Word: trusts
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...struggle will most likely be decided on other grounds. It will be colored by religion and haunted by Watergate. More important, the American people, fed up with politics and politicians, are in a mood to choose the man they see as the stronger leader?someone they can trust...
Taking on Carter, Ford will stress his own "experience" and speak often of the need for "trust." Carter, he is already saying, lacks experience and should be viewed with suspicion because "he is the biggest flip-flopper I know." Not only that, Ford has claimed that Carter inspires widespread public "fear and apprehension" because of his inexperience in foreign affairs...
...public and official posts after a government commission severely chastized him for "extremely imprudent" dealings with Lockheed. The prince, who served as Inspector General of the Dutch armed forces, will keep his ermine, but he has lost his epaulets. The stunned nation has lost something more-its cherished trust in royal rectitude...
...near Laguna Beach, a 5,000-acre mission-cum-tennis college presided over by Vic Braden, 47. Though Braden bears a faint resemblance to a vest-pocket Buddha and has a graduate degree in psychology, his methods epitomize two current hopes of Western civilization?a sense of humor and trust in technology...
...service loan-seeking Communists, several American banks have opened offices in Eastern Europe. Bank of America, Citibank and Chase Manhattan have all gone into Moscow. Manufacturers Hanover Trust has an office in Bucharest, and First National Bank of Chicago has one in Warsaw. The business has been lucrative. Commissions and miscellaneous fees can add up to $2 million on a $200 million loan-and that does not count later collections of interest. In addition, Communist countries have a good record of paying debts promptly. Says one American banker: "There is a lot of merit in lending to a stable, centralized...