News Scrapbook 1986-1988

S n Diego, CA (S n Diego Co.) venl ng Tribune (Cir, o. 123,092)

Escondido, CA (~n Diego Co.) Times Advocate (Cir. D. 32,685) (Cir. S. 34,568) r C 8 198

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)

1987

DEC 7

1987

uEC?

...JW..'•

I'. C. 8

Est 1111 ',( USD__:s free throws f SA, DIEGO 'emor rJrward .\larty .\fonn ,;cured 18 point and

'

Ir IHS

P C 8

I

PERSONNEL FILE Woltman heads bond firm ll1chard \(o1ti% ra been elected pre 1dent of Spelman & Co., pec1alists mmum 1pal and government bond . Wollman h 33 y ars of experience m commercial and investment bank- ing Hew on of three founder of First Affil· lat d S urlt1 Inc. where be was executive v1c p 1d nt and director Over the. pa t thr years, Wollman w a also responsible for

Fornev with 23 point· aud Maurice Selvin with 11 as the Logger 'rl' SO Ire. hman center Keith Colvin, who began the ni ht with an 11.a scoring averag , pram~d his right ankle just six minute m lo the game He had air ad· cored five pomt at the timt•. cord ~lipped to 2-4 La,te in the game, Puget used a rugged fulleourt pre "I can't smile," aid U l) Couch Hank !-:gun. "I thought our reat lion to the pres wa a m . general breukdow n There wo lack of organizat10n with a lot ot gu) gomg olo

grabbed ix rebound n defeated Puget Sound 71-66 Mon- day night in noncunterence ba ket- ball action at tht• l SD Sports Cen- ter. The Turreru~ rallied from a 33-31 deficit at the half tu move ahead 56-54 with :05 remaining and never relinqui hed the lead, scoring the final 10 point5 from the free-throw line. Danny Mean added 13 point· and four assists, while \1ike Haupt grabbed seven rebounds fur San Diego, which ha won two in a row to ral.!:e its record lo 2-3. an Diego

ynd1cating real e tale transactions involvmg llx·al apartment and commercial properties. gr du, te of Indiana University, Woltman ha n a La Jolla re ident for 30 years. He 1s a tru t of University of San Diego. G nderson lias been named division m nager for 7-EI v n tor m San Diego and Imperial counti nderson, who began his ca- r r with 7 El v n m 1975 as a held represent- at1v will be r ponstble for the oper lion of 210 tor Anderson served a an ir Force admm traliv offtc r and r ceived a bache• lor's d r m bu in admimstralton from th University of Mmn ota al Duluth Barney & Barn y ha named driana Bu ot ystems manager of I Delphi Starnct comput- r yst m Busol J

RICHARD WOLTMA

the hrm 10 1985 with 10 years experience m the

try

insurance md Roger

National City, CA (San Diego Co) Star News (Cir. 2xW. 3,336) (Cir. S . 3,301) Dt.C 10

arket Development orfor Burson-

nnott has be n named general manager of

nnott v...s r

Escondido, CA (San Diego Co. ) Times Advocate (Cir. D. 32,685) (Cir. S. 34,568)

r vie pre;tdcnt research d1r

Inc

1

Mar teller Public Relations in Chicago. Dynatr El troni Inc ha appointed Lorrie Davis marketmg commumca- tlon manager. D vts will be responsible for trade shows public adv rUsmg ric G r ha b n named director of marketing for Personal Computer Products Inc Ga r will oversee the firm's advertising, cu tomer relations and product support Associates Fmanc1al Semc Co. Inc has named Martin Rodriguez mana- g r of 1t El CaJon branch. Rodnguez joined the company m 1985 as a fmanCJal representative. Al o, D ane John on has been named manager of its Cla1remont esa branch. Johnson JOmed the firm m 1977 a a service repre- sentatlv Pbihp Ry ha been promoted to assistant vtce president of lending at the Bank of Del Mar Ryan. who 1010ed the bank in 1986, will oversee commercial and 1nstallm nt lendmg. Stewart Title of an Diego has elected Mary Ellen Munyon vice president of b m developm nt and historic preservahon. Munyon is a member of the bo rd of directors of the an Diego Hi torical Society and Gaslamp Quarter Foundation Gerald Gibney ha Joined Nolte and , sSOCJates as engineering manager for transportation rv1ces. Gibney, a registered engineer in six tales, has more than IS years experience m transportatton management and 18 years experi- nce in cMl eng1 ccrmg. Torrey Pmes Equitv Corp. has appointed FAward Martin its vice pr idcnt/senior real estate loan officer. Martin previously worked 11 years in real estate lendmg with Flagship Federal. Pl a ad Deff'. of personnel cb ages aad promotioas to Meg Ford, The TribUDc, f'inaacial Sectioa, P.O. Bor 191, SaJJ Diego 92112. lations and

7

DEC 1 o ~987

I'. C. 8 - __

Jlll~11•1

P C. 8 1~88 r 'The Univ rsity of San Diego Community Cho1r and the USD orchestra will perform Handel's Messiah, 8 p.m., at the USD Founder Chapel. Tickets are $5, $3 for students and $2 for children under 12. Fo( more in- formation call 260-4600, ext. 4456. ?,qi:; - / I I

.}llle,.'a

18SB

E,r

..,.., he 'Messiah' •)-q '{' The La ,Jolla Civic/Univer ity, vm phony Association pre>.ent their annual "Messiah" Sing-Along. Singer, of all lev- els are encouraged to parti<'ipate. Accom- paniment will be provided by the La Jolla Civic/Univer5ity Symphony Orchestra, organ and harpsichord. Singers may bring their own "Messiah" scores, or purchase them at the dour. When: I p.m. and 4 p.m. Saturday. Where: St .. James-by-the-Sea F,pisro- pal Church, 743 Prospect St., La Jolla. Cost: $6 general admis ion, $4 for e- nior citiwns llnd students. Phone: To reserve tickets, call !)~4-4637; tickets also available at the dour. Universit ofS · go Community Choir. compo~e ofstudi-nb, faculty, staff and alumni, will present Handel's clas:;ic work, The Messiah, Part I, al USD Founders Chapel. The l SD Orchestra w1ll accompany the choir. When: 8 p.m. Friday. Where: Founders Hall, LSD, Alcala Park, San Diego. Cost: $5 genera, admission, $3 stu dents, $2 children under 12. Phone: 260-4600, ext. 4456, or ,John unes at 260-46 2.

Imperial Beach, CA (San Diego Co.) Imperial Star Beach News (Cir. 2 x W. 2,730) (Cir. S. 2,568) EC 10 1987

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 123,092)

I'. C. 8

...AJJ.'1

E11

1111

/ The University of._San_Di.ego.. Community Choir and the USD orchestra will perform Handel's Messiah, 8 p.m., at the USD Founders Chapel. Tickets are $5, $3 for students and $2 for children under 12. For more in- formation call .260-4600, 7 ext. 4456 j.. .-

rl tm

DEC 'I

1987

0 C 11- ln , is the Mu cum of Photo- gr pblc Art ' exhibit at Cele• br te the Holiday . But through a vi camera, it appea upright. One 5-year-old was baffled: " tom, what' up ide down - the tr or me?" CITY CE E : Big guns from th FL, ABC and CBS huddled with our Super Bowl Ta k Force t Star of the Sea Room on Fri- day.... Jack Reber saw the ulti• mate threat on the bumper of an older Oldsmobile: WARNING - I PROTECTED BY A PIT BULL WITH AIDS.... Lorimar Telepic~ ture has igned La Jolla literary agent Linda Che ter to find man- u cripts for new movie . She's in good company. The only other lit- erary agent under contract to Lorimar: Swifty Lazar. , •. There' no COMBO auction this year. In tead, 7,000 upporters are reviewing a mo t unusual gift c talog ntil Dec. 15, COMBO will t bids on item rangin from a grand piano to a pet lat- rine rvice. . . . Deputy Mayor Glori McColl has restored an old p rk that Ed Strulk ma banned: coff for council offices - 10 c nts a cup. ECOND CHANCE : Bu ine • woman Ch ryl John on and John un , th D oke man, r d cover d eac other at their Crawford HI h 20th reunion last mmer. They elop d on Satnr- •.•. tockbroker Dick Vance r vives n old maxim a warn- Ing for Congre , a It waver on onoml reforms: "If all el e fall , do the right thing." BICOA TAL: B tty Baker's gr ndl on, in school m New York City, ha be n in the thick of Am nca' Cup gossip. He wrote h r that he'd b n trying ''to tick up for the n Diego Y cht Club. But th lat rumor in our cla th worst. I your club really gom to mak that lady mayor of n Otego its honorary commo- dore?" All on DaRo a JI Morgan col t

~/l~11•1 18~ · iianjlgement shift diiJ at Rohr as growth here ending By Carl Larsen Tribune JStant Financial Editor Strained by the largest expansion in its history _and a record $1.5 billi_on backlog of orders, Rohr Industries will be faced m_ the commg year with establishing a management team to lead the burgeomng aerospace company into the 1990s. While the cast in the certain management succession remains unclear, the company, which employs 11,000 workers at plants in the United P C B I r

*Ro r ~ 15 ? Continued From A-21 turity." · Todd, 65, who holds the three titles of company chairman, president and chief executive officer, said he will give up duties of president and chief executive officer next year. "We are moving deliberately in that direction," Todd told sharehold- ers at the company·s annual meeting Saturday at the University of San Diego. HLJaid it was a move he wel- come

States and France, is writing the fm I chapter on expansion at its Chula Vista headquarters, said Rohr Chairman Harry W. Todd. A new customer support facility, adjacent to Rohr's 'main plant at the foot of HStreet in Chula Vista, could be the last new facility to be built here by Rohr, Todd said. The 75,000-square foot building is lated for occupancy by spring. A number of factors make expan- sion here impossible, Todd said. He aid the overall cost of doing business in San Diego has become too high for the company, which manufactures components used on virtually all commercial jetliners and m military and space applica- tions He pointed to high housing costs and to a lack of available land to expand near its present operation, where development must be ap- proved by the San Diego Unified Port Commission. And high labor costs have become a source of concern for the company. In recent years, Rohr has devel- oped new manufacturing activities in Alabama and is shifting other activi- tie · to states with lower labor costs. La t February, the company was hit by a two-week strike by 4,600 union machinists. By May, Rohr will have opened two new final assembly plants in Ar- kansa . ·

ROBERT W. GOLDSMITH Heads operations

G. "DON"SIM Rohr vice chairman

had forced the company to plan for changes in the executive suite of of- fices. to recognize the growth and recogmze the ages of senior executives," Sim said. In addition, Rohr next year will need to find a replacement for P .E. Brunton, the company's top financial officer, who has been with Rohr since 1976. Brunton will retire next month, Todd said. A successor has yet to be announced by the company. In his presentation to sharehold- ers, Goldsmith said Rohr has boosted employment in the past year by nearly 30 percent. Last year, Rohr reported record sales of $663 million while earning slid to $26.9 million from $47.3 mil- lion for fiscal 1986. Per-share income dropped to $1.53 last year from $2.70 a year earlier. Net income was $7.1 million for the quarter versus $87 million last year / r' "We do need

of three company executives on the 10-man board. John W. Sandford, 53, who appears to be on a fast management track, is the other candidate for the company presidency. Sandford is senior vice president of programs and technology. He joined Rohr last year after after holding executive posts at Fair- child Industries Inc., where he was a corporate vice president and presi- dent of its Fairchild Republic Co. di- vision. Prior to that, he was presi- dent and chief executive officer of DeHaviland Aircraft of Canada and held posts at Rockwell International. It was Sim and Goldsmith who shared the podiwn with Todd at Sat- urday's annual meeting. Sim, after the session, said the company was taking "progressive steps" in creating a new top manage- ment team. He said Rohr's recent growth, which resulted in 2,500 new employ- ees being hired last year, and the ad- vancing a of senior man::u?ement

HARRY W. TODD To give up some duties

Todd was careful to say that labor is not entirely to blame for Rohr's qecision to expand production away from its two main California plants, at Riverside and at its Chula Vista headquarters. "You can't lay it all at labor's door," he said. "There are many other factors." He identified land and utility costs. He said the company is not consid- ering moving its headquarters. "We'll alway be here," he said, "b11t we've reach~_t position of ma- Please see ROHi_'A-23, Co/.1

Made with FlippingBook Annual report