Word: trusts
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Yang," "Chidori" and "Goat Dance." Danced to throaty cabaret songs composed by Zygmunta Koniecznego, Monreal's duet has less specific associations than the other drama and succeeds in its allusiveness. Laura Young and Woytek Louski sweep through a succession of breath-arresting lifts, revealing the tenderness and trust implicit in "duet...
Fearful Aloft. Wallace insists that 1976 will be his last campaign. "For one thing," he explains, "I'm tired of flying through thunderstorms." He has leased a $47,000-a-month BAC 1-11 (it has been named Trust the People) that transports 23 people in oil-baron style. But Wallace is still fearful aloft. Nor, at 56, can he count on his health holding up for another campaign (see MEDICINE). If he is denied the Democratic nomination-a virtual certainty-he is not sure what he will do. Though splinter groups want to run him on a third...
...draft softens some of the gloomier theologizing of the Anglican past. "The 1928 version is overloaded with sin and penitence," says Canon Charles Guilbert, 67, custodian of the Standard Book of Common Prayer and secretary of the liturgical commission. "The old Communion didn't really accept forgiveness. We trust God. We trust that if we confess, he will forgive...
...would be only a blip on an otherwise flat or slightly downward curve. Instead, an inexplicable renewal of optimism caused a wave of heavy buying, and the running of the bulls into the market began. As prices started to rise, the big institutions, such as banks' trust departments, pension funds, insurance companies and mutual funds, became anxious not to be left behind. They pumped massive amounts of cash into stock purchases, as evidenced by more than 5,000 trades of 10,000 shares or more during January. Meanwhile private investors, who saw their long-depressed shares finally regain...
...OPEC's generosity likely to increase. According to a new study by Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., the collective surplus of OPEC nations plunged from $62 billion in 1974 to $29 billion in 1975. That drastic rate of decline will diminish as world demand for petroleum picks up again, but it appears that for many oil producers the annual payments surpluses have peaked-and so might their aid commitment...