Word: mahoney
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Good Humor Man. Mahoney, who was personally recruited by Simon for the chief executive's chair, seems effervescent enough for the task. A New York City native who now occupies a Park Avenue apartment scarcely a block from the old East Side neighborhood in which he was born, Mahoney began his business career as a mailroom clerk in the advertising agency of Ruthrauff & Ryan. While working at the job, he commuted to Philadelphia's Wharton School of Finance, ultimately earned both a business-school degree and an account executive's office at Ruthrauff & Ryan...
...announced that he was relinquishing the post of board chairman of Wheeling Steel, which he has held since Hunt Foods acquired a major interest in the West Virginia steel firm in 1964. Next, in an unrelated move, he arranged the appointment of Colgate-Palmolive Executive Vice President David J. Mahoney, 43, as new president and chief executive officer of Canada...
...Mahoney appointment is the kind of creativity that Simon enjoys. Canada Dry has long been run by Roy W. Moore, 75, as chairman, and Moore's son, Roy Jr., 47, as president and chief executive. Both fought Simon vigorously two years ago when he bought a block of stock and first sought a seat on the board of directors. But the Moores were open to the criticism that Canada Dry, with a market in both soft drinks and whisky and sales of $171 million annually, has failed to live up to its marketing possibilities in spite of a record...
...Mahoney is a dedicated marketing man. "I like to get up in the mornings," he says, letting it be known that he can hardly wait to get at the kind of consumer product sales he was charged with at Colgate-Palmolive. Moving from second slot in an $800 million-a-year company to the top job in a less than $200 million-a-year corporation is a step that Mahoney considers a challenge. He claims no fear of Coca-Cola and Pepsi-Cola, Canada Dry's two higher-ranked competitors in the soft-drink field. Says...
...results of preelection polls to make a far-out analogy between California's New Leftists who voted for Reagan and the German Leftists of the 1930s who voted for Hitler on the theory that he would soon collapse. In a more jocular vein, MacNeil explained that Democrat George Mahoney had lost in his bid to become Maryland's Governor because such traditional Maryland Democratic voters as David Brinkley had turned against their party...