Word: remindful
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...light of the recent accusations being made about the possibility of phone tapping of students belonging to the Southern Africa Solidarity Committee (SASC), we would like to remind the Harvard community that proof that wiretapping has occurred would not necessarily implicate the University in any wrongdoing it is entirely possible that wiretapping has been carried out not by Harvard University, but rather by the United States government...
Paris-based Europe Correspondent Lawrence Malkin, who tapped public officials and financial specialists, likes to remind his colleagues that exchange rates have a history of fluctuating erratically. "The glittering American literary colony in Paris in the 1920s didn't go home because the wellsprings of creativity had dried up," he observes. "It was because the exchange rate shifted after 1929 and suddenly Paris wasn't cheap anymore. Americans should enjoy this city while they...
Paris-based Europe Correspondent Lawrence Malkin, who tapped public officials and financial specialists, likes to remind his colleagues that exchange rates have a history of fluctuating erratically. "The glittering American literary colony in Paris in the 1920s didn't go home because the wellsprings of creativity had dried up," he observes. "It was because the exchange rate shifted after 1929 and suddenly Paris wasn't cheap anymore. Americans should enjoy this city while they...
...Crimson dropped from second to fourth in the New England baseball ratings this week. Maine (M.13) received there first-place votes, while second-remind UMass get the other coach's and for best in New England. UConn ranks third...
Celebrity status, as the checkout-counter newspapers constantly remind us, is no guarantor of happiness or security. Schickel reels off the familiar tragedies of those who found there was no room at the top: John Belushi, Freddie Prinze, Dylan Thomas, Janis Joplin, Marilyn Monroe. Yet some of the deceased, like proper legends, have regained their power in death. Humphrey Bogart is a greater celebrity now than when he was alive; so is John Lennon. The fade-out has become as important in life as onscreen; no wonder Hollywood repartee has become standardized: "Elvis Presley is dead." "Good career move...