Word: trusts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Summit at Geneva: "It was. without question, right and proper that he should have gone there'. . . But it was of the greatest importance that he make no mistake . . . The impression was conveyed to the world that the cold war was over . . . The President gave every evidence of personal trust in the Kremlin leaders and even went so far as to credit the Russians with a desire for peace no less earnest than that of the West . . . Tensions relaxed immediately all over the world, and along with them, efforts to build strength and unity against the Communist threat . . . Neutralists...
Even with this great increase, the Coop is preparing to expand. Upon the completion of the new Harvard Trust building, next to Albiani's, it will occupy what is now the first floor of the Trust's building. The bank will retain the upper floors and will also use the entire new building. This move will nearly double the Coop's selling space...
...guarantee a full five-year term which will not fall into the abyss of government marked by precariousness and instability." Raising his voice, he added, "From the people I deserve confidence, and I ask that they wait for the results of my work ... I shall not fail your trust nor disappoint your hopes...
...Alfred Hayes, vice president of New York Trust Co., Manhattan's tenth largest bank, was elected to succeed Allan Sproul, 60, as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, largest and most important unit in the nation's twelve-district Reserve system. Sproul, president of the New York "Fed" for 15 years, became known as the most powerful of the regional chiefs and a frequent dissenter from the Washington Board's policy. He resigned because of health (stomach ulcer). Successor Hayes, who calls himself "deplorably obscure," is described by his banker peers as brilliant...
...Jubal runs away, until he finds Ernest Borgnine, the friendly ranchowner who looks like a Bronx butcher. After some preliminary bronc-busting, Borgnine gets to like Jubal (Glenn Ford)--"I trust you, Jubal"--and the trouble begins. It seems that Borgnine's wife, some starlet with a wavering English accent, also thinks she'd like to trust Jubal...