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Please see Wikipedia:Oversight for more information on the oversight/suppression policy, application, and team members. We usually suppress an edit or other information on Wikipedia if it contains the following types of information: Non-public personal information about a real individual. This could be private information about you or others.
"The Apology" is a grim and mostly satisfying locked-room thriller about Darlene and Jack's complex and often unpleasant conversation. They both have things they feel compelled to say. Moreover, they both have something they need each other to do for their peace of mind.
Harrison’s Reports is one of the three English-language periodicals with 10,000 or more film reviews reprinted in book form. The other two are Variety as Variety Film Reviews (1907–1996) in 24 volumes. The New York Times as The New York Times Film Reviews (1913–2000) in 22 volumes.
At its best, an apology is an expression of sincere personal remorse for one's own actions, rather than a form of inflammatory rhetoric or empty emotional coercion. A non-apology apology, on the other hand, is seen as a way of qualifying, or even avoiding, a "real" apology, and may even be used as the opportunity for yet another veiled insult.
Oversight should be requested for feedback which contains non-public personal information, such as phone numbers, home addresses, workplaces, schools or identities of pseudonymous or anonymous individuals who have not made their identity public -- according to the oversight policy. This includes hiding the IP data of editors who accidentally ...
The series is titled Harrison's Reports and Film Reviews (1919-1962). The Media History Digital Library has scans of the archive from 1927–1962 available online. Two other significant English-language periodicals with 10,000 or more film reviews have appeared reprinted in book form: Variety, as Variety Film Reviews (1907–1996) in 24 volumes.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Apology, Plato's recording of Socrates' defense at trial; Apology, Xenophon's version of Socrates' defense; A Mathematician's Apology (1940), an essay by British mathematician G. H. Hardy