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Word: failed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...hand, if the goal is to create a competitive football league, it would seem predestined to fail. Holding some schools to more stringent standards than others insures that over time the academically less competitive schools become the athletic powerhouses, or at the very least are presented with that opportunity, while the more academically competitive ones are faced with a major handicap. And the recent dominance of three-time defending Ivy League champion Penn indicates that has already happened...

Author: By Jonathan N. Axelrod, | Title: Balancing Sports and Scholarship | 9/15/1995 | See Source »

...said Hass spoke in that panel about how most of Keats' later poems were never equalled by later artists, so it is "therefore intimidating to poets who cannot call themselves Keatsian without believing that they will fail to measure up to his standard...

Author: By Douglas M. Pravda, | Title: Houghton Hosts Keats Conference | 9/13/1995 | See Source »

...evaluating academic undertakings." He makes the interesting observation that "[i]f Dr. Mack had taught at the Divinity School, it is unlikely that any investigation would be tolerated, since divinity schools are not governed by the laws of science." He's quite right of course, but I fail to see how this is relevant. Dr. Mack is a member of the Faculty of Medicine. Schools differ not only in their areas of intellectual interest but also in the methods of study used by their faculty and in the way the quality of scholarship is judged. In the Medical School, faculty...

Author: By Arnold S. Relman, | Title: The Motivation for the Mack Inquiry | 9/13/1995 | See Source »

...might fail...[but] we can leave it just a little bit better than we found it," he said

Author: By Anne L. Brody, | Title: West Urges Reflection | 9/13/1995 | See Source »

...Christmas and spend a lot of time with their children. Insists attorney Robert Allison, who works out of an office behind Mayor George Forston's barbershop: "The only codes that mean anything in this country are those duly passed by the governing authorities and the codes of God. I fail to see where Mark Whitacre violated any of those codes. In fact, it appears to me that he upheld those codes to his peril...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mark Whitacre: The Spy Who Cried Help | 8/28/1995 | See Source »

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