Word: micheles
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...baroque and classical enthusiasts, the New England Baroque Ensemble plays Purcell, Tomkins and Hume at Dunster House Library on Friday at 5:30 p.m. Also, the Cambridge Society for Early Music presents a concert of Mozart led by Michel Piquet on Monday evening at 8:30 p.m. in Sanders Theatre; tickets are at $7, $5, and $3 at the door. Call 247-1465. Finally, Robert and Catherine Strizich and Sandra Hammond play works of Foscarini, de Visee and Goultier in Gallery Gig at the Museum of Fine Arts (Gallery II-51). The lute, guitar and dance festivities begin...
Cambridge Society for Early Music--Michel Piguet conducts music of Mozart. At Sanders Theatre, Harvard, at 8:30 p.m. Admission at $7, $5 and $3. Call 247-1465 for details...
...dollar against the Swiss franc in a single day? It's out of this world!" Money traders worry quite as much as any finance minister about what the drop in the world's central trading currency is doing to the global structure of finance. Says Michel Grare, trader for Credit Lyonnais, a major French bank: "It's very worrying if one can't believe in the U.S. What, after all, is Switzerland? It could be fragile." Not a few money traders openly pine for the pre-1973 days of fixed exchange rates, when their business...
Burns was wooed to the Lazard firm by Andre Meyer, 80, the firm's longtime senior partner and chief deal maker who retired, at least formally, late last year. But he and his successor, Michel David-Weill, 45, a French-born, fourth-generation member of the founding Lazard family, have scored other recent recruiting coups. Three weeks before the Burns announcement, Lazard startled the club by world of New York investment banking by poaching four senior men from a much larger rival, Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb. Among them was James Glanville, 55, a Lehman managing director...
...eight years. Amnesty International has launched a campaign against alleged torture used by government officials on Argentine political prisoners, and is backed by, among others, the West German Protestant Church. Anti-Argentina protesters in France bombed a travel agency offering World Cup tours. An assailant unsuccessfully attempted to kidnap Michel Hidalgo, the French team's manager. Nor was such violence by European protesters the only source of worry. West German officials, concerned about possible left-wing terrorism during the series, and mindful of the 1972 Olympic massacre at Munich, insisted on sending with their squad twelve members...