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

While Senator Johnson was before the television camera, still arguing for tighter security, he also gave to the world several other U.S. secrets:1) that U.S. scientists, in trying to make a superbomb, have already made one six times as powerful as the Nagasaki "Model T"; 2) that the U.S. goal is a bomb 1,000 times as powerful; 3) that the present effort is to "find some way of detonating a bomb before the fellow that wants to drop it can detonate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: So It Was Plutonium? | 12/5/1949 | See Source »

...heaviest losses in Europe's art museum had been architectural. Considering the hail of shot & shell, bomb and superbomb that pocked the face of Europe for six years, the treasures still surviving were a lot to be thankful for. But much of the best in Western civilization had been blown apart, and what was gone was irreplaceable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Europe's Loss | 11/4/1946 | See Source »

First Yank Into Tokyo (RKO-Radio) might well be subtitled First Atomic Bomb Thriller Out of Hollywood. It was originally a stock B potboiler about a vague "superbomb," just ready to be picked off the RKO assembly line when news of the atomic bomb was announced. By snipping in a quick scene in a Washington office and pasting on the newsreel clip of the first practice explosion in New Mexico, RKO beats everyone else to the neighborhood houses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Sep. 24, 1945 | 9/24/1945 | See Source »

Great Britain disclosed last week that a "new and highly secret" ammunition had already gone to work on U-boats in the Battle of the Atlantic. Speculation centered on depth charges: this was perhaps a depth charge as correspondingly powerful as Britain's much vaunted superbomb (which, it is claimed, can level a whole city block of four-story stone buildings). Whatever it was, it remained, last week, just "stuff...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World War: Secret Weapon | 11/10/1941 | See Source »

Last week the Berlin radio boasted that Germany has a superbomb which could kill men by concussion and destroy everything within a radius of 1,600 ft. The distance was incredibly great, but death by concussion is an established wartime fact. In an article by Dr. Solly Zuckerman, famed Oxford anatomist, the British medical journal The Lancet last week described the damage, often fatal, which may be done to lungs by explosions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Death by Concussion | 9/23/1940 | See Source »

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