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2 unusual facts about The Bankers


Martin Mayer

Martin Prager Mayer (born January 14, 1928, New York City) is the writer of 35 non-fiction books, including Madison Avenue, U.S.A. (1958), The Schools (1961), The Lawyers (1967), About Television (1972), The Bankers (1975), The Builders (1978), Risky Business: The Collapse of Lloyd's of London (1995), The Bankers: The Next Generation (1997), The Fed (2001), and The Judges (2005).

The Bankers

The Bankers is the 1975 book by the economist-writer Martin Mayer that describes the industry just at the cusp of deregulation.



see also

Charlie Liffiton

Over the next 2 season, he played for the Bankers and at least one match for the Montreal Wanderers.

Chester Adgate Congdon

He had membership with the Kitchi Gammi, Northland Country, Commercial and Duluth Boat Clubs, all of Duluth; the Minnesota Club of St. Paul; the Minneapolis Club of Minneapolis; the University Club of Chicago; the Duquesne Club of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; the Bankers Club of New York; the Commercial Club of North Yakima; and with various college fraternities, including the Upsilon Kappa, Psi Upsilon, Theta Nu Epsilon and Phi Beta Kappa.

Montagu Norman, 1st Baron Norman

Ahamed, Liaquat, Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World, Penguin Books, 2009.

The Granville Hotel, Ramsgate

In the following years the hotel was owned by the bankers Coutts, an additional hall (new Granville Hall) was designed and completed in July, 1874 by the architect J T Wimperis.

Theodosia Burr Alston

The bankers populated the sandbank islands near Nags Head, North Carolina, pirating wrecks and murdering both passengers and crews.