Monday, September 30, 1985/The Battalion/Page 9 World and Nation f SYTILIES irOIEWAIEID % SHOE by Jeff MacNelly Unilever attempting takeover Company virtually unknown Associated Press NEW YORK — Unilever, the An- glo-Dutch company that has been pursuing a hostile bid of Richard- son-Vicks Inc., is relatively unknown to the public even though it is the world’s largest manufacturer of con sumer products and the 18th largest industrial company on the globe. But its products are familiar. Per haps you brush your teeth with its Close-Up toothpaste, wash your face with its Dove soap, use its All deter gent to do your laundry, and drink its Lipton tea. Although most of Unilever’s sales throughout the world come from foods, detergents and personal products, the company is also in volved in chemicals, paper, plastics, packaging, animal feeds, transport and tropical plantations. In addition, UAC International, one of Unilever’s largest subsidia ries, has substantial interests in Af rica and other parts of the world in diverse industrial ventures. Unilever, which employs about 320,000 people and operates in about 75 countries, had a profit of 396 million British pounds, or $564 million at the current exchange rate, on sales of 16.17 billion pounds, or $23 billion, last year. Sixty-five percent of Unilever’s sales are in Europe and about 14 percent are in the United States. The remaining sales are spread around the world. The British arm of the company is called Unilever PLC and is based in London. The Dutch arm, Unilever NV, is located in Rotterdam, the Ne therlands. The two operate as much as possi ble as single companies. They also operate under an agreement that equalizes the dividends paid to the shareholders of both. Floris A. Maljers is chairman of Unilever NV and vice chairman of Unilever PLC. Sir Kenneth Durham is chairman of Unilever PLC and vice chairman of Unilever N V. Unilever U.S. Inc., Unilever NY’s New York-based American subsid iary, owns Thomas J. Lipton Inc., which makes foods and beverages; Lever Brothers Co., which makes detergents and other cleaning prod ucts, personal products, margarine and some other foods; and National Starch and Chemical Corp., a maker of adhesives, specialty starches, res ins and other chemical products. The U.S. subsidiary said Thurs day it was raising to $60 per share its top offer for all of the common stock of Richardson-Vicks, whose man agement has opposed the takeover bid. Unilever said it was boosting its previous top offer from $56 a snare provided that the offer was ap proved by the Richardson-Vicks board. It said its offer would remain at $48 a share if the Richardson- Vicks board failed to approve the of fer. Richardson-Vicks and members of the founding family also have bought sizeable numbers of shares of the company’s stock. Family mem bers and trusts they control said this past week that they own 36 percent of the shares outstanding. As a result of the company’s buy back efforts, Richardson-Vicks has about 17.6 million shares outstand ing, making the value of the bid at $60 a share worth about $1.06 bil lion, compared with $985 million at previous top price. Unilever’s offer is contingent on 51 percent of Richardson-Vicks’ shares being tendered to Unilever for purchase. However, a two-thirds vote of shares is required for appro val of any merger. Richardson-Vicks’ consumer products are well-known, too. Among them are Vicks cold reme dies and Vidal Sassoon hair prod ucts. Rioting spills into white areas of South Africa Associated Press JOHANNESBURG, South Africa — A mob burned a black man to death Sunday in the second straight day of clashes between rival black groups near Durban, and anti-apart heid violence spilled into white areas for the third day in a row, police said. An explosion that police believed was caused by a bomb went off in the men’s room of a hotel near Durban where about 150 black youngsters were guests qt a “children’s day,” but no one was injured. The death toll from Saturday’s street battles between rival black groups in Umlazi was unclear. Police said four people died, but the inde pendent South African Press Asso ciation reported six deaths. Police said they killed an unidenti fied black man throwing a gasoline bomb in Dordecht, a small eastern Cape Province town 298 miles south of Johannesburg. Police have nearly quelled 13 months of rioting in the black and mixed-race townships, but whites have been attacked in the last three days in Johannesburg’s suburbs, near Cape Town, East London on the Indian Ocean shore and near Port Elizabeth. The African National Congress, the banned black guerrilla group trying to overthrow the white gov ernment by force, broadcast appeals from radio stations in black-ruled Africa telling blacks to spread unrest into white neighborhoods. More than 700 people have per ished since Sept. 3, 1984, but only seven have been white. None were killed in white areas, although two whites were killed in separate inci dents while driving near black com munities. New researcher team shuns traditional data Associated Press NF.W YORK — When anthro pologists venture into the Ameri can marketplace, the notes from their journals might surprise even Margaret Mead. Consider the finding that Southern men take pride in their pot bellies. Steve Barnett got his doctorate in anthropology at Chicago Uni versity, then taught at Princeton, Brown and MIT before joining the consulting firm of Planme- trics. Barnett has assembled a team in New York of five anthropolo gists, a sociologist, a social psy chologist and a statistician who are called in for the tough jobs, when traditional market research fails. Where other marketers use focus groups, direct questioning and opinion polls, Planmetrics uses direct observation. The technique, which can cost anywhere from $5,000 to $300,000, appears to be working. For example, a traditional pub lic opinion survey among mainte nance workers for a public utility found the vast majority approved of nuclear power. So the com pany decided to use the workers to “talk up” nuclear power with its customers. When the idea didn’t work, Planmetrics put a few anthropol ogists in the same uniforms as the repair crews to find out what was going wrong. “We discovered that even a pro-nuclear employee did not take a pro-nuclear stand with a customer,” Barnett said. Planmetrics later was asked to determine what features made certain styles of casual jackets popular with men. “We felt if you looked at how they tried them on, you’d find out what’s important to them,” Barnett said, so the team put video cameras behind one-way mirrors in the mens’ clothing section. The technique worked and the client was satisfied, but it was one irrelevant observation which fas cinated Barnett: In Southern stores, pot-bellied men would choose jackets that looked too tight, then turn sideways and ad mire their bulging profiles. “We discovered people were quite proud of having grown that belly,” Barnett said. “Rather than get a looser jacket that would hide it, they got one to show it off.” What would you do if you had $1 Associated Press NEW YORK — In an era when lotteries and sweepstakes are flou rishing, it has become popular to imagine oneself suddenly rich. The rules of the game are simple: Gather a few friends together, and C rovide a sociable atmosphere. Play egins when one member of the party poses the question, “Well now, what would you do if you had a mil lion dollars?” Recent times have tarnished the fantasy somewhat. Thanks to infla tion, $1 million in 1985 would be pa thetically inadequate if you wanted to provide yourself with proper wealth. It would buy you no yachts, no airplanes, no lifelong luxury. With $1 million you could scarcely afford a decent country estate in a typical high-prestige locale. And you would have nothing left over to pay the upkeep and the utility bills. Suppose you took a very cautious approach, and invested your $1 mil lion windfall in Treasury securities or municipal bonds. That would give you an annual aftertax income of $80,000 or $90,000 — enough to provide for a very comfortable, but hardly sumptuous life. You would presumably be free to quit your job, buy a home computer, and set out to write the novel or dream up the great invention you have always known was trapped in the depths of your imagination. Creativity might fail you, how ever, if you spent a lot of time worry ing about what the fluctuations of in terest rates and the erosive ef fects of inflation were doing to the value of your bonds. How best to use the $1 million, then? Maybe invest it aggressively in real estate, or stocks, or futures con tracts, hoping to turn it into the $10 million or $20 million you would need for a true life of ease. Lfnless you have the right temper ament, though, such a challenge might be daunting. The record shows that managing investments on a large scale can be very stressful. At this point in the conversation, someone who is tiring of all the cau tioning is likely to speak up. “If these are the problems that come with $1 million,” he declares, “I’d love to have them, compared to what I’ve got now.” “That’s not the point,” comes the reply. “We’re not talking about whether you’d like to have the money, but what you would — and could — actually do with it if you had it.” Picture This! I II I I I 3400 S- College JOICO 822-9515 I I '00 off on first visit Cuts: Men $12.00 & up, Ladies $16.00 & up, Perms $48.00 & up % Mon. - Thurs. 9-7, Fri. & Sat. 9-6 expires 10/26/85 0 I The Boot Barn FISH RICHARDS HALF CENTURY HOUSE Invites you to experience the casual elegance that is Fish Richards, and enjoy ROAST PRIME RIB OF BEEF for $3 off regular menu price on Mondays and Tuesdays. Lunch Poor Richards Revenge Dinner Mon-Fri Mon-Fri Mon-Sat 11:30-2:30 4:30-6:30 5:00-10:30 PIANO BAR NIGHTLY Featuring Jim Williams and Dave Ellis 5:00-6:30 and 8:00-10:00 801 Welborn Rd., College Station 696-4118 SOCIETY OF MANUFACTURING ENGINEERS SM6 Gen.Meeting Oct 3, 1985 at 6:00 p.m. in Fermier 305. Guest Speaker Dr. Don Phillips on FACTORY OF THE FUTURE it jj General Dynamics Plant Trip Registration