Word: reflectively
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...next column, the unpredictable Frank Owen felt better already. He had spent two days in the Daily Mail morgue, reading up on what happened after World War I. Wrote he: "... I cheer up too when I reflect that it's all happened before . . . dear food, scarce food, few clothes, no beer, high taxes, too many forms to fill up, not enough homes to live in, Germany, a crime wave, rising cost of living, falling output of goods, riots in India and Egypt. Everyone said: 'The country's going to the dogs.' Why, this is almost where...
...debates of world impact he merely grapples with the Government for petty party gains, while in matters of genuine difference with the Government he lets subordinates take over. Gravest and most justified complaint: Churchill, in his staunch opposition to gradual relaxing of the Empire's bonds, does not reflect his party's majority view...
Negro Staff Sergeant Gilbert Cartiero's winning picture (titled 0600 Hours) showed a pfc. putting on his pants. In bed in the background sprawled a tired naked German maiden. According to one red-faced bigwig, Sergeant Cartiero's picture might "reflect badly on Red Cross activities...
...conflicting headlines like these from the news of recent months that reflect the problems of the U.S. press in presenting the news clearly and accurately. Daily journalism often has to sacrifice clarity and accuracy for swift reporting (newspapers have to go to press before some of the stories they carry have finished happening). TIME gets a better break: we have up to seven days in which to verify the news before we print it. As the news goes these days, that is none too much...
...core was a drum-tight control of the Negro vote. For as Memphians reflect: "The nigger doesn't vote, he is voted." Thus, at any time, day or night, year in, year out, whenever Ed Crump pulled the lever of his political slot machine, he hit the jackpot-a clear majority of 40,000 to 60,000 votes, enough not only to inundate Memphis but to control Tennessee as well...