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...COMPETITIVE WORLD," ACKNOWLEDGED David Rowland, chairman of Lloyd's of London, "we have performed very poorly." That was hardly news for the nearly 20,000 "Names," Lloyd's investors who in some instances have lost fortunes as the 300-year-old insurance firm bled $9.4 billion in red ink over a four- year period. Losses for 1990, to be reported in June, could be a record $4.4 billion. What was news was the unveiling of Lloyd's first ever business plan -- a 70-page overhaul designed to attract new investors and allow companies, starting next year, to become members...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Name-Saving Plan | 5/10/1993 | See Source »

...association attempts to address the question of science's future at a time when "science and its role in both national and global affairs are being questioned and debated with fervor," according to AAAS President F. Sherwood Rowland...

Author: By Virginia A. Triant, | Title: Science, Social Issues Linked | 2/12/1993 | See Source »

Harvard Institute for Learning in Retirement. Clarinetist William Lipscomb, Cellist Poppy Dorsam and pianist Rowland Sturges will perform chamber music by Beethoven and Brahms. Blacksmith House, Spiegel Performance Hall, 56 Brattle St., 3:15 p.m. Free...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Listings | 11/19/1992 | See Source »

...doing so at least twice: during the New Hampshire primary campaign, when he dropped 13 points in four days, to the edge of extinction; and in June, when he had the Democratic nomination locked up but was running behind Perot as well as Bush. In early February columnists Rowland Evans and Robert Novak reported that "mainline Democratic politicians" considered Clinton to be "one of the walking dead who sooner or later will keel over." That sentiment would be repeated many times until the late-summer polls gave...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bill Clinton: The Long Road | 11/2/1992 | See Source »

Stung by heavy losses and highly critical of management, many of the Names (as investors are known) who make up the Lloyd's insurance market had long demanded the resignation of chairman David Coleridge, 60. Last week Coleridge stepped down and nominated as his successor David Rowland, 58, chief executive of the Sedgwick Group, an insurance firm. Since Rowland is considered a close associate of the former CEO, dissident Names are less than euphoric...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Less Than Euphoric | 8/10/1992 | See Source »

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