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Nat Goldhaber

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Nat Goldhaber
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUC Berkeley MA in Education
Scientific career
InstitutionsClaremont Creek Ventures

Amos Nathaniel "Nat" Goldhaber is an American venture capitalist, computer entrepreneur and politician. Goldhaber helped found Maharishi University of Management and was special assistant to lieutenant governor William Scranton III and founder and chief executive of TOPS, a computer networking company. He served as president of the venture capital firm Cole Gilburne Goldhaber & Ariyoshi Management and was the founding CEO of an Internet marketing company that became a public stock offering in 1999. He was the 2000 U.S. Vice President candidate for the Natural Law Party[1] and serves as the managing director of the investment firm Claremont Creek Ventures.[2]

Education

Goldhaber received a BA in interdisciplinary studies from Maharishi International University and an MA in Education from the University of California, Berkeley.[3] In June 2013 he received a PhD (H. C.) from Maharishi University of Management[4]. Goldhaber is an emeritus member of the Executive Board of the College of Letters and Science at UC Berkeley.

Goldhaber is a private pilot and holds an ATP Pilot License (twin, instrument, CitationJet single pilot type rating, Citation X rating)

Career

In the 1960s, Goldhaber became interested in meditation and worked directly with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the founder of the Transcendental Meditation technique.[1] In 1971, Goldhaber helped establish Maharishi International University, an accredited institution in Fairfield, Iowa, now called Maharishi University of Management.[1][3] In 1976, he wrote TM: an Alphabetical Guide to the Transcendental Meditation Program with Denise Denniston and Peter McWilliams.[5]

From 1979 to 1982, Goldhaber worked in Pennsylvania politics as special assistant to the lieutenant governor William Scranton III and later as the interim director of the state's energy agency.[1] Goldhaber left government to build a career in high technology and founded his first company, Centram Systems Inc., which developed networking for personal computers.[1] Goldhaber was founder and chief executive of TOPS, a computer networking company which Goldhaber sold to Sun Microsystems in 1987 for $20 million. Goldhaber then served as Vice President of Sun Microsystems.[3] Centram Systems product, called TOPS ("Transcendental Operating System"), allowed transparent file sharing among Macs, PCs, and Unix machines, using the AppleTalk protocol.[1]

In 1989, Goldhaber became the president of Cole Gilburne Goldhaber & Ariyoshi Management, a venture capital firm specializing in high technology for computers.[1][3] In 1992, IBM and Apple Computer Inc. appointed Goldhaber as president and founding CEO of their joint multi-media venture, Kaleida Labs.[1] In 1995, Goldhaber became the founding CEO of Cybergold, an Internet marketing and payment system which went public in 1999 and was acquired by MyPoints.com, Inc. in August 2000 in a stock-for-stock deal worth approximately $160 million.[3]

Goldhaber was the Natural Law Party nominee for Vice President in 2000[6] on the ticket with presidential candidate, John Hagelin. At the convention for a splinter faction of the Reform Party of the United States of America allied with party founder Ross Perot, Goldhaber won the nomination for Vice President over candidate Lenora Fulani by a vote of 120–66. The Federal Elections Commission later decided that Buchanan and Fulani were the Reform Party's legitimate nominees.[7]

In 2005, Goldhaber established Oakland-based Claremont Creek Ventures with colleagues, Randy Hawks and John Steuart, specializing in clean energy and healthcare investments in the San Francisco Bay Area. Goldhaber currently serves as Managing Director.[3]

In 2011, AOL.com named Goldhaber resident expert at Claremont Creek Ventures on energy conservation and management systems and one of the "Top Five Clean Energy VCs and Principals" in the US.[8][8]

In 2012, Goldhaber and Claremont Creek Ventures commissioned a study by graduate students at the University of Michigan Erb Institute for Global Sustainable Enterprise that determined that the United States could reach energy independence through significant penetration of electric and natural gas vehicles into the market, and increased public and private sector investment in renewables, energy efficiency technologies and North American oil reserves. The results of this study were released at the UC Berkeley BERC Energy Symposium.[9]

Other

The National Academies of Science, Engineering, Medicine: Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences, appointed Goldhaber to its Board on Energy and Environmental Systems[10]

Goldhaber is a member of the US Secret Service Electronics Crime Taskforce and an emeritus Member of the Federation of American Scientists.[3]

He is an Emeritus Member of the Silicon Valley Association of Startup Entrepreneurs (SVASE) and a member of the Board of the Lester Center for Entrepreneurship at the Haas School of Business, the Center for Entrepreneurship and Technology and the Berkeley SkyDeck Incubator UC Berkeley.

He is a friend of Electronic Frontier Foundation founder John Perry Barlow.[11]

He serves as Special Deputy and was former Commander San Francisco Sheriff's Air Squadron[12]

Personal life

Goldhaber lives in Berkeley, California, with his wife, Marilyn,[3] a co-founder and board member of the Claremont Canyon Conservancy.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "NY Times, September 30, 1992, "Business Technology" Laurence Fisher". Nytimes.com. 1992-06-24. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
  2. ^ Our Team: Nat Goldhaber Archived 2012-08-04 at the Wayback Machine Claremont Creek Ventures web site, retrieved July 29, 2012
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "Claremont Creek Ventures web site". ClaremontCreek.com. Archived from the original on 2011-06-29. Retrieved 2011-01-15.
  4. ^ "Nat Goldhaber receives honorary degree -- Maharishi University of Management". youtube.com. Retrieved 2013-02-13.
  5. ^ Goldhaber, Nat; Denniston, Denise; McWilliams, Peter (1976). TM: an alphabetical guide to the transcendental meditation program. New York: Ballantine Books. ISBN 978-0-345-24096-5.
  6. ^ Oregon Voters' Pamphlet General Election 2000, page 8
  7. ^ Helm, Mark (September 13, 2000). "Buchanan wins fight for federal funds FEC rules in favor of arch-conservative in divided Reform Party". San Francisco Examiner. p. A.1.
  8. ^ a b "Top Five Clean Energy VCs and Principals". Internet Archive. Archived from the original on April 2012. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |archive-date= (help)
  9. ^ UC Berkeley BERC Energy Symposium.
  10. ^ "National Academies of Science, Engineering, Medicine - Board on Energy and Environmental Systems". March 3, 2018.
  11. ^ Who's Getting Your Vote?, Reason
  12. ^ Sheriff's Air Squadron website archive from 2007
Preceded by Natural Law Party Vice Presidential candidate
2000 (lost)
Succeeded by
(none)