Muriel Siebert, a initial lady to possess a chair on a building of a New York Stock Exchange, talks about risk-taking, feminism, and ethics in finance.
By David A. Kaplan
Muriel Siebert in 2011.
FORTUNE — Muriel “Mickie” Siebert has been famous as a “First Lady of Wall Street” for roughly dual generations. She was a initial lady to possess a chair on a New York Stock Exchange, profitable scarcely half a million dollars in 1967 for a privilege. (She says she borrowed a infancy of it, from Chase Manhattan, after David Rockefeller privately authorized a loan.)
At a time, there were 1,365 other members, all men. SKIRT INVADES EXCHANGE, proclaimed
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Source:
http://www.ezonearticle.com/2013/02/04/wall-streets-toughest-octogenarian-woman/
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