Word: trustedly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...down Penn sylvania Avenue, Lady Bird leaned to Lyndon's ear and whispered a word. The President turned and said: "Thank you very much. You are wonderful people, and you have made this such a lovely day, and we will try so hard to be worthy of your trust and friendship...
...economy should also be stimulated by certain Government expenditures that, under Washington bookkeeping conventions, do not show up in the headline-making administrative budget, but do appear in the "national income account budget"-in effect, a separate working budget that includes Government trust funds for special purposes. Among these: the social security trust fund, which would increase its outlays by $2.1 billion next fiscal year, partially financed by a 1.25% increase in the employer-employee payroll tax. While the administrative budget anticipates a decreased deficit, the "national income accounts budget" will show a deficit increase of an estimated $1 billion...
...little man may give the market a needed lift, but the market's future will still be determined largely by the huge and growing institutional investors. Last year the market was swelled by $2 billion from pension funds, $1.3 billion from such mutual funds as Massachusetts Investors Trust (see Management) and hundreds of millions more from other institutions. The institutions hold about 15% of the nation's $650 billion worth of common and preferred stocks, and such companies as G.M., A.T. & T., G.E. and IBM each have about 1,000 institutional investors. The institutions have more money than...
...fair, the fair will need "several million dollars" to pay expenses before it can even reopen on April 21. Moore was joined in his walkout by a prestigious cast: David Rockefeller, president of the Chase Manhattan Bank; William S. Renchard, president of the Chemical Bank New York Trust Co.; Dale E. Sharp, vice chairman of Morgan Guaranty Trust Co.; and William H. Moore, chairman of Bankers Trust...
...managers of U.S. big business who earn more than half a million dollars a year belong to an exclusive club whose membership is hardly more than a dozen or two. Among them, the man who presides over Massachusetts Investors Trust, the nation's oldest and second largest mutual fund, receives one of the fattest paychecks...