Word: distinguishedly
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Finally a non-com had a look at them and came away with his heart brimming over with good will. "They were telling us," he said, "that you must learn to distinguish between National Socialism and Hitlerism. They say that National Socialism is a good thing, especially for Germany, but that to their regret as well as to anyone's, Hitlerism has perverted...
...rejecting Holman and electing Morse, many Oregonians were convinced that they had rendered a double public service. Holman, big of girth, white of hair, loose of lip, distinguished himself in Congress mainly by his absence from roll-calls (he was absent when Congress declared war, and missed 148 out of 239 roll-calls in seven months of 1942). But he managed to be present enough to distinguish himself in the making of intemperate attacks. These he delivered in a gravely falsetto voice which the Oregon Journal likes to call "a high tenor of protest. " High spot of the campaign came...
...force-are closely modeled on it. Red Star's battle reports are the Soviet Union's most reliable and most colorful. Since all Russians get military training, all correspondents have military rank. Most of Red Star's are majors, who wear no insignia to distinguish them as newsmen. Red Star's star correspondent is greying Ilya Ehrenburg, 53, whose dispatches are frequently cabled to the U.S. Pravda and Izvestia also run his highly colored, hate-filled dispatches...
...this occasion to say how very much I have enjoyed being a subscriber of TIME for the last two years, and to thank you for reliable information, frequently brilliant writing, and often superior analysis of world events; in short, for all the features which distinguish your magazine from other and less gratifying manifestations of journalism...
...Plans and a Vacuum. Meanwhile, Britain and Canada already have firm air policies in print. Britain's was brief, Canada's detailed and carefully designed to distinguish Canada's special interest from the Empire's (see p. 24). But they both called for tight International Air Transport Authority to license all world air routes and carriers and, as Britain put it, "eliminate uneconomic competition...