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Word: fa (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...fa CROSHY, c 7 21 10 .476 40 2 2 .955 LUNDER, of 4 13 5 .385 3 0 1 .750 COULSON, 1b 8 36 15 .417 76 3 3 .963 COPPINGER, 3b 8 28 9 .321 8 15 4 .852 CAULFIELD, of 8 31 11 .355 13 1 1 .933 MANNINO, ss 7 28 10 .357 9 20 3 .900 HYMANS, p 2 5 1 .200 0 2 0 1.000 KENARY, of 4 14 3 .214 8 0 1 .889 GANNON, of 8 37 8 .217 14 0 2 .875 HUNTINGTON...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crosby Tops Nine at Plate After 8 Tilts | 4/21/1948 | See Source »

...fa CROSBY, c 3 8 4 500 19 0 0 1,000 COULSON, 1b 4 17 7 412 29 1 1 .968 MANNINO, ss 3 12 4 .333 5 7 2 .857 CAULFIELD, rf 4 16 4 .250 1 1 1 .667 KENARY, cf 4 14 3 .214 9 0 1 .900 COPPINGER, 3b 4 15 3 .200 11 6 2 .895 HUNTINGTON, 2b 3 5 1 .200 3 4 0 1.000 GANNON, lf 4 19 3 .158 6 0 2 .750 SULLIVAN, 2b 4 10 1 .100 4 5 0 1.000 DURANT...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Latest Records of Nine's Performances Show Crosby, Coulson Leading in Batting | 4/6/1948 | See Source »

...fact, if you are an American college graduate and your last name begins with the letters "Fa" (Farley, Farmer, etc.), you have probably already received the questionnaire we sent you. For, in order to do the survey accurately we asked the presidents of the 1,200-odd U.S. colleges and universities to let us have the names and addresses of their "Fa" graduates (this sample proved to be representative in TIME'S earlier study of college graduates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Feb. 9, 1948 | 2/9/1948 | See Source »

...present, thanks to the enthusiastic cooperation of these educators, the survey is well along. The questionnaire, which was carefully developed by a committee of leading U.S. sociologists and educators, has been sent to 15,700 "Fa" graduates and, to date, 9,500 of them have replied- a return of better than 60%. We are tabulating the answers and expect to publish the results next spring...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Feb. 9, 1948 | 2/9/1948 | See Source »

...Commission of Fine Arts loudly disapproved the scheme, declaring that it would "permanently change the appearance of the south façade."* Pennsylvania's Congressman-Architect Frederick Muhlenberg rose to declare that the White House "was a heritage of the American people, not lightly or casually to be altered at the whim of any tenant." Indignant letters poured in to the Washington papers; cartoonists lampooned the plan. Crumped the New York Herald Tribune: " 'Back-porch Harry' is scarcely an appellation that a man would like to carry into a presidential campaign, even if he were impervious...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Back-Porch Harry | 1/26/1948 | See Source »

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