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- BUSINESS, Page 88MOST OF '88 TOP TRUMP TAMER
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- Switching from gabbing to grabbing, former talk-show host
- Merv Griffin outmaneuvered developer Donald Trump for control of
- Resorts International, the Atlantic City hotel-and-gambling
- company. The megarich Merv paid $364 million.
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- COSTLIEST TYPO
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- When Prudential took out a lien against eight ships owned by
- United States Lines, someone wrote down $92,885 instead of
- $92,885,000. So when the shipping firm went bankrupt and sold
- the liners for $67 million, it technically owed Prudential only
- $92,885. The shipping company eventually agreed to give
- Prudential the proceeds, but deducted $11 million as the price
- of the errant decimal point.
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- MST $$$, BLDG W VU
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- The world's tallest skyscraper, Chicago's 110-story Sears
- Tower, went on the block for an asking price of at least $1
- billion. Fearing corporate raiders, the giant retailer decided
- to sell the building to raise cash (its original cost in 1972:
- $200 million).
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- MOST FRILLS ON A GOLDEN PARACHUTE
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- Gerald Tsai, head of the Primerica financial-services firm,
- grabbed $40 million in severance when he sold the company, whose
- holdings include the brokerage firm Smith Barney, to Commercial
- Credit Group. Part of Tsai's deal: 120 hours free use of the
- corporate jet and a consulting contract that will pay him
- additional income for time he spends working in the office on
- his yacht.
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- CHEAPEST ROUTE TO BANKRUPTCY
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- Texas tycoons William Herbert and Nelson Bunker Hunt paid $1
- each to ride the New York City subway when they came to town to
- face a civil suit in U.S. District Court. A federal jury found
- that the former billionaires, along with their brother Lamar,
- had tried to rig the silver market in 1980 and assessed them
- damages of $130 million.
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- MOST ENDANGERED SPECIES
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- The last Playboy Bunnies in the U.S. folded their ears when
- their warren in Lansing, Mich., closed for lack of business.
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- WEAKEST TAKEOVER DEFENSE
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- Pillsbury's "just say no" strategy failed to fend off
- British consumer-products giant Grand Metropolitan. The Dough
- Boys also tried a "poison pill" strategy that would have
- awarded current stockholders a larger share of the company,
- making it far more expensive to purchase. But a Delaware
- chancery court ruled against Pillsbury's tactic, and it was
- gobbled up last week for $5.75 billion.
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- BEST CAPITALIST GIFT TO SOVIET WOMEN
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- Tambrands, the New York-based makers of Tampax, agreed to
- manufacture the product as part of a joint venture with the
- Soviet Union in what will be that country's first tampon
- factory. The plant, near Kiev, is expected to produce as many as
- 150 million tampons a year.
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- MOST BODACIOUS BIDDER
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- RJR Nabisco chief Ross Johnson and some colleagues offered
- to buy out the company for $17.6 billion in a deal that could
- have netted Johnson $100 million. The bidding eventually hit $25
- billion, but RJR directors rebuked Johnson and awarded the
- company to the Manhattan buyout firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts.
- Last week the House Energy and Commerce Committee announced a
- probe of the deal.
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- FASTEST-GROWING REPAIR BILL
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- The official estimated price tag to bail out the Federal
- Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation, which guarantees the
- deposits of the troubled thrift industry, jumped from $20
- billion at the start of 1988 to as much as $50 billion by
- year's end.
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