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...Laborite London DAILY MIRROR, world's largest daily newspaper (circ...
...Unrealistic & Unwise." "He should go before he further embarrasses his chosen successor, Sir Anthony Eden," snapped the pro-Labor Daily Mirror. Even the Times, which used to be hard to shock, was aghast. "What on earth made him say it? The idea was unrealistic at the time; it is unwise to come out with it now." Moscow happily noted that the statement "unmasks the true aims of the policy of reviving the German Wehrmacht...
...Florida State Bridge Tournament was more cheerful than Frederick Bernard Snite Jr. True, he could not lift a hand to play his cards, because he was paralyzed, but he told the nurse who held them what he wanted to play. He saw the cards only by reflection in the mirror over his face. For 18 years and seven months, since he was stricken with polio, Fred Snite had been bound to an iron lung...
Plugged Out & In. For years, the smiling face reflected in the iron lung's mirror was familiar to millions in newspapers and newsreels. His father spent an estimated $1,000,000 on the medical fight to keep him breathing. Fred graduated from Notre Dame in 1932, went to work in his wealthy father's business, the Local Loan Co. of Chicago. Four years later, in China on a trip around the world, he contracted bulbar poliomyelitis...
Competing Managing Editor Ed Murray of the crime-loving Los Angeles Mirror disagreed: "The case has mystery, society, sex and glamour, but as a day-in-and-day-out story, it has been duller than dishwater." Many another newsman raised the question: Is the Sheppard case worth the space U.S. dailies are giving...