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Harold S. Geneen. Among the plumbers' unit's activities was spiriting Dita Beard, a lobbyist for International Telephone and Telegraph, away from reporters inquiring into ITT's contributions to Nixon's re-election campaign. The gifts were apparently intended to get an anti-trust suit dropped--as it later was, at Nixon's personal insistence. ITT's President Geneen should probably come to trial for bribery. But just as some of the alleged Watergate consirators should have been tried years ago for other matters--things like ordering illegal mass arrests of political dissenters, as John N. Mitchell did during...
...ITT proposed to the Central Intelligence Agency in 1970 that the two cooperate in creating disorder in Chile to make Allende's election less likely...
...buyer for its Levitt home-building business, which the giant conglomerate is under a Justice Department order to sell. Last week a buyer finally surfaced. He was none other than William J. Levitt, the 67-year-old creator of the celebrated Levittown instant suburbs, who sold the business to ITT in 1968. Levitt signed a letter of intent to take the company back and said that he will operate it as a privately owned concern under its original name of Levitt & Sons (ITT had called it ITT Levitt). The deal, if approved by the Justice Department, will make the Company...
...indications are that William Levitt is getting a bargain and ITT is taking a bath. ITT bought the business for common stock then worth about $90 Billion: most of it went to Levitt as majority owner. The terms of his repurchase will not be disclosed until federal trustbusters approve them, but trade estimates are that he will pay ITT no more than $30 million, and possibly as little as $10 million, to get the company back, And he will be getting back a much bigger company than he sold. Levitt & Sons was a leader in its field when ITT bought...
...ITT letting go so cheaply? One reason, no doubt, is that Government-ordered divestiture sales rarely bring much money: buyers, knowing that the company has to sell, hold out for a low price. ITT agreed to sell Levitt, Avis, Inc. and other businesses as part of the violently controversial 1971 consent decree that permitted it to keep Hartford Fire Insurance. Another reason, though, is that the Levitt business, which had earned a profit of almost $4 million in the year before ITT bought it, lost $14 million under ITT's management last year. Home building is a business that...