Word: tut
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...considered plan to outlaw the Communist Party. Such "glib proposals" and "easy panaceas," he cried, were "nothing but the methods of Hitler and Stalin ... It is thought control borrowed from the Japanese." He rode the theme so hard that the Portland Oregonian was finally aroused to a tut-tutting editorial: "Let's not have an Oregon campaign based on who hates Communism most...
General Dwight Eisenhower finally climbed into civvies, in plenty of time for the Easter parade. For the press, he sat still in a neat-but-not-gaudy, double-breasted grey worsted (see tut), while Mrs. Eisenhower fussed happily with a less conservative...
...week, after adding up a cross section of the returns. Profits after taxes in the first three months of 1947 were at an annual rate of $17,500,000,000-some 10% more than in last year's booming fourth quarter. The rate declined in the second quarter, tut only to $16,500,000,000, still higher than any other year's peak...
...72nd birthday party, Winston Churchill's 60-lb. cake in token of his catholicity of taste in headgear, wore 32 assorted little hats. Herbert Morrison, Lord President of the Council, drew a distressed tut from the British trade paper, Tailor and Cutter, which ran two pictures of him. "Take the picture above," wrote the editor. "Quite nice. The stripes run parallel to the edge of the lapel. . . . Now look at the larger photograph. Oh! ... the trousers are too short. . . . The over coat is not a very pleasant sight. . . . And why is[he] so careless with his buttons and flaps...
...Where to Go. In Buffalo, the Rev. John F. Steve asked his congregation where to buy black-market sugar, got 24 tips, nary a tut...