Word: trimly
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...organizing such details into pictures, a number of the photographers have exploited their medium's access to ambiguity, the unguided camera's tendency to describe things without explaining them. (The most bedeviling example features a car's empty interior, a glimmer of light edging the trim beneath the window, through which we see a tangle of foliage and a woman whose face is cut off by the car top, and whose braceletted hands are removing her underpants.) And nearly all the pictures display a reluctance (shared by most contemporary painters) to deal directly with, or even to acknowledge, the complexities...
Reagan swept Democratic Governor Pat Brown out of office by nearly 1 million votes, largely on his vow to "squeeze, cut and trim" state spending, taxes and payrolls, much as he now promises to reduce the federal budget if elected President. Yet during his two terms in Sacramento, Reagan did none of those things...
...Katharine Hepburn and Henry Fonda, most of the great figuresthe faces and the voices from the '30s and the '40sare either dead or in retirement. But as she celebrates her 72nd birthday this week, and her 50th year in films this year, Davis, trim, vigorous and in buoyant good health, is still busy. She won an Emmy last year playing a mother who finally reconciles with her daughter in a CBS special called Strangers; in her entire career she has probably never given a better or more poignant performance. Last month she played...
...Citizens for Limited Taxation, which would roll back property tax levels to 2 1/2 per cent of assessed valuations. That wouldn't hurt some towns--outside Rte. 128, past Revere and Quincy, to Boston's silk-stocking suburbs, or down on the Cape--these tracts already enjoy a trim 2 1/2 per cent rate. For Cambridge, though, with property taxes currently at about 5 per cent of its value, things would be a bit tougher. Under the law, which would probably pass if voters went to the polls today, the city would have to roll back taxes, cutting revenues...
...House Budget Committee already has voted to trim planned spending by $16.5 billion, pushed hard by Chairman Robert Giaimo of Connecticut, who announced last week that he will retire from the House after eleven terms. Floor debate on the committee's resolution, however, which had been scheduled to begin last week, was put off until after Easter. Giaimo said darkly that "there are forces at work trying to delay the vote. They want labor and the special-interest groups to work the members over during the Easter recess...