FIRM CHANGES MIND AGAIN, WILL OFFER ITS NEW SHARES

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Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
7
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 6, 2014
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 25, 1966
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7.pdf325.32 KB
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IV A 7 r r-rb Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 MAY 2 5 1966 . I 71"M Changes Mind A gain : Wilt Offer Its New !Shares By a WALL STREET JOURNAL Staff Reporter NEW YORK ? Richmond Newspapers, Inc., has changed its mind again and has decided to go ahead with plans to raise about $1 million through the sale of 50,000 Crass A common shares. The company on Monday said it had abandoned the idea of raising funds through a public stock sale, but said a 350,983-share secondary offering of its stock would go on as originally planned. Yesterday's reversed decision leaves the of- fering at 50,000 shares representing new ' financing and 300,983 shares being sold as a secondary. A group led by Lehman Brothers, Scott & Stringfellow and Wheat & Co. are 'scheduled to sign underwriting agreements this morning covering the offering. It is expected the stock will be priced at $22 a share. Proceeds from the 300,983-share sec- ondary portion will go to D. Tennant Bryan, the company's chairman. Mr. Bryan currently holds about 688,000 of the company's approximately 1,240,000 out- standing Class A shares. He also owns 81,180 Class B shares. The sale would be the first public offering of the newspaper and broadcasting company's stock. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 EDITOR & PUgLISHER APR 21966 141chmond Newspapers Go 'Public' Richmond Newspapers, Incor- porated has filed with the Secu- rities and Exchange Commission a registration statement cover- ing the proposed public offering of 400,983 shares of Class A non-voting common stock, the first public sale of the news- paper and broadcasting com- pany's securities. Lehman Brothers, Scott & Stringfellow and J. C. Wheat & Co. will organize an under- writing group, which will offer the shares. Bryan Selling Shares Proceeds from the sale of 50,000_o_f_the shares will be re-, 67i-Ved by the.comfraily ariradded to woikine capital. The remain- ing 350,983 shares are being sold by D.? _Tennant Bryan, chairman of the board of Rich- mond Newspapers. After giving effect to the sale, Mr. Bryan will own 336,880, or 27.2%, of the company's Class A common shares and 81,180, or 54.1%, of the company's Class B voting common shares. Richmond Newspapers pub- lishes the morning and Sunday Richmond Times-Dispatch and evening Richmond News Leader, and operates radio stations WRNL and WRNL-FM in Vir- ginia. The company also owns the controlling interest in the Tribune Company of Tampa, Florida, which publishes the morning and Sunday Tampa Tribune, the evening Tampa Times, and the weekly Gulf Sentinel in Largo, Florida, in addition to operating radio sta- tions WFLA and WFLA-FM and television station WFLA- TV in Tampa. On a pro forma consolidated basis, Richmond Newspapers and the Tribune Company had gross revenues of $36,727,178 in 1965 and net income of $2,438,- 103, or $1.75 per share. ? IS Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 qTAT WA1 1 c1-1217PT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release a 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 MAR 3 1 1966 Richmond Newspapers Files 400,983 Shares For Combination Sale Earlier Holder Approval of Plan For Recapitalization Cleared Way for First Public Offering By a WALL STREET JOURNAL Staff Reporter ATLANTA ? Richmond Newspapers, Inc., filed a registration statement with the Securi- ties and Exchange -Commission for an offering of 400,983 shares of Class A nonvoting stock, a spokesman said. It is the first public offering of the Rich- mond, Va., company, which publishes news- papers in Richmond, Tampa and Largo, Fla., and owns broadcasting interests. The compa- ny plans to sell 50,000 shares "for working capital," a spokesnian said. The rest of the shares, 350,983, will be sold as a secondary offering for D. Tennant Bryan, chairman. Shareholders paved the way for the offering earlier this month by appcoving a recapitali- zation plan that is to tak6 effect before the stock sale. When the plan is put into effect, the company will have 2,000,000 Class A shares and 300,000 Class B voting shares authorized. There will be somewhat more than 1,200,000 Class A shares outstanding after the offering and 150,000 Class B .shares, the spokesman said. The recapitalization plan calls for the 30,000 shares the company currently .has to be split 5-for-1, resulting in 150,000 Class B shares. Then a stock dividend of eight Class A shares Will be paid for each Class B share, for a total of 1,200,000 Class A shares outstanding. Richmond Newspapers owns controlling in- terest in Tribune Co., Tampa,. Fla., which pub- lishes newspapers and operates radio and tele- vision stations. On an adjusted consolidated basis, Richmond Newspapers and Tribune Co. had gross revenue of $36,727,178 in 1965, and net income of $2,438,103, or $1.75 a share on the Class A and B shares outstanding after the recapitalization. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06 : CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 . Bryan Group Buys \ Tampa Tribune Co. RICHMOND, Va. Richmond Newspapers Inc. has purchased control of the Tribune Co. of Tampa, Fla. The announcement of the pur- chase did not make public the price, but Richmond Newspa- pers incurred a long-term debt of $17.5 million to finance the acquisition. The loan was made by a syndicate headed by John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. of Boston. The Tribune company pub- lishes the morning and Sunday Tampa Tribune and the evening Tampa Times. It also owns and operates WFLA and WFLA- FM and WFLA-tv and the Gulf Sentinel Corp., which publishes the weekly Largo Sentinel. Richmond Newspapers pub- lishes the morning and Sunday Richmond Times-Dispatch and the evening Richmond News Leader. The Tampa newspapers have a combined daily circulation of 193,519 and a Sunday circula- tion of 170,887. Richmond News- papers have a combined daily circulation of 283,153 and Sun- day circulation of 2021784. Bryan Is Chairman In the corporate realignment, D. Tennant Bryan, president of Richmond Newspapers Inc., since 1944, was elected chair- man of the board. Alan S. Donahoe, executive vicepresident since 1959, was elected president. Under the realignment, Mr. Bryan continues as publisher of the two Richmond newspapers, a position which he has held since 1944. Mr. Donahoe, assistant pub- usher since 1959, becomes as- sociate publisher. A. J. Brent, a Richmond at- torney, was named general counsel and secretary. . New directors of the corpora- tion are: J. Harvie Wilkinson Jr., chairman of the board of State-Planters Bank of Com- merce and Trusts; Mr. Brent; James H. Couey Jr. of Tampa, vicepresident of the Tribune Co.; John C. Council of Tampa, president of the Tribune Co.; Mr. Donahoe, and Paul E. Man- ' eim of New York, partner in Lh Lehman Brothers, international financiers. Directors continuing are D. ennant Bryan, A. Hamilton Bryan, and Lamont S. Bryan, all of Richmond. and general manager since 1959, continues in those positions and was elected treasurer and as- sistant secretary. Walter F. Robertson was elected assistant secretary and assistant treasurer and will con- tinue as comptroller. Autonomous Management He said control of the Tampa properties would not change the corporate structure of the Flor- ida company and that "it willr continue to function as a sepa- rate unit under autonomous management so that it can best respond to the need of the Greater Tampa community." Metropolitan Tampa is about the same size as metropolitan Richmond, with a population of 442,800, retail sales of $687,- 989,000 and effective buying in- come of $733,263,000. The acquisition comes at a time when Richmond Newspa- pers Inc. is completing a $7.5- -million expansion program in both the office and production buildings and installation of new presses. The Tribune Company was founded in 1894 and the first daily issue of the Tribune ap- peared Jan. 1, 1895. In 1926 a syndicate of local businessmen ?purchased the Tribune but in 1927 they sold it to S. E. Thoma- son of Chicago and John Stew- art Bryan of Richmond. They set up a local management or- ganization with a profit-sharing plan for the executives. Principal ownership of the Tribune remained in the Thoma- son and Bryan families when the partners both died in 1944. In recent years, D. Tennant Bryan, John Stewart Bryan Jr. and R. Keith Lane, the sons and son-in-law of John Stewart Bry- an, owned 47% of the Tribune Company stock, and, as trustees, voted 52% of the stock. Thoma- son heirs owned about 35% of the remainder. In 1958 the Tribune Company acquired the Tampa Times, whose principal owners were members of the Smiley family, and consolidated the publishing operations in the Times build- ing. The Richmond Newspapers' acquisition consisted mainly of a transfer of family trusts fol- lowing the death of John Stew- art Bryan Jr. last year. Stock was purchased from the Bryan trusts as well as from other To wt.e T. vt: I oln.4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 -- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for R...le.se_e_50-Yr 2014/011/06 : CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 JAN 1 0 1966 RICHMOND PUBLISHER BUYS TAMPA OUTLET Special to The Near,4rork Times RICHMOND, Jai. 8 ? Offi- cials of Richmond Newspapers. *tc., publisher of 14 Times Dis- patch and The .3#1.vs Leader here, announced today the pur- chase of newspaper, radio and television interests in Tampa, Fla. . ? The Richmond publishing com- pany said it had purchased yes- terday the Tribune Company of Tampa, publister of the evening Tampa Time and the Sunday Tampa Tribune. The Florida onillany also . operates radio tations WFLA-AM and WFLA- VM. a television ntation, WFLA- 11r. and a weekly newspaper, 'The Largo Sentinel. These properties were inauded in the ;mrehase. ? . I Richmond /.4wspapers. Inc., pwris the morning Times Din. ,?atch and the afternoon News Leader here and radio stations \yR:51,-Am ? and WRNL-FM., The combined' 'daily circulatlorl of the Riehniond papers it The Tampa newspapers !lave a combined daily circula- ion of 193,519: David Tennant Bryan, pres1- .!ent of Rielunond Newspapers: .nc., said thp,acquisition of thel 1,1prida papeo? would make hig 1 eompany the lath largest news.' paper group4n the country in terms of cirenlatIon. The comfiany did not an. nounce the purchase price, but 4? report in today's Times Dis, patch said that it had incarrect a long-term debt of $17.5 mil, :ion in cdmpleting the purchases The loan was made by a group insurance and banking corn.:, janies headed by the John Hancock Mutual Life Insuranc0 il;'ornpany of Boston. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 / STAT Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 R Next 2 Page(s) In Document Denied Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 &TWIT Cirt It (1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7 r. It" rIA"I ? Au-mono QtItTt?IA.013dt ? DAVID TINNANT BRYAN, Preeidast end Pubits101 , Vacuum Dsmirr, Setter RiosH Cesauni, Aloof& Maar Friday, Nimember 1100 Eleven Vanished Ameritane , If 11 Americans were missing on a Polar ICO OSP Or aboard a . vessel adrift in the Atlantic ? there Would be widespread anx- iety and searching.. It would go on until those =Ming were res- - cued or &WIPP* Was abandoned. But 11 Amipleart airmen are ? missing sorisewbere inside the borders of the Soviet Union and few peeps other than relatives ? seem to knew. or eare. On=per I es air force C120 St transpoirt with 17 men aboard was flying from Aden% X:illtsy, on round trip ?Mate to Vbis that took IS along tam! ENT* fronVer. de Ilie plane neared ir? Mitigubwlyvi Soviet yet ;fights* rePectedlY boxed in tbe transport and forced lb 4i.t1r ineidg the Soviet border. "Moving Aka its mound of an explodes Wea heard and a ? (plum of wk. was seen Tie- ' lpg from baWa range of hills ? , within,1eF,tarriory,! our Stetsb Int quoted Turk- Ashoon the border. " ? ?.* * * Ton dan later the Soviet fey- f: lb* &PAW knowledge . of theplane, in- formed. ibe United Mateo lb? burned 4irreskaira Pt live trans- port had been found about 90 milts Inside 11.14st territory. nix bodies want resorted in the plane. --Theo, later were turned over to AZIMPItath ?Choate. The doe* government claimed firmly 1t new nothing about the fats of the other 11 fliers. But 11 men don't Just dijap- f*sr in the heavily patrolled , border sone of the Soviet Union. AssunAing that Only six bodies were Ickrid in the wreckage, and there Is DO .110.0011 10 think ?thaw*, ft -Milian either WI" eapnited)or llid to swaps: In Oilier case the , go not ' to ? safely and were taken captive, - why Weren't they turned over to the Untteteteett That depends on Use mission that tar them , along tho Soviet border. It is poadble the fliers can Ore ths Soviets much technical mtary . information, under certain tech- nktuea of pernmelen. Sul if the Americane *Weal , taken alive, hoir.014 tit./ dist The airmen *014 .4ezried sidearms. Since the caMedoin within 20 miles . bf the" border they might her.= , . desperately to fight . theft -Ng back. ' The ohkiines "mkt gas boireVer4 of Pantie the ?`. army patrols, mine stripe and ? barbed wire along the border. ? ? . Ons.more glint possibility' ? ' fats. Itham smother, j transport was shot elownar era* vitt LOMA& in June, the snow- men who bailed out were nearly killed by angry peasants. The Armenian pesoutto apparently thought the 'Americans were Turks, what'll 110 intensely bate, for When ths airiien identified themselves by shouting t ? names of American cities the violence stowed. The 11 'drain on the Plane downed in bar may sot havis been so 311017. * * * The American State Depart- tient has madvitreld otaguirles to the Soviet goverisnseut far information on the missing air- . 1111111 know no. I. reply is ehmfe. ?We not about It." ? Ibuistbat is to be done? There ea4be le ?OWly Bit* Abet MMUS, ith ihan. is emit* appeI3 to Ib So- fa *is United Ira- hope ogbilad f mng. 1.11,010d rt osof the a. about ceir in- ter Can% Slip at - the? the Amer!. fame printed 4? nOtse about the downed the , Aniericiui request for mattes about the mg s 'sat withheld. This ? belief that the airmen, alive, are in Soviet head* .12 Ids Americans Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release @ 50-Yr 2014/01/06: CIA-RDP74-00115R000300050001-7