the reparations issue, and some...
...into the box with toys. The child's body was bruised on the back and the buttocks, and authorities initially said Sergay had been "violated." His throat was violently slashed. Soltys left behind a list, apparently scolding family members for their "tongues," that is, for saying things that they ought not to have said. Besides singling out his wife, Soltys listed two relatives: Zoya, the mother of Tatyana; and Sergay, the father of Dimitriy. Remaining family members were quickly provided with police protection...