Wednesday,  June 20, 2012 • Vol. 12--No. 342 • 27 of 33 •  Other Editions

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• A major college football playoff, albeit a small one, is closer than ever to becoming a reality.
• The BCS commissioners have backed a plan for a four-team playoff with the sites for the national semifinals rotating among the major bowl games and a selection committee picking the participants. The plan will be presented to university presidents next week for approval.
• Once the presidents sign off -- and that seems likely -- major college football's champion will be decided by a playoff for the first time, starting in 2014.

Oracle's Ellison to buy, invest in Lanai
OSKAR GARCIA,Associated Press

• HONOLULU (AP) -- Oracle Corp. CEO Larry Ellison is closing in on a purchase even lottery winners can only dream about -- 98 percent of Hawaii's pineapple island, Lanai.
• Ellison hasn't said what he plans to do with the vast majority of the island's 141 square miles, but the sellers say he plans substantial investments that will create jobs and stimulate tourism to the island once owned in the 1920s by the founder of Dole Foods Co.
• Attempts to reach Ellison through Oracle after business hours Wednesday were not successful. Ellison's involvement in the deal was publicly announced by Hawaii Gov. Neil Abercrombie.
• With nearly 50 miles of coastline, two resorts and zero traffic lights, Lanai boasts plenty of unspoiled charm. Tourism officials tout the luxury at its Four Seasons hotels and rugged rural areas that can only be reached by vehicles with 4-wheel drive.
• If all goes as planned, most of the island that is home to 3,200 residents and near Maui will be owned by Ellison -- the world's sixth-richest billionaire, according to Forbes.
• The outspoken Silicon Valley software magnate is known to race sailboats and make occasional unusual purchases. He once, for example, bought a tennis tournament to keep it in the United States.
• The land's current owner, Castle & Cooke Inc., filed a transfer application Wednesday with the state's public utilities commission, which regulates utilities on the island that serve its two resorts.
• The sale price for the property was not immediately clear. Lawyers for the seller redacted a copy of the sale agreement signed May 2, saying it includes confidential information that would competitively hurt Ellison and the seller if disclosed. The Maui

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