Word: overshadowing
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...even Anderson's outstanding performance failed to overshadow the Crimson's spectacular turnaround...
...said "it was so predictable" that Greenberg's selection would "dominate the news" and overshadow the protestors' broader goals...
Apprehensive that the organization's political thrust might overshadow educational goals, Willie said academics must stress "the linkage between analysis and action. "Saying that education and religion have been the greatest vehicles for the advancement of Blacks in America, he added that "higher education has to hang in there to remind racial minorities of the need not to turn away from...
Papal fever, in any case, had begun to overshadow political fervor for many Argentines in the hours before the Pope's arrival. The patriotic euphoria of the early weeks of the war was all but submerged in a vast national outpouring of piety and sheer excitement over the Pope's visit, the first ever made by a Pontiff to Argentina...
...writing and reading the constitution viewed it as a bold and pace-setting document. Actually, a survey of Ivy League student governments and some others around the nation shows that Harvard's new structure is the one playing catch-up. With few exceptions, the budgets of other governments greatly overshadow the $60,000 hoped-for by the Undergraduate Council, where a $10 student activities fee, will be refundable in contrast to mandatory charges at least twice that size nearly everywhere else. Further, the coveted link between the Undergraduate Council and the Faculty--allowing council members to serve on Harvard committees...