Word: faults
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Second, the caption is at fault for using language that panders to emotion and oversimplifies a complicated issue. By only describing an Israeli Border Policeman violently confronting a Palestinian youth, the caption or photograph does not capture the incident in its totality. It gives the impression that this was an unprovoked act of Israeli-initiated aggression and ignores the presence of the belligerent mob that threatened an apartment compound housing Israeli Jews...
...sure, it takes some nit-picking to find fault with the play of tailbacks junior Troy Jones, sophomore Chris Menick and freshman Chuck Nwokocha. It's also difficult to argue with the way the offensive line bullied a Lions defensive front sapped by the departures of All-Ivy perennials Marcellus Wiley and Rory Wilfork...
...best of the new shows is Nothing Sacred. It's intelligent, well acted, dramatic to a fault and, overall, pretty believable. A lot of its credibility is due to Father Bill Kane, a Jesuit priest and playwright who co-created the show and wrote the pilot, under the pseudonym Paul Leland. Andrew Greeley, the priest and best-selling novelist, thinks Kane's show is dead on. "In the pilot, where the woman is asking about an abortion, I would say something like that," he says. "That's the only effective way to deal with a woman who has a problem...
...lots of opportunities against Penn," Cantagallo said. "It wasn't the offense's fault. [Captain] Tommy McLaughlin played a great game and the offense played well. We just didn't get lucky...
...wasn't the fault of the commander with an aching heart, after all. In an exclusive interview with TIME, cosmonaut ALEXANDER LAZUTKIN revealed that it was he--not Russian commander VASILY TSIBLIYEV or NASA astronaut MICHAEL FOALE--who accidentally disconnected the fateful cable on board Mir in mid-July, sending the Russian space station into its second dance with death of the summer. "It was my fault," Lazutkin said softly, sipping coffee in his cramped two-room apartment on Moscow's northeast edge. "It was at night, and I was in the process of undoing something like...