Word: stuarts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Ever since his days as Harry Truman's Secretary of the Air Force, Missourian Stuart Symington has been a man with a mission. A kind of national gadfly, he has stung the U.S. conscience with ominous reminders of the growth of Soviet military power. Last week, in Philadelphia, Freshman Senator Symington charged that the U.S. Government itself had soft-pedaled the Russian threat. Said he: "It is a sad fact that for a long time some of our national leaders-in both parties-have not told us the whole brutal truth about the world in which we live...
Commented Senator Stuart Symington: "You are the most confused witness we have ever...
...normally polite business of investment banking, two firms have long been known as the Hatfields and the McCoys. One is Chicago's Halsey, Stuart & Co., which staunchly fights for competitive bidding for security issues; the other is Manhattan's Morgan Stanley & Co., which just as staunchly believes that the best way to float securities is to negotiate a price with the issuer...
...Review announced its 1953-54 staff selections, naming a ten man executive board, yesterday. Second year law students chosen include: Andrew L. Kaufman, President; Bruce W. Nichols, Article Editor; J. William Doolittle, Treasurer; Edward C. Stebbins and Stuart J. Land, Case Editors...
Taxpayer's Blessing. Byrd's confidence seemed well grounded. Treasury Secretary George Humphrey, believes that RFC has long outlived its usefulness. Missouri's freshman Democratic Senator, Stuart Symington, the man who put RFC back on its feet after the mink coat and Lustron scandals of 1951 (TIME, Feb. 12, 1951 et seq.), is not expected to come to the agency's defense. Even enthusiastic RFC backers might go along in the liquidation if some other agency e.g., the Federal Reserve, were to take over the RFC function of small-business loans...