Word: digestibles
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...publishers be aroused to the danger of phony headlines?" brooded Nat Floyd, 38-year-old correspondent of the New York Times. That question burned in Texas-born Nat Floyd's soul while he was on Bataan, getting madder & madder as he read the Navy's mimeographed daily digest of the optimistic news from the U.S.-dogfights headlined as major victories, major defeats buried away in the corners...
Having had a week to digest it, the U.S. knew what was wrong with the new overall price ceiling (TIME, May 4). It would not work unless it were reinforced by the rest of the President's seven point anti-inflation program, especially farm price control, wage control, and the mopping up (by taxes and war bonds) of excess consumer purchasing power. And OPA last week estimated the excess purchasing power...
...first series, a group of graduate students and members of the Faculty have presented a digest of American editorial opinion to the millions of listeners not only in this hemisphere but also in the areas of Europe under Hitler domination. These programs are Verboten to all listeners under Gestapo surveillance, but reports from various Red Cross officials reveal that WRUL has an enthusiastic, though hidden, audience, Tyler declared...
...most unsatisfying of good ones. Breakfast With the Nikolides is much sharper and more mature than Gypsy, Gypsy (TIME, Aug. 12, 1940), yet as a whole the book is like an overcomplicated omelet prepared by an amateur chef too late at night for those who must digest...
...correspondent for the London Daily Mail and Daily Express in World War I, Jane Anderson was Mrs. Deems Taylor, wife of the composer. During the Spanish Civil War (then married to the Marques Alvarez de Cienfuegos) Catholic Digest called her "the world's greatest woman orator in the fight against Communism." To Catholic University's Monsignor Fulton Sheen she was "one of the living martyrs...