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...larger Soviet designs in Africa-and with rising dissatisfaction among his own people because of high prices and corruption, Mobutu has vented his frustrations on foreign newsmen, who were branded "an irresponsible gang of adventurers" by the government-controlled press. Zaïre even expelled Associated Press Correspondent Michael Goldsmith for reporting-quite accurately -that a major rally, called by Mobutu to demonstrate popular support for his regime, had been marked by "an almost complete lack of enthusiasm." No matter. At week's end the government turned out 70,000 people for a better organized rally in a Kinshasa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ZAIRE: Signs of Support | 4/18/1977 | See Source »

...transatlantic food conglomerate and a director of three great European banking houses. With a French wife and two children in Paris, and an openly acknowledged mistress. Lady Annabel Birley, and two children in London, he lives a heady cross-Channel version of Captain's Paradise. Sir James Michael Goldsmith, 44, juggles all this and just about everything else with the aplomb of a crack gambler -which he also is. His latest gamble, to become an international press lord...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Sir Jimmy's Cross-Channel Fiefdom | 4/18/1977 | See Source »

...guild's members make the point that they have greater freedom-and mutual trust-than they could find on Seventh Avenue. "There's no backstabbing here," says Dennis Goldsmith, 31, a Jonathan Logan alumnus who started his highly successful Ma Chemise in Los Angeles only some 18 months ago. C.C.F.G. President Donald Cooper, 38, a native New Yorker and an owner of D.B.A. by Theodore, claims: "The goal of the guild is total mesmerization. We wanted people to jump up and down -and they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: The Unbuckled Sunbelt Look | 2/21/1977 | See Source »

Russell D. Goldsmith '71 sat in his office at Irell and Manella, a law firm in Los Angeles last week, and recalled his four years at Harvard. "Going to Harvard at any time should affect your values," Goldsmith said after being asked whether his values had changed because of the period in which he attended Harvard. "The kind of questioning that went on was basically positive. There was a particularly close examination of the values of individuals, the country and the University. Now, I question what I'm doing and why I'm doing it more. I have a greater...

Author: By Marc M. Sadowsky, | Title: Class of '71 Views 60's Turmoil As Positive, Mind-Opening Era | 6/14/1976 | See Source »

...Before Goldsmith went to law school and became a lawyer specializing in tax and entertainment law, he worked for the New York City government on an urban fellowship. "Working for New York City reflects some commitment to the values that grew out of that period," Goldsmith commented. "The problem for a lot of people who came away from the late sixties with a heightened concern with current issues is that many are having problems finding channels to utilize this concern. It's harder to be sure what is the right thing to do in different situations. You want to sustain...

Author: By Marc M. Sadowsky, | Title: Class of '71 Views 60's Turmoil As Positive, Mind-Opening Era | 6/14/1976 | See Source »

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