Sentences with phrase «stories of people buried»

Not exact matches

I read somewhere, maybe Rick Perlstein's Before the Storm about Goldwater's 1964 campaign, that newspapers simply didn't report about the John Birch society in the 1950s — the owners, people like the Chandlers, wouldn't allow it — or they buried the stories in the middle of the paper.
The complaints, filed by Common Cause and Free Speech for People, a group that seeks to limit corporate money in politics, argue that AMI paid to bury the story of Trump's infidelity and thereby influence the presidential election.
In fact, a buried story here seems to be how Asian immigration may be fueling the rise of the «nones»: people who are religiously unaffiliated.
Or the hearsay stories of a man who supposedly was the ONLY person in history to ever come back from the dead after 3 days of being buried... yet no one wrote a thing about it until 40 years AFTER the supposed «fact»?
Socrates confines himself to the claim that stories about the shameful doings of Kronos and his sons should not be told to young people, indeed should be «buried in silence,» even if they are true (378a).
ive been wrestling since i was 9 years old and when i went into high school i had to wrestle a girl... growing up learning to wrestle i had ended up having violent style, i never was dirty or broke rules but i was taught to do anything in your power to win whehter it was to club down the head or grab the throat to gain position etc. unfortunately i was in the postion to wrestle a girl once and at the time i did nt care who you were boy / girl, white / black / purple it did nt matter im was going to go out there bounce your head of the mat and bury you, so i went out there and wreslted the same way i always wrestled, 110 % and always to put your oppenents back through the mat i dditn change my style at all bc she was a girl i wrestled the same against everyone but after i pinned her in the first minute i did nt even realize that i broke her ribs when i power doubled through her, now after that for the rest of the tournament i was heckled and berated for forcefully beating a girl ppl were telling my parents «hey, looks like you raised a wife beater» etc. etc.... ever since then i refused to wrestle girls and thank go i eventually grew out of the lower weights, moral of the story is that is great and all that girls are wrestling but they shouldnt wrestle boys even if they know what they are getting into because 1.
I hope Gary shocked some sense into a few people by telling his story, but most will probably bury their heads in the sand and pretend that he and Len Bias were just a couple of wayward boys.
The centerpiece of those stories, the man who shouldered a devil - may - care attitude when others only dreamed they could, was being buried in the ground at Foley, Alabama, near his parents, and people simply could not believe it.
This was a genre that people thought was dead and buried back in the early era of CD Roms, thanks to the inaccessibility of talented actors, cinematographers, and story writers leading to trash like Night Trap dominating the genre.
Not because it's about two people (a very good Rachel Weisz and Rachel McAdams) of the same sex who fall in love with one another, but because it neither rushes its story (about a woman who returns to her Jewish Orthodox community to bury her late father and reignites her passions with a childhood friend) or judges its characters.
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There is something intangibly familiar about these events and the people within them — some memory buried deep in our mind, like the one that haunts Charlie (Logan Lerman), the lost protagonist of the story who simply wants to be found (Hopefully, whatever our memory might be is happier than that one).
And the students at Overton High School did just that: Until last year, the story of Ell Persons had been buried deep within the roots of Memphis» history.
Most people know Emma Donoghue (no relation, unless you go way back to the roots buried in the bog) as the author of Room, but she has been a prolific novelist and writer of short stories, mysteries, literary history and much more.
When we bury our story, the shame metastasizes... If we share our shame story with the wrong person, they can easily become one more piece of flying debris in an already dangerous storm.»
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