Word: creditably
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...deal goes through, it would be the largest-ever Indian acquisition of a foreign firm, and it would catapult Tata from the world's 56th largest steel producer to the fifth. "Nothing succeeds like success," says Sanjay Bhandarkar, managing director of N.M. Rothschild private bank in India. "All credit goes to Ratan Tata. He clearly has a vision and knows what he's doing." Tata is one of Asia's most influential businessmen. And perhaps more than any other company, Tata group exemplifies India's metamorphosis into a modern economy. For much of their 138-year history, the Tata family...
...night though, as five Crimson players recorded double-digit digs. Mahon had 20, Turley-Molony posted 18, McKinley had 17, and Lily Durwood and Alexandra Michael added 10 a piece. These efforts held Columbia (5-12, 0-8) to a .146 hitting percentage on attack.Trimble was quick to credit the individual success of the players with the strong team play on defense. “The reason that all of us did well,” she said, “ was that our defense was on. We were in our system and playing our game. The center...
...lead it would not relinquish.Hughes was pleased with the flag.“Yes,” he said, when asked if it was the right call in that situation. “We got called on a penalty the same in the first half, so I credit the officials with calling the game equal.”Hughes was referring to an unsportsmanlike conduct call on Princeton linebacker Luke Steckel, who had received the penalty after a run by senior running back Clifton Dawson on a Harvard touchdown drive in the second quarter. That cost the Tigers half...
...broken pass, led to Princeton’s deciding touchdown. The jury was still out on whether it was, at that crucial juncture of the game, the right call by the referees.“We got called on a penalty the same in the first half, so I credit the officials with calling the game equal,” Hughes said.Murphy was less convinced.“It just didn’t seem out of the ordinary,” said Murphy in describing Tanner’s actions following the play.Either way, one thing remains clear about...
...their credit and businesses grow, the women begin to see themselves as participants in a productive economy that proves to be the most important key to their successes. “Her husband thought she was stupid,” Yunus explained to New Internationalist magazine. “Her parents thought she was stupid. Her neighbors thought she was stupid. She thought she was stupid. But she has found out she is not as stupid as everyone thinks...