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

...only our government that has been shallow on Bosnia policy. To be fair, pundits and commentators who have been lambasting the administration for its inaction, often very eloquently, have also been vague on what happens after we bomb the Serbs or lift the arms embargo on the Muslims...

Author: By David L. Bosco, | Title: Harvard To the Rescue | 2/23/1994 | See Source »

...chosen strictly for scholarly accomplishment. Not one came to Harvard through honest means. They are without exception products of the cliquish conference circuit, a crassly commercial phenomenon that arose in the Seventies, as a result of the recession. Their work, under its hip varnish, is shoddy and shallow...

Author: By Camille Paglia, | Title: An Open Letter to the Students of Harvard | 2/17/1994 | See Source »

...same," we argue. True, bullets and bombs are being used rather than gas chambers. But is this really our test? Are we so shallow that the situations must look identical before...

Author: By David L. Bosco, | Title: War In Our Time | 2/9/1994 | See Source »

Second, Mulkerin's belief that allowing first-year students into a dining hall destroys house morale is off base. As first-years, we have many of the same concerns as our upperclass friends. Caricaturing us as "whining about Expos and the QRR" presents a shallow representation of first-years. We take the same courses as upperclassmen; we participate in the same extracurriculars. When we eat at Currier House, the dining hall is at lest half-empty. We are not barging in and sitting between a group of seniors debating their theses...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Quad Dining Policy Is Unfair | 2/5/1994 | See Source »

...policy simply isn't fair. While Harvard places interhouse restrictions on a number of other dining halls, they apply to all non-residents of the house in question, not just those who got thrown head-first into the shallow end of the freshman housing pool. Consider the fact that a first-year from Weld could eat at all of the three Quad houses with all of her friends, while a 29G resident has to eat at a randomly assigned house with randomly assigned people. And they say lightning never strikes twice...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Quad Dining Policy Discriminates | 2/3/1994 | See Source »

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