Word: goldmans
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...Takasu '98, a concentrator in East Asian Studies (EAS) and economics, worked for the U.S. investment bank Goldman Sachs in Tokyo last summer. He says that Japan is actually a very exciting place to work right...
...story to appeal to adults," says Mechanic, "particularly women who are most likely to take their kids to the movies." To keep Bluth from wandering too far into his trademark whimsy, the Fox creative brass kept tight reins on script and character development. They also insisted that he and Goldman give up their old-fashioned Rostrum camera and use Silicon Graphics computers in the studio Fox built for them in Phoenix. Says Goldman: "They pulled Don and me into the 21st century, kicking and screaming...
...again about Lange and Vannatter!" Dunne does add detail and atmosphere, and recounts a few incidents that are fresh. In one of the book's most startling scenes, Barry Scheck, the defense lawyer who specializes in DNA evidence, takes Dunne aside and says that he is "haunted" by the Goldman family. "You know," Dunne quotes Scheck as saying, "in every job there are things to do that you don't want to do. I'm defending this guy." A few days later, Scheck reminds Dunne of the conversation and tells him briskly that he absolutely believes in Simpson's innocence...
Scheck denies he ever said anything that suggested he felt guilty for defending Simpson. "I accidentally bumped into Kim Goldman," he says. "She reacted as if she had been hit by a cattle prod. I wanted Dunne to tell the Goldmans I would steer clear of them. I also said that they looked like good people and that I felt their loss." He insists the second encounter never happened. Told of Scheck's version, Dunne literally gasps and says he told a number of people about these exchanges at the time. "I was so moved by what...
...trial was a great story; to the attorneys it seemed to be a competition; to the public it was a mini-series. Certainly, Dunne relished the spectacle, but more than anyone else, he passionately attended to what the trial was really about--the slayings of Nicole Simpson and Ron Goldman. Having seen the hand marks of his daughter's killer on her purple, swollen neck, Dunne knows the reality of murder. No writer could have used that knowledge with more decency or energy...