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Howard S. Levin opened his small fist and a cascade of varicolored business cards fluttered onto his luncheon table. One card identified him as president of Levin-Townsend Computer Corp. Others proclaimed separately that he headed three affiliates: Las Vegas' Bonanza Hotel & Casino, National Equities Inc. and Levin-Townsend Service Corp. "Take them," he told TIME Correspondent Rudolph Rauch last week. "They are all obsolete...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Entrepreneurs: A Stunning Coup | 2/2/1970 | See Source »

...corporate coup organized with stunning secrecy, 45-year-old Levin had been bounced from the presidency of Levin-Townsend Computer, a seven-year-old leasing company that aspired to become a conglomerate. As Levin tells the story, he went to a board meeting in Manhattan after Co-Founder James E. Townsend had told him that there would be no agenda. "Suddenly," says Levin, "there was an agenda and a motion removing me as president." It carried 4-2, and Levin trudged back to his office-which he says he found locked and watched by security guards...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Entrepreneurs: A Stunning Coup | 2/2/1970 | See Source »

...Fling on Broadway. In 1962 Levin, who once taught college mathematics courses, teamed up with Townsend, a former Union Carbide executive, in creating a company to buy computers from IBM and lease them to users at a discount. The firm prospered, and Levin began spreading into the far-off fields of restaurant franchising, real estate and Nevada gambling, in which he had no real management experience. After Levin-Townsend bought the Bonanza Hotel last March, Levin got into what gambling authorities described as a "childish feud" with Nathan S. Jacobson, who owned an important minority share in the hotel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Entrepreneurs: A Stunning Coup | 2/2/1970 | See Source »

Executives who have dealt with Levin say that he rammed through several acquisitions without consulting all of his directors. Levin concedes that "maybe I made some mistakes," but insists that directors were fully informed and made no objections. The acquisitions generally expanded Levin-Townsend's revenues but did nothing for profits. Sales in the first half of the company's 1970 fiscal year, ended last September, rose to $33 million from $23 million a year earlier, but profits dropped to $3.6 million from $5.2 million. The company is expected to report a loss for the Dec. 31 quarter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Entrepreneurs: A Stunning Coup | 2/2/1970 | See Source »

Wall Streeters expect Levin, who owns 9% of Levin-Townsend stock, to start a proxy fight. He speaks with patronizing contempt of the executives who dismissed him. Of Onetime Friend Townsend he says: "Jim could implement that which I could conceive." With MacArthur-like resolve, Levin vows: "I will be back...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Entrepreneurs: A Stunning Coup | 2/2/1970 | See Source »

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