Word: fastly
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...McMath, home-town boy, ex-Marine officer, winner of the Silver Star, courageous politician. As prosecuting attorney, he had broken the 20-year rule of Mayor Leo Patrick McLaughlin, whose bland refusal to enforce the law had made Hot Springs a sanctuary for every gambler, gangster and fast-dollar man in the country. As soon as he took office on the first of the year, the new prosecutor closed Hot Springs' gambling spots and got McLaughlin himself indicted for corruption in office. McLaughlin did not even try to run for reelection. Dopesters rated Sidney S. McMath, 35, the hottest...
Last week, this whole painfully erected concept of fashion was tumbling down so fast that whole generations of window dummies were beginning to look selfconscious. The fashion world was engaged in a furious "circular advance-back to lines from which it had marched after World War I. It was a counterrevolution as drastic as a full-scale revival of the 1914 Pierce-Arrow, the buttonhook and the mustache cup. The summer's furore over longer hemlines was nothing but a skirmish. Vogue and Harper's Bazaar, imperious oracles of the dressmakers, sounded the call. Unabashed, they now cried...
...miners, were simply not producing in sufficient volume. Britain was buying more goods abroad than she sold; the money with which to make up that deficit (the $3.75 billion U.S. loan) was running out much faster than it should; Britain had only $1 billion left and it was going fast. But suddenly from the steadily mounting pressure of impoverishment sprang a political crisis...
Stunned Silence. Then, at a meeting of the parliamentary Labor Party, Attlee decided to tell all. In preparation, Labor whips talked hard & fast about party unity to bucking backbenchers. When Attlee unpacked the details of Britain's crisis, his listeners were stunned into silence. The whips had framed a party resolution expressing confidence in Attlee; it was passed unanimously...
...ultimately dispiriting quality of O'Hara's writing has been variously explained. One explanation: since his first novel, Appointment in Samarra, he has worked out a kind of ring technique for polishing off his subjects in one fast round. Subjects on which he might have to go the distance are not taken on; such subjects include whatever, if anything, O'Hara may love...