Word: reflected
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...consumer confidence numbers don't reflect this week's big drops on Wall Street, so they may drop again when UM comes out with its updated numbers at the end of the month. But this definitely raises the possibility that we'll look back at March as the inflection point for this downturn...
Summer's main task is not fundraising--assuming that the stock market boom of the Clinton administration in which he served doesn't end as the great stock market bust--but in carefully helping to guide the College and the University into new directions of teaching and research that reflect the rapidly changing nature of scholarly inquiry and the expanded horizons of a global society...
...quarantined on their land, that may have been the most bitter reality of all: no matter how deep the farmers' pain, the global marketplace will churn on, and people will get their food from somewhere. In parts of England last week the dark mood of rural inhabitants seemed to reflect a sense of betrayal, anger at the overturning of an old order. "Leave us alone," says a farmer in Highampton. "No one cares if we live or die." Adrian Edwards, the local butcher, says he will allow his supplies to run out this week, rather than sell imported meat. "That...
...lines, waiting to be uncovered. Emily Bernard's extensive collection and study of the 39-year correspondence between two of the Harlem Renaissance's most compelling personalities indeed challenge the reader to reach for the many insights regarding the state of American letters during these years, and to reflect on the complex relations--relations characterized by the strains of money, fame, politics and race--between two colleagues of different generations. Most of all, however, these letters challenge the reader to consider the nature of an evolving friendship between two ambitious authors, one whose career was on the rise...
...problem with swallowing these political bones is that if we don't pause to reflect, we might end up choking. There seems to be a tacit agreement between both parties that if the Bush plan really does target benefits to the rich, it must be rejected. Republican responses instead focus on denying the Democrats' slogan and telling us how good their tax-cut will be for middle-class families. Bush himself anticipated the Democrats' slogan and used last week's speech to shrewdly showcase the middle-class family of Steven and Josefina Ramos. And Bush is, of course, correct...