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...biggest resident theater company in North America is not to be found in New York City, Los Angeles or Chicago. Nor, as stage cognoscenti might suppose, is it in a thriving regional center like Minneapolis, home of the Guthrie, or a festival city like Ashland, site of the Oregon Shakespearean Festival. The champion -- as measured cumulatively by number of productions and performances, size of troupe, total audience and budget -- is located in an unpretentious town in the Canadian province of Ontario, about 90 miles from the skyscrapers of Toronto. It is a place that began with scarcely any claim...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: The Bard in Neon and Doublets | 8/22/1988 | See Source »

...been hard on the whistle-blowers. Says McKay: "I would not urge anyone to subject their families to what I've had to do. If you stand up and insist on not going along with wrongdoing, you're going to have people try to crush you." Recalls Williams: "Ashland Oil had been my life. I felt fiercely loyal to the company, but I felt betrayed." Both men believe they were blacklisted by the petroleum industry after they left Ashland. The executives can hope, though, that their victory may bring about some change in corporate ethics. Says Thomas Dunfee, a professor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: They Whistled and Won | 6/27/1988 | See Source »

Bill McKay and Harry Williams were company men and proud of it. Vice presidents at Ashland Oil, they had a combined 35 years of experience in the oil business. McKay earned $150,000 a year and lived with his wife and two children in a handsome four-bedroom brick house in Russell, Ky., a quiet neighborhood less than a mile from company headquarters. Williams, who lived nearby, frequently traveled to New York City and Washington as Ashland's executive in charge of corporate lobbying. In 1983, however, the two men felt they had to blow the whistle on their employer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: They Whistled and Won | 6/27/1988 | See Source »

Last week a federal jury in Covington, Ky., ordered Ashland to pay the former executives damages of $69.5 million, which would amount to 52% of the company's fiscal 1987 earnings. McKay, 45, won $44.6 million, while Williams, % 47, was awarded $24.9 million. McKay's judgment, which was higher because his salary at Ashland was larger than Williams', is one of the largest awards ever granted to an individual claimant. Ashland will appeal, and may be able to get the damages reduced. Because the company will not have to pay anything until the appeals process is complete -- something that could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: They Whistled and Won | 6/27/1988 | See Source »

...company's troubles began in 1979, when the U.S. Government embargoed oil from Iran. Since Ashland had depended on Iran for 25% of its crude supplies, the firm scrambled to find alternative sources. In so doing, the jury ruled, Ashland resorted to bribery: in 1980 and 1981, according to court records, the company paid $49 million to government officials in Oman and Saudi Arabia and a government representative in Abu Dhabi to obtain oil. Ashland attorneys had argued that the payments were legal and were made to private consultants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: They Whistled and Won | 6/27/1988 | See Source »

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