Word: straightening
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...months ago, in return for help from U.S. and international banks, the government finally agreed to try a little austerity-namely, to hold down wages and straighten out its finances. That only brought new clamors for wage increases, the most spectacular of which was a demand for a 48% boost by bank employees. When the government said no, the leftist National Confederation of Workers-500,000 in all-joined in a crippling general strike that forced the country's ruling nine-man National Council to declare a state of siege, which was not lifted until early this month...
Munro has worked all week on his team's passing game, especially trying to straighten out their positioning. He said it was sloppy positioning that allowed Columbia to win so many races for the ball last Saturday...
...late as the Depression, Americans starved. "In the wet hay of leaking barns," wrote John Steinbeck, "old people curled up in corners and died that way, so that the coroners could not straighten them." About 2,000 Americans still die yearly from diseases of malnutrition, and many of the poor are poorly fed. The official U.S. poverty definition is based on the Department of Agriculture's "economy" food plan ("essentially for emergency use"): large helpings of bread, rice, dried beans and peas, cereals, rare servings of meat, no out-of-season or convenience foods...
...soon as the lengthy love scenes are out of the way, the story gets clicking. Alain is a nice young ex-con trying to straighten out with the help of Wife Ann-Margret but with no help at all from his gangster brother. First thing anybody knows, there is poor Alain wrapped up in a plot to heist a million dollars' worth of platinum wire. Double and triple crosses pop in and out as if run through a revolving door, and thriller fans will find a plenitude of such ritual sounds as the squeal of tires, the chunk...
...tires burn under the tremendous torque. The course, usually four to 14 miles long, runs up steep country roads, contains no fewer than 15 curves, and its straightaways are no longer than 200 yds. Yet the cars average 69 m.p.h., occasionally even top 125 m.p.h. Most drivers try to "straighten the curves" by skidding around the corner in a controlled four-wheel slide and then snapping the car into a lightning-like acceleration. Says British Driver Tony Marsh: "You have no chance of winning unless you go absolute flat-out-so that means you are on the ragged edge...