Word: reflecting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Reason will not happen spontaneously," Demos said. "You will have to try with all your might to reflect dispassionately...
...Ellender, who once said, "I wish there were a Trujillo in every country of South and Central America." Other apologists, ignoring Trujillo's terror, pointed to the Dominican Republic's sharply improved per-capita yearly income ($225, about average for Latin America). But the average did not reflect the disproportionate share of the wealth acquired by the ubiquitous Trujillo family through The Benefactor's standard 10% cut on all public-works contracts, his heavy interests in sugar, textiles, cattle, insurance, and his monopolies of salt, cigarettes, lumber, matches, milk and peanut oil. When the coffin lid shut...
Already jobs are multiplying faster than they did early in the recovery from the 1958 recession. The Labor Department last week reported that between mid-April and mid-May, employment rose 1,044,000 and unemployment fell 194.000. Most of the new jobs simply reflect the normal spring surge in hirings. But five major industrial centers lost their unhappy rating as areas with substantial (6% or more) unemployment, leaving 96 on the list. And in April, for the first time in a year. U.S. factories hired more men than were laid off or quit...
...earthen plaque in the West Berlin State Museum. Other straight-legged stools are borrowed from a frieze in the Parthenon. Copied line for line and curve for curve from the stele of Hegesco, built in 400 B.C., is a large chair with curved back and legs. Gibbings' couches reflect the economy of the classical Greeks, who used them for sitting, sleeping or eating. Modern users, if they like, can follow the Greek custom of dining from a small side table while reclining on the couch and then shoving the table under the couch to make room for the dancing...
These figures, says Dr. "Modell, reflect the fact that new drugs are often introduced not because they are better than existing drugs or because there is a real need for them, but "to horn in on a market which has been created by someone else's discovery." He denounces as "structural roulette" the game of making a minor change in the molecule of a competitor's drug, to get around patent restrictions, and rushing the resultant analogue to market. He points to one manufacturer "who sells one drug entity in this country and a congener [close chemical relative...