Word: tisch
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Only three months ago, Laurence Tisch, 63, was being toasted as a hero at the Manhattan headquarters of powerful CBS. The billionaire chairman of Loews had suddenly emerged, to resounding cheers, as the No. 2 network's acting chief executive officer, after a dramatic boardroom confrontation with Ousted Chairman Thomas Wyman, 57. Many CBS employees hoped that the changeover, which also brought back Network Founder William Paley, 85, as acting chairman, would mark the onset of a new golden age for the tradition-minded broadcasting giant and the end of months of upheaval and austerity. CBS, exulted 60 Minutes Correspondent...
These days CBS's future seems to have arrived, and the huzzahs are rare in the company's corridors. Instead, there is much muttering and trembling, as the tightfisted Tisch continues to direct a rapid and ruthless austerity campaign that has so far cost 1,200 of CBS's 15,500 employees their jobs. Tisch has also lopped off entire lines of the sprawling conglomerate's business (1985 revenues: $4.8 billion), and is said to be looking for buyers who will take on others. Meanwhile, speculation is increasing that the next item to get the ax may be the "acting...
...increasing dominance of CBS's largest stockholder (he controls 24.9% of the outstanding shares) was underlined once again last week. As Tisch and Paley emerged from a three-hour regular monthly session of the 14-member CBS board, word spread that directors had once again avoided choosing a Wyman successor. A seven-member search committee, headed by former Defense Secretary Harold Brown, has met three times so far but has set no deadline for its task. The main reason for the committee's lassitude is that Tisch is not yet finished with his task of reorganizing the company...
There is considerable irony in Tisch's campaign. Cost-conscious bloodletting, in a bid to fend off corporate raiders who were swarming around the company, had stirred widespread unhappiness with Wyman and helped to bring Tisch to power in the first place. But the chops did not stop with Wyman's departure. Far from it. It was easy enough to explain a wave of 700 firings that had begun in July as the result of an austerity plan approved before the outgoing chairman's downfall. But then in October came 400 more, decreed by Tisch, followed by an additional...
...School has sponsored similar programs for the last 14 years. Grants from the House Administration Committee, the IOP, the Tisch Family Foundation and the Sears Roebuck Foundation will fund the session, Farnsworth said...