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...universities, including Harvard and Wellesley, to heed the call to conscience which has generated these protests. Sigmund Abeles, Art Leon Apt, History Duncan Aswell, Eng. Grazia Avitabile, Ital. Mariam Berlin, His. Sharon Cadman, Eng. Elizabeth Conant, Bio. Ann Congleton, Phil. Helen Corsa, Eng. John Crawford, Music Ward Cromer, Psych. Fred Denbeaux, Bib. His. Jacqueline Evans, Math. David Ferry, Eng. John Graham, Math Laurel Furumoto, Psy. Rene Galand, French Edward Gulick, His. Jean Harrison, Bio. Walter Houghton, Eng. Gabriele Jackson, Eng. Owen Jander, Music Florence McCulloch, French Eleanor McLaughlin, His. Jeanette McPherrin, French Joan Melvin, Bio. Genworth Mofett, Art Torsten Norvig...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Dow Sit-in and Its Aftermath | 11/2/1967 | See Source »

...corporations have often found it difficult to recruit top foreign talent for their overseas executive suites. Lately, however, laboring for the Yankee dollar has begun to lose its stigma. Last week, in one of the year's more remarkable personnel coups. International Business Machines landed the Earl of Cromer, former governor of the Bank of England, as chairman of its subsidiary IBM United Kingdom holdings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Britain: For the Yankee Dollar | 9/29/1967 | See Source »

...What attracted me," said Lord Cromer, 49, "was the international aspect of the company. My job will be concerned with the broader policy issues." On both counts, the prescription fits his talents. As the youngest head of the Bank of England in two centuries, Cromer earned a reputation as an acerbic critic of Tory and Labor governments alike during his five-year (1961-66) governorship. His stature among bankers was enormous-and helped to raise the rescue funds overnight when eleven nations, including the willing U.S., came to the defense of the British pound at its moment of greatest peril...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Britain: For the Yankee Dollar | 9/29/1967 | See Source »

After leaving the Bank of England, Cromer returned to his first love, as a managing director of Baring Brothers, oldest (established 1763) and among the most powerful of British merchant banking dynasties. Cromer will keep that job, and his new associates should profit from the Establishment connection. Though IBM dominates computer-making in the U.S. and the rest of Europe, it has snared only about a third of the British market...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Britain: For the Yankee Dollar | 9/29/1967 | See Source »

...came to the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street directly from secondary school in Wands-worth, a lower middle-class section of London, O'Brien worked his way up in 39 years from clerk to chief cashier and deputy governor. Harold Wilson picked him to succeed Lord Cromer, who left at the end of his five-year term to resume his partnership in the famed banking house of Baring Brothers. The O'Brien appointment was calculated to offend neither the financial community of "the City," which would have resented the traditional selection of a Treasury aide, nor Labor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Britain: Time for Miracles | 7/15/1966 | See Source »

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