Word: sliced
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...report raised the question of whether it would not be wise to limit any one company, however honestly and efficiently managed. For example, a limit of 1% of the gross national product would slice G.M. to one-third its size...
Reread Willa. Author Siebel's grim little slice of life has the troubling oppressiveness of a Grant Wood painting. Her portrait has a frame of iron, and within it poor Ella and all the rest do not have a chance because Julia Siebel never meant them to have one. Hatred for the harsh side of farm life is here, and hatred for the narrowness of small-town life, but it comes out as a pathological hatred instead of a meaningful one and Ella Beecher seems not so much tragic as vegetable. The publishers compare this embittered tale with...
Lannan said that more than 20 unnamed friends of his had gradually bought more than 300,000 of the Milwaukee road's widely scattered 2,123,210 outstanding shares (present market price: 20¾ per share). He thought this slice large enough for effective control. Directors promised Lannan and Wirtz, who own almost 30,000 shares apiece v. 8,500 shares held by all other directors combined, seats on the board. Said Lannan's good friend and Milwaukee Board Chairman Leo Crowley: "We're happy to have a fellow like Pat on the board...
...week a UNESCO survey, "World Communications," totted up the world's daily circulation: 262 million, a sizable increase. The most impressive gains came in backward countries, where the drive against illiteracy has brought newspapers to African jungle villages and remote South Sea islands. The U.S. had the biggest slice of the world's daily circulation -more than 55 million-but in printing 344 daily copies per 1,000 inhabitants, it trailed behind Britain (609 per 1,000) and nine other countries, including Japan (with 399). To offset any smugness among newspaper men over the steady growth...
...Failure of Gamesmanship. Using paddles with soft, sponge-rubber faces that take the ping out of pingpong but slice off some wicked spins, the agile and tireless Japanese wasted no time taking the Swaythling Cup. They stuck stubbornly to their unorthodox "penholder" grip (which makes for an awkward backhand), but attacked so steadily that their opponents could seldom smash to their weak side. "Yoshi! Yoshi!" (Good! Good!) the partisan crowd cried each time a Japanese scored. Japanese women players stopped and bowed low every time they scored on a net cord shot or bounced a winning shot off the edge...