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- <text id=93TT2077>
- <title>
- Aug. 23, 1993: Broken in Haft
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Aug. 23, 1993 America The Violent
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 57
- Broken in Haft
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A family free-for-all shatters Washington's most prominent business
- empire
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD--With reporting by Tresa Chambers/New York and Ellen Germain/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Less than one year ago, Herbert Haft and his family embodied
- the American business principle that if you get out from behind
- the counter, keep your elbows sharp and put your family to work,
- you can become a very rich clan. But lo, the destruction when
- that same ferocious solidarity and energy turn mean and inward.
- </p>
- <p> The Hafts' vast retail empire was born 39 years ago in Washington,
- with Gloria nudging her husband Herbert out of the back of their
- drugstore and the couple boldly borrowing from Gloria's parents
- and liquidating their children's bonds to gamble on a discount
- pharmacy. The venture thrived and grew into the Dart drugstore
- chain, which the Hafts went on to parlay into a retailing conglomerate.
- With $1.2 billion in sales today and about 600 outlets in seven
- states, the Hafts' Dart Group, which includes Crown Books and
- Trak Auto stores, has kept the family in Range Rovers and Florida
- and California mansions and at charity balls. But now a family
- feud of operatic dimensions has erupted, threatening to undo
- all that the Hafts have worked so fiercely for. "Herbert is
- likely to burn everything down," says a gloomy insider. "It
- would be surprising if the company survived."
- </p>
- <p> In June, Herbert Haft kicked Gloria and their older son Robert
- off the Dart Group board for allegedly conspiring to speed him
- out the door. Directors then fired Robert, 40, as president
- of Dart and replaced him with his brother Ronald, 34, who had
- headed a subsidiary.
- </p>
- <p> Last week both Robert and Gloria struck back. Robert, who was
- his father's carefully groomed heir apparent before the blowup,
- filed suit to recover more than $2 million in cash and stock
- that he claimed was owed him under employment contracts. And
- in divorce court, Gloria sued for legal separation from her
- husband of 45 years. Charging that Herbert had beaten her, conducted
- extramarital affairs and engaged in financial chicanery, Gloria
- demanded control of either Dart or the family's real estate
- company. Responding through a lawyer, Haft denied any wrongdoing
- and accused Gloria and Robert of forming an "unholy partnership"
- to seize control of the family's holdings.
- </p>
- <p> The divorce suit instantly replaced White House gaffes as Topic
- A in Washington. The charges of abuse led wags to wonder just
- how much of a punch the diminutive Haft, who stands little more
- than 5 ft. tall even with his Don King-like surge of white hair,
- really could pack. For his part, Haft alleged that his wife
- had physically abused him and said Gloria and Robert had launched
- a media campaign to "destroy me."
- </p>
- <p> For Herbert, 72, the battle marks a brutal climax to a career
- that has left behind a trail of business enemies. He fought
- with his brother-in-law, who charged in a lawsuit that Haft
- had cheated him out of investments in the family's drugstore
- chain. When Haft's brother Leonard sided with the brother-in-law,
- Herbert broke off relations with Leonard for 15 years. Herbert
- made frequent use of his toughness in the 1980s, when he and
- Robert mounted campaigns to take over such retailing giants
- as Dayton Hudson and Safeway Foods. While the Hafts never purchased
- those behemoths, they walked off with fat profits after takeover
- fever jacked up the price of the target companies' shares.
- </p>
- <p> Herbert's steely, in-your-face style complemented Robert's gentler,
- laid-back manner. A Harvard Business School graduate, Robert
- founded Crown Books in 1977 and built it into one of the first
- successful book discount chains with his pitch "Books just cost
- too much!" Herbert took pride in such achievements and kept
- increasing his son's responsibilities. Since the two fell out
- last spring, however, Robert has been reduced to waiting outside
- the Washington Post offices at 3:45 a.m. to read the latest
- developments in the family feud; the only communications he
- gets from his father are daily poison faxes. "As much as he
- loved me is as much as he hates me now," a saddened Robert told
- the Post last week.
- </p>
- <p> The conflict first flared at an April board meeting when Robert,
- who was becoming eager to succeed his father as Dart chairman,
- clashed with him over plans to expand a single store. While
- Herbert wanted to increase the company's Total Beverage liquor
- operations, Robert pointed out that the only existing Total
- outlet was operating at a loss. The split widened in May when
- Gloria Haft, 66, defended her son at a Crown Books meeting and
- beseeched her husband to end the quarrel.
- </p>
- <p> Even family members have had trouble comprehending Herbert's
- subsequent virulence. Sources close to the family surmise that
- the elder Haft, who had heart problems in 1991, regards his
- son's eagerness to take over as an unwelcome reminder of his
- own mortality. The Donnybrook also puzzles investors on Wall
- Street, where Dart stock, a highflyer in the '80s, has been
- languishing. Beset by growing competition and the sluggish economy,
- Dart saw its profits fall to $3.5 million in its latest fiscal
- year, down 44% from the previous period.
- </p>
- <p> While Wall Street watches anxiously, Robert is left mourning
- not just the uncertain future of the company he helped to build
- but also the loss of its original spirit. "My father is no saint,
- but we were a family, strong, loyal and successful together,"
- he said. "That's why his behavior now is so inexplicable."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-