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Word: detracted (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...highest level of quality. Some people fear that affirmative action will inevitably conflict with our efforts to maintain high standards of teaching and scholarship. I disagree. If we are prepared to invest the necessary time and effort, affirmative action can contribute to Harvard's quality and not detract from it. To accomplish this result, we must observe two import principles...

Author: By Derek C. Bok, | Title: Diversity and Quality | 3/27/1973 | See Source »

UNDER MILK WOOD. Dylan Thomas wrote this verse play, as he put it, "for voices." The images that Director Andrew Sinclair has added to his film adaptation do not complement Thomas' language; they detract from it. The language that comes cascading off the sound track is bottled into florid captions for an illustrated travel guide to Wales. Whenever Sinclair is not being resolutely literal-minded, he diverts himself by being fantastical. It will not do for Richard Burton merely to read the first voice. He must appear, all rumpled and dour and selfabsorbed, like some wandering Welshman cursed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Quick Cuts | 2/19/1973 | See Source »

...squad, a quarterback whom I felt was not giving Harvard an optimum performance. I hold no personal animosity toward him as an individual and I did not seek to main him psychologically. But after the frustration of watching performance after unsuccessful performance, I felt that a change could not detract from an already meager athletic production. And I wrote what I felt, hoping as did so many other fans, that the end result would be a better team performance for Harvard...

Author: By Peter A. Landry, | Title: Petering Out | 2/16/1973 | See Source »

FEILINI LONG AGO secured his place in the film patheon, and even so imperfect a film as Roma doesn't begin to jeopardize that, Roma, it is safe to say, will neither add to nor detract from Fellini's reputation. Its successes are as large as its failures are obtrusive. It is, in short, an astonishingly inconsistent film whose hits manage to outnumber its misses, but only just barely...

Author: By Michart Levenson, | Title: Actors, Actresses, Whore and Catholics | 1/15/1973 | See Source »

...employees, including 8,586 special agents, has over the years been astonishingly uncontaminated by outside political influence. The number of FBI agents convicted of a crime: none. Hoover's bureau set the standard and wrote the rules for effective law enforcement throughout the world. No criticism could detract from his extraordinary achievement-the difficult establishment in a turbulent democracy of a national law-enforcement agency that was honest, expert and free from partisan taint...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE ADMINISTRATION: The Long Reign of J. Edgar Hoover | 5/15/1972 | See Source »

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