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- <text id=91TT0624>
- <title>
- Mar. 25, 1991: Captain Bob's Amazing Rescue
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 25, 1991 Boris Yeltsin:Russia's Maverick
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 52
- Captain Bob's Amazing Eleventh-Hour Rescue
- </hdr><body>
- <p>After a bitter five-month strike, the New York Daily News is
- taken over by a wily British press lord, who may need to work
- his most remarkable salvage yet
- </p>
- <p>By William A. Henry III--Reported by Helen Gibson/London and
- Leslie Whitaker/New York
- </p>
- <p> When American newspapers were in their heyday after World
- War II, the brassy, pictorial New York Daily News led all the
- rest. Its 1947 circulation of 2.4 million daily and 4.7 million
- Sunday was bigger than any daily achieves today, although the
- U.S. population has nearly doubled. But like many now vanished
- media giants, the News gradually succumbed to its own success:
- with profits pouring in, time and again, management agreed to
- union demands for unneeded jobs, overtime guarantees and
- restrictive work rules, rather than risk a strike. By the 1980s,
- featherbedding was so extreme that despite annual revenues
- approaching $425 million, losses averaged $1 million a month.
- At least twice, the parent Tribune Co. in Chicago explored a
- shutdown. Both times the plan foundered on the immediate price
- tag: more than $100 million, mainly for severance pay and
- pensions.
- </p>
- <p> Last week, after having lost almost $250 million on the News
- since 1980, half of it within the past year, the Tribune Co.
- finally gave up. To end a sometimes violent five-month strike,
- during which the paper kept publishing but virtually all
- revenue disappeared, the News was "sold" to British-based media
- tycoon Robert Maxwell, 67. In truth, the "buyer" was paid $60
- million just to take the paper off the Tribune Co.'s hands. The
- bulk of that will go to buyouts and severance pay. To add to
- the Tribune Co.'s pain, in just six days Maxwell extracted $72
- million in union concessions, more than the old owners had
- demanded in provoking the strike. Union leaders gave up 800 of
- 2,600 jobs, accepted a one-year wage freeze and agreed to rule
- changes that for many workers may amount to a pay cut. The one
- thing they did not concede was what the Tribune Co. most
- intransigently sought: management's right to determine how many
- jobs were needed, rather than having staff levels guaranteed
- by contract.
- </p>
- <p> The message was clear. Far from being grateful for the time
- and money the Tribune Co. had invested, the fed-up employees
- preferred almost anyone else. Not that Maxwell is just anyone.
- He is both a buccaneer billionaire and a professed socialist,
- renowned for a blend of macho charm and armored-tank
- aggressiveness. A British union leader once ruefully observed,
- "He could charm the birds out of the trees, then shoot them."
- Although decorated by British Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery
- for World War II valor and elected in 1964 as a Labour Member
- of Parliament, Maxwell was involved in a corporate takeover
- battle that led Britain's Department of Trade and Industry to
- conclude in 1971 that he could not "be relied on to exercise
- proper stewardship of a publicly quoted company." The rebuff
- hardly stopped him: his empire embraces more than 450
- companies, with interests ranging from dailies in Budapest and
- Nairobi to soccer teams in Britain and a pharmaceutical house
- in Israel.
- </p>
- <p> George McDonald, head of the allied newspaper unions in New
- York City, conceded he had been warned by a union official in
- London that "Maxwell is a rogue...watch out for him."
- Instead, McDonald and colleagues found themselves praising the
- new owner--who at week's end still required formal
- rank-and-file ratifications--as a "tough negotiator who
- understands problems fast." They enthused about how
- straightforward and plainspoken he was, how quick to extend a
- hand to shake on a proposed deal. Having reduced the options
- to Maxwell or nothing, they did not challenge his
- characterization of the cuts as "historical, unprecedented and
- necessary to guarantee the return of the Daily News to the
- streets of New York."
- </p>
- <p> If anything, the question is whether the cuts will prove
- enough to keep the News there. Says newspaper analyst John
- Morton: "Maxwell has made a very risky move." During the
- strike, which led to truck burnings, beatings and intimidation
- of news dealers, the unions so effectively discouraged sales
- of the paper that the Tribune Co. practically gave it away. It
- let hundreds of hawkers, many of them homeless, buy stacks of
- 100 copies for $2.50 to peddle at 35 cents each.
- </p>
- <p> This combination of controversy and unmeasurable circulation
- (down from 1.1 million before the strike) drove away
- advertisers, most of whom increased their exposure in the
- competing tabloids, the scandal-minded Post and the more pious
- New York Newsday, a city-oriented version of the dominant paper
- on suburban Long Island. While many plan to return, now that
- the News has union blessing, some advertisers have cut budgets
- in a slumping economy, and others are concerned about when, or
- if, the News can rebound to pre-strike levels. Its rivals,
- which raided columnists and the syndicated supplement Parade,
- have upped their combined circulation by 300,000. By some
- estimates, News losses were twice that. If past strikes are any
- indication, a sizable percentage of readers who got out of the
- daily habit will never resume it with any paper.
- </p>
- <p> But hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers remain loyal to the
- sassy Daily News, which over the years has been celebrated in
- song (by Frank Loesser and Phil Ochs, among others) and
- screenplay (its Art Deco building on Manhattan's 42nd Street
- was reporter Clark Kent's workplace in the Superman movies).
- For the tabloid's fans, Maxwell's moxie may prove congenial.
- He has shown a shrewd feel for the city's odd blend of
- worldliness and parochialism. Playing to Manhattanites'
- penchant for embracing almost any outsider who professes himself
- instantly smitten with their metropolis, Maxwell arrived by
- yacht to start negotiations and, before stepping into a waiting
- Cadillac, spoke the tantric words, "I love New York." Recalling
- the tradition of the News as "the people's paper," Maxwell
- said, "I want it to be, first and foremost, the voice of New
- York for the ordinary man. It will assist the town with its
- fiscal problems. I would also hope that the News would come to
- be seen as an important voice internationally to tell the world
- how America feels." Maxwell insists that the News will
- "certainly not" install a staple of his beetle-browed London
- Daily Mirror (circ. 3 million)--cheesecake photos of women.
- </p>
- <p> Among Maxwell's "secret admirers" is his new rival, owner
- Peter Kalikow of the Post, who says, "I like his background.
- His kind of rags-to-riches story happens in America a lot, but
- not in England." Born Jan Lodvik Hoch of Jewish peasant parents
- in Czechoslovakia, the future Maxwell left school after just
- three years. At 15 he joined the Czech underground. The Nazis
- shot his father and sent his mother to her death in a
- concentration camp. Wounded and captured in France, he escaped
- to Britain and joined its army at 16. After serving in postwar
- Berlin as a press officer (he speaks at least eight languages
- fluently), Maxwell acquired a small company in 1949 that he
- built into Pergamon Press, an important publisher of scientific
- and educational books.
- </p>
- <p> As he expanded in the print business, many firms he launched
- or resuscitated were obscure, technical in orientation or
- uninfluential. But since May 1990, he has spent an estimated
- $40 million launching the European, an English-language
- newspaper to compete with the International Herald Tribune. A
- self-made man who is reportedly Britain's ninth richest, with
- a net worth of $2 billion, Maxwell has earned wide esteem in
- London's business community. He is robustly satirized, however,
- by the leftish Private Eye in the comic strip Captain Bob.
- Among his fiercest critics are former employees. One claims
- Maxwell is so manipulative that he scheduled simultaneous
- lunches with former Secretary of State George Shultz and
- Paramount studio owner Martin Davis in different rooms at the
- same restaurant, shuttling between them on the pretext of
- taking business calls.
- </p>
- <p> For the next six months, Maxwell pledges, he will stay in
- New York City and serve as Daily News publisher--a bold step,
- since associates say his far-flung empire is so chaotically
- structured that only he has a clear sense of it. He believes
- in hands-on management of newspapers. After launching the
- London Daily News in 1987 and folding it within five months in
- the wake of reported losses of $50 million, he vowed never
- again to leave management of a daily to its staff. At the Daily
- Mirror, Maxwell sometimes wrote editorials, and says he may
- do so again at the Daily News. The downside of his intensity
- is that he tends to lose passion for projects and move on to
- new obsessions.
- </p>
- <p> Some London business analysts question whether his interest
- in the Daily News will outlast the first heady gust of
- publicity. Others think he is determined to succeed where his
- archrival, Australian-born media mogul Rupert Murdoch, failed.
- Murdoch, who bested Maxwell in London to buy the Sun, News of
- the World and the august Times, burst onto the New York scene
- by acquiring the tabloid Post in 1976. During the next 12
- years, Murdoch lost $150 million before being legally compelled
- to sell because he also owned a local TV station.
- </p>
- <p> In one regard, at least, Maxwell starts with a huge
- advantage. The first $60 million he loses will be someone
- else's money.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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