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

...what its editor labeled an act of "ideological genocide," the conservative magazine Peninsula on Thursday found itself the victim of a parody campaign that twisted the publication's slogan, "Faith, family and freedom," into "Racism, fear and bigotry...

Author: By Caitlin E. Anderson, | Title: Peninsula Calls Parody Assault on Free Speech | 3/3/1997 | See Source »

...group's posters had linked "Racist quotas, Godless classrooms and Peter Gomes" with Harvard, while the Peninsula was associated with its slogan: "Faith, family and freedom...

Author: By Caitlin E. Anderson, | Title: Peninsula Calls Parody Assault on Free Speech | 3/3/1997 | See Source »

...ways to graft elements of foreign technology and organizational skills onto their own economic and political infrastructure, so that they could achieve the delicate task of strengthening their country rather than undermining it from within. This selective and gradualist approach allowed China to keep at least a measure of faith that it was somehow preserving its own inner value system even while using the West in a host of developing areas. During this 19th century period--as during the 1980s and into the present--the effects of this attempt on the worlds of political culture were profoundly ambivalent. It turned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DENG XIAOPING AS PAST AND PROLOGUE | 3/3/1997 | See Source »

...poster that says "Faith" "Family" "Freedom" even we could tell was authentic, but the one that reads, "Christmas Kwanzaa Easter If you know which one doesn't belong...JOIN PENISNULA!" we just couldn't be sure of. And Jay M. Dickerson '98, a "guardian" at Peninsula was at an equal loss. Finally, he seemed to remember seeing that one and admitted that it was in fact real...

Author: By Daniel M. Suleiman, | Title: PENINSULAR | 3/1/1997 | See Source »

Whitman writes that for the man of faith, "no greater honor exists than for a man to die for his convictions." Several paragraphs later he sums up the nature of the cynic, who, without the aid of faith, is "reduced to a mere animal groping after the desires of the flesh." What we have here is animality versus spirituality. Whitman's reductionism is unfair to both faith and cynicism...

Author: By Noah I. Dauber, | Title: In Praise of the Doggy Life | 2/25/1997 | See Source »

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