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Word: exploitatively (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...raid, even to many of its specific details, had been a U.S. open secret for a long time. The fact seemed to be that the raid, which had first been hailed as a great and famous thing, had gradually been publicly accepted as something less-a bold but ineffective exploit-in what the New York Herald Tribune called "our sophomore period...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Murder in Tokyo | 5/3/1943 | See Source »

Last week the report was released in La Paz. Most of the fears turned out to have been unnecessary. An impartial U.S.Bolivian Commission of jurists, unionists, industrialists and Government economists found many an example of outrageous exploitation, many a sore spot in the Bolivian economy. But the authors of the report also demonstrated an intelligent awareness that the root causes lay deep in centuries of poverty and inevitably slow development. In its sum, the report was at once an indictment of those who now exploit these conditions, and a challenge to all the Americas to raise the standards of substandard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Who Stands Accused? | 4/26/1943 | See Source »

...Queens Hospital has been a proving ground for new treatments. Says Dr. Larsen: "The literature and the drug houses often exploit something that eventually proves to be worthless. We were able to publish the first adverse report in America on the uselessness of mercurochrome as a specific cure for streptococcus infections...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Lesson from Hawaii | 4/12/1943 | See Source »

...Times states indignantly that "For the most part the students thought that our policy had been to prevent immigration, to send them missionaries, and exploit her." It all depends on the point of view, and emphases differ. A number of Harvard Faculty men say they would give credit for those "errors...

Author: By Robert S. Landau, | Title: 'Times' American History Survey A Farce | 4/7/1943 | See Source »

...away!" All he could get out was "Bombs-." He did not live to see the bombs split the target. He did not live to hear, as the others in the outfit did, of Winston Churchill's message to Major General Ira C. Eaker, calling the raid "a brilliant exploit, the effectiveness of which the photographs have revealed"-nor to hear General Eaker's answering promise: "We will repeat these efforts many times, and on an ever-increasing scale...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Battlefronts: BATTLE OF EUROPE: Bombs Away! | 3/29/1943 | See Source »

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