It certainly was one for many years, but is probably not now considered to be a blue chip firm.
No, I have never been refused any kind of bond.
1.47
It really means has your background and honesty been checked.
No
As of June 2014, Fort Knox has never been robbed. There has never been an attempted robbery to occur at the fort.
The Most Beatful "BLUE EYES" I have ever seen! Thank You.
It's called the Xerox Alto
Considering the fact that he is not, nor has he ever been, a smurf, I'm going to have to go with no.
Yes, a blue whale has been caught alive. In fact, thousands of them have been caught while still being alive.
We have high inferences of which colors are which. We have been creating names of material ever since Adam & eve.
NO blue represents hannakuh and that's it Christmas has always been represented by red and green
His favourite colour is purple. It's been that way ever sense 2016, he even said so on Twitter.
Mrs Field's chocolate chip cookies!
Steve Jobs and some of the Macintosh development team visited the Xerox Palo Alto Research Center where a system using a mouse and a graphical user interface was being developed. While the Apple team picked up some ideas there, the differences between the two systems are substantial. Some of the Xerox developers went to work for Apple and went on to develop their own system with features not included in the Xerox system.
Yes
yes multiple times but they look like a demented dog
A blue chip stock is the stock of a well-established company having stable earnings and no extensive liabilities. The term derives from casinos, where blue chips stand for counters of the highest value. Most blue chip stocks pay regular dividends, even when business is faring worse than usual. The phrase was coined by Oliver Gingold of Dow Jones sometime in 1923 or 1924. Company folklore recounts that the term apparently got its start when Gingold was standing by the stock ticker at the brokerage firm that later became Merrill Lynch. Noticing several trades at USD$200 or USD$250 a share or more, he said to Lucien Hooper of W.E. Hutton & Co. that he intended to return to the office to "write about these blue chip stocks." Thus the phrase was born. It has been in use ever since, originally in reference to high-priced stocks, more commonly used today to refer to high-quality stocks. In contemporary media, Blue Chips and their daily performances are frequently mentioned alongside other economic averages like the Dow Jones Industrial Average.