Haste makes waste, and destructive lack of cooperation from the Republicans in Congress is dispiriting.
Comparing its most recent findings to historical data, the study comes to some dispiriting conclusions.
Mr Klein's dispiriting announcement comes just weeks after Michelle Rhee stepped down as Washington, DC's chancellor.
Perhaps most dispiriting of all, virtually none of those interviewed acknowledges responsibility for what was done.
Over that period, the abstention rate has varied from 19.6% to a dispiriting 63%.
For herself, she ordered a dispiriting salad and a Coke—a real Coke just this once, not Diet.
Since the firm is one of the biggest investment banks advising corporate America, its example is dispiriting.
But we cannot ignore the dispiriting figures that tell the broader, non-anectodal story of women in the professions.
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If all that were not dispiriting enough, Mr Wilson notes two more reasons why MBAs' careers are stalling.
This has been the most dispiriting opera season since I began reviewing music in New York, twenty years ago.
On the calorie side, Michael Fumento tells the dispiriting story in his recent book, The Fat of the Land (Viking, 1997).
So will Gazans at last be able to leave their land without a dispiriting tangle with Israeli security and red tape?
While the litigation is dispiriting, it doesn't surprise John Rousmaniere, yachtsman and author of books on the history of the America's Cup.
This dispiriting scene is in turn mainly caused by two political problems.
On the face of it, they make a strong, if dispiriting, case.
Austria in the 1920s was a dispiriting place for a young person.
Total real business investment rose by 1.1%, much better than might have been expected from the dispiriting profit figures that American companies have been reporting.
He is probably right in this: self-regulation is on the run in most walks of life, and recent experience of it in Parliament is dispiriting.
For a novel and somewhat dispiriting theory of economic divergence, read A Farewell to Alms, published this year, by Gregory Clark of the University of California at Davis.
Last week brought more dispiriting news for the big-brand Australian wine industry, as U.S. import buyers continued to favor Argentine and Kiwi labels for their everyday quaffs.
Faced by this dispiriting stalemate, it would be understandable if Barack Obama concluded that he could do nothing big in Palestine when he becomes America's president in January.
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