Word: tackly
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...Government and their way of life. Britain, their old ally, banker and protector, now owed them ?80,000.000. Spain, their old rival, was in the United Nations' doghouse, while Salazar, in spite of his anti-democratic sympathies, had pursued throughout World War II a serpentine policy whose final tack was enough in the Allies' direction to earn their tolerance, if not their approval. The Portuguese national budget, thanks to Salazar, was always balanced these days. (It had shown a deficit in 68 of the 70 years before 1928.) Portugal's exports were much higher than before...
...might have to face the whole problem over again. A move was developing in Congress to tack the Case bill on to the President's emergency legislation...
...Three Cs. Like two other famed headmasters of New England prep schools, Peabody of Groton and Coit of St. Paul's, Diman thought the English public schools were on the right tack in stressing classics, character and Christianity. (Dr. Coit, however, was too English for him: "He was such an Anglophile that he wouldn't let the students play baseball; they had to play cricket."*) He was impatient of office routine, and so worded his letters that few required answers. The hours thus saved he spent in meditation...
...TACK C. BUCKLE Huntingdon...
Elizabeth Arden Graham, whose horse trainer was suspended last November for ephedrinizing a horse, professed to have little interest in winning the Kentucky Derby next month. "I am more interested," declared the tack-sharp cosmetiqueen, "in the sales showing of my new perfume, Amour D'Ephedrine...