Word: replays
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Other Freudians say that because women traditionally associate the open streets with prostitutes and the danger of rape, agoraphobia can be a coded fantasy for illicit sex, a replay of the child's sexual attraction to her father during the Oedipal stage (starting around...
...faked out the goalie so well," said Wood. "You just wanted to see a slowmotion replay of everyone's faces after that...they were amazed...
...complex price regulations, must be allowed to rise to a world level of about $13.50 in order to discourage consumption and give the oil companies added incentive to explore for fresh petroleum sources inside the U.S. But they are convinced straightforward deregulation will amount to nothing more than a replay...
Just about then a fictional replay of the Nixon tragedy-Washington: Behind Closed Doors- was holding 50 million Americans in front of their TV screens. The best line of the day came out of this electronic novel. Andy Griffith, playing a retiring President patterned on Lyndon Johnson, cast a wise eye on Jason Robards, the fictional Nixon, and advised, "It's plenty hard to lose the affection and trust of those people. But let me tell you something, lose it once by God you never get it back...
After New York's big blackout last week-in many respects a replay of the 1965 power shutdown that darkened eight states in the Northeast-that old Con Ed catharsis began working overtime. Federal, state and local agencies launched investigations of the power failure. Politicians and editorial writers howled over the fact that only three days before the city went dark, Con Ed's $200,000-a-year chairman had said he could "guarantee" that the chances of another blackout were remote. New York Mayor Abraham Beame summarily convicted Con Ed's management of "gross negligence...