Captain Llewellyn ("Lew") Jenkins had a problem. A dozen Nazi SS Troopers had just escaped through Russian-controlled territory in Czechoslovakia and surrendered to his American soldiers. World War II in Europe had just ended. Lew was under orders, from General Dwight D. Eisenhower himself, to return to the Russians any German soldiers coming from Russian-controlled territory. Lew had done that the day before, when another dozen SS Troopers had surrendered to his troops. But the Russians executed them. What should he do? Comply with Eisenhower's orders, or save the lives of a dozen men who, just weeks before, had been trying to kill him? Decades later, Lew, now second in command of the third largest commercial bank in the United States and President of the powerful American Bankers Association, was summoned to the White House. The prime interest rate that banks charge to their best customers was nearly 21 percent. Some people were blaming President Ronald Reagan for the high rates. His staff was looking for a scapegoat. Bankers were easy targets. No one loves a banker. What should Lew do? In his 1998 book "The Greatest Generation," Tom Brokaw wrote that the men and women who grew up during the Great Depression and fought in World War II represented "the greatest generation any society has ever produced." They fought not for fame, but because it was the "right thing to do." Lew Jenkins, who is 94 and still going strong, is living proof that Brokaw was right.
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