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Word: goergen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...dessert time at the banquet marking Chancellor Ludwig Erhard's ceremonial visit to the Hanover Fair. Suddenly a Nachtisch of grim-faced police appeared. To the astonishment of the crowd, they arrested and marched away Fritz-Aurel Goergen, the president of the vast Henschel Works, whose $125 million in annual sales cover locomotives, trucks and heavy machinery. Before the week was out, two other Henschel executives had been arrested, and four had had their homes and offices searched. Germany was faced with what may be its biggest postwar business scandal, which quickly began making bold headlines and even bolder...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: A Giant Jailed | 5/8/1964 | See Source »

Suspicion of Fraud. Under German law, prosecutors need not immediately bring charges against arrested suspects, and the Koblenz prosecutors directing the Henschel case were tightlipped. Ruhr-born Goergen was simply confined to a Kassel jail on "suspicion of fraud against the German government." But in the German business community, the word spread that the charges involved faked invoices and old parts passed off as new in a $16 million defense contract awarded to the Henschel Works to provide spare parts for U.S.-built M-47 and M48 tanks used by the West German army...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: A Giant Jailed | 5/8/1964 | See Source »

German businessmen were particularly stunned by the stature of the company and the colleague involved. Tapped by occupation authorities after the war as apolitical enough to manage part of the old Thyssen steelworks, Goergen built Phoenix-Rheinrohr into the nation's second largest steel company before he and Widow Amelie Thyssen, his principal stockholder, split in a disagreement over policy. With the $600,000 settlement that he received after resigning, Goergen bought into Henschel, a once mighty steam-locomotive maker in Kassel that had sagged into receivership because it had underestimated the diesel locomotive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: A Giant Jailed | 5/8/1964 | See Source »

Loss of Honor. Working twelve-hour days, short, blunt-mannered Fritz-Aurel rebuilt the giant, expanded into industrial machinery and helicopters, sold 44% of his stock to such U.S. investors as Morgan Guaranty Trust and Yale University when German bankers refused to finance further expansion. Goergen lived like the entrepreneur he was. His suburban Düsseldorf villa, ransacked by police for evidence, is filled with rich rugs, works of art and salons the size of tennis courts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: A Giant Jailed | 5/8/1964 | See Source »

...more revenue for such ancillary services as hotels, restaurants and airlines. But even as they tallied up their new orders, Germany's businessmen debated whether the Hanover Fair -or, for that matter, Europe's proliferation of industrial fairs-was really worth the bother. Said Fritz-Aurel Goergen, managing director of exhibiting Henschel (trucks, heavy machinery): "There's probably nobody who doesn't recognize that this is a drain of money, manpower and time that borders on insanity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: Dancing at Every Wedding | 5/17/1963 | See Source »

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