Word: tactfully
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...this stout staff that helped him on his road to Rome and the ultimate goal, Berlin. For the harmony that prevails throughout, Ike Eisenhower has his own tact and diplomacy to thank. On October 14, General Eisenhower will be 53. Since last February, when he was temporarily commissioned a full general, he has been the youngest of that rank in the U.S. Army. This does not surprise the officers with and under whom Eisenhower has served. Since graduating from West Point in 1915, he has always shown a marked capacity for getting ahead, always worked and studied more than...
...Gaulle and Giraud to tangle disruptively over the Liberation Committee's recent purge of elderly and ex-Vichyite officers. But the French leaders were more concerned with the war's trend, and in their concern De Gaulle won a signal diplomatic victory-still without benefit of tact. France's united front was a bid for recognition and participation in any Allied peace negotiations with Italy. Said Commissioner of Information Henri Bonnet: "I hope [the new accord] will have a good effect on ... the U.S. and Britain. . . . Nonrecognition will not prevent us from becoming stronger...
...were serving under the late, great Marshal Lyautey against the Riffs. He learned to call Charles de Gaulle mon cher after he quit the Vichyfrench governorship of Indo-China and joined the Fighting French. Now, under Georges Catroux's amiable pipe smoke, and with the help of his tact, the stubborn leaders agreed to submit their differences to a majority decision of the new Committee of Liberation...
...units participating on the Allied side. This unity had to be achieved after some initial difficulties, and it was largely the handiwork of General Dwight D. Eisenhower. As commander of the whole Allied effort, he has kept himself rigidly out of the limelight, has exercised the greatest possible tact, and has contributed many ideas (the forced march of U.S. troops from El Guettar to the extreme north was an Eisenhower conception...
Never again will an instructor of a new company use so little tact in his choice of nautical terms when he tells an E company man, "To break open a window", . . . that is, not with the high price of glass these days...