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When Georg Henschel gave the first downbeat on Oct. 22, 1881, he brought to life the dream of Major Henry Lee Higginson-Civil War veteran, philanthropist, amateur musician and founder of the Boston Symphony. Under a succession of Germanic conductors the young orchestra survived and flourished, moving into its incomparable home, Symphony Hall, in 1900. The modern, French-Russian character of the B.S.O. dates back to 1918, with Conductors Henri Rabaud, Pierre Monteux and, most important, Serge Koussevitzky. During his 25-year reign-from 1924 to 1949-Koussevitzky. During his 25-year reign-from 1924 to 1949 - Koussevitzky presented...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Centennial at Symphony | 11/2/1981 | See Source »

With Fritz-Aurel Goergen, the boss of West Germany's Henschel Works, awaiting trial on charges that he cheated the government in a $16 million tank deal, businessmen have been wondering what would happen to the vast heavy-equipment firm he made one of Germany's most profitable. Last week Essen's Rheinische Stahlwerke ended the speculation by making a bid to purchase Henschel, a move that would catapult the enlarged firm to third place among Germany's coal and steel giants (after Thyssen and Krupp...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: Surprise Bid | 7/24/1964 | See Source »

Rheinstahl sells steel to Henschel, whose production of heavy trucks complements Rheinstahl's lighter line. Most important, Henschel is at a crossroads where it needs both larger injections of cash and a new guiding light to replace the ailing Goergen. Fritz-Aurel Goergen would be delighted to sell out to Rheinstahl, and in fact began merger talks with Rheinstahl Boss Werner Sohngen more than a year ago, but he owns only 53.9% of the stock. Most of the rest is in the hands of such U.S. investors as Morgan Guaranty Trust, Wall Street's Burnham & Co. and Financier...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: Surprise Bid | 7/24/1964 | See Source »

Sensational Arrests. Germans are distressingly familiar with Untersuchungshaft; it inevitably became a favorite Gestapo tactic. But only recently, as the result of a number of sensational investigative arrests, has a reform movement been started. Half a dozen ranking executives of West Germany's big Henschel Werke (locomotives, trucks, land movers) have been jailed on suspicion of defrauding the West German Defense Ministry, including President Fritz-Aurel Goergen, who was hauled away from a banquet honoring Chancellor Ludwig Erhard (TIME, May 8). Germany's biggest clothing manufacturer, Alfons Muller-Wipperfurth, was grabbed from a hospital bed and jailed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Criminal Procedure: Reform in West Germany | 7/3/1964 | See Source »

Germans found it hard to imagine that a magnate of Goergen's stripe could be involved in fraud, especially since defense contracts represent only 15% of Henschel's business. "It would hardly seem worthwhile for a company as large and important as Henschel to cheat for such a minor sum," said a Bonn corporate lawyer. Many Germans were jarred, too, by the blunt manner of Goergen's arrest and imprisonment, especially since no charge was filed against him. The uneasiness about how he was being treated was heightened last week when he suffered a heart attack...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: A Giant Jailed | 5/8/1964 | See Source »

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