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Word: dexterousness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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That Certain Feeling. As for Morgenthau's "vendetta," it all went back a dozen years or so, Cohn explained, when he was investigating charges of Communist spy infiltration into the Treasury Department. In the 1940s, Cohn recalled, Communist Helper Harry Dexter White was working in the Treasury, and Robert Morgenthau's father Henry was Treasury Secretary. "I have no personal malice toward Morgenthau senior," added Cohn charitably, "but Morgenthau junior has harbored a feeling about this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Investigations: Going Which Way? | 9/13/1963 | See Source »

Charges of Boondoggling. Power men have long dreamed of putting the great "Quoddy" to work. In 1919 a Boston engineer named Dexter Parshall Cooper drew up a plan that would require an estimated $150 million in private capital. That idea collapsed with the 1929 market crash. Then in 1935 Franklin D. Roosevelt-best known summer visitor to neighboring Campobello Island-started boosting the Quoddy and actually got $7,000,000 from Congress to start the project. But F.D.R.'s hopes died too, amid Republican charges of "boondoggling on the Quoddy." Two years ago a U.S.Canadian International Joint Commission completed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Canada: To Harness the Quoddy | 7/26/1963 | See Source »

...England in the Test Match with Australia. Tradition got additional body blows when Hutton and another Player were knighted by the Queen. Recently the gap between cricketers has become increasingly absurd, as it developed that Gentlemen were making more money out of the game than were the Players. Ted Dexter, currently leading England in the Test series against Australia, is an amateur who rakes in the cash by appearing in testimonial ads for a shirt company, writing sports articles for the London Observer, and receiving royalties on the sale of cricket bats bearing his signature. This anachronistic citadel of privilege...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Players, Please | 12/7/1962 | See Source »

From his infancy, young Dexter Grabgrind '62 cultivated the art of evading solicitors. At the age of three, he escaped a Girl Scout selling cookies by showing her a box that his uncle had given him the previous year. By his eleventh birthday, he had contributed 54 buttons to the collection plate in the church of his choice...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Combined Charities | 12/5/1961 | See Source »

Brown's administrators have little trouble with either the city of Providence or the state of Rhode Island. Indeed each side is constantly striving to co-operate with the other. In 1956, when the land on which Brown's new Dexter-Aldrich athletic facilities are being built was first offered for sale, President Barnaby C. Keeney confidently expressed Brown's interest and need for the property in the knowledge that "our relations with the city have long been mutually beneficial...

Author: By Bruce L. Paisner, | Title: Lessons From Brown in Civic Affairs | 5/19/1961 | See Source »

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