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Maurice Raymond “Hank” Greenberg (born May 4, 1925) is an American business executive and former chairman and chief executive officer of American International Group (AIG). Early life and education
Hank Greenberg, US, baseball HOF first baseman of the Detroit Tigers; general manager for the Cleveland Indians and Chicago White Sox, also part-time owner of the Indians. [24] Stephen Greenberg, US, deputy commissioner of baseball under Bart Giamatti and chief baseball officer later on. Jay Horwitz (born 1945), US, New York Mets executive
Later ran syndicate gambling operations in Cleveland with Moe Dalitz, Jack Licavoli, Maurice Kleinman and Thomas Joseph McGinty (aka T. J. McGinty). [2] [5] [6] [7] Arnold "The Brain" Rothstein: 1882–1928 1900s–1920s One of the first major underworld figures in New York during the early 20th century.
Greenberg, a Jewish scholar who would later become chairman of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, was different from the other rabbis he met, Polack said. He found Greenberg inspiring.
Juval Aviv (1947–), Israeli-American founder of corporate investigations firm Interfor International [37] [38]; Larry Baer, CEO of MLB's San Francisco Giants [39]; Henry (1922–2019) and Richard Bloch (1926–2004), founders of tax preparation company H&R Block, Inc. [40]
He taught in the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Nebraska from 1976 to 1986 and then became the University of Hartford's first Maurice Greenberg Professor of Judaic Studies and director of its Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies from 1986 to 1998. At Hartford he was also professor of history, served as acting chair ...
Let’s heed the message of the “Festival of Lights” and may the light of goodness we introduce to our world banish the darkness of evil.
Greenberg was born on January 1, 1911, in Greenwich Village, New York City, to Romanian Jewish immigrant parents from Bucharest, Sarah (née Schwartz) (1881–1951) and David Greenberg (1883–1969). He was the third of four children and had two brothers, Ben (1906–1994) and Joe (1915–2001), and a sister, Lillian (1907–1989).