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Word: shallowing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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After a fly out to shallow left, Carter threw a wild pitch that allowed Minuteman outfielder Nick Gorneault to score and moved runners to second and third. Harvard then decided to walk Mike Kulak intentionally to set up a potential game-ending double play with light-hitting UMass shortstop Cullan Maumus...

Author: By Brian E. Fallon, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: Baseball Drops Beanpot Opener | 5/2/2001 | See Source »

...fear. Koizumi says plainly - and rightly - that Japan's economy needs a sharper, deeper recession before it can pull out of its current, shallow one. Should Koizumi defy the odds and prove a wild success, a period of creative destruction in Japan could extend and deepen the current global slump. Yet after a decade of slow decay, it is no time to be squeamish about bleeding Japan in order to save...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Junichiro Koizumi | 4/26/2001 | See Source »

...answers to the questions put to him. Yet his ideas, frankly, are not that interesting. There is little reason for the intelligent viewer to sit through another discourse on the problems of our society’s increasing addiction to artificial realities. Consider also his shallow thoughts on language and mathematics: Words and numbers, he says, mean nothing when removed from their contexts. Only those who have been trained to recognize the ways in which they can be put together to represent ideas can make any use of them...

Author: By Benjamin J. Soskin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Penny For Your Thoughts | 4/20/2001 | See Source »

They also didn’t run the bases especially well. Hordon got the Crimson’s first hit on a single to shallow right field. Hordon rounded first base and glanced toward the outfield to see if he could turn the hit into a double. When he saw that it would be too risky, he scampered back to first...

Author: By Martin S. Bell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Baseball Succombs to Errors, URI | 4/5/2001 | See Source »

George W. Bush is in the process of finding out. As a youthful candidate who wanted to be taken seriously despite his inexperience in foreign affairs, he struck a tough-guy pose, compensating for shallow knowledge by adopting the combative tone of a cold warrior. Guided by advisers steeped in anticommunism, Candidate Bush sought to contrast his hard-eyed "realism" with a Clinton-Gore idealism that he called bereft of core principles and dominated by a misguided desire to insert Washington into global peacemaking. The easiest way to mark the distinction was to talk up Russia and China as nations...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dubya Talks The Talk | 4/2/2001 | See Source »

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