Word: banke
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Student Employment Office is setting up a "talent bank" of skilled student labor to supplement its present random system of job placement, SEO director R. Jerrold Gibson '51 said yesterday...
...employers think of hiring students now because of the difficulty involved in finding the right student for the right job," Gibson said. "With a talent bank we can give employers access to students with the skills they are looking for," he said...
...Worms. Through their non-bank subsidiaries, the holding companies are at least theoretically free to spread far afield - into retailing, manufacturing, transportation or whatever else looks profitable. That possibility plainly wor ries the Federal Reserve Board. Says Chairman William McChesney Martin: "This is a real can of worms. It can affect the whole capitalistic system in the U.S. The line between banking and commerce should not be erased...
Most bankers disavow voracious intentions. They are, after all, sensitive to the popular concern that banks, with their vast resources, could grab too much control over the economy if permitted to do so. "We don't want to go into the steel business," says Chairman George S. Moore of Manhattan's First National City Bank, which recently won approval from Comptroller of the Currency William B. Camp to turn itself into a one-bank holding company...
This idea comes out in fiction, where men are impotent and women are insatiable. In The Graduate, Benjamin must undergo ordeal by orgasm before he can act decisively; in Bonnie and Clyde, the woman takes bank robbery and murder in her stride while the man battles paralysis (this is not to say that Bonnie is crudely portrayed). Man must prove himself against the external and feminine. The hero of Malraux's La Voie Royale is driven to conquer nameless woman after nameless woman. The vision of writing that emerges from all this is somewhat masturbatory--the emphasis...