Word: banker
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Another new investment banker, Fowler left the Government recently to become a partner of Manhattan's Goldman Sachs...
...partners, Meyer fled to New York when Hitler invaded France in 1940. In the years since, he has helped negotiate some of Wall Street's biggest deals, including the 1966 McDonnell-Douglas merger, for which his firm's fee was $1,000,000. Besides serving as investment banker to such companies as ITT and Owens-Illinois, he is a director of RCA and Allied Chemical in the U.S., Fiat and Montecatini Edison in Europe...
...same time, Nixon encouraged his appointees to hold news conferences. The danger of attempting to say nothing while talking, however, immediately became apparent. When Chicago Banker David Kennedy, who will head the Treasury, was asked about the Government's fixed price for gold ($35 an ounce), he declared: "I want to keep every option open." Kennedy really meant to avoid any policy statement at all. But his remark immediately set off a flurry of speculation that the gold price might be raised (see BUSINESS...
...director of the Budget Bureau will be Chicago Banker Robert Mayo, 52, who already has an impressive command of the problems he will have to grapple with after Jan. 20: last year he was staff director of a blue-ribbon study of ways to make the federal budget show a truer picture of what the U.S. Government actually spends. James Keogh, also 52, who is on leave from his post as executive editor of TIME, will be a special White House assistant handling a new job in which his function will be, he said, that of "a sort of managing...
...dedication to efficiency. Like his descendants, too, he showed the strain of contrariness and in bred eccentricity that helps make Manchester's series of family portraits a gallery of near-grotesques. Alfred ranted against "speculators, stock-exchange Jews, share swindlers and similar parasites"; then he borrowed from the banker Salomon Oppenheim to meet his payroll. Paranoiacally fearful of Socialist tendencies among his workers, he hired an agent to inspect even the "used toilet paper" for seditious notes. He also located his office above a stable so that he could inhale the "healthgiving" aroma of manure...