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Word: fasters (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...proponent of amendments at last May's convocation, is still not sure. On second thought, Canon Fry felt it "very wrong to withdraw the prohibition about a deceased wife's sister." Said he: "A great many of us know of cases where the wife grows old rather faster than her husband. She becomes rather faded. Her husband is not a bad sort of man, but he is amorous. His wife has a younger, attractive sister. He likes to go for long walks with her and his wife becomes uneasy about the friendship. Is it worthwhile to bring discord...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Is Leviticus Out of Date? | 7/23/1945 | See Source »

...bombs to break up a clash of pickets and workers. In Akron, where 16,700 rubber workers were out, Selective Service was ordered to cancel draft deferments. In 63 specific war-producing areas labor was still tight, but in Detroit, Buffalo and San Francisco workers were losing jobs faster than they could find new ones...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Reconverter | 7/9/1945 | See Source »

Unexpected Stockpile. Major General Henry B. Sayler, the blue-eyed, square-jawed West Pointer who is top dog for ordnance in the European Theater, now thinks that close to 80% of all equipment on the Continent can be put into fighting trim faster than there are bottoms to take it away...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WAR PRODUCTION: One Salvaged Is One Built | 6/25/1945 | See Source »

First-line flyers reported that Japan had a new defense fighter, faster, more maneuverable and better handled than anything they had seen before. Promptly the U.S. answered by unveiling the Grumman F-7F Tigercat, soon to make its combat debut with Marine fighter squadrons and Navy supercarriers. The Tigercat has twin engines, climbs a mile a minute, rates in the 425-m.p.h. speed class. For Japan the planes came, kept coming, and would continue to come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BATTLE OF JAPAN: The Planes Came | 6/18/1945 | See Source »

...been held there, supporting the invasion, had become the subject of rumbling & mumbling in Washington. Homer Bigart, conscientious front-line correspondent of the New York Herald Tribune, had kicked off with a dispatch from Okinawa, suggesting that Tenth Army tactics had been ultraconservative, that the campaign might have moved faster if the III Marine Amphibious Corps had been used last month for an end-run landing in the south, behind the Jap lines, instead of being thrown into a power drive at the Shuri line alongside the Army's XXIV Corps. Columnist David Lawrence picked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BATTLE OF THE PACIFIC: To the Last Line | 6/18/1945 | See Source »

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