Search Details

Word: mirrored (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...might well have happened in Hitler's Germany. Armed with arrogance, pistols and arrest warrants, special security police swooped down at night on the Bonn bureau of Der Spiegel (The Mirror), a weekly newsmagazine, and summarily carted staffers off to jail. In Der Spiegel's Hamburg headquarters, other police sealed off rooms, ransacked them with a thoroughness that included upturning the wastebaskets. In Torremolinos, Spain, about 1,300 miles away, local police, acting on an urgent request from West German authorities, routed a vacationing Spiegel subeditor and his wife from bed and locked them both behind bars...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Two Stubborn Men | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

Faring as Well. The principal beneficiaries, to be sure, are the surviving mercy killers. By exterminating its afternoon possession, the Mirror, the morning Los Angeles Times jettisoned a liability that cost $20 million since it was first published in 1948, ran $2,000,000 in the red last year alone. Now the only morning paper in town, the Times has grown by 220,219 in daily circulation; its total of 772,439 makes it the nation's fourth largest daily...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Successful Euthanasia | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

...After the New York Daily News (1,952,404), the New York Daily Mirror (851,928) and the Chicago Tribune...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Successful Euthanasia | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

They bored a slanting shaft deep into their mountain (see diagram). Above the shaft they mounted a heliostat (a flat mirror). As the mirror turns to follow the sun across the sky, it reflects the sun's rays down the shaft where they are reflected back and focused by a concave mirror. Bounced back toward the top of the shaft, the light is intercepted at ground level by another mirror and angled into a vertical well. There the sun's image can be examined on a flat screen, photographed, or studied with a spectrograph...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Astronomy: Bigger & Brighter | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

Married. Cecil Harmsworth King, 61, Britain's biggest press lord, whose Daily Mirror Group encompasses eight British and a dozen overseas newspapers, plus 200 assorted periodicals (total circ. 36.5 million); and Ruth Railton, 46, a longtime friend, founder and director of the Daily Mirror-sponsored National Youth Orchestra; he for the second time; in Maidenhead, England...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Oct. 26, 1962 | 10/26/1962 | See Source »

Previous | 88 | 89 | 90 | 91 | 92 | 93 | 94 | 95 | 96 | 97 | 98 | 99 | 100 | 101 | 102 | 103 | 104 | 105 | 106 | 107 | 108 | Next