George Goldberg,
former editor and
publisher of SCAN
Newsletter, died on
December 10, 2003 at
North Shore Hospital
in Manhasset, LI
from cardiac arrest
due to complications
from pneumonia.
George was born on
March 19, 1925 in
Harlem, New York
City, the second son
of a retail salesman
of fabric for
women's dresses.
Both his parents
had been youngsters
from Russia who
spoke no English
when they arrived in
the U.S. by boat
from Europe, via
Ellis Island, just
after the turn of
the century. Their
poor families had
settled in Brooklyn
in search of the
American dream.
George graduated
from Lafayette High
School in Brooklyn
in January 1942, two
months short of his
17th birthday and
one month after
Pearl Harbor.
After completing a
year at City College
of NY, he was
drafted in May 1943,
after he turned 18.
He trained for
half-a-year in the
Army Air Corps to be
an
officer/navigator,
but, after the
Battle of the Bulge,
he was transferred
to the regular Army
and served in France
and Germany for 14
months as a private
in the headquarters
unit of the Seventh
Army, 63rd Division,
253rd Regiment.
After the war, he
graduated from City
College of NY in
1948, majoring in
statistics, and then
received a Masters
in business
administration from
NYU two years later.
His first job, in
Manhattan, was
project leader for
three years with a
market research
agency specializing
in surveys of young
people. His next
position, also in
NYC, was as chief
statistician for a
newly-formed
Department of
Defense joint
procurement agency.
In 1954, he joined a
diversified American
Stock
Exchange-listed
company, Kleer Vu
Industries,
headquartered in
Manhattan, which
manufactured and
marketed plastic
products and
microfilm equipment.
He was with the
firm for 18 years,
serving as general
manager, executive
vice president, and
then president/CEO.
In 1975, George and
his wife, Teddy,
co-founded their own
company, GGX
Associates, Inc.,
devoted to products
for the
just-emerging
automatic
identification/data
capture (AIDC)
industry. GGX,
based in Great Neck,
NY became one of the
leading marketers of
film masters and
pressure sensitive
labels for UPC and
other bar code
applications. The
company was sold in
1992.
There were no
publications in the
mid-1970's covering
the fledgling AIDC
industry. To fill
this need, George
began publishing
SCAN Newsletter in
September 1977 - at
first with fewer
than 100
subscribers. At
that time, auto ID
simply involved bar
coding; and bar
coding was almost
exclusively
supermarket checkout
scanning. Over the
next two decades,
the industry grew to
include many
ADC-related
technologies with
worldwide
applications in
retailing,
manufacturing,
distribution,
transportation,
healthcare,
communications, and
federal and local
government
operations.
SCAN was a unique
management and
marketing newsletter
covering worldwide
developments in bar
coding, radio
frequency (RFID and
RFDC), and related
AIDC technologies.
In 1982, SCAN
established the
prestigious, annual
Percival Award
recognizing special
contributions to
AIDC by individuals
or organizations
from the user
community.
When SCAN Newsletter
was sold to Corry
Publishing in 1996,
it had paid
subscribers in
twenty-six
countries. George
remained
Contributing Editor
of SCAN: The DATA
CAPTURE Report.
George conducted
seminars on bar
coding in the US,
Canada, Europe,
Russia, and China;
he was the technical
advisor to the book
publishing industry
committee on bar
coding; he served as
a member of the ANSI
committees which
established
standards for
package marking; he
has written articles
on AIDC for numerous
publications.
He was particularly
proud of his most
recent achievement
as a co-founder of
AIDC 100, an
organization of the
leading
professionals from
the AIDC industry.
Under his
leadership and
guidance, the
Melville Library at
the State University
of New York at Stony
Brook has
established a
Special Collection
for the AIDC 100
Industry archive.
George is survived
by his wife of 55
years and longtime
business partner,
Teddy. They had two
sons and a daughter.
Jeff, 53, is an
author and TV
producer in
Washington, DC;
Robbi, 49, is an
artist in E.
Moriches, LI; David,
42, is a music
composer, who lives
with his wife Nanci
in Port Washington,
NY and George's baby
grandson, Jonathan.