Word: citizenships
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Captive. Other retiring directors had even less to say. For the record, Stanton Griffis, onetime U.S. Ambassador to Spain, was in Paris. Investment Banker Jansen Noyes and Motor Millionaire Walter P. Chrysler Jr. were "out of town." Financier William M. Greve, a man who temporarily gave up his U.S. citizenship in the 1930s, then returned home hurriedly from Liechtenstein just two jumps ahead of Hitler, was keeping his own counsel. One of the departing directors, demanding anonymity, told reporters: "We figured we'd get out while the getting was good." Only Wall Street Investor (Goldman, Sachs) Sidney J. Weinberg...
Harvard and M.I.T. are "capable and obligated to express the best ideals of citizenship and community" by leading in the re-design of Cambridge, the report added...
...lecture just to make sure that a fellow scientist read a paper about "rotten and decadent Western pseudoscience" exactly as it had been okayed. Suddenly Borodin balked and left the hall, pretending to be ill. Shortly afterward, in August 1948, acting from"instinctive self-preservation," Borodin renounced his Soviet citizenship and changed his name. According to his publishers, he now works in England in a job "where his scientific knowledge is in full...
...will be eligible for a Master's Degree in Economics. This incongruance in status exemplifies the contrast Gunter has found between U.S. and German higher education. In agreement with many previous observers, Gunter summarizes these difference through the aims of the two systems; individual scholarship in the German University; citizenship in the American college...
...Citizenship" Minor...