Word: trust
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Citizens of twelve states are out of luck as far as casting a ballot for their presidential candidate is concerned, unless they go home or can prove themselves self-supported by scholarships or by trust funds, the chairmen of the two College political organizations admitted last night...
Editor Segerstedt does not trust Ger many's reckoning of air losses over Britain, accepts British estimates as more accurate. Said he bitterly, one day last fortnight: "Any reproduction of British reports vio lates neutrality, as German propaganda sees it." Next day he added: "When a people like the British . . . fight for every thing which they consider holy, their resistance cannot be broken by a few bombing raids. . . . They will fight, if they must, among heaps of ruins. They will fight with the certainty that final victory is theirs...
...those of the rogues now in power." Last week, when a show of Raemaekers' drawings, old & new, was opened in Manhattan's Holland House gallery, he said: "People say I hate the Germans. I do not hate the Germans, I know them. You can trust them just so long as there is nothing they can grab from you; so soon as you have something they want and the opportunity comes for them, then it is all over. When you [the U. S.] wait until the English are beaten, then it is too late...
...complete record next month). Host was its editor-publisher, natty, mustached Milton Whately Harrison who named Tax Lawyer Randolph Evernghim Paul of Wall Street's Lord, Day & Lord as moderator. Moderator Paul chose his sides skillfully. On business' teams, he lined up such stalwarts as Old Colony Trust Co.'s T. Jefferson Coolidge, Dime Savings Bank's Philip Adolphus Benson, Guaranty Trust Co.'s Robert L. Garner, Bowery Savings Bank's Earl Bryan Schwulst, Kuhn Loeb's Benjamin J. Buttenwieser. On Government's team, he picked such men as Jerome Frank, Leon...
...similar economic brain-crackers. They also discussed English Economist John Maynard Keynes's plan for curtailing workers' current wages by giving them a prior mortgage on postwar consumption. This evoked as clear a statement of the anti-New Deal position as the meeting produced. The evoker: Guaranty Trust Co.'s Garner, who said: "You are going to have to pay back the fellows from whose wages you get the money. Who is going to pay them back? The Government? Well, who is the Government? Where is the Government going to get the money? ... I believe we ought...