Word: suggestive
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...machine-turned production; it has, on the contrary, a virtue uncommon in contemporary films-the look and texture of the lovingly handmade article. It has also the quiet discretion that always distinguished Leslie Howard as an actor. He is well supported by Rosamund John and David Niven, who delicately suggest the subtle interdependencies which may develop between a mature woman, a man of vision and a man of action...
Praising Morrison's frankness, the Economist goes on to praise the U.S. antitrust laws, to suggest that Parliament pass a declaratory act reviving the old common-law doctrine against restraint of trade. The Economist also calls for the appointment of a Royal Commission to explore the "jungle" of British trade associations...
...project. As far as the marching goes, mates, the word is that that's entirely upto us. The sooner we make the grade with Lieut. Anderson the sooner we stop perspiring like clock-work every Tuesday afternoon, so although we hate to tell tales out of school we strongly suggest a decided improvement before the dog days set in around here . . . they can really...
...course I realize that the Secretaryships are appointive offices, but while making up the slate, I suggest these candidates as competent, capable and conservative...
...T.I.S., vastly expanded, vastly speeded up, has worked its pupils into a soldier's mold with an efficiency that has made pedagogues gape. Yale's Dr. James G. Rogers calls it "magnificent." A Harvard Law School professor, after a lifetime studying teaching methods, was unable to suggest an improvement, said it was "perhaps the most important place in America." A graduate, who had degrees from Harvard and Oxford, said: "My education did not begin until I came to Benning...