Word: trusts
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...aboard an RB-66 that was shot down last week northeast of Hanoi. But, says Captain Gale Hearn, 34, a onetime flying instructor who specializes in night runs, "we're more scared of those mountains than we are of the Viet Cong. You learn to trust your radar out here. When the moon goes down, it's like flying through an ink bottle...
...trust that none of TIME'S readers will be left with the impression from the story on Billy Casper [July 1] that he was fat and sick because he was a Congregationalist. Congregationalists are fat and sick, I am sure, in about the same proportion as members of any other religious group. However, if your readers infer that Casper became a superior golfer because he was first a Congregationalist, they may be nearer the truth. Congregationalists are often fine golfers, as I can attest on many a sunny Sunday morning...
Motor launches took questionnaires to lonely lighthouses at Neptune and Thistle Islands and along the Great Barrier Reef, while on the equatorial Australian-trust island of New Ireland, Census Taker Douglas Fyfe, normally a schoolteacher, set up shop beside a flooded river to interview rubber-plantation workers. Four men drowned in a swamped boat as they tried to reach Fyfe, but he counted them anyway, since they had been alive 30 hours earlier on the census deadline...
...ownership of TWA to raise money. In the end, forced to borrow $165 million or face receivership, he had to surrender operating control of TWA to the Metropolitan and Equitable life-insurance companies and a group of 15 banks. Hughes placed his stock in a ten-year voting trust controlled by the lenders, who named former Ford Motor Chairman Ernest Breech as a trustee. TWA was again without a president, former Navy Secretary Charles Thomas having resigned in a tiff with Hughes five months earlier. Breech began a desperate search for a man to lead TWA out of chaos...
...plays that opened Wednesday night at the Loeb Drama Center, one became an instant blurr in my memory, and I trust the Loeb will be able to get over it as easily. The other--Eugene Ionesco's The Lesson,--pretty much redeemed the evening...