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Word: goldmans (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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...other articles deal with Africa: "Israel in Africa: A Survey" by Guido Goldman, and "Israel in Kenya: A Case Study" by Emily Shrader. Miss Shrader, a Radcliffe junior who recently returned from a year in Kenya, emphasizes the political problems of Israel's diplomatic invasion of Africa. She notes that Israeli socialism is very appealing to the Kenyans, and Israeli agricultural problems are very similar to those faced by most of East Africa. In all, however, she is not sanguine about the success of Israel's venture. She warns that propaganda from the Muslim countries in the Casablanca bloc...

Author: By Steven V. Roberts, | Title: Mosaic | 2/13/1963 | See Source »

...Ramac 305 computer is the soul of a profitable, year-old company called Telecredit, Inc., bossed by Chairman Robert Goldman, 36, an electrical engineer, and President Ronald Katz, 26, a businesslike onetime assistant dean of students at U.C.L.A. The computer at Telecredit headquarters is programmed with the name, number and physical description recorded on each of California's 8,500,000 drivers' licenses, and with the latest police reports on check forgeries or thefts. When a stranger wants to cash a check with a Telecredit subscriber, the subscriber asks for his driver's license and reports...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Services: Checking the Bouncers | 1/4/1963 | See Source »

Subscribers pay $30 a month for the direct telephone line to Telecredit, plus 20? each for every inquiry above 150. So far, 400 Los Angeles companies have signed up, including Sears, Montgomery Ward, the May Co., and almost all major supermarket chains in the area. Katz and Goldman expect to expand into San Francisco and San Diego this year, then reach eastward. One of their sales points: the number of bad checks passed in Los Angeles declined almost...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Services: Checking the Bouncers | 1/4/1963 | See Source »

...both Harvard and Princeton. He was an editorial writer for McGraw-Hill's Business Week when he joined the draft-Ike movement in 1951. After six years with Ike, Hauge was lured away from the White House in 1958 when ubiquitous Wall Streeter Sidney Weinberg. a partner of Goldman, Sachs & Co., persuaded him to become chairman of the finance committee at Manufacturers Trust Co. When Manufacturers merged with the Hanover Bank last year. Hauge became vice chairman, a job in which he was charged mainly with managing the bank's large investment portfolio. He will become president next...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Personnel: Smooth Shift | 1/4/1963 | See Source »

...President can persuade Congress to vote a sizable cut in income taxes. U.S. businessmen, enthusiastically on the President's side for a change, view the proposed tax cut much as a company might view a loan. Says influential Wall Streeter Sidney Weinberg, partner of the investment banking house of Goldman, Sachs & Co.: "It's just like when General Motors invests in a new plant?it gets its money back over a period of years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Competition Goes Global | 12/28/1962 | See Source »

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