Word: goldmans
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...Murphy consultant Michael Goldman said, "There is no question that this particular survey was intended to pressure the convention to give him 15 percent he hasn't earned...
MOVE OVER, JESSE. Virginia Governor Douglas Wilder, a moderate black leader, may end up stealing some of Jesse Jackson's thunder. His state party chairman, Paul Goldman, is eagerly mapping out 1992 scenarios, and Wilder's travel plans suggest far more than a mere vice-presidential bid. He has visited California twice in the past two weeks, and is poised to announce a foray into New Hampshire this spring. Can Iowa be far behind...
...evil male characters do, this is due to his priestly duties and possibly to his homosexuality. As a representative of Christianity, he influences, through religion, the two women in the work who most fail to live to the potential of their own womanhood. The first, the elder Etain (Patty Goldman), Conor's mother, dies in child birth seemingly because she is afraid of it. The other, Elen (Jennifer Harris), Angus' molested daughter, turns from her incestuousness to chastity...
...growth. The battle between the central bank and the Finance Ministry was unusually public and sparked widespread anxiety among investors. "For the first time in memory, there was an open dispute. That was very un-Japanese, and it caused a lot of uncertainty," observes Robert Hormats, vice chairman of Goldman Sachs International. By midweek the Finance Ministry agreed to the rate increase. But not everyone cheered the end of easy money. Says Hormats: "Once the Japanese established a tighter monetary policy, it took the wind out of the stock market...
Lured by the seemingly inexhaustible demand for junk-bond financing, Drexel's Wall Street rivals rushed into the profitable business. The newcomers included such prominent firms as Goldman Sachs, First Boston, Merrill Lynch and Shearson Lehman Hutton. While Drexel's grip on the market gradually slipped, in 1985 it controlled more than half of the new issues. "Drexel is like a god," Michael Boylan, president of the publishing firm Macfadden Holdings, declared in a magazine article that a Drexel executive proudly framed. "They are awesome. You hate to do business against them...