Friday, September 12, 1986/The Battalion/Page 9 President of CBS News resigns softer ousting of CBS Inc. head fl$ Discontent in news division forced change in leadership e charges 'ore than a ;d. Ifr did appt! clear wnv fe hate a swap have been iftly and b ■NEW YORK (A.P) — Confronted I/Arw^ a revo ^ front below and the KUH ouster of his ally at the top, V an Gor- don Sauter resigned Thursday after ■tumultuous 10 months as presi- ■nt of CBS News. ■The resignation came one day af ter network founder William S. Palev and Laurence A. Tisch, the company’s major stockholder, foi i ed the resignation of Thomas H. ssible diplr- Wyman as chairman and chief exec- ^^■ve officer. rbachev was lOpposition to Wyman crystallized appeared to a ft er h e asked the CBS board to con- Daniloff ot I9 er a f r f en< dly takeover by Coca- fDanilofh®! 3 C° > according to Merrill ie release ^ ri)Wn °f Channels, an industry Wigazine. Paley and Tisch partic- the Kremtr W r *y objected to any proposal lerestimattc fhich would sacrifice the network’s 'can res[x-,W e P enc * ence ’ ^ rovvn sa id Thurs- *n adminK'*y on t ^ ie “MacNeil-Lehrer News- ■In Atlanta, Coca-Cola spokesman Carlton Curtis confirmed there had Bn some discussions with the net- v arres( work, but “there was no substance to the can be 311 ' contact between the company j b v f orf; . and CBS.” He said he did not know ■ s 1 at what level the contact was made or when n occurred. ________,B>auter’s resignation was an- Bunced minutes after CBS board ijember Walter Cron kite had said that a change in the news division’s leadership appeared inevitable. , ftpauter earlier this year laid off 70 em pl°y ees as P art a general Ill v reduction in the CBS workforce and Bp criticized openly by star employ- jL*—, , ees such as Bill Moyers and Andy Money for not insulating the news Bision from the pressures of prof- i i its and ratings. |^l/in/®Mthough "60 Minutes” continued * to lie very profitable, “CBS Evening News” hacl fallen into a three-way Bht with its competition and “CBS , Pakistan p^rning News” fell to third place, aestionedrJ|jrMy jg years at CBS were joyful ssportThiaBd rewarding, and while the diffi- seizureofi culut s 0 f the past 10 months consti- I sought atBed an irreversible end-game, 1 into a Pate® i ities leave with pride in my work and re spect and fondness for my former colleagues,” Sauter said in a statement. He had also served as president of CBS Sports, chief censor and news bureau chief in Paris. Gene Jankowski, president of CBS Broadcast Group, said he ac cepted Sauter’s resignation with re gret, and that Howard Stringer, ex ecutive vice president of CBS News, would handle day-to-day operations for the time being. Stock analysts say shake-up at CBS won't be cure-all NEW YORK (AP) — The dra matic management shake-up at CBS Inc. will help boost morale and settle some of the turmoil that has plagued the broadcasting company, but the move is hardly a cure-all, Wall Street analysts said Thursday. CBS still faces uncertainty over who will run the company and who will ultimately own it, the analysts said. And CBS must still address the very problem that the departing chairman tried to solve — how to increase profits despite poorer program ratings and the slow down in the growth of advertising revenue, they said. The company’s employees have not necessarily escaped more of the cost-cutting measures that had caused such public dis sension, the analysts said. On Wall Street, CBS stock fell $6 a share to $134 in trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The stock had dropped $3.75 on Wednesday. The stock declined sharply be cause the likelihood for a take over battle for CBS had dimin ished, analysts said. The shake-up was “a positive development for the company and settles things a little bit,’’ said Barry Kaplan, an analyst with the investment firm Bear Stearns & Co. John Reidy, an analyst with Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc., said, “With the return of William Paley as an active chairman, I think you have a major boost in morale and everybody is going to go back to doing their business.” Edward Atorino, an analyst with Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co., said, “I don’t think it begins to solve their problems. “CBS has to go through the whole process of getting a new president again. There’s going to be more management upheaval. There’s going to be more tur moil.” The network finished second in the prime-time ratings race in 1985-86 after six straight winning seasons. CBS had an after-tax profit of just $27.4 million on revenue of $4.8 billion in 1985, compared with a net profit of $212.4 million on revenue of $4.6 billion. There was no indication whether a new chief for the news division would be selected before a new CBS chief executive is named. Former Defense Secretary Harold Brown, also a CBS board member, is head ing a search committee for Wyman’s replacement. CBS fell into second place in the prime-time ratings last season after six years as No. 1. Mike Dann, a former CBS pro gramming vice president under Paley, said the return of the 84-year- old founding father would boost CBS’ prime-time fortunes. “He has a passion for shows,” Dann said. “One of his favorites now is ‘Cagney & Lacey.’ It’s important and successful, a Paley trademark.” Although prime time is a more se rious problem for the bottom line, the discontent in the news division had been an open and embarrassing sore. Within the last two years, CBS also had suffered from a multimillion- dollar libel suit by Gen. William C. Westmoreland, which it won, and takeover attempts spearheaded by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and CNN owner Ted Turner. CBS, which said last year it would pay $ 1 billion to buy back 20 percent of its stock to thwart Turner, earned $27.4 million in 1985 on revenues of $4.8 billion. At an 11-hour board meeting Wednesday, Wyman yielded his ti tles of chairman and chief executive officer which he assumed in 1983 under pressure from Tisch, whose Loews Corp. owns nearly 25 percent of CBS stock, and Paley, who owns 8.1 percent. As Loews’ stake in CBS had grown and rumors of Wyman’s departure became more frequent, Sauter had allied himself publicly with Wyman, as had Jankowski. Jankowski, Walter R. Yetnikoff, head of CBS Records, and Peter A. Derow, president of CBS’ publishing group, later won Tisch’s support. Committee to study U.S. - Mexican relations i man idem aki was s lamabad air$ th the seizin „ in KarachiMMEXiCO CI TY (AP) — An inde pendent commission made up of 18 Libyan pa fop-ranking officials, intellectuals forgery,kMd business leaders from both sides “nceagaitedf'he border was formed Thursday ■ were killed to study U.S. - Mexican relations, ijured wherfJSen. Hugo Marjapain, a former am- the Pan AnMsador to Washington who is the ened firedifflairman of the Mexican group, said * passenger; the target is to have a report ready H the time new presidents take of- d Mina.wklffe * n Mexico in December 1988 cold The .11 in the United States in January at police ■111 89 ' ?stine UbeMThe U.S. group is chaired by Wil- ssion in biM 111 ^°g ers > a Washington lawyer for a mac' w ho was a former assistant secretary ng with Ti'® d authonsii of state for inter-American affairs. “This was not done by a govern ment agreement,” Margain said at a news conference. “There is absolute independence.” Here it is sponsored jointly by the Ford Foundation and other private organizations. Margain said the study will be of “all types of bilateral problems,” in cluding economic, political, social and cultural issues. He said the focus will not be on “immediate problems” but rather will be on the long term. A statement describing the goals said the research would identify “those issues that will affect the agenda of the relations between Mexico and the United States from now until the end of the century.” It said the commission also would seek “solutions and recommenda tions of long range tending to strengthen and make mutually more advantageous these relations.” Among the U.S. members are Yvonne Brathwaite Burke, former U.S. congresswoman from Los An geles; San Antonio Mayor and Texas A&M regent Henry Cisneros; U.S. Sen. Nancy Kassebaum, R-Kan.; Robert S. McNamara, former de fense secretary and former presi dent of the World Bank, and Charles W. Parry, chairman of the Aluminum Company of America. Among the Mexican group are Fernando Canales Clariond, a busi nessman from the northern indus trial city of Monterrey; Mario Ojeda, president of the prestigious Colegio de Mexico; novelist Carlos Fuentes, and Ernesto Fernandez Hurtado, a former director of the central Bank of Mexico. Franklin A. Thomas, president of the Ford Foundation, said in a statement released in New York that the commission would discuss ways to manage U.S.-Mexican relations during the next 25 years. ^'gOfficial jailed for refusing to release records ent, mear/t; DETROIT (AP) — The director of Detroit’s t Air M Community & Economic Development Depart- Syed.thedsfpent was jailed Wednesday for refusing to pro- te air for«| Vide two newspapers with a list of city-owned o invaif/'i property, a spokesman for the mayor said. ie way ofiMEmmett Moten Jr. was ordered jailed by Wayne County Circuit Judge Harry Dingeman t official/fj Ju who on Monday found the city in contempt 5 may have j of court for refusing to provide the list to the De- he bloodys®j tfo/f Free Press and Detroit News, said Robert when thflBerg, a spokesman for Mayor Coleman Young, power Dingeman on Monday also fined the city $250 gunmen W and ordered that Moten furnish the records to proximattl'S the newspapers by 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, Berg said. Moten said before being jailed that he had not had adequate time to compile the records, the spokesman said. Moten would be jailed up to 30 days or until the city provided the material to the Free Press and News, Berg said. But, he added, “There’s no indication that it will.” “We naturally regret anyone going to jail in this case,” Free Press Executive Editor Kent Bernhard said Wednesday night. “I think that’s a shame. But I think the judge put it well when he said Mr. Moten had the keys to his own jail cell, if the city chose to turn over the records that the court has ordered to be turned over.” The Free Press in January filed a request for the list of city-owned land under the Freedom of Information Act. The newspaper sued to obtain the list after the city refused to do so, and the News later joined the suit, Berg said. Berg said Young has resisted the newspapers’ efforts to obtain the list of city-owned property, saying its release could prove costly to taxpayers. Dingeman had ordered Aug. 26 that the city immediately furnish the records to the newspa pers. .man, diif ■deral Inve The was arte aesday afc :hi. SOCCER TRYOUTS Soccer players born in 1968, 1969, or 1970 who are interested in Classic League and McGuire Cup play are invited to tryouts for the Brazos United Sting under-19 team. Tryouts will be held on the field east of Zachry Engineering Center on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 5:30 p.m. beginning September 9. Players should attend all tryouts. The Sting will represent the Brazos Valley Youth Soccer Association in South Texas Youth Soccer Asso ciation competitions. For more information call Make McDer mott 693-3766(H) 845-4337(W) ’©curve) nISES T LENSC| OPEN NOW £$a//(uxns ^au/u^cce' Do You Need To Say: • Happy Birthday • I Love You •I’m Sorry SAY IT WITH BALLOONS M-F 8-5:30 SAT 10-3 SUN 11-4 1405B Harvey Road (across the street from Post Oak Mall) Battalion Classified WHAT’S BEHIND THIS DOOR? PI KAPPA PHI Speak-Easy Party TONIGHT 8 O’CLOCK Treehouse Apts. - Party room A£3ie Nheels Auto Rental Ramada Inn, Suite 115 046-2355 "Applied ho Wheel • 24 hour service • Cars, Pickups, Vans • Daily, Weekly, Monthly, Multi Monthly Rates Special Help for Visiting Scientists Sigma lota Epsilon THE MANAGEMENT HONOR SOCIETY is looking for those undergraduates who have: 3.0 GPR or above 3.0 GPR or above in maangement related coursework 3.0 Semester hours completed w/at least 1 junior level mgmt course You don’t have to be a management major to apply. Please see our bulletin board for further details and an application. Graduate students are also encouraged to apply. Our next meeting will be Sept 22 at 7:00pm in Blocker 161. Call 846-4940 after Sam. 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