Word: trust
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...overruling Providence the men and women of our forces. ... Be Thou their strength. . . . Guide . . . the nations of the world into the way of justice and truth and establish among them that peace which is the reward of righteousness. . . . Make the whole people of this land equal to our high trust, reverent in the use of freedom, just in the exercise of power, generous in the protection of weakness. . . . Make us ill content with the inequalities of opportunity which still prevail among us. Preserve our Union against all the divisions of race and class which threaten us. ... May the blessing...
...second time, been willing to break an ingrained American tradition. It did so because it did not want to rock the boat in wartime, and because it had faith in Franklin Roosevelt. The big minority which had disagreed with him or had mistrusted him would have to trust the judgment of the majority...
...argument was premised on two facts: 1) the U.S. cannot break cartels by trying to force the Sherman Anti-Trust Act on the rest of the world; and 2) foreign businesses engaged in cartels are strongly supported by their Governments. Perkins believes that much of the U.S. righteous indignation about cartel agreements is phony; that this country not only basically wants cartels, but sooner or later "the pressure of circumstances will tend to make us accept cartels because other nations accept them...
Cyril Edwin Mitchinson Joad, Brit ain's bubbling, goat-bearded ex-pacifist philosopher and mainstay of the BBC "Brains Trust" (British equivalent of In formation Please), was invited to speak at Cambridge University on international affairs, was greeted with tear and smoke bombs by student rioters who aimed to prevent him from speaking. Reason: in 1933, Joad had spoken at Cambridge in defense of the Oxford Union's once-famed resolution-"Not to Fight for King and Country...
...blue-eyed, with an irresistible capacity for laughter. ... Of course a young man like that landing in the midst of Boston society played havoc with the fair sex. They fell before him like ninepins." Handsome Cotty entered Lee, Higginson & Co., brokers, as a runner and clerk. Life among the trust funds soon bored him. He visited the famed, silver-tongued rector of Boston's fashionable Trinity Episcopal Church, Phillips Brooks. Their conversation...