Fayez Sarofim, the billionaire cash supervisor, died Saturday at his house in Houston, at age 93.
“I’ve at all times claimed it took somebody from overseas to acknowledge the true potential on this nation,” mentioned Fayez Shalaby Sarofim in his first interview with Forbes Journal in 1969. Again then Sarofim — 41 on the time — was a cash man on the rise. The native-born Egyptian was generally known as The Sphinx for his inscrutable demeanor and his calm, unshakable religion in American exceptionalism. He purchased blue chip shares like P&G, Coca-Cola
KO , Philip Morris, was an early investor in Intel
INTC and Teledyne, and he believed wholeheartedly within the financial energy of the US not simply to earn cash, however to compound it.
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“The U.S. remains to be a comparatively younger nation amongst industrialized nations. It may possibly nonetheless mount the trouble to grow to be extra aggressive by expertise,” he mentioned on the time. “It is blessed with pure sources and, equally essential, the brainpower. And the united statespolitical system remains to be probably the most steady of all.”
His Coptic Christian household had left their native Egypt after the federal government ordered Sarofim’s rich father to promote his land or have it seized by the state. He arrived within the U.S. in 1946 and after faculty at UC Berkeley and Harvard, owlish Fayez entered finance and developed a knack for stockpicking.
With $100,000 from dad he launched Fayez Sarofim & Co. in 1958. Together with startup capital, his father gave him recommendation: “He advised me not to attract a wage however to pour any income again into the enterprise in order to present the purchasers the absolute best service. The income would come later.”
This fish-out-of-water’s conviction of American exceptionalism performed nicely among the many oil tycoons in his adopted hometown of Houston, the place regardless of the warmth and humidity he caught to his London-tailored three-piece fits. However it was his first spouse Louisa Stude — a Grace Kelly lookalike and niece of George Brown, one of many founders of oilfield companies agency of Brown & Root, now a subsidiary of Halliburton
HAL — who actually opened doorways for Sarofim. An early coup was touchdown administration of the $65 million endowment of Rice College.
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By 1969 he had greater than 400 purchasers and $1.2 billion below administration. Throughout the mid-Nineteen Seventies he bravely purchased shares at deep reductions. By 1980 belongings had grown to $7 billion. He held on to grease shares too lengthy within the early Nineteen Eighties after they crashed. However he saved the religion, and in a Forbes cowl story in 1980 lamented that the market was weighed down with “an excessive amount of pessimism.”
He was proper, in fact, to think about America and in entrepreneurial capitalism. “Betting on individuals is crucial factor,” he as soon as mentioned. Entrepreneurs merely “appear to provide higher funding outcomes, after they have their cash — and their egos — on the road.” His common inventory holding interval of 5 years was eons longer than flakey friends.
In 1987 he was working $15 billion and appeared for the primary time on the Forbes 400 with a internet value of $300 million. His worst day was “Marlboro friday” in 1992 when the corporate slashed costs for smokes and Sarofim’s fund misplaced $475 million. He made up for it later by steering purchasers away from Enron. Right now, belongings below administration prime $30 billion, and son Christopher Sarofim runs the corporate.
Sarofim spent some huge cash on divorces. In 1989 Louisa (who bore him two youngsters) filed for divorce after reportedly being the final individual in Houston’s tony River Oaks neighborhood to know that Fayez had been having an affair with considered one of his staff, Linda Hicks, with whom Sarofim had one other three youngsters. He settled with Louisa for greater than $100 million in 1990.
Although he purchased Linda a 22,000 sq. foot mansion on River Oaks Boulevard, their subsequent marriage resulted in 1996 and price at the very least $60 million. Ever the women man, Sarofim raised eyebrows round city when he married once more in 2015 to Susan Krohn, the mom of his son Phillip’s (now ex-) spouse Lori, herself the ex-wife of Houston oil tycoon Tracy Krohn.
His ardour (aside from spending afternoons in a haze of cigar smoke on the Coronado Membership in downtown Houston) was artwork. He began shopping for within the Nineteen Sixties and constructed a set together with masterpieces by John Singer Sargent, Winslow Homer, Mary Cassat, Edward Hopper, Willem de Koonig. In his workplace he saved El Greco’s portray of Christ’s Cruxifiction on the wall, close to a Picasso and Rothko. Sarofim’s final huge philanthropic present was $75 million to the just-completed growth of Houston’s Museum of Superb Artwork.
It’s becoming that Sarofim’s favourite TV present was mentioned to be Wheel of Fortune, which he loved watching at house along with his youngsters, nonetheless carrying the day’s three-piece go well with. Having grown up in timeless Egypt, skilled being a Christian in a Muslim nation, seeing his household compelled to promote their ancestral lands, Sarofim had a deep sufficient perspective to know that America had been really blessed by fortune, however didn’t at all times admire it.
For that first 1969 story, Forbes reporters requested Sarofim, “How did you come thus far so quick?” His reply stays related greater than half a century later. As a result of he was a foreigner, he mentioned, he merely did not fear about a number of the “issues” that misery so many American cash managers. “At each flip throughout my ten years in enterprise,” he mentioned, “there have been hordes of doubters — nervous males preoccupied with fears of lurking catastrophe. However have a look at what has actually occurred and guarantees to maintain on taking place.” Certainly, America has survived and thrived after each bear market thus far, and can once more.
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LUBBOCK — Darrion Williams scored 19 points, Elijah Hawkins and JT Toppin posted double-doubles, and Texas Tech breezed to a 98-64 victory over Arkansas-Pine Bluff on Monday night.
Williams made 8 of 11 shots with two 3-pointers, adding four rebounds and four assists for the Red Raiders (4-0). Hawkins finished with 10 points and 11 assists, while Toppin pitched in with 14 points and 11 rebounds.
Kevin Overton came off the bench to hit three 3-pointers and score 17. Chance McMillian pitched in with 11 points and six assists. Reserve Devan Cambridge scored 10.
Christian Moore scored 21 points to lead the Golden Lions (1-5), who have lost all five of their games on the road. Moore hit 9 of 15 shots with two 3-pointers and handed out five assists. Dante Sawyer scored 13 off the bench on 5-for-10 shooting.
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Williams had 14 points by halftime and Toppin scored eight with seven rebounds to guide Texas Tech to a 47-28 advantage. Sawyer had nine first-half points to lead UAPB. The Red Raiders shot 52.9% from the floor in the first 20 minutes with six 3-pointers. The Golden Lions shot 52.2% overall but they took 20 fewer shots and made just 1 of 7 from beyond the arc.
Kerwin Walton hit a 3-pointer with 7:15 left to play to give the Red Raiders their largest lead at 88-46.
Texas Tech will play Saint Joseph’s in the UKG Legends Classic on Thursday.
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Texas education officials are expected to hold a vote on Monday on the use of Bible readings in the public school curriculum for kindergarten through fifth grade English and language arts classes.
The board listened to hours of testimonies from those for and against “Bluebonnet learning”, a new curriculum that will affect millions of the state’s elementary public school students.
Those in favor of a Bible-infused curriculum argue that the holy book contextualizes material about famous artworks or texts like Leonardo da Vinci’s mural painting The Last Supper and Dr Martin Luther King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail.
Specifically, as the New York Times notes, The Last Supper would be taught to fifth-grade students through an account of the final meal shared by Jesus and his 12 disciples. The lesson would also involve several verses from the Gospel of Matthew.
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In the instance of King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail, King uses biblical characters in his letter to clergymen around the south. Advocates for this curriculum argue that students would need biblical context to comprehend the letter.
The Texas Freedom Network, a watchdog organization which advocates for religious freedom, individual liberties and public education, opposes the curriculum on the grounds that it is biased towards one religion, Christianity.
Carisa Lopez, deputy director of Texas Freedom Network, spoke out against the curriculum during a hearing in September, saying: “Teaching about the influence of religion in history and culture is an important part of a well-rounded education, but you can’t turn public schools into Sunday schools. This is fundamentally a question of respect for religious freedom. Public schools can’t favor one particular religion and promote religious beliefs many students and their families simply don’t share.”
The Texas chapter of the American Federation of Teachers, the second largest teacher’s union in the country, said in a statement ahead of the vote that it believed this curriculum “violate[s] the separation of church and state and the academic freedom of our classroom” and “the sanctity of the teaching profession”.
David R Brockman, a Christian theologian and religious studies scholar who reviewed the curriculum, told the Times that while he has “long been an advocate of teaching about religion in public schools”, he believes lessons should be factual, balanced and not promote one religion over another. He emphasized to the outlet that the Texas curriculum did not adhere to those tenets.
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While the curriculum would not be mandatory if approved by the board, schools would be financially incentivized to adopt the new religious-leaning curriculum, receiving roughly $60 per student from the state.
The US constitution prevents public schools from promoting or advancing any particular religion, but states like Texas are part of a growing trend of conservative Christian ideology in public school classrooms.
Oklahoma’s state superintendent, Ryan Walters, announced earlier this year that all schools were required to teach the Bible and the Ten Commandments. Around the same time, Louisiana became the first state to require the Ten Commandments to be displayed in every public school classroom.
Texas was also notably the first state to allow public schools to hire religious chaplains as school counselors.
This movement will likely see support from the upcoming administration of the president-elect, Donald Trump, who in addition to calling for the shuttering of the federal department of education, has vowed to bring prayer back in schools.
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If approved, districts could begin using the curriculum by August 2025.
After Marcel Reed was officially named the Texas A&M Aggies’ starting quarterback for the remainder of the season following a second-half meltdown against South Carolina, the freshman got another chance at a full game with Conner Weigman backing him up.
The result? A blowout victory at home over New Mexico State.
“I think we came out strong,” Reed said following the contest. “We executed where we were supposed to.”
On the evening, Reed finished with 268 yards, a pair of touchdowns, and an interception. Both Weigman and Aggies third-stringer Miles O’Neil got playing time in the second half as Texas A&M used the game to fine-tune some of its game plan.
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Ironically, a 35-point margin of victory wasn’t enough to cover the spread, and all things considered, wasn’t as high as it could have been. Reed was the first to acknowledge that.
“I got sloppy in the second quarter,” he said. “I should have thrown that pick out of bounds, but you have to live with it.”
Between finding Moose Muhammad III and handling business enough to keep New Mexico State at bay, Reed played to his strengths — including a few he’s worked on over the past few weeks.
“Being able to read the defense,” Reed said of what he’s improved on. “Being a vocal leader and being able to command the offense.”
As the Aggies look ahead to their two-week conference stretch, Reed will play a big role in their success and will have to continue to step up in order to keep them tied atop the SEC.
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What was on display on Saturday, however, wasn’t anything that worried him, or Mike Elko.
That was perhaps the biggest positive.
“No,” Elko said when asked if he was concerned at the win.” You go into this game wanting to handle business. You do what you have to do.”
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