News Scrapbook 1973

5 new Westgate directors named / 12-1/st.JA.IV / / -13

l Bishops To AtSynodOpe

new board then, NieL,;en

countants, and J.R Ridg, new board ;election way, 59, of Rancho Santa the bench today. Fe, president of La Valen- The five were namrd by seven members, two of from The new Westgate board cia Hotel Co., of La Jolla.

Five new dlrr<'lors of Weslgate-Cahfornta Corp. were named by V.S. rns- tnct Court Judge Leland C tel en today In aecor- danc • with a final etlle- ment plan of the Securities and Exchange C'omm1s- ion's suit against the con- glom rate. Seleded a directors by ·1el n are Jack r.rtvello, 65, of San Diego, presidf'nt of Sun Pacific, Inc.; Her- bert Kunz 1, 65, of San Diego, an attorney and former president of the Solar 01'1 s10n of Interna- tional Harvester; I! R Land, 56 of Los Angele , pre 1dent of Rex L: nd and ssoclate . a manabem nt consultant firm, Jam Leisner 49, of Rr\erly Hill., "'ho retired m 1972 a partner in charge of the nine western statl's offices of P at, :'.larwH'k, \1itchell and Co , c1•rt1f1ed public ac-

said

e of the five new board

will consist of a total of me bers will probably

serve as acting prrsident of

the new

Nielsen under terms of a them nominated by U.S. Westgate until settlement that was com- Holding Co., which was also

board can fmd someone to run the company, Nielsen also said he is con d ring staying any legal proceedings against te for at least six to give the new board lime to get the com- pany running again. We said. Niel members) face a f , but I am C' 1- vinced tllat 1f order yin be able ta "They (the new

a defendant in the SEC ac-

pleted Tuesday. The out-of-

court ~•ttlement also calls t10n. U.S. Holding, which for the resignations of West- owns about 53 per cent of gate chairman C. Arnholt Westgate's voting securi-

ties, is ownrd by Smith, his daughter and ex-wife. . ielsen said the two non, G Arnholt Smith's Thompson, 1J S. Holding's Nielsen said all the board proved by the SEC as re- attorney

Smith and president Philip The SEC suit was filpd in A. Toft.

.S. months

federal court here May 31 Holding board select1011s and accuSE>d Smith, Toft, will be Carol Smith Shan- I tlons of securities laws, daughter, and David R W tgate and others of vio-

. me involving fraud. ln agr eing to the settle- defendants neithi>r ment t

the

Westg te

reslor reconst1tu plore ev r achieve it,'

ard wt ex- a\enue to \ n said.

admitted nor d med any members have been ap- 'I am pleased that the quired by the . Uement five persons I have nam d plan wrongdmng

The new pectal coun 1 for Westgate will be named

hav agreed to use their ronsiderable skills and en- ergies to work for renewed health for Westgate," Mel- :;en said in announcing the

Th

, Nielsen

within tY.o

for the first Um tomorrow, their resignat10ns Smith 2nd Toll will offer to .m. ielsen said.

said.

Accordmg to the setlle- empowered to ri'·==--=.._,.U"2....,.te as- th special

the ment terms couns 1 '1\1]

Dorn, assisted by his daughter, Robin, is about to move into new larger quarters with, hopefully, better-planned files.

Franc·1sc·o, spends one of his la · d ys 111 his present offlCf', s:1rrounded b the odds and ends of his uniqu filing system.

A I.I'ITLE ELBOW R00)1, PLEA E - :--:orman Dorn. public information officer for Callfornia State Lniver ity at San

WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 24, 1973 THE SENTINEL

3-D

a::J: J. ], 1973

lJSD-lJSICREPORT

BUSINESS MIRROR

lash

Industry, coll~ges

Streaks on the line

Mondoy, Odober 29, 1973 TH USD Gains Tie; USIU Falls

pany, former deputy de- fense secretary under Pre- sident Nixon, former Stan- trustee, long-time friend of edueation. "I recognize that for the I some reasons. "Is kicking university , unrestricted ROTC programs off the money is most valuable," campus the kind of leader- he said after the prime ship we need? Is prohibiting steaks were consumed. "I business from r~cruiting .. does not necessarily follow . the kmd of leadership we however. that unrestricte need?" • money, used as it has bee Some of the educators used, is always in the inter looked grim. Packard sund- est of the corporation." ed bitter. "Should these un- Silence was deep as he iversities serve as havens explained that times have for radicals who want to hanged. Almost every col- destroy the free enterprise lege board today must have system? Should students be representatives of students, taught that American cor- faculty, alumni, ethnic porations are evil . . ?" groups and the like, he said. Ceremony became con- ".Moreover, much of the troversy. Derek C. Bok, power has gone to the facul- Harvard president, rose to ty, and too often faculty defend the freedom a great decisions are determined university must preserve by a militant minority of even, he said, at the cost of the faculty." tolerating distasteful, un- Beeause of this and other constructive behavior. reasons, he said, "I believe "Understandably you the case for a corporation should give jn self-inter- giving unrestricte_d funds to est," he said, but he urged a private university can no the executives to intel"Jjre longer be supported." Con- self-interest broadly. tnbut1ons should he said, but with strings In a series of rhetroical questions he presented ·ontmue, attached. ford

By JOH. 'CL NJFF AP 8us1MH Analyst NEW YORK - It "'as planned as a largely cere- monial affair by educators and industrialists to encour- age donations to the nation's most prestigious private universities. The institutions of busi- ness and education needed each other, it was said. And since big business had the money and the .universities needed it badly, wasn't it logical that ideas and money should be ex- changed? Assembled at the Univer- sity Club were leaders of some great American univ- ersities: Harvard, Chicago, Stanford, .Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, Cor- nell, the University of Pen- nyslvania. Joining them were some elite of American industry, many of them members or sympathizers of the Com- mittee for Corporate Sup- port of American Universi- ties. The luncheon would promote the need for contn- but1ons, which have fa! off. The funds needed most, said a booklet planned but not yet published, were those that permitted the un- iversities to establish their own priorities - unrestrict- ed, discretionary funds, rather than those rigidly specified. Featured spealcer was David Packard, tanford cla of 1934, cofo der of the 15iant Hewlett- ckard scientific instruments com-

urrender a m re 10 point· p<•r game However. two members ol th l off n. e might be al bin matters from the 1dcl1ne aturdav Quart rback Bob Duitch sprained an ankle and tailback Rich Paul,on,

Turner counted 2"2 tnjured players afterwards with junior linebacker Don Thomasson the most mostly ser1o u ly hurt. He underwent surgery Sunday for an abdominal herma "If we don't get some of tho e injured guvs back bl' game time · Turne"r contemplated "our ranks w 111 be mighty thm to go against an opponent as tough as LA State GSit:'s enltrc defensive backfield is sidelined with injuries and this marks the worst campa1g., ever tor Turner a far as tnjuries are concerned LA Sta te bas won its last two ~ame, aller opening Wllh an 0-H mark The Dtablu topped Azusa- Pac1f1c 35-16. and edged Cal Lutheran 32-2i last week The Westerners will be seeing a lot of the famed Houston Veer th1 · Saturda\· which mean· even more of C~aud1e \\ atson and Larry Y.atklns JC ,\II- mencan Rick Holoubek runs the option attack th1. season ·aturdafs game 1s the lir t or fuur consecutive road contests for Turner who do not return home until i'.O\ 24 to l'losc out the :eason agJ1r.sl Cal Polr Pomona. ·' The \\estt'rncrs will also hoping to rxtend their hex over th Diab s l 'Sil' has won the past two en<'ounters 21 20 last year and 21 7 m 1971 alter droppm a 35-8 game m 1965 and 55-20 u, c1 ion hve ye r

terference call at the 11 with USD then got the ball on Croom then going the final its own 11 with 1 22 still on yard for the TD to make it the clock. On the first play, 28-13. USD's attempt to run Dulich fired over the middle the conversion failed. to Sanchez who raced 89 A 14-yard Dulich-to-Croom yards untouched. Tomsco pass climaxed an 89-yard made a low, diving catch of drive with Doug Rothrock's Dulich's pass for the tying conversion making it 28-20. conversion.

Denied a sixth straight victory in a 28-28 standoff with Humboldt State, Un- iversity of San Otego returns home Saturday mght to face Azusa Pacific with the Tor- eros now 5-1-1. STATISTICS First downs Rushes-yardage USO Hum.St. IB 21 38 116 45·9'2 236 251 106 31

Pass,ng yardage Return yaraa9e Passes Punts Fumbles·lc)St Penalties yardage First downs RusheS-yardag@ Pa~sing yardage Rerurn yardage Passing Punts Penalt,es·yarda;e

14365 \73}\ 7 32.0 12 30.4 I I 0-0 '0-72 11102 USIU L.A.St. 10 33 28 31 58 212 186 379 16 47 16 J2 2 21 32-0 9 l9 0 04.0 12 1'5 8 79

L.ttc t St :\!ary' , who sutlered a 46-0 drubbing at the hand of the Tor!'ro , ·ext up 1 a dPre,vtnR Humboldt Stale te.Jn1 "They ar the biggest le m we will have played to date.' . ummart,Pd Vine, 'They averag • ,,lmost 240 pound, per man on the d fen.1ve front line "They dele tied Sarrarn •nto State, 7 0. ,n a downpour la t w · k To be quite truthful, the} hould be 6-0 and not I I fatality Yd

STATISTICS

SD leading l! D .corer with II TD ~. uffered leg tnjury 11 either are not readv to go 13,)b Tomlinson would fill m for Dultd1 and so·. career rush I ad r arnmy Croom quid get the r II at ta11bac k

Meanwhile, U.S. Interna- tional stays on the road for a Saturday afternoon game at Cal Lutheran after the West- erners suffered their fifth straight setback in a 44-6 loss at Los Angeles State last Saturday mght. USD had to stage a tre- mendous final-quarter rally to earn the deadlock with the Lumberjacks at Humboldt State. Trailing, 28-7, \\-ith only II 22 left in tb game, the Toreros cam back as Sammy Croom scored twice and Andy Sanchez raced 89 yards with a Bob Dulich pass for a third score. It took a two-pomt conver- sion via a pass from Dulich to Paul Tomsco to earn the tie with only I;09 left in the game. The Toreros went 76 yards with the help of a pass in-

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