René Boël
Count René Boël (1899-1990) was a Belgian industrialist and Director of the Usines Gustave Boël. He was married with Yvonne Solvay (1896-1930), granddaughter of Ernest Solvay. They have two sons Yves Boël and Pol Boël and one daughter Antoinette Boël (1925 - 1982).
Career
After his marriage, he became director at UCB and at Solvay. During his career he advised the Belgian government in exile during World War II, and founded the Museum of Modern Art in Brussels. He was the first President of the Belgian-American Association, and chaired, between 1950 and 1981, the European League for Economic Cooperation,[1] and was heavily involved in the European Movement.[2]
Sources
- The Diffusion of US Management Models and the Role of the University: the Case of Belgium (1945-1970) - Kenneth Bertrams, July 2001
- Kenneth Bertrams, Converting Academic Expertize into Industrial Innovation: University-based Research at Solvay and Gevaert, 1900–1970, Enterprise and Society
gollark: Meanwhile, AMD's 3950X is... £700 or so, I think, probably uses one of the best (perf-wise) architectures in existence, and has 16 cores.
gollark: You can get consumer-platform 16-cores.
gollark: Octa-core 4GHz CPUs are quite old news now.
gollark: Isn't SPARC kind of ancient? I think newer x86 stuff would be faster.
gollark: Security through obscurity *always* works! RIGHT?!
References
- Some outstanding People, in: elec-lece.eu.
- Evans-Pritchard, Ambrose (1 June 2014). "Euro-federalists financed by US spy chiefs". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 1 June 2014.
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