News Scrapbook 1986

La Jolla, CA (San Diego Co.) La Jolla Light (Cir. W. 9,040) MAR 201986

Sa n Diego, Calif. Southern Cross (Cir. W. 27 ,500)

MAR i O1986

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P. c. B

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P. C. B

/ :i:-cALA PAR~e University of San Diego will / ' --·- 3 m on host a summer from 11 "":n:1· to P· · Saturday, March 2, m the Camino Dmmg Room on the USD campus. . More than 25 children's camps, accredited by ~he American Camping Association, will be f~atured to g,ve parents and their children an opportunity to become acquainted with the summer programs: Camps to be featured this summer mclude computer camp Golden West Forensics Camp, and weight loss camp'for girls. Several sports camps will also ~e offered, including swimming, boys' football, and tennis. '?amps are for children between the ages of eight and 18, with the exception of USD's Tournament Tennis Camp. The fair is free and open to the public. For more information, call Jacqui Hones at 260-4585 or John

He added, "For me to do the jobs on their places and figure out what they need to have done, I have to know what the situation is. If thev j ust want to keep a kid 1g to 'r ss ce r- i h r ,,ne111.1 ,, !!.'""g "' start beating her up, well, then we start look- ing at heavy stuff on the doors. It's pretty wild." L

ntinue from A3 Jeff insisted on being paid before leaving. All she had was a JOO bill . She told him to keep the c ange. Dome~L"-- ,.,_~~ b h father and son. The younger Rigsbee said that one time he was putting dead bolts on a woman's door after a recent break-up, and while he was working the man came in and proceeded to remove items from the house. J-le said he couldn't do a thing but call the woman and tell her what was go- ing on. reasons Rigsbee's for retaining , .. services, said

n dramatic change in the lock business.

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Lowell Ri b

Getting a lock on the business

D Ill, lJJht 'taff Writer

By KR ES'f t:. P L OW LL RIGSBEE addled a blank 1n the key cutler and flipped on the witch. The motor ro c to a whir that wa oon drowned out as the brass touch d the blade, . Little fl ck of metal hot loo c nd joined nd dune of havings that prcad acros the heavy work table. "Oh yeah, business is good,'' said Rigsbee, 7S, Bu me . i lso different. La olta Repair and Lock mith rvice, "since 1953," exists a community gauge of sorts, hirtmg with Looking back to when he bought the busines in 1964, Rigsbe said, "In tho c day , you didn't have locks. Nobody ever worried about anybody ettmg in . Peopl would ju t come over, borrow a cup of coffee and le vc a note, you know what l mean? We used to do 90 percent of my bu inc s in home repair . Now, it'· the other way around." That doe n't mean the business doem't do 1t hare nymorc, only that people arc more security con ciou . Rig bee aid the hift began in "about '69 or '70, when thing were getting kind of ncrvou , you know . People were breaking into hou c and we'd go put dead bolt on their doors . . . . And now it's even worse, and this town is filling up o fast. I can't even remember where the streets arc now." If you lost track of where La Jolla Repair and of home repair change in social preoccupation .

In 1963, he saw Augie Handley, then owner of La Jolla Repair Service (no locks or keys), at Harry's Coffee Shop. Rigsbee made an offer to buy his business. Handley refused. Rigsbee doubled his offer and a bargain was made. He purchased the business located on Pearl, "lock, stock and barrel," for $6,000. And if you have wondered where La Jolla Lock and Safe went in 1969, Rigsbee bought that, too - for $8,000. Before buying La Jolla Lock and Safe, Rigsbee did only light work in locks and keys. "The fact i ," he said, "I didn't know a damn thing about locks. Bill Mcanley, of Meanley and Son Hard- ware - Bill's not there anymore. He died. His son is there - he taught me so much. Boy, he really knew locks." Jeff Rigsbee graduated from the University of San Diego and worked tor General" Atomic from 1964 to 1975 when he was laid off. He com- muted for a short time from his home in Del Mar to Irvine until he decided to buy his father' business. When asked for their best stories, Jeff Rigsbee said, "Oh, that's easy. Drunks. I've had one over her1• that was really something, where I had to get her in several times... . She was always drunk . (Her husband) would always try to lock her out. The last time I went over there they had a big fight, and after I got her in, he was sitting in- side the apartment."

Lock mith ervice went three month ago - after the building it prev1ou ly occupied on Pearl wa renovated to make way for re -taurant - it ha moved to Girard Avenue, till staunchly planted in the h rt of the community from which it receives the m ijority of its busincs ·. Lowell Rigs e no longer owns the business which he old to his son, Jeff, nine year ago, but till come

Nunes at 260-4682 .

Sen Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

La Jolla, Cl>. ) san 01ego co. la Jolla Ugh\ (Cir. w. 9,293)

AR 2419t

._Allen', , ., 1888 v.-r~ w~-Di~go offers "In- Ho~tallce" from students at USO If you need furniture moved. Y_ards cleaned, errands run or any as- sistance around the house call 236- 5765. This program will be held April 5 and 6 and will be operated on a first-come, first-served basis. P. c. B.

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Darfler-Wilson -;;..q 5 . . Gena Lee Darfler of Umvers1ty City was married February 15 to Scott Bradley Wilson of Long Beach. The bride is the daughter of Mr. asnd Mrs. Gene Darfler of La Jolla.. The bridegroom is the son of Dr. and Mrs. James Wilson of Point Loma. The afternoon ceremony took place at La Valencia Hotel and was officiated by Louis Vick. The brother of the groom, Todd Wilson, acted as the Best :vtan. A fter a reception in the Veranda Room of the hotel, the couple left .. for a wedding trip to Hawan.

to cut a few keys and rewire '.l lamp or two. The older R1 sbee has lived in La Jolla sm 1940 when hi home wa on Coast B ulcvard. 'ow, he and his wife of over 50 years reside in another La Jolla home which they purchase for $11,000 in 1949. During Work! War 11, he worked for G eral Dynamics, Convair Divis1cm as a foreman . Whca the war ended he began a dellvcry service in La Jolla maki11g trip to and from the Atla11ic and Pacific Trading Company (A&P) and the H&R Market. The latter's location is no~ occupied by Jurgensen's, ht aid. He hurt his back and left the delivery busines to ma1age the H&R Market for tht next 16 year .

San Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Evening Tribune (Cir. D. 127,454)

Gena Lee and Scott Wilson

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The bride is a graduate o Univer~}'.__Q.LS.an Diego an~ is working as a sales representative. Wl .lson 1·s a USD graduate as well and received a master's degree from the University of Texas. He

fiAR 24 1986

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._Alt.,n ', P C. B. bt 1888 Corrections _ .&J:l~fications ~

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is_ a_s_c=ie•n- tist and engineer.

\__U- po_n_ t_h_ei_r _r_et_u_r_n_, -th-e~y_s_e_tt-1-ed- in__ }--ong Beach.

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esfts Dominguez, who has been commissioned to de- sign and cast a memorial bust of the late Ray A. Kroc at San Diego Jack Murphy Stadium, also bas a life-size sculpture of St. Didacus in front of the Helen K. and James S. Copley Library at the University of San Diego. The Tribune last 'Tuesday erroneously reported that the St. Didacus sculpture is located in front of the James S. Copley Library in La Jolla.

Please see LOCK A6

san Diego, CA (San Diego Co.) Dally Transcript (Cir. D. 7,415)

Jl {len'• P c 8 Bill C/" &:-- It's probably

I I 888 ysart, Sailing, Flying And Peter Pan

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chelder, dean of Western State University College of Law, will talk about new philosophies in law school teaching on Channel 5l's "At the Bar" program this Sunday at8:30a.m * • * Maria T. Arroyo-Tabin and Hugh Friedman have been ap- pointed to one-year terms on the Legal Services Trust Fund Com- mission by the state bar's Board of Governors. Arroyo-Tobin is an assistant U.S. attorney and Friedman teaches at USD Law School. * * * Beatrice Williams Kemp of Copeland, Kemp, Lugar & Pohl has been appointed to the state bar's Co=ission on Judicial Nominees Evaluation. Reappointed to the co=ission was Deputy District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis. • * * A showing of Polish hangings and tapestries will be displayed at the San Diego County Law Library from April 14toMay24. * * *

school's first national moot court team. After graduating, he practiced with Hugh Friedman until 1976 and then worked for the Westgate trustee another three years. He also began teaching at USD, first legal writing and legal research, then admiralty law. That was 17 years ago. Today Dysart is a partner with Dale & Lloyd in La Jolla practicing primarily admiralty law. He's also still an adjunct professor at USD. _ As for sailing, he "sails as often as we (wife Sandra, their daughter Jennie, a senior at La Jolla High School, and Jay) can get out." This will be his sixth and final year on the Southwestern Yacht Club's Board of Directors. Next up might be the board of Junior The- ater; says Dysart. • * * Michael Andrew of Luce, For- ward, Hamilton & Sci-ipps will be a visiting professor m bankruptcy and commercial law at Stanford Law School this fall and the Uni- versity of Colorado Law School next spring. He plans to return in May 1987. • * • The Mexican Bar Liaison Com- mittee will meet from 4-7 p.m. on April 4 at USD Law School in a joint sessio~ with the Women's Bar Association in Tijuana. There will be presentations by both bars on civil and criminal legal aspects of traffic accidents. * • • 'Buzz' Featherman will lead a panel discussion April 2 from 7- 8:30 p.m. on achieving peace through arms control negotiations. The discussion will be held at USD's Ma~hester Executive Con- ference Center. . . "

Dysart and others helped the show's technical director put together the rigging, blocks and harness-type equipment the kids would need. "There were six dif- ferent flying apparatus that re- quired eight people," said Dysart. Even though some of the gear went down during the 13- performance run, it was nothing that couldn't be repaired. Dysart was either out front or behind

little presump-

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tuous just maybe if Bill Dysart hadn't got• ten rnvolved in iling, his son Jay wouldn"t have been able to fly like P ter Pan. Shortly before Christmas 1984, San Diego Junior Theater (many simply call it J .T .) started working on the et for ,ts version of Sir Jam s M. Barrie's 1911 cla8Sic LawBriefs scheduled for February 1985. But they r n into trouble with the industrial rigging used to carry Pet r, Wendy, John and Michael into the air. No concern for Captain Hook because he didn't fly anyway and Tinker Bell w s projected with a pecisl I er. Yet just imagine a performance without an airborne Peter Pan . That' wh n Dy8art stepped in. A a m mber of J T.'s production staff md a sai!or for about 23 ye r . he tracked down some m rim• hardware which had a working capacity of 1,500 to 2,000 pounds, more than nough to han- dle the show' equipment. "Wh n you've been around !I· ilbout , you dl'al with larger rig- ging equipment," said Dysart, who owns Newport 33 sailboat and was I t year's commodore of the SouthwestPrn Yacht Club in Point Lorn . to s y, but maybe

El Centro, CA {Imperial Co.) Imperial Valley Press (Cir. W. 10,526)

AR 241986

Jlllen'• P. C. 8

F.

( ~ .; K aydie Smith graduated from the UniJrer- sity of fu!n

by Martin Kruming

stage for mostoftheproduetions. Both he and Jay, a 14-year-old ninth grader at Muirlands Junior High School, got involved in Junior Theater three years ago: Dad on the technical side, son as a perfor- mer. Jay played the lead tenor in a "Mu~•c Ian" quartet, which ended Sunday. He has been in nine shows, as well as Starlight's "King and I" last summer. Dysart's love for the theater is mo tly on the technical side. As a student at Vista High School he was involved in lighting, sound and some set design. Four years of debatmg at Stanford, in- cludmg national tournaments, took up much of his time but he still did some documentary film makmg. Dysart came back for law school at USD, where he was on the

Diego in Decem- ber, 1985, with a m ·or in education and a minor in English. She is cur- rently employed as a substitute teacher with San Diego City Schools

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Smith and is working towards a master's degree in curriculum development at the University of San Diego. She is the daugnteroilk and Mrs. Gary Smith of Brawley She is a 1982 graduate of Brawley Union High School. _ _ ___ _/

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