.4':. 4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 18, 1984 Getty tops Forbes list of America's richest NEW YORK (AP) - Gordon Peter Getty is the richest person in America again this year, his $4.1 billion fortune being nearly twice that of his nearest challenger, according to Forbes magazine's 1984 listing of the country's 400 wealthiest people. Getty, 50, of San Francisco, a com- poser, pianist and arts patron, doubled his net worth from last year's $2 billion after selling his family's interest in Getty Oil to Texaco. Married with four sons, the son of J. Paul Getty was also number one on last year's list. Sam Moore Walton, who lives modestly in Bentonville, Ark.,hagain is the second richest man in America, worth $2.3 billion. Walton founded and runs the Wal-Mart discount store chain. THE 1984 Forbes 400, due out next week, is the magazine's third annual ranking of individual wealth. It lists 10 men and 2 women worth more than $1 billion, down from 15 billioniares on the list last year. Ann Arbor resident Thomas Monaghan, who owns Domino's Pizza and the Detroit Tigers, entered the list this year with a fortune of $200 million. It took a fortune of $150 million or more - a "sesquicentimillionaire" _ to make this year's list, compared to a paltry $125 million last year. David Packard, 72, and chairman of Hewlett- Packard, moved up a notch to No. 3 on this year's list with a fortune of $1.8 billion. Henry Ross Perot, 54, of Dallas, founder and chief executive officer of Electronic Data Systems, is the fourth richest person in America, worth $1.4 billion, according to Forbes. Nelson Bunker Hunt, 58, and his sister, Margaret Hunt Hill, 69, both of Dallas, each have a fortune estimated at $1.4 billion and are fifth and sixth on the list. From left to right, five of America's richest and their fortunes are: Gordon $1.8 billion; Henry Ross Perot, $1.4 billion; Peter Getty, $4.1 billion; Sam Moore Walton, $2.3 billion; David Packard, billion. and Nelson Bunker Hunt, $1.4 .r. PART-TIME EMPLOYMENT - EVENINGS The College of Literature, Science, and the Arts is currently interviewing students interested in participating in an alumni fundraising telethon. LS&A alumni across the country will be called from campus. The telethon runs five nights per week, Sunday through Thursday, September 30 through Novem- ber 15. Each week you select two of the five nights available, with some opportunity to work additional nights. Hours: 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Pay: $3.55 per hour. LS&A STUDENTS PREFERRED Call 763-5576 The University of Michigan is an Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer Woman hitchhiker reports being raped BEIT MIDRASH Program of Jewish Studies FALL 1984 COURSES An Ann Arbor woman who was hit- chhiking on the 500 block of South State Street reported being raped by a man who stopped to give her a ride, Ann Ar- bor Police Sargeant Jan Suomala said, adding that details are sketchy. The victim told police that two men in a van picked up at 11:15 p.m. and drove around before picking up a third male friend, Suomala said. ACCORDING to Suomala, the woman said she went with the men to buy beer. Police do not know whether the woman attempted to get away from the men or if she willingly stayed with them to drink, Suomala said. After finishing the beer, the van's driver dropped offd the other two men in the vehicle and took the woman to what she described as a cemetery out- side the city limits where he reportedly raped her, Suomala said. The man dropped the woman off in Ann Arbor at 6 a.m., Sept. 14, Suomala said. The woman said she woke up her roommate and the two went to the hospital and called police. According"to Suomala, police have not yet started investigating the in- cident because it may have taken place outside the city. - Rachel Gottlieb POLICE NOTES " " " Hebrew (4 levels) Yiddisch Basic Judaism * Philsosphy in the Bible " Talmud Midrash Classes Begin September 19. RegistrationSeptember 14 - 19 FEES: $8.00 Students SPONSORED BY HILLEL - 1429 HILL ST. for more information call 663-3336 How to make peace withTolstoy _ j 1 Man slashed downtown A man was cut with a knife Saturday morning at 2 a.m. in front of Mr. Flood's, a bar on West Liberty St., police said. Police said the victim pun- ched another man as they were leaving the bar. The other man then pulled a knife and slashed the victim across the chest. The victim was taken to Univer- sity Hospital for treatment while the other man was taken to Washtenaw County Jail, police said. House burglarized Burglars broke a window and entered a house on the 700 block of Church St. Friday sometime between 10:30 p.m. Friday and 1 a.m. Saturday, police said. A telephone and other property valued at less than $100 were stolen. Pizza Bob's robbed An employee of Pizza Bob's restaurant on South State St. handed over an undisclosed amount of cash last Thursday when a man claiming to have a gun told the employee to give him all the cash in the register, police said. A gun was never spotted and there were no injuries. - Rachel Gottlieb Bumper pot crop stirs growers protesters (Continued from Page 1) and operating like a commando strike force-have landed in helicopters and chopped down and burned 105,000 plan- ts worth $210 million. The torturous, target-turf of these attacks are the hills, gullies, ditches, and backyards of nor- thern California. Few arrests are made. MAX SCOFFS THAT the marijuana grabbed by the CAMP raiders is probably under 10 percent of the crop. His real worry is the heavily armed nocturnal poachers who raid their property and rip off the mature plants. Mendocino Max is a marijuana wholesaler, salesman, and distributor. A few days ago he was on the telephone talking about matters any businessman would understand: profit margin, mark-up, quality control, and transport to market. ACCORDING TO a San Francisco Chronicle reporter permitted inside the marijuana business, Max was over- joyed to hear that his part of the take would be 25 percent. Correction IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reorts Reagan, Mondale set debates WASHINGTON - President Ronald Reagan and Walter Mondale will meet in a 90-minute televised debates on Oct 7 in Louisville, Ky., and Oct. 21 in Kansas City, Mo., the League of Women Voters announed yesterday. Their vice presidential running mates, George Bush and Geraldine Ferraro, will debate under an identical format in Philadelphia on Oct. 11, the league said. The Democratic nominee had sought six debates with the president. But Mondale said in Dearborn, Mich., that the agreement for two debates was "all that we could get." White House deputy press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said: The president,. looks forward to these debates. He has said from the beginning that he sup-, ports the principle of debates and that presidential candidates should debate the issues." The first presidential debate will cover the economy and other domestic issues, the second defense and foreign policy, said league President Dorothy Ridings. The vice presidential matchup wil be equally divided in time between domestic and foreign questions. At a news conference, Ridings said the debates would include a moderator and four questioners. probably all journalists. Grenada's prime minister warned of U.S. intervention WASHINGTON - A year before the U.S.-led invasion of Greanda, then Prime Minster Maurice Bishop outlined in a secret speech his strategy for establishing a Marxist-Leninist state but warned that the plan must remain confidential lest it provoke American military action. Accordingly, Bishop said, he had invited a number of "bourgeois" elemen ts to join his government so that the United States, mindful that "some nice fellas" had joined the revolution, "wouldn't think about sending in troops." The speech, delivered before a closed meeting of his New Jewel Movement on Sept. 13, 1982, was stamped "Confidential" by Grenadian authorities. U.S. officials said it is the lead item in a compendium of party, state, and police papers captured on Grenada that the Reagan administration plans to release shortly. No date has been set as yet. France, Libya to leave Chad PARIS - France and Libya announced yesterday their troops will begin pulling 'out of Chad on Sept. 25, signaling an end to the 13-month military standoff in the central African country. But the withdrawal could create a military vacuum and trigger a resum- ption of Chad's 20-yaer civil war, according to independent analysts and diplomats in Paris. The French limited their official statements yesterday to the mechanics of the pullout. The offical Libyan news agency JANA also announced that the withdrawal of troops, weapons and equipment would begin Sept. 25. Foreign Minister Claude Cheysson said he worked out the arrangement last weekend during talks with Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy in Tripol, the Libyan capital. He said a timetable had been established and a date for completion of the pullout set, but they were being kept secret, and no guarantees had been' sought. U.S. trade deficit Highest ever WASHINGTON The broadest measure of U.S. foreign trade plunged to another record deficit during the April-June quarter, spured by weaker overseas investment income and a surge in Americans traveling abroad, the government said yesterday. The deficit in the current account hit $24.4 billion in the second uarter. surpassing the previous mark of $19.7 billion set just one quarter earlier;'. the Commerce Department said The operating rate at the nation's factories, mines, and utilities remained unchanged in August at 82.6 percent of capacity, the first time in 21 months this measure of economic health has failed to show an increase. After reviewing the latest figures; Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige predicted the deficit for the whole year would exceed $100 billion, surpassing his earlier projections of an $80 billion shortfall. The country's poor trading performance has become an issue in the presidential campaign, with Democratic challenger Walter Mondale com- plaining that President Reagan has not done enough to.nrotect against a loss of American jobs from the flood of foreign imports. Mondale attacks Mideast policy WASHINGTON - Walter Mondale said yesterday that President Reagan has been "essentially absent" from the search for peace in the Middle East and that four more years under the president's leadership" will take us closer to the brink" of war. "No wonder the world has the iitters." the Democratic presidential can- didate said as he assaulted Reagan's record in U.S.-Soviet relations, cen- tral America, human rights and Middle Eastern policy. In an address to a group of Jewish supporters, Mondale said Reagan "has squandered the promise of the Camp David accords between Egypt and Israel." Mondale said he would "scrap the failed Reagan plan" for peace in the region and give the men Israeli government tine to develop its own policies toward the Arabs. He also said he would move the U. embassy in Israel to Jerusalem. The Democratic presidential candidate charged that Reagan has pursued' a policy of "illusions" that has included dealing with Israel at times as though it were an adversary. Mondale said he was placing Reagan on notice that "I will make the question of war and peace a major issue in this campaign" and his speech to: the Jewish group was the opening salvo in that effort. Vol. XCV - No. 11 I t The Michigan Daily (ISSS(N 0745-967X) is published through Sunday during the fall and winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the spring and summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub. scription rates: September through April-$16.50 in Ann Arbor, $29.00 outside the city; May through August-4.50 in Ann Arbor, $6.00 outside the city. Second-class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Post- master: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann arbor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Doily is a member of the Associated Press and subscribed to United Press International, Pacific - News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate and College Press Service, and United Students Press Service. i 4 Editor in chief ........................ BILL SPINDLE Managing Editors ................. CHERYL BAACKE NEIL CHASE Associate News Editors,...........LAURIE DELATER GEORGEA KOVANIS THOMAS MILLER Personnel Editor ................. ..... SUE BARTO Opinion Page Editors .................JAMES BOYD JACKIE YOUNG NEWS STAFF: Marcy Fleischer, Marla Gold, Thomas Hrach, Rachel Gottlieb, Eric Mattson, Tracey Miller, Allison Zousmer. Magazine Editor ................... JOSEPH KRAUS Associate Magazine Editor .......... BEN YOMTOOS Arts Editors .................FANNIEWEINSTEIN PETE WILLIAMS Associate Arts Editors .......... ..... BYR ONBULL Sports Editor ..................... MIKE MCGRAW Associate Sports Editors ...... JEFF BERGIDA KATIE BLACKWELL PAUL HELGREN DOUGLAS B. LEVY STEVE WISE SPORTS STAFF: Dave Aretha, Mark Borowski, Joe Ewing, Chris Gerbosi, Jim Gindin, Skip Goodman, Steve Herz, Rick Kaplan, Tom Keaney, Tim Mokinen, Adam Martin, Scott McKinlay, Barb McQuade, Brad Morgan, Jerry Muth, Phil Nussel, Mike Redstone, Scott Salowich. Randy Schwartz, Susan Warner. Business Manager ................. STEVEN BLOOM Advertising Manager .......... MICHAEL MANASTER Display Manager.....................LIZCARSON' Nationals Manager...................JOE ORTIZ Soles Manager ...... . .......... DEBBIE DIOGUARDI I L i