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

...hundreds of thousands of men to the Washington Mall. Those (improved) men will then return to their homes and churches, joining the small, PK-influenced men's groups that now populate one-third of churches nationwide. Second, we have state politicians, most of whom are men, taking on no fault divorce. Louisiana recently became the first state to attack this 1970's innovation. Louisiana's new law creates something called "covenant marriage." Couples who choose a covenant marriage undergo counseling before they marry and can divorce only with fault, defined as abandonment, physical abuse, adultery or conviction of a capital...

Author: By Thomas B. Cotton, | Title: Promises and Covenants | 10/3/1997 | See Source »

...feel it's been a misreading of my book-was it Harvard's fault or was it not Harvard's fault," she said. "You can't see an institution as responsible for something like murder. That said, I think that there were a lot of opportunities that were missed...

Author: By Dharma E. Betancourt, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Thernstrom Speaks on Murder-Suicide Book | 10/2/1997 | See Source »

...think it's all [Phi Gamma Delta's] fault," she said. "No one forced him to drink...

Author: By Marc J. Ambinder, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Frat Party Leaves MIT First-Year In Coma | 9/29/1997 | See Source »

...sunk. We put great stock in what people appear to be or project themselves to be, rather than in what they are, even when the two images, the sham and the real, are obviously in conflict. The case of the Princess of Wales may open our eyes. But the fault did not lie with Diana. She was just a normal, healthy young woman, with human desires and all too human failings. The fault lies with our society, which put her on a pedestal that was utterly undeserved. BHUPINDER SINGH Muscat, Oman...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Sep. 29, 1997 | 9/29/1997 | See Source »

Although she will say she is "always late," a mortal sin in what the ever-politically correct campus politician terms Harvard's "culture of appointments," it is through no scheduling fault of her own. For though Lamelle may insist that everyone on campus "finds their niche and digs in deep," none, it seems, has reached the depth and breadth of immersion as the first-ever female Undergraduate Council president...

Author: By Molly Hennessy-fiske, | Title: For Rawlins, Two Lunches And Coffee Is Business as Usual | 9/26/1997 | See Source »

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