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Wild never forgot the private act of kindness, and his adamantine loyalty to Shackleton would prove to be one of the expedition's major assets.
In classical mythology he was the lad so enamored with himself that he stared at his reflection in a pool of water for so long that he forgot to eat or drink and passed away of sheer weakness.
Or the long-forgotten controversy around Scorsese's Last Temptation of Christ in 1987, with Jesus coming down from the cross to live a quiet life with Magdalene.
This turns out to be a vote in the midst of that nearly forgotten frenzy, the Gingrich revolution.
All of this was about to change mighty quickly, what with 19-year-old Elvis Presley down in Memphis in the summer of 1954, stuck in Sun Records' cramped studio and fooling around with a forgotten blues tune, "That's All Right," written by Arthur "Big Boy" Crudup.
For a similarly fast (or at least nearly so) performance, I would recommend the great but almost forgotten performance from the 1960’s by Zino Francescatti and George Szell.
BRIAN McGRORY is too cute by half using the flag to denigrate Chelsea, a city that has had its share of bad management and now has a manager capable of keeping it from being the punching bag and dumping ground for every enterprise that is not wanted in someone else's backyard ("A heritage forgotten," Page B1, March 26). Did McGrory, out of his heightened sense of of indignation, offer to set up the veterans in question in his community?
The Arab nations, alas, forgot it immediately.
England have long since forgotten how to keep their foot on their opponents' throat, but they began the process by strangling Chris Read for lack of runs and beefing up the batting with the introduction of Geraint Jones for his Test debut.
Today's London Marathon is like a giant party where everything has been arranged except that someone has forgotten to invite the chief guest.
When Matte, an enthusiast for the new brain-transplant technology, announces, “Death is dead,” Leo responds, “Oh, no, everyone’ll miss it so!” (Exclamation point mine.) He ends in sorry contemplation of his existence as a “stranger on the earth, a nobody with nothing,” stuck in “the nightmare of eternal life.” He seems to have forgotten that by trading his body in for a newer model he has postponed but not forever avoided the final breakdown.
He died in 1939 and was soon forgotten.
She reproaches him with forgotten birthdays (his son's) and neglected design choices for his makeover-due study.
David Holmes is at the Big Day Out on January 26. ONE of the Ohio Valley's greatest sports legends is gone but certainly not forgotten.
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