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Word: slow (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Party Chief François Mitterrand, who clearly plans to make the atom an issue in next March's elections, charges that the policy of headlong nuclear expansion was reckless, "launched like a railroad engine at 400 kilometers an hour." In August, some 30,000 protesters tried to slow the train down by staging a noisy demonstration at Super Phenix, the big French plutonium breeder reactor east of Lyon. Now there is concern about a new element in the government's aggressive program. It is a plan to help pay for the country's nuclear expansion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NUCLEAR WASTE: The Reprocessing Race | 1/9/1978 | See Source »

There is a light-year's gap between the living standards of the masses and those of a growing middle class. A low-ranking civil servant in Egypt's swollen, slow-moving bureaucracy may earn no more than $45 a month; an evening at currently fashionable Jackie's Disco in Cairo costs $60 per person. Some of the affluent Egyptians who can afford a summer home in Alexandria are uncomfortable about the disparity between their country's two nations. Says one wealthy, Harvard-educated Cairene: "I feel like a foreigner when I'm with the Egyptian lower class. When...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Man Of The Year: The Gift of the River Nile | 1/2/1978 | See Source »

...great dramas of history was enacted between the 3rd and 7th centuries A.D.: the slow collapse of Rome, the fading of its empire and, with it, the death of the classical world. The age of Christianity was officially brought to term when the Emperor Constantine formally embraced the new faith and in A.D. 324-330 moved the capital of the Roman Empire from Rome to Constantinople. But across the still vast spread of the imperial territories, which ran from the Euphrates to Gibraltar, there was no clean break with the old religions. For 400 years, the remnants of the pagan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Between Olympus and Golgotha | 1/2/1978 | See Source »

...immediately reduce the U.S. trade deficit. But they fail to acknowledge that oil imports are increasing largely because the U.S., alone among major industrial nations, is pursuing a broad-based program of economic expansion from which everyone else is benefiting. Japan, for example, has kept its factories humming despite slow domestic economic growth, mostly by selling cars, TVs, steel and other products to the U.S. Consequently Japan is running an $8.5 billion trade surplus with the U.S., drawing American protests against the Japanese trade barriers that keep U.S. and other imports...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: The Free-Falling U.S- Dollar | 12/26/1977 | See Source »

Comp IV starts things off by thinking of- but not revealing - a number, and its human opponent tries to work out the secret by punching pushbuttons. Milton Bradley Co., which makes the gadget, supplies scratch pads for adults and slow-witted children, but self-respecting eleven-year-olds disdain these. The girl also does not bother with the relatively easy three-and four-digit problems. She plays at the rarefied five-digit level, which means she must hit on one out of a possible 30,240 combinations, and she keeps her notes in her head, the way the computer does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Games People Play: 1977 | 12/26/1977 | See Source »

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