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Word: owing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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This is hard music from soft people; dirty Rock for kids who want to horse around for a while and need some beats to which they might safely bounce and flail. What brownie points the Ants have received in their brief lifespan, they mostly owe to Michael Jackson. Perhaps you’ve recently heard the guys reap the fruits of the King’s labor in their chunky-guitar cover of “Smooth Criminal,” or seen the smart-ass video. It’s on MTV in the late afternoon...

Author: By Emma Firestone, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Not-So-Smooth Criminals: Alien Ant Farm | 11/16/2001 | See Source »

...live among our neighbors, but we do inhabit their larger community. We’ll live in this community four years, and we have an obligation to inform ourselves about the issues that affect it. And in the case of a no-brainer like this one, we owe it to the community to vote in its interests...

Author: By Sarah C. Spiegel, | Title: A Vote for the Community | 11/5/2001 | See Source »

...real reason you shouldn't stockpile Cipro is simple: it's unpatriotic. In America we do not exalt the nation over the individual or the family. But you and--yes--your family owe this one small thing to your country, your fellow citizens and their families. Our soldiers are risking their lives in a large way. You can risk yours in this small way. Never in any living person's lifetime--not even during World War II--has every American's personal security (rather than an abstraction called national security) been at stake the way it is today. Good Americans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Be a Patriot. Don't Hoard Cipro! | 10/29/2001 | See Source »

...owe it not only to the generations here today but the future generations [to take action],” said Councillor Michael A. Sullivan, who read the order to sue, which the council passed unanimously...

Author: By Lauren R. Dorgan, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Council Objects To New Districting | 10/26/2001 | See Source »

...better if used to cure disease. Harvesting organs from a death row inmate is an analogous case. If this person, also permanently outside of society, can serve humanity better by offering future medical benefits, what stands in our way of advancing such a policy? Furthermore, does this person not owe such a debt to society for his crime? If our moral sensibilities rebel against such an idea, how much more should we be shocked by the killing of a completely innocent human being for the same purpose...

Author: By James E. Kruzer and Melissa R. Moschella, S | Title: Respecting All Human Life | 10/26/2001 | See Source »

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