• He has a tendency, though, to focus on the wrongs that are simplest to understand.

    ECONOMIST: John McCain's economics

  • Putting out of our minds the wrongs others hand done, we resolutely looked for our own mistakes.

    FORBES: A.A. in the Age of the Internet - We Pause for a Primer on "the Program"

  • Even those of us with the best intentions will at times fail to right the wrongs before us.

    CNN: Obama: 'Peace requires responsibility'

  • Competing for bottom honors in the latest batch: Luther Right and the Wrongs.

    NPR: Another Batch of Annoying Music

  • And for Davies, Sunday's encounter gives the Cornish side the perfect opportunity to right the wrongs of that defeat.

    BBC: Cornish Pirates

  • You correctly recognize that we are righting the wrongs of past management and putting the "new Cambridge" firmly on track.

    FORBES: Readers Say

  • The previous pope, John Paul II, made an historic apology for the wrongs done to Jews by Catholics over the centuries.

    ECONOMIST: The pope reaches Israel in his tour of the Middle East

  • Total Network Solutions are sure to be up there again, even more determined to right the wrongs of last season's run in.

    BBC: Welsh Premier preview

  • Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, is similar to a House resolution adopted last year that acknowledged the wrongs of slavery but offered no reparations.

    CNN: Senate approves resolution apologizing for slavery

  • There is too much breast-beating about the wrongs of some Europeans and too little historical perspective about the role of others in this appalling episode.

    ECONOMIST: Evasive action

  • While "some portions of the South have changed, " Shelby County represents "the epitome" of the wrongs Section 5 was designed to address, said Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

    WSJ: Justices Question Aspects of Voting Rights Act

  • But my immediate impression of this troop of Kangaroos is a youthful, excitable bunch of mates keen to right the wrongs of their 2008 World Cup failure.

    BBC: Closing the gap?

  • They would have been disappointed with the series loss in the West Indies but the only way to right the wrongs is to put some good performances on the board.

    BBC: Aussies make Strauss Ashes target

  • To right the wrongs of decades requires difficult choices.

    FORBES: Guest Post: Creating Jobs

  • Never mind that, to some extent, the wrongs resulted from what was ill-conceived regulation from the start--a health care system so convoluted and ripe for gaming that it makes the tax code look elegant.

    FORBES: Healing Thyself

  • Underwhelming investors, U.S. Treasury Secretary announced on Thursday a series of planned regulatory moves to right the wrongs that led to the current economic malaise, with a focus on revamping mortgage and credit regulations.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • The call for mutual forgiveness was the continuation of a theme begun on Friday in Greece, where the Pontiff sought God's forgiveness for the wrongs committed by Catholics against Orthodox faithful in the past 1, 000 years.

    CNN: Pope pleads for Muslim, Christian forgiveness

  • He made a historic apology for the wrongs done to Jews by Catholics over the centuries, and visited the Holocaust Memorial Yad Vashem and the Western Wall on his trip to the Middle East in 2000.

    BBC: Pope in the Mid East: The issues

  • "I do think that it's important when we have the opportunity to talk about violence and not just kind of have it as entertainment, but connect it to the wrongs, the injustices, the social ills, " she said.

    BBC: TV episodes dropped after US shootings

  • The fact that there has not been a big terrorist attack against the West since the one in Madrid last March does not mean that the threat has gone away: as Osama bin Laden's reference to the wrongs done to Muslims in 8th-century Andalucia shows, Islamist terrorists work on a longer time-scale than most people.

    ECONOMIST: Terror suspects in Britain

  • At the same time, the success of international tribunals in bringing suspected war criminals such as Yugoslavia's former leader Slobodan Milosevic to trial has created a new impetus for righting the serious wrongs of the past.

    BBC: Henry Kissinger: Haunted by his past

  • We changed the argument from one about the "rights" of so-called private clubs to one about the "wrongs" of a cadre of industry titans using the fig leaf of such memberships to exclude women, the standard this behavior sets in corporate America and damage it does to women at all levels.

    CNN: Worth the fight: Women in Augusta's boys club

  • In a sense, however, the rights and wrongs of the case are neither here nor there.

    ECONOMIST: The Iceland saga is a harbinger of crises to come

  • Whatever the rights and wrongs, the trustees have not distinguished themselves.

    ECONOMIST: Victory for a company town

  • Today, more than 300 years after the failure of the Darien scheme, political controversy still surrounds the rights or wrongs of the Union, and Darien continues to occupy a special place in the Scottish cultural imagination.

    UNESCO: 2010 UK Memory of the World Register

  • "What one really hopes, regardless of the rights or wrongs of the adults, you have to look at the fact that these children wil have moved four times and they're only six months old, " said Naomi Angell.

    BBC: Alan and Judith Kilshaw face investigation

  • Whatever the rights and wrongs of that, the big issue is surely this: when the Heartland Institute speaks on climate change, it is speaking with the money, fundamentally, of one major donor.

    BBC: Openness: A Heartland-warming tale

  • The overall effect is deflationary: she shows, example by example, how much better it is to argue about the rights and wrongs of techniques in the here and now than to dazzle or terrify ourselves with techno-futurology.

    ECONOMIST: Bioethics

  • The rights and wrongs of Suarez's punishment and of the Terry case -- should the FA, for example, have charged the Chelsea captain after he had been cleared in a court of law -- have been played out endlessly in the media and across social-networking websites like Twitter.

    CNN: Crime and punishment in sport: Laying down the law?

  • What Turkey wants from the visit is pretty plain - an assurance from the French government that its bid will be judged on the so-called Copenhagen criteria of political openness and accountability, rather than on the rights or wrongs of admitting a large, poor, Muslim state into the union.

    BBC: Mr Erdogan is expected to raise EU membership

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