News Scrapbook 1982-1984

LEMON GROVE REVIEW

DAILY CALIFORNIAN SEP 2 9 1983

The richest of the rich

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SEP 2 t 198J

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Jazz concert benefits hunger relief A jazz concert sponsored by the USD Associated Students and Sigma Pi fraternity will benefit Ox- fam America, a famine relief agency, and the Mis- sion Valley YMCA. It will be held from 1 to ~:30 p.m. Sunday at Humphrey's HILlf Moon Inn, Shelt,er Island rJ.ckets , are $3 for general admission and $2 for studenb!.

S,,.~J \\ tW\'( Qh, M'\ • on Getty tops list with his $2.2 billion o

Lawrence joins San Diego list

Alternatives to Litigation, San DieP,o's fir~l fµU-scuw !':<'r- \/ice providing cosl-effel'tive method by the center will bf" mediation, either as simple settlement conference,11 or in "more so- phisticated mini-trials;" litiga- tion management, a process t1nabling counsel to acquare C'nough information to evalu- ate ca,5es for eflrly i,,ctt)ement; and adjudication, w h I ch in- " Ives arbitration and refer• encC's from the court. The multi-facPted program C'ntails edueation and re,.ee.• h as well as disp,,te rPsolul10n, Welsh says. The ALC will serve the UCSD School of Law a~ an experimc•n1.1I )ah- oratory for research in the relative values of different techniques and as a !arum for clinical education, and in the coming months will bPgin a training progra'."'I for l)("rsons interested in developing medi- ation J;kills. "This kind of effort results in .savings for th<' cJjents; in- creased ability c,J competRnt attorneys to take on addition- al case:, and better serve the public; and improved calendar management for the c1Jurts. We believe the CF.nter may he- come a model for similar pro- grams in other communities," said Welsh. A project of the San Diego Law Center, co,sponsored by the U. of S.D. School of Law and the San Pic>go County Bar Assn. and funder! In part by a grant from the Weingart Foundation, the CentP.r ill be located in Colcmbia CPn- tre, ~m. W. A st, ir, space do• nated IYy Douglas F. Manches- ter, president of Torrey En- terprises, Inc., owner of the building. Mancj:).ester is a member of the University's Bo!lr3 of Trustees. For services and fees con- tact Alternatives tc, Litigation Center, 236,1848.

aire daughters of oilman H.L. Hunt, all now living in Dallas, are scattered from sixth to 14th on the list. Nelson Bunker Hunt 57, is worth $1.4 billion; Caroline Hunt Schoellkopf, 60, $1.3 bil- lion; Margaret Hunt Hill, 68, $1 billion, and WilJ.iam Herbert Hunt, 54, $1 bil- lion, the magazine said. Says Nelson Bunker Hunt·"We're not as smart as other people, so we need every advantage." Adds sister Caroline: "All my life I thought I'd end up penni- less. Well, I've finally gotten over it." David Packard, 71, of Los Altos Hills, Calif., and Hewlett-Packard Co., is No. 4: his worth is listed at $1.85 billion, and An Wang, 63, of Wang Laboratories Inc., in Lincoln, Mass., is next with $1.6 billion. H. Ross Perot, 53, of Electronic Data Systems in Dallas, 1s eighth, worth more than $1 billion, George P. Mitch- ell, 64, of Mitchell Energy & Develop- ment Corp., in Houston, is 10th, worth at least $1 billion, according to Forbes. Al No 12 is David Rockefeller, 68, of New York City, grandson of Standard Oil mogul John Da'liison Rockefeller and current patriarch of the clan, worth more than $1 billion. Two self-made oilmen in Denver are worth $1 billion each, Forbes said. They are Philip F. Anschutz, 44, at No. 13 on the list, and Marvin Davis, 57, who also owns half of 20th Century Fox, at No. 15,

Nt.'W YORK (AP) - Fifteen Amen- c n re m the money - BIG money, ut the nche t of the nchest - Gor- don Peter Getty - says he'd "rather be ori the mu ic pag '' than at the top of For magazine's R1 h List. And another of the nation's wealthi- t f w ay mod ·Uy, "We're not as smart a other people, so we need ev ry advantage." or · magazine is at it again, rank- in the 400 nchest American in its 1 u due out next week At the summit ar 15 billionaires, 13 men and two wo n. Ix of them living in Texas. G tty, 49, of San Francisco, son of Im n John Paul G ttv, has a mini- m m n t worth of $2.2 billion, accord- n to Forbes. An amateur composer, p1am t and patron of the art , he is married nd h· four ons. At No 2, weighing in at $2.15 billion, is Sam M Walton, 65, who lives in Ben- tonville, Ark., and drives a pickup truck. His family owns 41 percent of Wal- art Stores stock. "It's unbeliev- able," he told Forbes. Dam I Keith Ludwig, 86, of New York City, who e shipping and real es- tate fortune topped the Forbe · li t last year, dropped to No. 3 because of huge lo from an Amazon jungle pulp v nturc. tHI, his net worth is believed to be mor than $2 billion, Forbes said. Two bill10naire sons and two blllion-

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M. LARRY LAWRENCE

SAN DIEGO UNION SEP 2 9 1983 • • • "Two Special Wine Semi- nars With Dan Berger," will be held at the University of San Diego. "Varietal Bi:eak- down" will be presented on four consecutive Tuesday evenings, Oct. 4 through Oct 25. "Super Premium Wines" will be held Wednes- day evenings, Nov 2 through Nov. 23. Registra- tion for each full series is $60 or $20 per session. The seminars are held at 6 30 p.m. in the DeSales Hall Board Room and are spon- sored by USD Continuing Education. For information and reservations, call 293- 4585.

Tribune and The San Diego Union and chairman of The Copley Press, was list- ed by Forbes as having an estimated net worth of $200 million. · • Robert Staples Howard, 58, bounced from newspaper to newspaper early in his career before taking over the Casper (Wyo.) Star-Tribune in 1951. The Rancho Santa Fe resident now owns 18 daily newspapers, is bullish on cable television and has increased his net worth from $125 million to $175 milhon over the past year, according to Forbel\ • Ernest W. Hahn, 64, has devel- oped 34 million square feet of shopping centers during his career and today has an estunated net worth of $150 million. The Rancho Santa Fe resident current- ly is developing Horton Plaza in down- town San Diego. • Margaret Cargill, 63, of La Jolla, is little known, but her estimated net worth is $138 million She and her brother James, a Minnesota resident, are believed to have evenly split the $275 million in stock from the grain company founded by their grandfather. -Michael Kinsman

While the rich may be getting richer, hotel operator M. Larry Lawrence is gaining. Lawrence, 57, joined Forbes maga- zine's Rich List this year for the first time, raising to six the number of San Diego residents among the nation's 400 wealthiest individuals. Termed a "very prudent financial specialist," Lawrence has climbed from summer contracting jobs in Chi- cago to chairman of the Hotel de! Coro- nado and real estate investor. He has an estimated net worth of $136 milhon. The magazine reports, however, that figure may be undervalued. Five other San Diegans made return appearances on the Rich List. They are: • Ray Kroc, the high school drop- out who now sells $2. 7 billion in McDonald's hamburgers each year, has a net worth of $450 million, according to the magazine. The 80-year-old Kroc was still small time at 52, the magazine says, but in the past year alone his net worth has risen about $130 million Kroc divides bis time between homes in La Jolla and Chicago. • Helen K. Copley, publisher of The

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LOS ANGELES TIMES

SEP 3 0 1983

DAILY CALIFORNIAN SEP 3 0 1983 EDUCATION/ "The Media's Roi in Education" is the title of a seminar to be held from_ 4:15 to 6 p.m Thursday, Oct. 6, in the Cammo Lounge at the Universitv of San Diego, Alcala Park. Panelists will include: · Lanie Jones, education editor for the San Die~o edition of the Los Angeles Times; Lena Nozizwe of KFMB Radio; and Michael Scott- Bl~ir educ~tion editor o~ the San Diego Umon Fee 1s $10. For registration infonna- tion, call 293-4536

FOUNDERS GALLERY ( University of San Diego, Foundent"tall) • "Beasts" an exhibition of ammilll In art form, mcludmg acu p ure, paintings and etchings. Gallery hours are from noon to 5 p .m. Monday through Friday.

DAILY CALIFORNIAN SEP 3 o 198 3

COMPUTER/ "Introduction to the Use of Microcomputers in Education Set- tings" is the title of a course to be offered from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 1, at the University of San Diego, Alcala Park. Other computer courses are scheduled t~rough January. Fee is $65 per course, with an additional $25 for courses involving hands--0n computer work. For more infonnation, call 291~, Ext. 4296.

DAILY CALIFORNIAN SEP 3 0 1983

PARENTS DAY/ The University of San Diego will host parents at the annual "Parents Day" beginning at 9:30 ~.m. Sat~r- day Oct. 1. Parents will meet m carg~i Th~ater to hear a welcome speech b~ f President Author E. Hughes. A series o arent workshops will follow. For more lnformation, call the university at 291-6480, Ext. 4271.~---- ~~--

SAN DI EGO CLIPPING SERVICE

SAN DIEGO UNION

SEP 2 6 1982

HOLLIS GENTRY QUINTET - The quintet will perform with the Dr. Sparns B,g Band at 2:30 and 5:30 p.m. nexl Sunday in Humphrey'• at the Half Moon Inn, 2303 Shelter Island Drive, for the "Day on the Bay Jazz Festival" co-sponsored by the USO Cultural Arts Assocla- t,on and the Sigma Pi fraternity al USO.

SAN DIEGO UNION SEP 1 0 l98l

EVENING TRIBUNE

USD meets Redlands By Bill Finley Slaff Writer

SEP 9

1983

"I feel we should be able to compete with all six of the Division III teams on our schedule and we're hoping to break even with the'four bigger schools," he said. "It's not unrealistic to think we could finish 8-2. If I had to guess, I'd say we'll go some- where between the 6-4 and 8-2 range." Forgarty has installed an I-for~ation ~f- fense and the chief beneficiary will be tail- back 'Jerome McAlpin. McAlpin, a senior from Los Angeles, gained 424 yards last season. This year, said Fogarty, he should gain 1,000. "In this offense, your tailback position should account for at least 1,000 yards if you are going to be any good at all," the coach said. The team's top receiving threat will be Michael Rish, a starter the last two sea- sons. Rish, who runs the 40 in 4.65 secon?s, already holds most of USD's career receiv- ing records with 78 catches, 1,305 yards and 13 touchdowns. The USD defense will feature strong safety Greg Stein, free safety Chip Jarvis and 6-1 265-pound tackle Marvin Castillo. Stein ,,;as the team's defensive player of the year last season. Jarvis, said Fogartr, : "hits as hard as anyone I've ever seen m football." USD finished 4-5 last season, but the Toreros were seldom overmatched. The team's losses were by 2, 6, 6, 14 and 21 points. . Among the victories was a 31-0 trmmph over Redlands at Redlands. The Bulldogs, who finished 4-6, will also be opening their ,eason tonight.

San Diego, Friday, September 9 Toreros to play question game·

Phil Spencer was not stamped from the mold that normally produces college quarterbacks. In short, he is, uh, short. He is only 5-foot-7, but University of San Diego coach Brian Fogarty announced y_es· terday that Spencer will be the startmg quarterback when the Toreros open t~eir football season here tonight at 7:30 against Redlands. "In our last scrimmage, Phil did some things we really liked," Fogarty explained. "He scored." Since the day practice began, USD h~s been searching for someone to replace Eric Sweet, the Torero quarterback the last two years. The contestants have been Spencer, who played cornerback last season; fresh- man Roger Meyers from Poway High, and University of Hartford transfer Steve Var- dilos. "Phil's the kind of guy who makes things happen," Fogarty said of the decision to star.t Spencer, a senior who last played quarterback at Mater Dei High in Santa Ana. "He's a real good scrambler if things break down. The thing that set him apart, finally was his experience. He hasn't played' quarterback at this level, but he's played, and that's going to help him tomor- row night." It will also be Fogarty's first game at this level. Fogarty, who last season dir~t- ed St. Francis High in Pasadena, was hired to replace Bill Williams last winter, and he is optimistic.

By T.R Reinman Tribune Sportswriter A lot of teams

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their seasons wit:1 qu~uur.~ to lie answered, but the first one the University of San Pi{'go's rookie coach, Bill Fogarty, has to answer is a cru ial one. Can Phil Spencer, who bas played corncrba"k for the last three years at Saddleback Junior Colleg1: ' , play quarterback this season? "It's a tough place to have question marks," Fogarty said, "but Phil's the kind of a guy who makes things happen." Pressing Spencer are transfer Steve Bardilos and former Poway High quarterback Roger Meyer, al- though Spencer will start at 7:30 tomorrow night when the Toreros open their season at home against the University of Redlands. "They're all inexperienced," said Fogarty of his quart- erbacks, ''but we think they're doing a good job. And there's nothing like competition to get them playing well." Fogarty's scheme calls for a basic 50 defense, and a

PHIL SPENCER

BILL FOGARTY

. . Slot-I offense, which is a slight change from last year, and linebacker. Last years ~efens1ve ~layer of t~e year when the Toreros were more pass-oriented. This year, was stro~g safet.YGreg Stem, and hes_ back with free Fogarty says, USD would like to get 1,000 yards from its ~fety Chip .Jarvis and four other expen_ence~ vete_rans. tailbacks. Jefome McAlpin, a 5-foot-9, 180-pound senior F1~e more lm~backers with a lot of playmg time will be who ru hed for 424 yards last season, is the starter. But vymg for startmg spots. Fogarty is still trying out backups, with the inside track "We don't know too much about Redlands (4-6 in '82)," going to Chris Bertrand. said Fogarty, who mherited a 4-5 club from coach Bill Also back on offense is receiver Mike Rish, who caught Williams,.who was. fir~ last Decem~.r and has taken a 40 balls for 637 yards and six touchdowns last fall, and coachmg JOb at Umvers1ty of the Pac1f1c. tackles John Amarillas (6-6, 265) and Gary Holley (6-3, ''We're more or less concerned with ironing out our 240). problems right now and we'll see where that takes us in Defensively, the Toreros are solid at defensive back the opener." ,

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