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Word: reflectively (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...there is no likelihood of a price rise in the near future, they are keeping inventories at a minimum. Steelmen expect that they will be operating between 70% to 80% of capacity until late May, when buyers will have whittled away their new inventories. After that, steel business should reflect more closely the rate of business done by steel users...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Watching Steel | 4/25/1960 | See Source »

...long supported himself by commercial art, but that day is past; the combines created in Rauschenberg's Manhattan loft bring from $400 to $7,500 apiece. Such public demand for such private images is one of the art boom's most fascinating phenomena. Does it reflect a starvation diet of subjective experience amongst the mass of rich Americans? Or do people buy Rauschenberg to share in his quiet protest against what they think cellophane-wrapped sort of world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Emperor's Combine | 4/18/1960 | See Source »

...while still a student at the high-rated Bronx High School of Science, he got interested in a paper by Professor John D. Kraus of Ohio State University. Dr. Kraus reported that a satellite speeding through the outer fringe of the atmosphere trails an ionized wake that can reflect certain kinds of radio waves. Teaming up with his friend Perry Klein, another teen-age New York ham, "Ray" Soifer wrote the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge for detailed schedules of satellite orbits. Whenever a satellite, U.S. or Russian, passed at a reasonable distance, the boys tried to bounce radio waves...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Teen-Age Conversation | 3/14/1960 | See Source »

...some readers. Françoise Sagan's novels are of interest chiefly for the light they seem to reflect on their author. In Bonjour Tristesse, the light revealed a child passionately and exuberantly weary of the world, but now it shows an adult who seems tired of writing books. There is little in Author Sagan's latest (and fourth) novel worth a compliment or a damn, although readers with an ironic turn of mind may cherish the 23-year-old author's reference to "that incomparable love that comes with age." The story, hardly more than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Postcocious Adult | 3/14/1960 | See Source »

Next week the collection of a man who has both goes on view at the Milwaukee Art Center, demonstrates some of the good things that Americans have yet to discover in their own heritage. The 125 canvases, roughly half the collection of Detroit Businessman Larry Fleischman, reflect a warmly romantic taste, and uncompromising standards too. Among them: The Uncanny Badger is a strange picture by John La Farge, a mural painter and stained-glass designer of renown who worked mostly in Manhattan's Greenwich Village. It was inspired by a trip to Japan with his famed friend, Historian-Biographer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Romantics at Milwaukee | 2/29/1960 | See Source »

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