Word: reflectively
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...ruled the Court. "We think the contention not only has no relevance to the circumstances of the instant case but is an unsound generalization. . . . The Act... does not require that the petitioner retain in its employ an incompetent editor or one who fails faithfully to edit the news to reflect the facts without bias or prejudice. The Act permits a discharge for any reason other than union activity or agitation for collective bargaining. . . . The restoration of Watson to his former position in no sense guarantees his continuance in petitioner's employ...
...reaching the highest peak of all at 60. Author's explanation : "We may perhaps think of the two rises in the curve as associated respectively with increasing tension from the life-problems of sexual adjustment and adjustments to old age, while the low level in middle life would reflect lessening of sexual tensions, relative remoteness of sexual possibilities, maximum earning power, and relative remoteness of in, capacitating...
...impressionable financiers much encouraged by General Hugh Johnson's wry query in his syndicated column: "Who anointed the Secretary of Agriculture as an economic Isaiah? And where does Uncle Danny Roper get off as a synthetic and official Leonard Ayres or Roger Babson? And why should all markets reflect words of theirs in a marked recession?" Meantime, neither Chairman Eccles' reiteration of his easy money aims nor his courageous call for taxes and debt retirement checked the cracking prices of Government bonds, which despite more determined Treasury support dropped to new lows for the year. In the last...
...women. At a time when our country is inclined to develop class, race or creed consciousness or hatreds the menace of a common enemy and the inspiration of fighting it together may have a sorely needed and deeply significant religious and moral force. Research, diagnosis and treatment will all reflect the increased interest and activity...
Dean Gauss's comparison between the European and American attitude in this respect will doubtlessly delight the "bigger-and-better" gentlemen, but should make all those interested in the quality of our education stop and reflect. In England, which has a population of forty-three million, there are approximately forty-six thousand students in the institutions of higher learning. In France the ratio is somewhat higher. In this country, on the other hand, eight hundred thousand out of a population of one hundred and seventeen million were attending the universities...