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University of San Diego Digital USD

Print Media Coverage 1947-2009 USD News

2003-08-01

University of San Diego News Print Media Coverage 2003.08

University of San Diego Office of Communications and Marketing

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Digital USD Citation University of San Diego Office of Communications and Marketing, "University of San Diego News Print Media Coverage 2003.08" (2003). Print Media Coverage 1947-2009. 8. https://digital.sandiego.edu/print-media/8

This News Clipping is brought to you for free and open access by the USD News at Digital USD. It has been accepted for inclusion in Print Media Coverage 1947-2009 by an authorized administrator of Digital USD. For more information, please contact [email protected]. USO News Media Coverage August2003 USD Print Media Coverage August 2003

Office of the President Dr. Mary Lyons takes lead at University of San Diego (Southern Cross) ...... 1 Lyons begins duties as USD president (The Daily Transcript) ...... 5 USD' s new president (San Diego Metropolitan) ...... 6 USD welcomes new president Mary Lyons (San Diego Voice & Viewpoint) ...... 7 Local Scene: USD gets Phi Beta Kappa chapter (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 8 UCSD agaion ranked 7th-bestpublic school (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 9 Local Scene: Local colleges ranked (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 10

Office of Alumni Relations Alumni center under way at USD (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 11 Executive Spotlight: David S. Casey, Jr. (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 13 Mercy Hospital Foundation Board adds six members (San Diego Daily Transcript) ..... 14

Office of Corporate Relations Gala Evening/Grand Opening of Shiley Center (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 15 University Highlights (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 17

Kyoto Laureate Symposium Physicist, chemist will receive Kyoto Prizes (Physics Today) ...... 19

College of Arts and Sciences Redefining rape [Hendershott] (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 20 Solid Citizens (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 22 Rabbinic Insights: Whose land? [Dosick] (San Diego Jewish Times) ...... 26 Wolf center in Julian recovering from fire (North County Times - Escondido edition) ...... ·...... 28 Photo: Andrew Firestone, TV's "" (Beach & Bay Press) ...... 31 Oller wants office in nation's capitol (Tahoe World) ...... 32 Newsmakers: Robyn Kenyon (Fairfield County Business Journal) ...... 33 Chemistry's pipeline remains healthy (Chemical & Engineering News) ...... 34

School of Education Laws of Life (East County Californian) ...... 35 Have you heard? (Pelham Weekly) ...... 36 In Focus: Carrier Johnson (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 37

School of Law Recall ruling creates more confusion [Martin] (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 3 8 Recall puts San Diego registrar in scramble mode [Martin] (San Diego Business Journal) ························· ······ ···· ················· ·····················································40 N.Y. to use DNAprofiles [Kamisar] (Chicago Tribune, New York Times, St. Louis Post- Dispatch) ...... 41 A U G. 20 3 - p. 2. Miranda warnings on fall docket [Kamisar] (New York Sun, Daily Herald, Desert Sun, Albany Herald, etc.) ...... 42 Supreme Court takes broad look at Miranda rights [Kamisar] (Times Record, Times Herald, Chicago Daily Laws Bulletin, etc.) ...... 43 High court to revisit Miranda [Kamisar] (Sun-Sentinel) ...... 45 A Merrill Lynch whiz kid, and then a suspect [Partnoy] (Washington Post) ...... 46 Former Merrill Lynch chief trader under investigation [Partnoy] (Ventura County Star) ...... 49 Ex-Merrill Lynch exec investigated [Partnoy] (Advocate, Ventura County Star) ...... 51 U.S. and Canadian inquiries into energy trader (New York Times) ...... 52 Former Merrill Lynch trader under fraud investigation [Partnoy] (Oregonian) ...... 53 Probe eyes ex-Merrill Lynch exec [Partnoy] (Newsday, Tribune Review, Houston Chronicle) ...... 54 First whiz kid, now center of $43 million storm [Partnoy] (Hartford Courant) ...... 55 Bill protecting small businesses gets amended [Fellmeth] (L.A. Daily Journal) ...... 58 Media groups on hold awaiting outcome of FCC rule change review [Fellmeth] (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 59 Invitation: The Red Mass (Southern Cross) ...... 60 A sweet way to bestow a special ring (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 61 Allen Matkins names 5 new partners (Wren/Western Real Estate News) ...... 63 People: Government and Nonprofit [Darby] (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 64 People: Paul Schimley (Pasadena Star-News, Whittier Daily News, San Gabriel Valley Tribune) ...... 65 Law Briefs (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 66 On the move (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 67 $105 million Pala resort is set to open (Saan Diego Business Journal) ...... 68 Law Briefs (San Diego Daily Transcript) ...... 69 Who's who in law (Buffalo Law Journal) ...... 70 On the Move: Sally B. Hardin (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 71 Metropolitan Movers [Hardin] (San Diego Metroplitan) ...... 72 Distress signal (San Diego Magazine) ...... 73

Other USD News New prepaid-tuition plan starts (Press-Enterprise) ...... 74 Sister act (El Paso Times) ...... 75 ALP A announces 2003 scholarship winners (Air Line Pilot) ...... 78 St. Louis Catholic High School grads (Southwest Catholic) ...... 79 Obituary: Amidon Joseph Michael (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 80 Consortium's goal is getting students back to school (San Diego Business Journal) ..... 81 Arab Christians discuss roadmap to peace at USD (Southern Cross) ...... 83 Colleges and universities (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 85 MBA schools (San Diego Business Journal) ...... 87

Athletics Torero is a man for all seasons [McGarry] (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 88 Revamped Toreros should be explosive [McGarry] (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 89 AU G 20 0 3 - P 3 Defense is key for USD [McGarry] (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 90 A coach for all ages [Greenwood] (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 91 USD volleyball team wins two in Arizona (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 93 USD defeats UCR in soccer (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 94 SDSU men's soccer rallies for late win (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 95 College [Guarino] (Chronicle-Telegram) ...... 96 Transactions [Guarino] (Daily Record) ...... 97 NCAA record [Cota] (NCAA News) ...... 98 Is cup half full or half empty? (San Diego Union-Tribune) ...... 99

August TV/Radio Coverage Recall vote; KGTV {Martin} (August 8) Phi Beta Kappa; KFMB (August 12) Affordable housing; KPBS TV "Full Focus" {Galuppo} (August 13) California recall; KNSD {Drinan} (August 19) Recall's effect on the economy; XETV {Gin} (August 19) Recall's effect on the economy; KFMB {Gin} (August 21) Local colleges help install computers; KUSI (August 21) USD ranked one of the best universities; KGTV (August 21) USD ranked one of the best universities; KFMB (August 22) California recall; KPBS TV "Full Focus" {Luna} (August 25) California recall; XETV {Drinan} (August 26) Office of the President Board of Trustees

Dr. Mary Lyons Takes Lead at University of San Diego

ALCALA PARK - She comes to the University of San Dr. Mary Lyons, who began her tenure as retired captain in the Naval Reserve, she has Diego from Minnesota's College of St. Benedict where president of USO in July, is a fifth-genera- been a professor of rhetoric and homiletics she was also the president, but coming here is close to tion Californian. Because her father served at the Graduate Theological Union in Berke- coming home. in the U.S. Army, she moved around as a ley. She also taught at the University of Cal- child, but settled in Santa Rosa in time for ifornia, Berkeley, and San Jose State high school. University and has been a community col- Upon graduating, she joined the Sisters of lege, middle school and elementary school St. Joseph of Orange and stayed with them teacher. for five years, leaving before professing final At 55, Lyons should have plenty of time to vows. make her mark on USO. Prior to serving at the ·college of Saint She sat down with The Southern Cross just Benedict, Lyons was president of the Cali- two weeks after her arrival and said that she fornia Maritime Academy for six years. A SEE USO PRESIDENT, PAGE 14

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envisioned being so broad but would PRESIDENT be very pleased with, I think. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 As the head of a Ca tholic university, Lyons is a retired there's an imperative that the e duca- tional experiences for s tudents be not captain in Navy reserve just grounded in a true humanistic lib- eral arts tradition, but be one that gives evidence of the Gospel in ways that are had d evoted h er first days at the uni- inviting to people of many different versity to s tudy, learning all she c ould faiths but also in ways that are truly about the founding and mission of the explicit. school on the hill. Everywhere I turn, there is evidence that [USO) is about more than simply Could you say something about providing access to knowledge, but it is your general sense of the role of the also about how that knowledge is lived Catholic university and the position by graduates to improve the human of the Catholic university in the com- condition. munity? Just hearing your story as a young The founders of both the San Diego woman, you must have experienced College for women and the men's some kind of conversion or attraction school, Bishop [Charles F.] Buddy and to the Gospel early on in your life. Mother [Rosalie] Hill, right from the very beginning ( had what I would con- I wouldn't give myself so much cred- sider a very catholic view of education, it for having the maturity of faith to both with a capital C and a small c. really know that. But I have to say, I They were extremely expansive in their think that some people have just kind vision for the university. By that I mean of a little bit more of a religious sensi- [they had] a strong religious ethos that bility, which I think I had as a young- embraced people of many different ster. But what was most attractive to faiths so there was an ecumenical me, always, were the examples of my spirit to that. [The y also] had a strong teachers, and by that I mean both the sense of the role liberal arts in the for- clergy and vowed religious but also mation and education of young people; many of the lay people who really inte- and also a deep and abiding sense that grated their own faith lives with what- the university was created to not only ever else they did. serve students but to really be a part of I was always impressed by the fact the larger community. that my teachers or my mentors had a As I have come to know people on very natural way of integrating their the campus and have learned about own faith with whatever else they did programs and read the history, what or whomever else they were. And as I has be en edifying for me is the extent grew, and became more mature and to which that vis ion has not only con- would be exposed to things like the tinued but expanded. There is so much documehts out of Vatican II that evidence of what I would call the pub- emphasize that we're all by baptism lic purpose of the university being lived called to holiness, that that is our true in ways that the founders may not have vocation - that gave me a language and

2 an insight that I might not have had sity that we know in the Western before. It helped explain to me what I world. I don't think there's ever been was witnessing. a time when the university hasn't been at the center of tremendous debate and dialogue. To some extent, if Catholic universi- ties were just floating along in a kind of dream world, I would wonder if there is anything really happening there. On one 0 hand, I think you take the long view and you realize that ye there are i moments of difficulty and controversy. i Especially presidents get c aught in the ! crossfire between different factions. DR MARY LYONS On the other hand, in the American · Church, I think what has happened is That is a model that one would that the Catholic university, Catholic · expect at a Catholic university. That the higher education, has gone through a way in which the Catholic character of whole maturation proces_s.If you look the university expresses itself is not only at the Catholic universities in this . merely in its programs but is also in the country, we're a relatively young group way the people of the university con- of universities. Most Catholic colleges duct themselves. and universities weren't really founded until the early part of this last century. These have been years of controversy Many were founded to serve immi- regarding the Catholic university. You grant families. could draw it back to Ex Corde Ecclesi- We've only got a track record [at USD] ae, but even before that, the Catholic of a little over 50 years. We're proud of university trying to find its role in the the progress that has been made given world as an independent institution the relative youth of Catholic colleges and after the Second Vatican Council. and universities like this. How do you assess where we are in all We have a long way to go but I'm of that sorting out? really excited. Being young means you're not moribund. One of the things that's most hope- ful for me is to know that this is not a . What about the criticism that in the whole lot different than it has always pursuit of prestige, Catholic universi- been. Catholic universities have ties have become less Catholic, or always been at the center of great con- maybe have become non-Catholic? troversy and great debate. The whole university comes out of I think if someone were to do the real the history of the Church: the univer- CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE

' 3 work, the real research, and would that, but I have more homework to do. really take the time to get to know One thing I will say, I would love to Catholic colleges and universities in learn more about and maybe talk more this country, they would realize that about the ways in which the Catholic that assertion that Catholic schools for character of the university, especially the most part are becoming more secu- as it's made manifest through the lar is not true. And I would challenge social teachings of the Church, [is] pal- those folks who want to make that pable in the way in which this univer- claim by trying to get behind what that sity conducts itself. concern is and to find out what they It is already here: between the Insti- think they understand to be the nature tute for Peace and Justice on the one of a Catholic university. If a person hand and all the many programs I see thinks that a Catholic university is on campus. meant not to just have a rich liturgical I'd like to think that it's not just that life and a rich sacramental life, but also we have an Institute for Peace and Jus- to be the Church, they're mistaken. tice but that it is a university of peace These institutiqns have to be clearly and justice. [I'd like to think that] peo- denominational but not sectarian in ple who come here as visitors or stay that sense. And I think there may be with us as students or work here - some people who misunderstand what when somebody says, "What difference the nature of a university is let alone does it make that you graduated from a what the nature of the Catholic univer- Catholic university or work at a sity ought to be. Catholic university?" that they would have an answer and that answer would Are you starting to form an idea of probably be "because I know now what directions, things that will be priori- the social teachings of the Church are ties in the coming years? and the way in which they can be lived and learned in this environment." I'm beginning to have some sense of The Southern Cross

4 Friday, July 18, 2003 [email protected] http://www.sddt.com Source Code. 2003071811

Lyons begins duties as USO president Friday, July 18, 2003

Mary E. Lyons started her duties this month as president of the University announced on Friday. Lyons, 55, will be formally inaugurated in Novem "Becoming part of this extraordinary community is a tremendous privilege," Lyons said in a prepared statement "I look forward to building on the wonderful legacy of my predecessor Alice Hayes." USO will continue to be a university dedicated to academic excellence and teaching with a focus on small dasses and values-centered learning, she said. Priorities will be to provide better educational and research opportunities across the curriculum and to continue to recruit the best and brightest faculty, Lyons said. Goals include developing additional resources to fully utilize new facilities including the Donald P. Shiley Center for Science and Technology, the Joan B. Kroc Institutefor Peace and Justice, and to expand the programs and facilities of the College of Arts and Sciences and the schools of business administration, education, law and nursing.

Lyons previously served as president of the College of Saint Benedict in central Minnesota. USO, chartered in 1949, is an independent Catholic institution that enrolls more than 7,000 students.

5 SAN DIEGO METROPOLITAN SAN DIEGO, CA MONTHLY 50,000 AUGUST 2003

*** USD's new president, Mary E. Lyons, will give the State of the University address at a luncheon Sept. 17 in the Hahn University Center. Registration is at 11 :30 a.m.

6 San Diego Voice and Viewpoint July 24, 2003 P. Shiley Center for Science and USO Welcomes Technology and the Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice, and New President to expand the programs and facili- MaryLyons ties ofour College ofArts and Sci- ence and schools ofBusinessAd- ministration, Education, Law and Nursing." AnativeCalifornian, Lyons, 55, said she is delighted to be back in her home state. "California is a place with such vitality and diver- sity. I am energized by the chal- lenges ahead. I look forward to helping expand educational oppor- tunities for students from all back- grounds, cultures and religions." ''With her experience in Catho- lic higher education, we are confi- dent that Dr. Lyons will lead USD to even greater success as a na- tionally ranked institution ofhigher learning," said Liam McGee, chair ofUSD's Board ofTrustees.

Mary E. Lyons took office this While Lyons already has as- month as president ofthe Univer-urned her new duties, a fonnal sityofSanDiego. "Becoming part auguration will be held in No- of thisextraordinary community is vember during USD's Founders a tremendous privilege," said Week. Lyons who was formerly president Prior to serving at the College ofthe College ofSaint Benedict in ofSaint Benedict, Lyons was presi- central Minnesota. "I look for- dent of the California Maritime ward to building on the wonderful Academy for six years. A retired legacy of my predecessor Alice captain in the Naval Reserve, she Hayes. " . . has been a professor of rhetonc Lyons said, ''USD will continue and homiletics at the Graduate to be a university dedicated to aca- Theological Union in Berkeley, demic excellence and teaching with California She also taught at.the, a focus on small classes and val- University ofCalifornia, Berkeley. and San Jose State University and ues-centered learning. Our priori- has been a community college, ties will be to provide even better middle school and elementary educational and research oppor- school teacher. tunities across the curriculum and The University of San Diego is to continue to recruit the best and an independent Catholic institution brightest faculty. ofhigher learning overlooking San "We also want to develop ad- Diego's Mission Bay. Chartered ditional resources to fullyutilize our in 1949, the school enrolls more new facilities, including the Donald than 7,000 students and is known for its commitment to teaching, the liberal arts, the formation ofvalues and community service.

7 DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO, CA TUESDAY 15,000 AUG 12 2003 LocalScene -

USD .gets Phi Beta Kappa chapter The University of San Diego has been approved -- ' for a chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, the oldest acade- mic honor society in the nation, university officials announced Monday. Phi Beta Kappa offers a variety of academic, social and community-based pro- grams to support its members and promote excel- lence in liberal arts scholarship across the county. "Membership in Phi Beta Kappa means USO can now confer the highest academic honor possi- ble on its outstanding liberal arts and sciences graduates," said USO President Mary E. Lyons in a news release. Phi Beta Kappa officials, who meet every three years to consider new members, announced USD's acceptance Aug. 9 in Seattle. The society, established in 1776, will now have 270 chapters from around the country. USO is one of 18 Catholic institutions in the country to have earned membership into the honor society. Source Code: 20030811tlf By Daily Transcript staff writers

8 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA FRIDAY 374,856 AUG 22 2003

111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Burrelles 580 QB .xz11. 26 .1 .. . x I UCSD again ranked College rankings 7th-best public school 1. Harvard University 13. University of Chicago areas of study, affordability, di- By Eleanor Yang and enrollment of inter- Princeton University 14. Cornell University STAFF WRITER versity national students . 3. Yale University Johns Hopkins · I University For the fifth year in a row, This year, UCSD's engineer- 4. Massachusetts Institute th. of Technology 16. Rice University the University of California San ing program ranked 25 Diego has been listed as the San Diego State's intema- 5. California Institute 17. Brown Un iversity e bu ine s country's seventh-best public tional undergraduat of Technology 18. Emory University to 11th from 15th university in the closely program rose Duke University two years ago. 19. University of watched and controversial col- Stanford University Notre Dame published by SDSU was rated 22nd for the lege rankings of Vanderbilt University . amount of student indebted- University U.S. News & World Report Pennsylvania In the ranking of public and ness of its graduates. About private universities, which was half of its undergraduates leave 9. Dartmouth College 32. University of California led by Harvard and Princeton school with debt averaging Washington University San Diego universities, UCSD fell one slot $13,000. in St. Loui_s San Diego-based Alliant In- this year to 32nd. 11. Columbia University of San Diego ternational University was 99. University The University of Califomia Northwestern University Berkeley and the University of ranked first in the country for ent popula- rates, Virginia, tied at No. 21, are the its international tud Note: Va lues calculated based on a formula that includes graduation and retention of its top-rated public schools. tion. About 36 percent faculty resources and other factors. UC campuses in Los An- students are foreign. ASSOCIATED PRESS geles, Davis and Irvine also The rankings are de rived SOURCE: U.S. News & World Report made the top 50. from a complicated algorithm carefully and cautious- The University of San Die o, that includes surveys of aca- Some educators say students be used s ly and with insight," Machung private Catholic school, was demic reputation, student re- should note that the ranking ranked 99th, and San Diego tention, faculty resources, ac- are based on variables and said. The rankings are online at State University ranked in the ceptance rate, graduation rates weighted in a somewhat arbi- /www.us news.com/us- fourth tier (reserved for and alumni giving. trary fashion, said Anne Ma- http:/ and in magazines at news- schools ranked in alphabetical For years, U.S. News & chung, a UC analy t who has news on stands today. order from 191st to 248th). World Report has been scruti- published several reports the ranking . The 20th anniversary of the nized by critics who say it's Staff writer Lisa Petrillo and the magazine's college rankings impossible to translate academ- 'There are pros and cons to Associated Press contributed to-this had several listings, including ic quality into numbers. the rankings, but they need to report.

9 DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO, CA MONDAY 15,000 AUG 25 2003

Local Scene

Local colleges ranked Three San Diego County universities were among those recognized in· U.S. News & Worlds "America's Best Colleges 2004," published online on Aug. 22. The University of California, San Diego tied at 1 seventh place in the top 50 public National Universities-doctoral list. In a separate category, UCSD tied at 32nd place in the best national univer- sities-dO'ctoral list, out of 248 public and private national universities, which are defined as those offering a wide range of undergraduate majors as well as master's and doctoral degrees. The p niversity of San Diego tied in 99th place out of 248 public and private national universities. San Diego State University's international busi- ness program, an undergraduate major, ranked nth in the list, up from 12th last year. Previously, U.S. News ranked only the top 50 universities, grouping the remaining ones alpha- . betically in three separate tiers. This year, the m·ag- azine ranked the top 126 universities in the first two tiers. SDSU was listed in the fourth tier, which ranked schools alphabetically in the 191 to 248 category. Source Code: 20030822tlf By Daily Transcript staff writers

10 ( Office of Alumni Relations

DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO, CA THURSDAY 15,000 AUG 28 2003

Campus construction Alumni Center under way at USD being a source for pride for the print has been modified to allow Six-level parking structure also university." the university to maintain 346 A dedication for the new facility existing surface parking spaces. slated for completion will take place early next year. Earlier this summer, USD cele- Also under way at USD is a six- brated the dedication of its new By HARMAN will host official alumni events level, 783-space parking structure $47 million Donald P. Shiley USD News Bureau Director and features a campus "living adjacent to an existing parking lot Center for Science and A new 28,000-square-foo( room" ·with a fireplace for small on the west end of campus. The Technology. The 150,000-square- alumni center at the University··· gatherings, a Spanish $11 million structure is expected foot center features state-of-the- of San Diego, made possible by a Renaissance-style courtyard with to be complete when school starts art equipment and 73 laboratories $5 million gift from the family fountain for receptions and a this fall. and classrooms. foundation of USD graduate patio and conference room for The architect is Innovative Carrier Johnson was the Bert Degheri, is scheduled for formal dinners and meetings. The Design Group in association with project's architect and Rudolph completion by the end of the three-story building will house Mosher Drew Watson Ferguson. and Sletten Inc. was the contrac- year. offices for USD alumni relations, The contractor is Douglas E. tor. Van Atta and Associates was Wheeler Wimer Blackman is fund raising and communications Barnhart Inc. the landscape architect. the project's architect and and marketing. To help minimize concerns Mary Whelan, USD's director of Douglas E. Barnhart Inc. is the "We're very grateful to Bert about the project's potential University Design, worked to contractor. Degheri for this wonderful gift," impacts from USD's neighbors, the make sure the center's exterior The Degheri Alumni Center, said Jack Kelly, USD's alumni structure is being built into a hill- and interiors were consistent with located near USD's main relations director. "The facility side, giving it a smaller profile. USD's Spanish Renaissance style. enttance, will be a campus hospi- will create an exciting new center Three stories are being constructed USD's Facilities Management tality center and showcase USD's for integrated alumni and underground to minimize height team coordinated the entire traditions and history. The center student activity in addition to concerns and the structure's foot- project. USD's Degheri Alumni Center, scheduled for completion by the end of the year, will serve as a campus hospitality center and showcase the school's traditions and.history. The three-story building will feature a Spanish Renaissance-style courtyard with a fountain.

12 People KEY HIRES AND PROMOTIONS

EXECUTIVE SPOTLIGHT DavidS. Casey Jr. David S. Casey Jr. has been elected president of the Association of Trial Law- yers of America, an association of 60,000 attorney members. Casey is a senior part- ner at Casey, Gerry, Reed & Schenk, a firm speciali.zing in product liability, seri- ous personal injury, wrongful death, toxic tort, environmental, asbestos, and fraud liti gation. He is also founder and senior partner of Herman, Mathis, Casey, Kitch- ens & Gere!. He just completed a one- year term as president-elect of A TLA and is a me mber of ATLA's board of governors and Public Education Committee. Casey has also served as president of the Western Trial Lawyer As- oc i a tion, president of the Consumer Attorneys of California, and president of the San Diego Trial Lawyers Association. In May, Casey was honored with the Author E. Hughes Career Achievement Award from the versity of San Diego.

SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA WEEKLY 14,000 AUG 18 2003

13 DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO, CA FRIDAY 15,000 AUG 1 2003

IIIIIIII IIIII Ill lllll llllllll Ill 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrelles

·L219 I JL txz1d. 28 be .... Mercy Hospital Foundation Boardaddssix members . I / of auxiliary since 1987. She also boards of the San Diego Regional Stanton is associate medical volunteers on Mercy's behavioral Chamber of Commerce, Metro director of Scripps Cancer Center health unit and chairedthe Mercy OrgWatc h YMCA, . Cahforma Bankers and a member of the cancer By Sonya McDowell Ball in 1985. A resident of La Association, San Diego center's board of governors. He is Mesa, Andrade. 1s president of International Sports Council and a medical oncologist who bases County Psych1atnc Hospital Lincoln Club of San Diego his private practice and serves on Auxiliary. She is a memberof the County. He is also the firstman to the teaching faculty at Scripps Six San Diego community Special and PalliativeCare chair San Diego Operas gala com- Mercy Hospital. In his leadership leaders have joined the Mercy Fund Ra1smg comnuttees of the m1ttee. He is a member of the role in the Scripps Cancer Center, Hospital Foundation Board. Board. Heart. Care Center Campaign he is working to integrate cancer Mercy Hospital Foundation pro- Corrente, a San Diego native, 1s Committee of the Board. care throughout the five Scripps motes the philanthropic support president of Pacific Southwest King is the former director of hospitals and helping to bring sci- of Scripps Mercy Hospital in Mortgage, a real estate invest- development at the Mingei entific discoveries of the Scripps Hillcrest. Founded in 1890 by the ment company. The San Diego International Museum, where she Research Institute to the bedside Sisters of Mercy, Scripps Mercy resident is a member of the is currently vice-chairman of the where patients will be offered the Hospital is San Diego County's Mortgage Banker Associations of board of trustees. She _also has best opportunities for success. longest operating and only America. He is involved with served as the executive director of Stanton also is chief of staff and Catholic hospital. a community organizations includ- Mothers Embracmg Nuclear member of the board of directors Joining the board in 2003 are ing the Scripps Health/Hospitals Disarmament and as a consultant of San Diego Hospice and Gail Andrade, John Corrente, Board of Trustees real estate com- and teacher in the fields of fund- Palliative Care as well as a clinical Robert Horsman, Maureen King, mittee, SDSU Alumni and La raising, volunteerism and non- professor of medicine at UCSD William Stanton, M.D., and Jolla High School Alumni associ- profit managemnet. The Pacific where he completed his residenc; Frederick Vandeveer. ations. Beach resident is a graduate of the and fellowship. The Del Mar Andrade's commitment to resi- Horsman 1s president and CEO Umversity of San Diego, and her dent is currently studying the care Mercy started from birth - she of San Diego National Bank, communityactivities have eame_d of older adults with cancer with was born at the hospital, as was which directs approximately. 3 her the Bishop Charles Francis the aim of developing her son. a program She is immediate past percent of its profit to commumty Buddy Award and Distinguished in geriatric oncology. president of the Mercy Hospital and nonprofit projects. The Point Volunteer award from Umted Auxiliary, and has been a member Loma resident serves on the Way of San Diego and Junior League of San Diego. She is a member of Mercy 1000 and serves on the Mercy 1000 Committee. She is also a member of the Heart Care Center Campaign Committee of the boar Office of Corporate Relations

GALA EVENING CELEBRATES TH E GRAND OPENING OF THE DONALD P. SHILEY CENTER FOR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY The University of San D o o ened the doors to its new Center for Science and Technology in a grand way th is summer. An elegant black-tie gala honored Donald and Darlene Shiley, as well as the many other donors of the building, whose generous support heralded a new era for science at the university. The night concluded with confetti canons, champagne and even a chocolate fountain for guests to enjoy.

Janie Tomkiewicz, Michel Boudrias, Professor ofMarine and Environmental Studies and BusinessLink DIEGO BUSINESS USD member, Ken Ramirez, Branch Managerfor Coca-Cola Bottling Company ofSan Diego. JOURNAL ·Ca lilomio Assemblyman Juan Vargas and Dean Patrick Drinon, USD College ofArts and Sciences. Congresswoman Susan Davis and USD Trustees William Jones, CityLink Investment Corporation SAN DIEGO, CA President and CEO and Yolanda Walther-Meade. WEEKLY 14,000 AUG 4 2003 UNIVERSl1Y DEVELOPMENTS The Donald P. Shiley Center fo r Science and Co ntractors Awa rd as San Di ego Contractor Technology is the newest building at USD - for the of the Year. moment. Later this year, the doors will open on the Degheri Alumn i Center on the east end of campus. And, as the fall semester begins, the lives of USD commuters and visitors will be made· easier by the 1,050- space parking structure on the west side of campus.

Construction of the three-story, 28,000 square foot Degheri Alumni Center, like the parking structure, is being supervised by douglas e. barnhart, inc. a longtime Businesslink USD member and two-time recipient of the Associated General - SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA WEEKLY 14,000 AUG 4 2003

UNIVERSITY HIGHLIGHTS COLLEGE OF ARTS & SCHOOL OF BUSINESS SCIENCES ADMINISTRATION The College celebrated the dedication of the new Donald Two new graduate degree programs were inaugurated P. Shile Center for Science and Technol in June. It by the School of Business Administration in late spring. has been gratifying for facu ty to see io-tech's support The MS in Supply Chain Management, administered by of the hands-on laboratory instruction. The College will USD's Supply Chain Management Institute, is delivered host the international meeting of the Center for as a combination of on-campus residency and distance Academic Integrity in October. The Center is the premier learning. The MS in Accountancy and Financial organization in supporting academic integrity, academ· Management is an evening program featuring five-week ic honesty, and stronger campus systems to prevent courses enabling students to enroll in the program cheatihg and plagiarism. Students at USO are in the throughout the year. The new Leadership Institute for early stages of building an honor code at USO; the Entrepreneurs will launch its first day-long conference on October event should accelerate planning and con· Friday, November 14. For more information, contact the tribute to the USO mission as a value-bosed institution. School of Business at (619) 260-4830. For more information, please contact the College of Arts and Sciences at (619) 260-4545 SCHOOL OF EDUCATION- SCHOOL OF LAW The School of Education's Dean Paula Cordeiro was hon· According to the results of a major new study of law ored by San Diego Magazine as one of the "50 People to school quality released this spring, the University of San Watch in 2003." Dean Cordeiro has served as President Diego School of Law faculty is ranked 22nd in the of the San Diego Council on Literacy, launched a yearly nation, which places it among the highest rated law conference for hundreds of school counselors and created faculties in the United States. This study was bosed upon an innovative program to supply teachers to local charter an extensive survey of more than 150 leading law pro· schools. She is also responsible for initiating the fessors throughout the country. Also, Trevin Hartwell has Educational Leadership Development Academy and joined the law school as director of development and attracting funding from the Eli Broad Foundation for the alumni relations. Formerly associate director of West partnership with other colleges that provides training for Coast development for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences school administrators. Dean Cordeiro also launched the at Harvard University, Hartwell brings more than a Non-profit Management Masters program last fall which decade of academic development experience with him is taught by both School of Business and School of to USO. Lastly, the law school will celebrate its 50th Education professors and successful non-profit managers, anniversary with a kick-off event on Tuesday, September and provides scholarships for non-profit managers. 30. For more details, call (619) 260-7438 .

17 HAHN SCHOOL OF NURSING AND HEALTH SCIENCE Sally Brosz Hardin, PhD, RN, FAAN has assumed her position as Deon of the Hohn School of Nursing and Health Science. Dr. Hardin joins the school with a rich background that includes research, teaching, and admin- istrative experience. She most recenrly directed the PhD Nursing Program at the University of Missouri, St. Louis. In addition to Dr. Hardin, the following new faculty mem- bers hove joined the school: Dr. Anita Hunter, PhD, CNS, CPNP, Associate Professor, MEPN Program Director; Young-Shin Lee, PhD, RN, Assistant Professor; Cynthia Connelly, PhD, RN, Associate Professor; and Caroline Brown, EdD, RN, Associate Professor.

18 Kyoto Laureate Symposium PHYSICS TODAY IIEL VILLE, NY MONTHLY 121,000 AUGUST 2003

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Physicist, Chemist Will Receive Kyoto Prizes i.-f n November, the Inamori Founda- Ition in Kyoto, Japan, will award this year's Kyoto Prizes to one winner in each of three categories: basic science, advanced technology, and arts and philosophy. Of the recipients, two are engaged in physics-related work. The Kyoto Prize for Basic Science, given this year in Earth and plane- tary sciences, astronomy, and astro- physics, will be bestowed on Eugene N. Parker. The foundation is honor- ing Parker for "establishing a new perspective on astrophysics by eluci- dating the phenomena of the solar wind and cosmical magnetohydrody- namics." He is the S. Chandrasekhar Distinguished Service Professor Emer- itus in the University of Chicago's de- partments of physics and of astronomy and astrophysics, and in the univer- sity's Enrico Fermi Institute. He re- tired in 1995. This year's Kyoto Prize for Ad- vanced Technology recognizes work in materials sciences and engineering. The recipient, George M. White- sides, Mallinckrodt Professor of Chemistry at Harvard University, is being honored for "pioneering a tech- nique of organic molecular self- assembly and its applications in the field of nanomaterials science." The laureates will each receive a diploma, a Kyoto Prize medal, and a cash prize of Y50 million (approxi- mately $420 000). They will convene at the University of San Diego next March for the third annual Kyoto lau- reate symposium. I

19 College of Arts and Sciences SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA FRIDAY 374,856 AUG 15 2003 REDEF INING PE Expanded meaning robs women of power By Anne Hendershott dorm adviser. Feminist advoca_tes nave successfully convinced a growmg num- hile we mayneverknowexac t' her of young female college students that what too p o e ryan before they have sex with a man, they . hotel room, circumstances sur- must give consent wrounding as explicit as a Mi- allegation s of date rape are sadly ng And a growing number of familiar to those of us who work on college ran a womenhave been persuaded campuses where rape has been redefined. young that On many campuses, allegations of rape when such stipulations can do not formally now be made following any unpleas- occur as they rarely do in moments ant, awkward of or regrettable sexual en- passion then they too have been the counter and the rapist is any male who victims of rape. participates in these encounters. And This new sexual hysteria has been fueled while we really do not know what hap- . by the creation of a date-rape pened industry re- between Bryant and his accuser, it plete with "spokespersons" for is the "sur- important to try to understand the cul- vivors." A frequent media commentator ture that surrounds on the growing number the Bryant case is Katie Koestner, a popu- of acquaintance rape allegations, and even Iar lecturer on the date-rape more college circuit important to understand how smart and self-described "date rape survivor" and once-strong and independent women who claims to have visited more than are now redefining 800 themselves as help- campuses to warn female students of what less victims, powerless to prevent some- lies in wait for them. one they know from taking advantage of Weaving advocacy data with graphic de- them. . scriptions of her own traumatic experience Feminists have been successful in . of being date-raped during changing her first year at the definition of rape. Feminist 1 William and Mary College, Koestner legal scholar and anti-pornography activist , claims that in the United States, Catherine 1.3 women MacKinnon maintains thatone are raped every minute. In her lectures, can be "raped" by a paragraph, while her she tearfully testifies that her "life was for- comrade, Andrea Dworkin claims that ever changed" during the even consensual fall of her fresh- heterosexual sex 1s man year when, after going out with a male "rape." Rape had always been used as a student, "Tickling and teasing metaphor, transpired but just as accused male college into a wrestling match that night students that left have learned during the past her on the floor pinned under her "at- decade, Bryant is now learning that the re- tacker." Koestner admits spending definition the has come to have decidedly non- night with her "attacker" in her room metaphorical after consequences. this incident, and also acknowledges bring- Although national data indicate that . ing the "attacker" back more to her room after than 75 percent of what were origi- lunch the next day where he allegedly nally embarrassing or regrettable sexual raped her again. encounters were not initially defined as It is likely that Bryant's accuser was rape by the women involved, women are warned by campus speakers increasingly like Koestner encouraged to redefine - as most first-year female college these stu- encounters as rape after a meeting dents are warned - that she, with an enlightened friend, relative too, might be - or - • - •

20 the one in tour wno wowa oe raped that se- mester. It is also likely that her college pendent women do, that the real problem memorialized all the female students at- with the expanded definition of rape is that tacked by men in their annual "TakeBack it actually ends up removingpower from the Night" march. women. It creates instead female children Culturalcritic Camile Paglia has written unable to stand up for themselves and in persuasively of the moral panic surround- need of protection by the kind of men who ing date rape and describesit as a "cata- attend date-rape lectures or participate in strophic cosmic event like an asteroid "TakeBack the Night" marches. They be- threatening the Earth in a '50 science fie- gin to view themselves as potential victims tion film." Paglia believes that the "fantastic in need of protection by the emerging fetishism of rape by mainstream and anti- sex codes created by campus feminists col- porn feminists has, in the end, trivialized and lege administrators and over-zealous pros- rape, impugned womens credibility and ecutors. reduced the sympathy we should feel for legitimate victims of violent sexual as- It is likely that this will continue as cam- · puses continue sur- sault" When feminist discourse is unable to canonize the "rape to discriminate the drunken fraternity vivors" who, instead of delivering a mes- brother from the homicidal maniac, sage of strength and independence for women are in trouble. women, remind them of their fragility and Paglia knows, as most strong and inde- vulnerability. And as long a rape victims are venerated on college campuses, it Duringthe early days ot the rape allega- should not surprise anyone that allegations tion, Robb received all the rewards that ac- of rape continue to increase-and that the company such victimhood, as campus fem- cases often involve confabulation. inists rallied to her side, held demonstra- The most recent rape fabrication was tions to warn other students, and de- quietly revealed at Iowa State University manded that prosecutors find the perpetra- when Katharine Robb, a second-year stu- tors. Robb briefly became a campus hero- dent, finally disclosed that the story she ine, widely praised for her courage in com- had tearfully told her sorority sister-of ing forward to face the horrible crime. By being forced into a car at gunpoint by four the time she admitted to lying about the black men and raped while in a wooded rape, the story had spun into a criminal area-was untrue. Thinking it was a real case that wasted investigators' time and rape, the sorority's president reported the thousands of dollars in taxpayer money, story to the police without Robb's knowl- while spreading increased alarm among edge. By then, Robb later acknowledged, other female students. she was "too caught up" in the lie to con- It is difficult to predict where the politics fess to anyone. of date rape will lead. That the hysteria may have moved off-campus into a Colorado courtroom promises that the date-rape in- Hendershottis a professor of sociology at the dustry will continue to grow. University of San Die o and the author of the recently released, "The Politics of Deviance" (Encounter Books).

21 Walk of Fame's statues will take history to the streets I Stories by Roger M. Showley,STAFF WRITER

an Diego is entering a new Bronze Age. As in bronze statues. From Pete Wilson the mayor to Bum the dog. Famous figures from San Diego history are head- ing for the foundry, where sculptors' interpretations go from clay to plastic to wax to bronze. But who will be immortalized in metal, where will these fig- ures stand and who will pay up to $100,000 for each statue - these are among the many questions facing proponents of this stroll into San Diego's past Unlike other, older cities, San Diego has commemorated few of its local luminaries. But Steve Williams of Sentre Partners, a downtown real estate development and management company, has given new life to the 5,000-year bronze-figure tradition by starting a nonprofit or- ganization, "Horton Walk - San Diego's Walk of Fame." The organization's four-member board rejected a Hollywood- style series of stars in the ground and opted, at least for now, for life-size images in the round. "We're trying to get the thing jump-startedand put history back in the streets of downtown San Diego," said Williams. In 1998, Sentre Partners footed the $50,000 bill for a statue of downtown founder Alonzo E. Horton. Standing at the corner of ThirdAvenue and E Street (Broadway Circle), Horton holds a · map of the area he bought for 33 cents an acre in 1867 and pro- ceeded to promote as the center of the city over the next 40 years. Next month a second figure is due for un- veiling-Ernest W. Hahn, developer of Hor- ton Plaza shopping center, the catalyst of downtown's revitalization. The statue of Hahn, who died in 1992 at the age of 73, will depict him in a business suit, standing on an I-beam holding a hard hat Sculpted by retired SDSU art professor Jess Dominguez, it will stand near the en- trance to the shopping center's Lyceum The- atre, across Broadway Circle from Horton (which Dominguez also sculpted). At this week's 70th birthday party for for- mer Mayor Pete Wilson, supporters plan to unveil sketches of a Wilson statue that would be the third on the Walk of Fame. The tenta- tive location would be on the edge of Horton Plaza park at Third and Broadway. The Centre City Development Corp., the City Council's downtown redevelopment arm, has contributed $20,000 each to the Wilson and Hahn statues, with the balance coming from family, friends, supporters and corporate interests. 23 Karolyn Dorsee, who is organizing the trib- board member who ute to Wilson, said donors have been considers Wilson's promised that their names will appear on the legacy as U.S. senator monument She said plans also are in the and governor "dubi- works to rename a street for Wilson and com- ous," said Wilson de- memorate his political career in other ways. serves a statue for his CCDC President Peter Hall said tenure as he hopes 0 mayor the Walk of Fame will grow to include (1971-1983) . dozens of figures over the coming decades. 'The statue is about He envisions visitors taking an audio tour of that," Mitrovich said. the Walk of Fame, during which they would "Not about the things learn who shaped the region. subsequently done." "We've got to put soul in the city," Hall In considering other said, "and the soul in the city starts in the famous San Diegans, public realm, not just in its buildings but how Philip Klauber, 88, it works, what it looks like, fun discoveries in whose family has been every neighborhood." active in local busi- It isn't only politicians and developers who ness and philanthropic will show up on downtown corners. Hall said work ince the 1870s, he hoped the next statue will represent Bum, a three-legged St Bernard. The stowaway agreed that many famous from San Francisco showed up in 1886 and San Diegans have had che ckered histori became the beloved town dog, whose image es. He cited a one ex- ample banker and bu appeared on every dog license for a time. sinessman C. Arnholt Smith (1899-1996) , a "Mr Local historians welcome interest in the . San Diego" who San Diego story but later served eight months of jail time for em- caution promoters to bezzlement. walk carefully on the road to celebrating fame. "You have to consider each "We should go very slowly and maybe do case on its me rits and demerits," Klauber one a year," said University of San Diego his- said, "and if tory professor Iris Engstrand. there are more me rits than demerits, then in- clude them in." John Panter, director of the San Diego His- torical Society's Research Local historian' Richard Amero called the Library, hoped the statu Walk of Fame would include e approach a "meager peek into history'' a wide diversity and of occupations and backgrounds. generally lacking artistic worth. Hugh Davies, dir ctor of the "There are great stories of people who are San Diego Museum of ·Contemporary Art, and Mary relatively unsung," Panter said, naming as one Beebe, direc- tor of UCSD's Stuart Collection example Ah Quin, the honorary mayor of of public art San on the campus, also Diego's Chinatown in the late 19th century had reservations. . "All things being Angeles Leira, the city planner who has equal, a bronze plaque with a bas re lief refereed historic preservation controversies of their head is probably a more appropriate way to do it than a three-di- for years, said the Walk of Fame could ex- me nsional statue," Davies said. tend into the ne ighborh oods and comprise a Added Beebe, "It'd be kind of weird to have variety of memorials, not just statues. . a whole lot of bronze men all overdowntoWn." "Maybe one of the things that needs to be Dominguez, sculptor of the Horton and done before going very much further is Hahn statues as well as a number of other some kind of study and analysis of who figures he re and elsewhere, said he prefers these players were so that a listing could be other forms of sculpture. developed," Leira said. 'That way, we avoid "It's not a new direction in art," he said. "I throwing up statu on every c orner, which know they're not going to end up in the art could be a little cluttered." books." Bruce Coons, executive director of Save He suggested any future Walk of Fam en- Our Heritage Organisation, said he was con- trees include other representations, symbolic cerned with celebrating people like Pete of a person' accomplishments rather than an Wilson who are still alive and whom history image alone. For example, he said Salk could has yet to fully judge. be reme mbered by a set of broken crutches. "It seems a little too political a the mo- "If you honor the person's values, you hon- ment," Coons said, "and it'd be ea sier for or the person," he said. "Let's do something them to make the case when we did have to beautify the city and inform the people more distance." who was great." But George Mitrovich, a Walk of Fame

24 Jess Dominguez (left) and Joel McVey of Fine Art Foundry discuss the Hahn statue at Dominguez's home studio In Spring Valley. Roni Galgano/ Union-Tribune

DOWNTOWN STATUARY Broadway

> > > E St. .c

Horton C F St. 0 C Plaza

- G St. > > - > Market St. .c C N 1 U.S.S. Midway Aircraft 5 Homecoming Carrier Museum Proposed 6 U.S.S. San Diego 2 Military Tribute Memorial Under Construction to Bob Hope 7 Pete Wilson Proposed 3 Battle of Leyte Gulf Memorial 8 Alonzo E. Horton 4 Aircraft Carrier Memorial 9 Ernest W. Hahn Planned UN ION-TRIBUNE 25 SAN DIEGO JEWISH TIMES I I EL CAJON , CA BI - WEEKLY 18,500 AUG 1 2003 RABBINIC INSIGHTS

I 9# . Whose Land? Now we know. Eretz Yisrael is the place where the Wayne Dosick Rabbi The emotional tug of the "right of bones of Joseph were buried, in land . Dateline: Ramallah , the West Bank. return" and the political gain and that his father Jacob had purchased Jew- July 13, 2003. "A mob attacked an power of the "right of return" is very Eretz Yisrael is the place of the and eminent Palestinian political scientist appealing to the Palestinian leader- ish Judges, and the Jewish Kings, yesterday as he prepared to an- ship and the fundamentalist Arab ter- the Jewish Prophets. where nounce a striki ng finding from a re- rorists who hold out for it in the current Eretz Yisrael is the place gion-wid e surv ey of Pa lestinian negotiations. David established the Jewish king- capital. rrefugees. Only a small minority would But, the Arab populace itself - the dom, and the eternal Jewish ercise a "right of retu rn" to Israel as very people who would be affected by Eretz Yisrael is the place of the first part of a peace agreement." (San Di- the "right of return" - do not want it. Holy Temple, and the second Holy ego Union Tribune, July 14, 2003, as They want a way to make a good Temple, and the remnant of the Holy reported by James Bennet for the living; they want good schools for their Temple for which Jews yearned and New York Times News Service.) ch ildren; they want running water and prayed for 1,900 years of exile. The study shows that "Only 10% of working toilets and passable roads; Eretz Yisrael is the Jewish heart, those questioned demanded perma- they want television sets and blue and the Jewish soul, and the place nent residence in Israel, a proportion jeans and Starbucks. where Jews know that heaven and that decreased if the refugees were But, they do not want the so-called earth touch. told that they would have to take Is- "ancestral homeland," where they Eretz Yisrael has been the spiritual raeli citizenship or that their old homes "move back" to the exact piece of Jewish homeland since the promise were gone. More than half- 54%- property here their grandfathers or by God 3,800 years ago, and the said they would accept compensation great-grandfathers once lived. physical Jewish homeland since and homes in the West Bank and So, let's take the "right of return" off Joshua fought the battle of Jericho Gaza, or in land ceded by Israel. Oth- the table; let's take it out of the nego- 3,200 years ago. ers said they would elect to stay in tiations on the Roadmap to Peace. Jerusalem has been the capital of their host country or go to another Let's remind the American president Eretz Yisrael since King David, 3,000 country .. .refugees were less inter- whose administration is the author years ago. ested in being nationalist standard- and the advocate for the Roadmap Christianity came to Israel but 2,000 bearers than in living fuller lives ." that just as the United States is not years ago. For his scientifically conducted going to give the "right of return" to Islam came to Israel but 1,400 years study, the political scientist, Khalil Mexicans who might want to reclaim ago. Shikaki - who holds a doctorate from a piece of farmland in Texas, Israel is Jerusalem is mentioned in the He- Columbia University, and now directs not going to give the "right of return" brew Bible more than 700 times. th e Palestinian Center for Policy and to so-called Palestinians who might Jerusalem is never - not once - Survey Research - was physically want to reclaim a house in Jerusalem. mentioned in the Koran. attacked and pelted with eggs by a And , please. Let's not forget: Whose land is Israel? mob of his fellow Palestinians, who Eretz Yisrael is the land that God Who has the right of return? then proceeded to trash his office. prom ised to Abraham more than Eretz Yisrael is the Jewish land. So much for the truth! 3,800 years ago. Then. Now. Forever. The so-called "right of return" is one Eretz Yisrael is the place where Jerusalem is the Jewish holy city. of the major · s of diff e en e in e Abraham bought the burial cave tor Then. Now. Forever. negotiations that are most recently his wife Sarah. Oh , we will be glad to hare. For, known as the "Roadmap to Peace." Eretz Yi srael is the place Jacob bur- we understand the importance of Is- Clearly, Israel will never agree to per- ied his wife Rachel. rael, the allure of Israel, to all peoples, mit more than tour million Palestinians Eretz Yisrael is the place where I for it is, ultimately, God'sland, and we to "return" to Israel. For, added to the Joshua brought the wandering Chil- are all God's child ren. one million Arab citizens of current- dren of Israel, in order to fulfill the But, we will not - WE WILL NOT Israel , these five million Palestinians ancient promise. (By the way, the only - be played and swayed by the po- would soon numerically overwhelm ones with the real claim for a "right of litical current of the moment. the five million Jewish citizens of Is- return" to Israel are the ancient We will not-WE WILL NOT - give rael , effectively turning the Jewish Canaanites. Bring me an ancient away our land, or the ability to defend , or the right to live in secu- state into an Arab state. Canaanite; I'll take him to lunch, and ourselves we'll begin the negotiations.) rity and peace for the political prom- 26 1ses or tne moment. Make no mistake :-the current Palestinian prime minister may wear a suit and tie and control the government-of-the-moment. But Vasser Arafat has not gone away. And he still controls much of the streets, much of the money, and much of the terror. And Vasser Arafat does not want peace ; he does not want a two-state solution . Arafat wants nothing less than the total destruction of Israel. And if he and his fri ends must, he will let the current negotiations continue, ac- cept the two-state solution , and then , be poised to destroy Israel from his internationally re co gnized , United Nations-voting, geopolitical state. The current American administration may mean well, and it may talk as if it is Israel's friend {read: get more Jews to vote Republican in 2004) but it isnaive and foolish if it thinks that words on a piece of paper will guarantee long-term peace and security for Israel. We have now learned that one of "Jerusalem has been the capital of Eretz Visrael since King David 3 000 the basic "non-negotiable" items on years ago." ' the Palestinian agenda is not of inter- est to 90% of the Palestinian people. Before we continue to listen and act on the demands of the politi cians and government leaders, let's determine what is really at stake, let's determine what the PEOPLE really need and want. We will most likely find that the vast majority of Palestinians - who have been kept in squalid conditions as po- litical pawns and fodder for their own leadership - want good jobs, good homes, good opportun ity and good prospects for their children, far more than they want to stake claim to lands . and places they have never known or seen.

Rabbi Wayne Dosick, Ph .D., is the spiritual guide of The Elijah Minyan, an adjunct sor atthe niversit of an Die o, and t • rector of The oul Center for Spiritual He is the award-winning author of six acclaimed books, including Golden Rules, Living Judaism, and Soul Judaism: Danc- ing with God into a New Era.

\ 27 HELPING AN ENDANGERED SPECIES

NORTH COUNTY TIMES ESCONDIDO, CA MONDAY 93,881 AUG 11 2003

Photos by WALDO NILO / TAFF PHO A North American gray wolf peers out of Its enclosure Friday at the California Wolf Center In Julian. The center Is still recovering from damages and the deaths of four wolves In the Pines fire a yearago. Wolf center in Julian recovering from fire

help wolf center rebound from last year's Pines fire

ERIKA AYN FINCH

JULIAN - Watching the off-white wolves lolling about in the shade and viewing the green grass that blankets the Pat Valentino, executive director of the Callfomla Wolf Cen- surrounding hills, one ter, talks to a North American gray wolf at the Julian center would never guess that on Friday. the Pines fire ravaged the California Wolf Center a year ago. named Gila, was expected would have been okay." But volunteers remem- to breed for the next three Volunteer at the 25- ber the fire all too well. to four years, producing year-old center still re- The center lost four pups of a particularly pure member with horror and wolves, including a female lineage. disbelief the Pines fire, Mexican gray wolf prized "This female stayed in which charred 61 ,690 for her genetics. one area," said Pat acres between July 29 and With fewer than 300 Valentino, executive direc- Aug. 13 last summer. Start- Mexican gray wolves left tor. "If she had moved 25 in the world, the ·female, yards up the hill, she WOLF, A-4 28 ed by a California National The center, which has par- Guard helicopter's rotor blade ticipated in the federal breed- year," Kelly said. "We can't re- severing a power line, the ing program for six years, also place the wolves but we have blaze burned 37 homes and has plan for expansion. They recovered. The fire facilitated 150outbuildings. are working on opening a new ' theprocess of taking on the The memories of wolve facility in orthem California wild wolves and finishing the killed at the center haunts the by 2005, Kelly said. enclosures. We have recuper- volunteers, but they try to "It will be similar to a zoo ated lost funds and we have concentrate on the future as b.ut in a more natural environ- seen an increase in member- well as on recent positive de- ment," he aid. "Its impor- ship and donations." velopments. tant to put an education facili- Valentino said the center ty in an area where wolves has received $75,000 in dona- will eventually be back." tions since the fire. Most no- At the Julian facility tably, Valentino said, the Valentino said plans are un- Wendy P. McCaw Foundation der way to create a simulated donated $20,000 for repairs to science field tation where enclosures damaged in the vi itor will be able· to learn fire. As a result of these re- what it's like to be a scientist pairs and the completion of a studying wolve in the wild. third Mexican gray wolf enclo- As a result of the fire, sure, the center received two Valentino said, the center wild wolves in December plans to build fire breaks from the Apache Forest in Ari- three to four times wider than zona. the originals. He said he "With the donations, we would like to stock the center were able to fix up the econd with an extra water tank and Mexican wolf enclosure to chain saws handy for remov- house the wolves from the ing brush. wild," aid Laura Kelly, a vol- "We spent a lot of time unteer from Univ r ity of San preparing for fire, we had lo- Diego. "These WO ve s are wild cal and national animal· and can't be n ear humans. We groups consulting,"Valentino were able to fix problem areas said. "We even had fire dens and add ground cover and built and that may have been shrubs to the enclosure." what saved some of the pups. Kelly said the wolves were We were just shocked by this removed from the wild be- fire." cause they were killing live- Both Valentino and Kelly stock. She aid that wolves said the center's staff of 15 need a l ot of space and, as a had a hard time psychologi- result of human encroach- cally recuperating from the ment, often wander into areas fire. A wildlife veterinarian where they are not welcome. from Montana has brought in "They are taken from the counselors to talk to the staff wild more often than publi- in the aftermath of the disas- cized," Kelly said. "People ' ter. don't understand a lot about "That day of the fire the wolves - they aren,t like coy- · volunteers put their lives on otes. They don,t like humans the line and there were a lot and they need a lot of open of psychological issues after land." the fire," Valentino said. "This The center, which was e - organization has become a dif- tablished in 1977, hou e 29 ferent organizationin the past North American gray wolves including 10 Mexican gray year." wolves. As the third largest Kelly, whose brows were participant in the Mexican singed by the flames as she Wolf Species Survival Plan co- fought to save the wolves, said ordinated by the U.S. Fish and she still thinks about the fire Wildlife Service, the center every day. She said the an- eeks to help the endangered niversary of the fire two specie recover and increa e weeks ago was difficult. in population. The Mexican "It has been a wonderful wolf lives in the Southwest and Mexico, Valentino said.

29 Pat Valentino, executive director of the California Wolf Center in Jullan.

30 BEACH & BAY PRESS SAN DIEGO, CA WEEKLY 19,500 AUG 21 2003

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'i° WINE & LOVE FRONT PAGE Andrew Firestone (left), star of TV's "The Bachelor," signs a bottle of wine from his family's vineyard for a fan Aug. 13 at Vons In Pacific Beach. Firestone Family Estates has produced wine and beer In the Santa Ynez Valley for the past 30 years. Andrew, a uate of the University of San Diego great-grandson o re neur Firestone, now represents the family wine business as a sales manager. BBP photos/Paul -

31 TAHOE WORLD TAHOE CITY, CA WEEKLY6,200 AUG 7 2003

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/ Oller wants office in nation's capitol By Susan Wood Woodland farmer Howard World News Service Beeman have also expressed intere tin the 3rd District. Ca Marking a serie of pre-pri- ti llo want to take the di trict mary sea on shifts, state Sen. back from the Republi- cans and rethink Rico Oller announced las t the fi cal pol- icy of the week hi s intention to trade the federal government. Beeman rural landscape for the con- ha already been thirikin crete jungle of Washington, g about change. D.C. . " When you ride on a trac- tor, you The San Andreas Republi- have a lot of time to think," he can h as scheduled a rally and said. Politicians campaign kickoff at Wood- have a tendency to evolve mack Products, 14430 White through their careers, even Rock Road in Rancho Cordo- State. Sen. Thomas "Rico"Oller changing their minds about gov va, to officially launch his can- ernment aspirations. Oller didacy for the 3rd Congres- in the seat now held by Rep. is no exception . He e sentially sional District. Doug Ose, who' retiring. The switched places with Assemblyman "I've been approached by district covers Alpine, Amador Tim Leslie, R-Tahoe City, many citizen , business own- and Calaveras counties. Rep. a few years ago. "If you er and Republican leader John Doolittle represent the had gone to Rico 10 years ago and from aero s the di strict that Tahoe basin in the 4th District. asked if he'd run for tate have urged me to run for this The 3rd Di trict seat open- senator or even have gone seat," he said. "After a lot of ing ha also attracted another into a life of·poli- tics, he would thought and discu ions with familiar Republican to the Cal- have said: 'No way,"' Oiler my wife and family, I'm ready ifornia political arena - for- 's campaign man- ager Steve to announce my deci ion." mer tate Attorney Genera l Davey said. Oller A ssembly Leader Dave Dan Lungren. The two- term ' current di trict over- lap with much Cox. has hi s eye on Oiler's 1st top cop for the tate, who has of the federal eat he District becau e the Fair Oak most recently worked a s a 's eeking to serve. The father Republican has tapped out his Washington, D.C., lobbyi t, of four children still own three terms in the 5th District. still has famil y tie to the a dry wall company that started Cox Chief of Staff Kevin basin. in the back of his pickup. Bas e tt aid the University and ba ck- Now it employs 40 people. San Die o graduate will soon be re pre ented As announce hi s candidacy for the o ne rch 2 primary a businessman and Republi state Senate. election rolls around. can, Oller advocates lower Oller, who serves the dis- On the other s ide of the taxe , sma ller govern- ment trict encompassing South Lake ai s le, Carmichael financial and a con ervati ve approa · Tahoe, ha expre ed interest consultant Gabe Ca tillo and ch to domestic policy.

32 FAIRFIELD COUNTY BUSINESS JOURNAL WHITE PLAINS, NY WEEKL Y 14,000 AUG 4 2003

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Newsmakers

Robyn Kenyonof Easton was appointed to the newly created position of corporate communications man- ager at BrannWorld- wide, WIiton, a dlrect- marketing firm. Most . recently, Kenyon was area communications directorIn the WIiton office of the American Cancer Society. Prior to that, she was public rela- tions manager at MONEY magazine, New York City. Before that, she was public relations coordi- nator at Worth Media, New York City. Kenyon holds a Bachelor of Arts degree In French and English from the University of San Diego.

33 8.A./ 8.A./ 8. A./ 8.5. M.5. PH.D. 8.5. M.5. PH .D. 8.5. M.5. PH .D. Seton Hall U 5 15 10 No rth Carolina, U of Ramapo C of New 1 Shippensburg U 14 Asheville 10 Jersey 0 Siena C 4 Chapel Hill 74 6 39 Randoleh-Macon C Simmons C 8 Charlotte 22 4 Randolph-Macon C 4 Skidmore C 17 Greensboro 11 8 Woman·s Smith C 21 Pembroke 17 Redlands, U of 7 12 Sonoma State U 4 Wilmington 34 5 Reed C South Alabama, U of 17 No rth Carolina A& T Rensselaer Polytechnic 8 3 2 South Carolina, U of 31 6 13 State U 6 3 Inst. South Dakota, U of 8 6 No rth Carolina Central U ·12 2 Rhode Island C 6 6 5 South Dakota School of North Carolina State U 98 9 7 Rhode Island, U of 14 Mines & Technology 7 or th Dakota, U of 19 1 2 Rhodes C 6 14 13 South Dakota, State U 10 1 3 Nor th Dakota State U 8 4 1 Rice U C of South Florida, U of 96 3 8 No rth Texas, U of 8 6 5 Richard Stockton 16 Southeast Missouri No rtheastern U 7 6 11 New Jersey 12 State U 14 3 or theastern Illinois U 13 2 Richmond, U of Southeastern Louisiana U 7 Nor thern Arizona U 34 11 Rider U 2 Southern U and A&M C 18 2 Nor thern Colorado, U of 19 5 2 Ripon C 4 Southern California, U of 11 5 18 or thern Illinois U 13 5 3 Roanoke C 5 8 Southern Colorado, U of 8 2 0 Northern Iowa, U of 23 3 Rochester, U of 16 12 Southern Connecticut No thern Kentucky U 11 Rochester Inst. of 10 State U 8 2 North ern Mich igan U 9 2 Technology 26 Southern Illinoi s U Northwest Missouri Rockford C 7 Carbondale 22 4 2 State U 3 0 Rollins C 2 Ed wa rdsville 17 3 Northwestern U 23 3 22 Roosevelt U 7 of Southern Indiana, U of 7 Northwestern State U 2 Rose-Hulman In st. Southern Methodist U 6 2 Notre Dame, U of 29 5 17 Technology 7 Rowan U 13 Southern Mississippi U of 14 0 1 Sou thern Oregon U 19 Oakl and U 29 Russell Sage C Southwest Missouri Ob erlin C 14 Rutgers U State U 13 2 Oc cid ental C 22 Camden 2 8 13 10 6 Southwest State U 12 hio U 41 5 7 Newark 14 17 Southwest Texas State U 8 4 ( Ohio Northern U 9 New Brunswick 43 Southwestern U 10 OhioState U 40 20 21 15 Southwestern Oklahoma On 10 Wesleyan U 12 Saginaw Valley State U State U 7 Oklahoma, U of 55 13 7 St. Anselm C 4 Stanford U 15 7 25 Oklahoma State U 5 2 3 St. Benedict, C of/ State U of New Yo rk O'.d Dominion U 17 4 St. John's U 22 4 Albany 10 2 0 Oregon, U of 37 22 10 St. Catherine, U of Binghamton 50 5 7 Oregon State U 10 5 11 St. Cloud State U 13 Buffalo 29 9 21 Otterbein C 9 0 0 St. John Fisher C 4 0 0 St. John's U 11 6 New Paltz 3 2 Stony Brook 19 22 8 Pace U Sa int Joseph C 5 5 5 C at Brockeort 12 New York City 2 St. Joseph's U 19 C at Buffalo 14 Pl. eas antville 5 St. La wrence U 4 C at Cortland 1 Pacific,U of the 13 3 St. Louis U 42 5 C at Freedonia 2 0 Paci fi c Lutheran U 8 St. Mary'sC 9 Cat Geneseo 23 Pennsylvania, U of 39 10 25 St. Michael's C 3 C at Old Westbury 4 Pennsylvania State U 43 3 28 St. Olaf C 43 Cat One onta 5 Pe nnsylv ania State Erie- St. Pe ter's C 1 Cat Oswego 8 0 Behren C 5 St. Th omas, U of 22 C at Plattsburgh 14 Philadelphia U 5 Sa int Vincent C 10 Cat Potsdam 9 Pittsburgh, U of 54 16 19 Salem State C 5 C at Purchase 1 Pittsburgh State U 6 7 Salisbur State U 13 State U of West Georgia 11 Polytech U 5 10 12 Sam Houston State U Stephen F. Austin State U 8 Pomona C 26 Sari Die U of Stetson U 4 Po -rland, U of 6 San Diego State U 1 Stevens Inst. of Tech. 16 19 Portland State U 20 2 0 San Francisco , U of 10 Suffolk U 5 Princeton U 30 0 17 San Francisco State U 46 9 Swarthmore C 10 ProvidenceC 9 San Jose State U 30 2 Syracuse U 23 2 8 P uerto Rico, U of Santa Cla r a U 13 Mayaguez 41 18 Sc iences in Phi ladelphia, Temple U 35 5 4 Rio Pi edras 53 2 13 U of 14 1 3 Tennessee, U of P dget Sound , U of 15 Scranton, U of 10 19 Chattanoo ga 21 Pu rdue U 33 16 48 Seattle U 20 Knoxville 13 5 9 P .. rdue,Cal. umet 5 Seton Ha ll C 3

: j; i 3 51 :. 34 ( School of Education EAST COUNTY CALIFORHIAH ALPINE , CA WEEKLY 25,000 AUG 1 2003

1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 11111111 Burrelle's 174 SE .xz4.. 26 XX .. .. 'Laws of life' J S'i LAKESIDE- Briana Barber, student at the Literacy First Charter School, won Universi of San Die o' inentary school studen "Laws of Life" essay contest. The contest was started in 1987 by the Sir John Templeton Foundation, and was the sec- ond time it was held in San Diego. Barber and winners in the middle/junior high and high school divisions each received a plaque and $100. Teachers and students who would like more infonnation about participating in next year's contest s hould call USD's Center for Character Education at 260-5980.

PELHAM WEEKLY PELHAM, NY WEEKLY 1,688 AUG 1 2003

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Have· You Heard?

Katie Walter (PMHS '99) recently graduated with honors from the University of Notre Dame. Beginning this fall, she will be teaching as an AmeriCorps volunteer at the Promise Charter School in San Diego and studying for her Masters in Education at the University of San Diego. As part of the San Diego pu 1c sc ool system, Promise Charter School pro- vides a college prep education to chil- \ dren who generally fall below the fed- er al poverty level in the Logan Heights area of San Diego. Classroom instruction is provided 11 hours per day, six days per week. ****

36 Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA WEEKLY 14,000 AUG 4 2003

Partnerships Between Business and Education

MEMB ERHIGHL IGHTS L- - _.

Carrier Johnson was the recipient of a Gold Nugget Award ("Judges Special Award of Excellence, "2002) by the PCBC - The Premier Building Show & BUILDER Magazi ne fo r the design of The Joan B. Kroc In stitute for Peace and Justice on the campus o USD. For interior design, Du pont Antron se lected Carrier Jo hnson as the 2002 "Hospitality C ategory Winner" for the Hil to n, Gosl omp Qua rte r So n Di ego at Bridgeworks. Carrier Johnson is the only interior design 'firm iri Son Diego to be included on Interi or Desig n Magazine's "Top 100 Interio r Giants" fo r 2003. The AIA, Son Diego Chapter honored Carri er Johnson with the 2003, SDG&E "City of Vill ages, Energy Efficiency Integration in Non-Resi dential Design" award for the Co lTro ns Distri ct 11 Headqua rte rs . Th e Associated General Contractors of America, Son Diego Chapter voted Carrier Joh nson as the "AGC 2001 Design/ Architectural Firm of the Yea r."

37 School of Law SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA TUESDAY 374,856 AUG 5 2003 ! . Recall ruling creates more confusion By Brian P. Edward J. Erler 7 Carter to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of qualification of his successor." and John c. Eastman Appeals, declared Before the ruling a victory Moskowitz's decision, the for the voters only valid of California, whether ballots in a recall race it comes·to political chi- they decide to vote yes, no would be those · or abstain. that made a choice canery, we have learned to Martin's self-proclaimedmotivation in the first "Yes or expect No" question. Therefore, the worst from Gray was to accommodatevoters "alien- the issue of a Davis. The governor majority in such and his func- ated" by the recall process to retain an election is straight- tionaries have launched forward. However, by a flurry of their vote inchoosing a successor. So allowing ballots lawsuits aimed at to remain valid even stopping the recall far, this seems straightforward. After if a choice was not election. made on the original . all, shouldn't every vote "Yes or No" ques- Most of the attention count? tion, Moskowitz has beenfo- . According to press reports, recall has perhaps intro- cused on two cases, duced a third category-" the effort to invali- backer Phil Paule, director of Rescue Abstain." date the petition A po8$ible outcome process that placed California Recall Gray Davis, hailed on Oct. 7 could the question on be a plurality victory of "Yes" the ballot and Lt. Gov. the decision as a "victory for the over "No" Cruz Bustamante's machinations to ID· rocess." whereby "Yes" votes do not constitute stall himself as Davis' successor if the P governor is recalled. a majority of all votes, when the ballots However, the de- But before declaring this a victory cision that may have of those that"Abstained" are included. the largest impact for the recall backers, we should take on the Oct. 7 recall election Consider the following scenario. Re- came and note of what Davis had to say about the went with scarcely a cent polling data suggest that in a whimper of ruling. First, he is the prey-the self- protest from Qte major straight "Yes or No" question, 51 per- players in this proclaimed "Bengal tiger" --in the drama.'The silence is deafening. cent of the electorate would choose to biggest political game hunt ID the The recall ballot recall the governor. For the sake of ar- will comprise two state's history. Second, he is an adroit questions. gument, let us suppose that on election The first is whether or not to and fierce political combatant recall While night, "Yes" beats "No" by a tally Davis. The second consists of he has proven his incompetence of 51 choosing as the percent to 49 percent As to the num- a successor should the gover- Golden State's chief executive, nor be he is ber of abstentions, estimates of recent recalled. Federal Disbict Court eminently skilled at electioneering, Judge recall elections in local races Barry Moskowitz struck down a havingwon five statewide peg that particular elections.. figure somewhere between 4 percent element of this process on Contrary to recall opponents July 29. Section - his and 8 percent Let's assume that the 11382 of the California so-called allies- Davis liked the Elections Code states, number of abstentions on election "No vote cast in Moskowitz ruling. According to an As- the recall election shall night will be 6 percent Next, let us put be counted for sociated Press report, Davis saw the de- any candidate unless the abstentions in the total pool of the voter also cision "as a positive sign for People voted for or against me. votes and calculate the relative per- the recall of the offi- can now vote yes or no or skip 1t com· cer sought to be centages. The new figures would be as recalled." pletely and go on to the next issue." In declaring that follows: Yes (48 percent); No (46 per- this section violated This is an odd statement on its face. the U.S. Constitution, cent); and Abstain (6 percent). Moskowitz de- How does the governor benefit from clared that "section a All of this to the contrary, the plain 11382 substantially decision that allows voters more free- burdens the right of language of section 11384 clearly indi- citizens of Califor- dom in choosing his successor?The nia to vote on a cates that a "majority" refers to a ma- successor governor in answer is the second part of his the event of state- . jority of the Yes/No votes cast on the a recall by conditioning ment "yes or no or skip it completely." the counting "recall proposal." Moskowitz at- of that vote on whether We have argued for some time that it tempted to address this question the voter cast a ballot on the question has been a mistake in his of recall." to count Davis out ruling, although his answer before the battle is left the over. This recent door open for an aggressive The lawsuit was brought by a hus- federal court ruling Davis to has the potential to challenge the legality and legitimacy band of and wife duo of law professors. . an outcome similar Shaun Martin 1s a professor at the Uni- to to that described fice. above. One can easily imagine a versity of San Diego andSandy Rier- son is at the Thomas . friendly state court judge holding that, Jefferson School Section 11 oi tion Code, of Law. Martin, a former in lightofMoskowitz's ruling, a major- law clerk to which is still intact, states, "If amajor- Stephen Reinhardt, ity of all voters in the recall election did who was chairman ity of the votes in a recall proposal of the California are not choose to recall the governor. Democratic Party be- "Yes," the officer sought to be recalled fore his appointment by President shall be removed from office upon

38 Secretary of State Kevin Shelley has said that his office will not appeal the · Moskowitz ruling and is instructing voting clerks in the 58 counties to ballots tally according to the federal court decision. If an appeal is not made and this decision stands, we could be in for one wild ride come October. Floridians may think they have a lock on the repu- tation as America's biggest political basket case. One has the sinking feel- ing that we in the Golden State are about to teach our assuming brother the to east that Californians always lead theway.

Janiskeels assistant professor of political science at Callfornla State University San Bernardino and a fellow at the Claremont Institute. Erler Is a professor of polltlcal science at Callfornla State University Bernardino. San Eastmanls a professor of law at Chapman University and director of the Center for ,Constltutlonal Jurisprudence at the Claremont Institute.

39 SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA WEEKLY 14,000 AUG 4 2003- Recall Puts San Diego Registrar - in Scramble Mode

BY RENE 'E BEASLEY JONES "I have such faith in the California election officials," McPherson said. "Our voters and , Employees in the San Diego Registrar of staff are very accustomed to the Voters' office are in overtime mode. system. We used it for 25 years, so They started working evenings and week- there should be no problem." ends late last month after state officials set The county's sample ballots are Gov. Gray Davis' recall election for Oct. 7. printed in Los Angeles by ES&S. The special election will cost San Diego Even though preparation time is County a total of $3 million, said county Reg- shorter for this e lection, istrar of Voters Sally McPherson. However, McPherson doesn' t foresee any only $2 million can be considered an addi- delays. Sample ballots are not as tional expenditure, McPherson said, subtract- complex as they would be for a ing out regular staffers' salaries. major election, which has more ju- "Usually, we have months to prepare," risdictions on the ballot. McPherson said. "This election is 75 days Sample ballots will go to the from the date the lieutenant governor called printer in mid-August. They must the election. Now, we have to recruit 4,000 be mailed at least 10 days before an poll workers and find 1,300 polling places." election. McPherson said San Di- Her office is appealing to the public for poll ego County voters can expect to see their sample workers. The job pays $60, $80, or $100, de- ballots two to three weeks before the election. pending on the assignment. The registrar's of- The short timeframe should not interfere fice needs workers who speak English, Span- with absentee voter applications, which will ish, and Tagalog, which serves the be on the back of sample ballots. They will Filipino population. also show polling places for voters. McPherson expects to work The last day to apply for an absentee ballot right up to the election muster- by mail is Sept. 30, seven days before the ing all the people she needs. election. Permanent absentee voters automati- Only three days into the elec- cally wiU receive a ballot in the mail. tion cycle, 18 potential candidates Two local law professors - Shaun Martin filed to run for governor, and his wife, Sandy Rierson - filed a lawsuit McPherson said. That's a large questioning the constitutionality of Calio number compared to other races. fornia's recall election law. An obsolete stat- New voting machines have not ute meant a significant number of votes would arrived yet, so county voters will not be counted in _the election, they said. use the same punch-card system, A federal judge in San Diego ruled in their she said. ..but it is not expected to stall She doesn' t expect any prob- lems with the punch cards similar r at Universit of San to the Florida scenario that stalled the 2000 Diego, an 1erson is a professor at Thomas presidential election. Jefferson School of Law.

40 NEW YORK TIMES NEW YORK TIMES (NATIONAL EDITION) NE W YORK, NY CHICAGO TRIBUNE NE W YORK , NY TUESDAY 1, 194 , 491 TUESDAY 248 , 880 CHICAGO , IL AUG 5 2003 AUG 5 2003 TUESDAY 889 , 028 AUG 5 2003 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 111111111111111111 IIIIII Ill lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 ST. LOUIS, 110 TUESDAY Burrelles 298,235 I . 208 QL AUG 5 2003 , IZ1 1. 3 ·• · •• n

N.Y. to use DNA p ofiles to indict unknown offender 1n• • sex crimes

By William K. Rashbaum tation is to protect e accused victions. Both time and emotion New York Times News Service against fading me ories and can affect memory. lost witnesses .. An · dictment, Criminal-defense lawyers and NEW YORK-City officials even one that iden · es the at- legal scholars had mixed views said Monday that they planned tacker simply by D A collected of the project, and some con- to r eview biological evidence soon after a crime, indefinitely tended that it sought to bypass from hundreds of unsolved sex preserves the ab· to prose- the statute oflimitations crimes , a cen- , with the goal of indict- cute, officials said. turies-old tradition rooted in ing the unidentified attackers "For the first ti e, prosecu- common law, without providing based on their DNA profiles be- tors, police and s entists will an adequate replacementfor the fore the 10-year statute of limita- join forces and us technology defenses it provides. tions runs out. on a citywide scale o employ an Lawrence Goldman, the past Under the initiative, called innovative legal s ategy - in- president of the National Asso- the John Doe Indictment Pro- dicting the DNA p ofiles of un- ciation of Criminal Defense ject, prosecutors, investigators known sex offend rs," Bloom- Lawyers, said with the passage and scientists will seek to tie the berg said. "One ve simple goal of time, it becomes harder and most serious unsolved sex is behind this strat gy: stopping harder to defend against crimi- crimes to specific DNA profiles, rapists from profi ing from the nal cases. then file charges even before statute of limitations," he said. "It is extremely difficult to de- they have linked a name to the "By indicting a apist's DNA fend a crime after many years," DNA or have arrested a suspect. profile even before we know he said. "I would rather the city The first 600 cases for which who he is, we can stop the clock spend its efforts on people who evidence will be reviewed con- on the statute of limitations. So are sitting in prison and make cern attacks in 1994. If the indict- on the day that we find out who sure the DNA matches." ments are completed before the that rapist is, whether it takes But Yale Kamisar, an expert prosecution clock runs out, law- us 10 years, 20 years, 30 years or in criminal procedure and a law enforcement officials said they more, he will have his day in professor at the University believe of the person with that court." Michigan and the University of DNA can be arrested and John Feinblatt the mayor's San Diego. called the initiative charged any time in the future. criminal justice coordinator, "a kind of ingenious way" to The project is the first of its said he could not say how many deal with the statute of limita- kind anywhere, Mayor Michael indictments would be filed, but tions. Bloomberg said Monday, al- he and other officials empha- Noting that people now treat though individual "John Doe sized that they would be sought sex crimes far more seriously indictments" based on DNA only if the victim could be found than they did even 10 years ago, have been filed in New York City and would be willing to testify he said, "So now that people and a few other places. State law before a grand jury. view it differently, I personally requires that a felony prosecu- Because of the passage of time don't see why anybody has a tion be brought within 5 years of and the intense emotion in- right to say, 'Well, my those time has crimes, or within 10 years volved in sex crimes, he ac- run out and they can't find me.' if the criminal's identity is un- knowledged that there were spe- This is a pretty good way to re- known. The purpose of the limi- cial difficulties to winning con- spond to that."

41 DELAWARE GAZETTE DAILY HERALD ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT DELAWARE , OH PROVO , UT GAZETTE MONDAY 8,500 MONDAY 33 , 000 LITTLE ROCK, AR AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 MONDAY 182 , 609 LEDGER AUG 25 2003 ALBANY HERALD ALBANY , GA ELLWOOD CITY, PA NEW YORK SUN MONDAY 28 , 600 WED NESDAY 1, 300 NEW YORK, NY AUG 25 2003 AUG 27 2003 MONDAY 60 , 000 EVENING SUN STATEN ISLAND ADVANCE AUG 25 2003 NORWICH , NY STATEN ISLAND, NY MONDAY 5,800 MONDAY 70,000 Miranda warnings on falldocket Supreme Court to look at rules on interrogations, admissible evidence · 1 BY G zations. "They don't want to be of calling and hanging up on his should stop it. THE A SOCIATED PRESS embarrassed by the prosecutor, ex-girlfriend breaks down in "This is really making a joke WASHINGTON- ' 'You have or the judge." tears when confronted by a po- out of the whole thing. Even the the right to rema in silent" will Interrogations are restricted liceman, then leads officers to Supreme Court justices who are be a common utterance around under the court's 1966 ruling in a gun he has illegally. not terribly enthusia stic about the Supreme Court this fall. Miranda v. Arizona, which re- In two of the cases, from Ne- Miranda have to realize you ei- Justices will hear appeals in quires officers to warn the peo- braska and Missouri, quest ion- ther keep Miranda on the books three cases involving the court's ple they arrest and question of ings were started before the sus- or you don't," he said. 37-year-old mandate that police their rights to remain silent and pects were read their rights. In Even with Miranda warnings, officers warn suspects of their see a lawyer. the third case, from Colorado, an estimated 80 percent of sus- rights before beginning interro- The court reaffirmed Miran- the suspect interrupted the Mi- pects still talk to police, Karnis- gations. da in 2000, but then gave po- r anda warning and told the offi- ar said. The eventual rulings will tell lice a victory this summer with cer he already knew his rights. "When you read s omeone police how far they can go to get a ruling that officers cannot be The Supreme Court will de- their rights, it goes in one ear answers from suspected crimi- sued for violating the standard cide if the two-step in ter roga- and out the other," Johnson said. tals, and let courts know when as long as the confession is not tion process is improper when "The words have lost their they must bar confessions or ev- used in a prosecution. done deliberately by officers to meaning be cause they've be- idence from a trial. The issue of interrogations is try to get a confession. A 1985 come so common." Officers hoping to enhance also getting some legislative at- court ruling dealt with the same Susan Klein, a U niversity of their chances of getting a sus- tention. Last month, Illinois be- subject, but the double ques- Texas professor, said there's a pect to divulge key informa- came the first state with a law tioning was not deliberate. Both good chance the court will side tion sometimes put off reading requiring police to tape interro- people questioned twice were with the government in all three "Miranda warnings." After they gations and confessions of mur- convicted. cases. The Fifth Amendment get a confession, or answers that der suspects, intended to ensure The court will also con sider right against self-incrimination will lead to a we apon or other those in custody are not tortured if evidence obtained from peo- is not a cherished right in this evidence, officers then run or coerced. ple not read their rights can be age of terror fighting, she said. through the warnings that have The forthcoming Supreme used against them. "It's not something the jus- been made famous by TV police Court cases give people a Critics say people may not re- tices would bend over backward shows. glimpse of what interrogations alize that information divulged to protect," Klein said. "This is The Supreme Court will de- can be like: before they are read their rights a good time to chip away at Mi- cide if it's smart detective work Officers armed with an arrest cannot be used at trial and they randa." or deceitful trickery to delay the warrant say they just want to then repeat incrimin ating state- But Eugene Milhizer, a former 1 warning. Law enforcement is chat with a suspected drug deal- ments later in formal interviews. Army judge dvocate and pro- paying attention to the cases. er before taking him to jail. Of- Yale Kamisar, a Miranda ex- fessor at A · Maria School of "They want to make the ar- ficers who arrest a murder sus- pert who teaches law at the Uni- an, expects nar- rest, but they want to make it pect at 3 a.m. leave her alone in versity of Michigan and the Uni- m the court. stick, too," said Bill Johnson, ex- the interrogation room to "give versi of San Diego, said polic e that the court ecutive director of the National her a little time to think about officers are eing trained to get o o something revolu- Association of Police Organi- the situation." A man suspected around Miranda and the court tion ary with Miranda," he said. PORTSMOUTH DAILY TIME S TIMES NEWS PALM BEACH POST DESERT SUN PORTSMOUTH, OH LEHIG HT ON , PA WEST PAL MBEACH, FL PALM SPRINGS , CA MONDAY 15,064 MONDAY 17 ,004 MONDAY 171,607 MONDAY 51,548 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 ALTOONA MIRROR COLUMBIA DAILY TRIBUNE SUN ALTOONA , PA COLUMBIA , MO YUMA, AZ MONDAY MONDAY 31 1 000 18,748 MONDAY 25,000 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003

42 TIMES-HERALD NORTHWEST FLORIDA DAILY SARATOG!AN ALLIANCE NE NEWS ALLIANCE I TIMES RECORD SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY THURSDAY 3,121 FORT SMITH, AR FORT WALTON BEACH, FL MONDAY 10,404 AUG 28 2003 MONDAY 42,201 MONDAY 40,252 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 Supreme Court Takes Broad Look At Miranda Rights

or you don't," he said gations and confessions of mur- 40 YEARS LATER, FOUR APPEALS Law enforcement is paying at- der suspects, intended to ensure WILL BE HEARD BY JUSTICES tention to the cases. those in custody are not tortured "They want to make the arrest, or coerced. The upcoming Supreme Court By Gina Holland officers then run through the but they want to make it stick warnings that have been made too," said Bill Johnson, executive cases give people a glimpse of famous by TV cop shows. director of the National Associ- what interrogations can be like: armed with an ar- WASHINGTON - ''You have the The Supreme Court will de- ation of Police Organizations. Officers say they just want right to remain silent" will be a cide if it's smart detective work "They don't want to be embar- rest warrant chat with a suspected drug common utterance around the or deceitful trickery to delay the rassed by the prosecutor, or the to before taking him to jail. Supreme Court this fall warning. judge." dealer who arrest a murder Justices will hear appeals in Critics say people may not re- Interrogations are restricted Officers at 3 a.m. leave her three cases involving the court's alize that information divulged under the court's 1966 ruling in suspect interrogation room 37-year-old mandate that police before they are read their rights Miranda v. Arizona, which re- alone in the her a little time to officers warn suspects of their cannot be used at trial and they quires officers to warn the peo- to "give about the situation." A rights before beginning interro- then repeat incriminating state- ple they arrest and question of think of calling and gations. ments later in formal interviews. their rights to remain silent and man suspected up on his ex-girlfriend The eventual rulings will tell Yale Kamisar, a Miranda ex- see a lawyer. hanging in tears when police how far they can go to get pert who teaches law at the Uni- reaffirmed Miranda breaks down by a policewoman, answers from suspected crimi- versity of Michigan and the Uni- then gave police a confronted officers to a gun he nals, and let courts know when versity ofSan Diego, said police ummer with a rul- then leads . they must bar confessions or ev- officers are beingtrained to get ing that officers cannot be sued has illegally two of the cases, from Ne- idence from a trial. around Miranda and the court for violating the standard as long In Missouri, question- Officers hoping to enhance should stop it as the confession is not used in braska and were started before the sus- their chances of getting a suspect "This is really making a joke a prosecution. ings read their rights. In to divulge key information some- out of the whole thing. Even the The issue of interrogations is pects, were from Colorado, the times put off reading "Miranda Supreme Court justices who are also getting some legislative at- the. third case, the Miranda warnings." After they get a con- . not terribly enthusiastic about tention. Last month, Illinois be- suspect interrupted and told the officer he fession, or answers that will lead Miranda have to realize you ei- came the first state with a law warning his rights. to a weapon or other evidence, ther keep Miranda on the books requiring police to tape interro- already knew

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GALION I OH FREDERICK, MD MORNING JOURNAL MONDAY 4,000 MONDAY 48,925 LORAIN, OH AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 MONDAY 41,000 HANNIBAL COURIER-POST AUG 25 2003 HANNIBAL, MO MONDAY 10, 000 43 AUG 25 2003 CADILLAC NEWS MOUNTAIN EAGLE CADILLAC , MI KIRKSVILLE DAILY MONDAY 11,000 YOtITESBURG, KY EXPRESS AND NEWS AUG 25 2003 WEEKLY 7,500 ' AUG 27 2003 KIRKSVILLE, MO DAILY TIMES-CALL MONDAY 5,393 BRISTOL PRESS AUG 25 2003 LONGMONT, CO MONDAY 22,285 BRISTOL, CT DAILY MINING GAZETTE AUG 25 2003 TUESDAY 15,000 HOUGHTON, MI 0 - AUG 26 2003 ·MONDAY 11,440 . AUG 25 20Q3 ALPENA NEWS ALPENA, MI MONDAY 12,500 AUG 25 2003 MEXICO LEDGER MEXICO, MO MONDAY 8,229 GRAND ISLAND AUG 25 2003 INDEPENDENT GRAND ISLAND, NE MONDAY 24,605 AUG 25 2003 BOONVILLE DAILY NEWS BOONVILLE, MO MONDAY 10,000 BARRE MONTPELIER TIMES AUG 25 2003 ARGUS BARRE, VT MONDAY 10,800 LEBANON DAILY RECORD AUG 25 2003 LEBANON, MO MONDAY 8,500 AUG 25 2003

DETROIT LEGAL NEWS ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOT( DETROIT, MI Professor Yale Kamisar, a Miranda expert who teaches law WEDNESDAY 1,880 at the University of Michigan and t e iversi of San Die o, says PRESS-REPUBLICAN AUG 27 2003 t hat police officers are being trained to get around Miranda and PLATTSBURGH, NY t hat t he Supreme Court should stop it. MONDAY 23,187 AUG 25 2003 ENTERPRISE-RECORD GAINESVILLE SUN UNION LEADER CHICO, CA GAINESVILLE, FL MANCHESTER, NH WEDNESDAY 33,400 MONDAY 51,407 MONDAY . 72, 700 AUG 27 2003 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 CASPER STAR-TRIBUNE REPORTER-HERALD MERCURY-REGISTER CASPER, WY LOVELAND, CO OROVILLE, CA TUESDAY 32,900 MONDAY 17,900 WEDNESDAY 8,800 AUG 26 2003 AUG 25 2003 AUG 27 2003

JOPLIN GLOBE DAILY CAPITAL NEWS STANDARD DEMOCRAT JOPLIN, MO SIKESTON, MO JEFFERSON CITY, MO MONDAY 31,882 MONDAY 9,900 THURSDAY 23,000 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 AUG 28 2003 JEFFERSON CITY POST-TRIBUNE DAILY AMERICAN SOUTHEAST MISSOURIAN JEFFERSON CITY, MO WEST FRANKFORT, IL CAPE GIRARDEAU, MO WEDNESDAY 17,408 MONDAY 4,200 MONDAY 18,000 44 AUG 27 2003 AUG 25 2003 AUG 25 2003 SUN-SENTINEL FORT LAUDERDALE, FL MONDAY 251,970 AUG 25 2003 High court to revisit I Miranda "This is really making a joke out of by a policewoman, then leads officers the whole thing. Even the Supremf. to a gun he has illegally. Police tactics, Court justices who are not terribly en- In two of the cases, from Nebraska thusiastic about Miranda have to real- and Missouri, questionings were start- confessions I ed before the suspects were read their ize you either keep Miranda on the. nghts. In the third case, from Colora- at heart of appeal books or you don't," he said. do, the suspect interrupted the Miran- Law enforcement is paying atten- da warning and told the officer he al- BY GINA HOLLAND his THE ASSOC IA TED PRESS { tion to the cases. ready knew rights. w ASHINGTON • "You have the right "They want to make the arrest, but to remain silent" will be a common ut- they want to make it stick too," said terance around the Supreme Court .Bill Johnson, executive director of the this fall. National Association of Police Organi- Justices will hear appeals in three zations. "They don't want to be embar- cases involving the court's 37-year-old rassed by the prosecutor, or the mandate that police officers warn sus- judge." pects of their rights before beginning Interrogations are restricted under interrogations. the court's 1966 ruling in Miranda vs. The eventual rulings will tell police Arizona, which requires officers to how far they can go to get answers warn the people they arrest and ques- from suspected .criminals, and let tion of their rights.to remain silent and courts know when they must bar con- see a lawyer. fessions or evidence from a trial. The court reaffirmed Miranda in Officers hoping to enhance their 2000, but then gave police a victory chances of gettinga suspect to divulge this summer with a ruling that officers key information sometimes put off cannot be sued for violating the stan- dard as long as the confession is not reading "Miranda warnings." After used in a prosecution. they get a confession, or answers that The issue of interrogations is also will lead to a weapon or other evi- getting some legislative attention. Last dence, officers then run through the month, Illinois became the first state warnings that have been made famous by TVcop shows. with a law requiring police to tape in- The Supreme Court will decide terrogations and confessions of mur- whether it's smart detective work or der suspects, intended to ensure those deceitful trickery to delay the warn- in custody are not tortured or coerced. ing. The upcoming Supreme Court Critics say people may not realize cases give people a glimpse of what in- that information divulged before they terrogations can be like: are read their rights cannot be used at Officers armed with an arrest war- trial and they then repeat incriminat- rant say they just want to chat with a ing statements later in formal inter- suspected drug dealer before taking views. him to jail. Officers who arrest a mur- Yale Kamisar, a Miranda expert der suspect at 3 a.m. then leave her who teaches law at the University of · · ion room to Michigan and the Universi of San · aboutthe Diego, said police officers are emg ted of calling trained to get around Miranda and the and hanging up on his ex-girlfriend court should stoo it. breaks down in tears when confronted 45 WASHINGTON POST WASHINGTON , DC THURSDAY B11,925 AUG 14 2003 A Merrill Lynch Whiz Kid, and Then a Suspect By BEN WHITE futures trades. Only in Gordon's Washington Post Staff Writ er case, he was allegedly taking mon- ey for himself, not trying to cover NEW YORK, Aug. 13-lt up losses for his firm. was the summer of 1998. "Usually in order to pull some- The bull market was kicking . thing like this off, it takes a person into full swing. Wall Street at least 30 years old with a decade banks barely gave a second of experience," Partnoy said. "And thought to hiring young ,usually the way these things hap- whiz kids straight out of col- pen is someone gets in a hole, los- lege. es money, and lies to cover it up. Historically staid broker- . . . If these allegations are true, age giant Merrill Lynch & [Gordon] is an even more brazen 1996 BOSTONUNIVERSITY PHOTO VIA BLOOMBERG NEWS Co. sensed an opportunity to Nick Leeson." DANIELL GORDON make big money in the new At first, Gordon seemed like a gift from heaven for Merrill. A Wild West world of dereg- trading wizard whose boyish ulated energy trading. But looks made him seem even youn- no one at the firm under- ger than his 22 years, Gordon stood the market. So Merrill raced through the ranks, quickly went out and hired people taking over as head of Merrill's who said they did. Global Energy Markets (GEM) Among the recruits was a business in 1999. He lived in high 22-year-old wonder boy style in a multimillion-dollar con- named Daniel L. Gordon. At do on Manhattan's wealthy and an age when many students exclusive Upper East· Side, pur- are just finishing college, chased in part with money lent by Gordon already had a mas- Merrill Lynch Credit Corp., ac- ter's degree in international . cording to public records. economics from Yale and He came to Merrill with what had spent a year working at appeared to be a strong resume: an advanced degree from Yale and an energy-trading firm in a year working at Constellation Baltimore. Power Source in Baltimore, then a Within two years of join- joint venture between Goldman ing Merrill, prosecutors al- Sachs and Baltimore Gas and Elec- lege, Gordon would steal tric Co. A Constellation spokes- $43 million. If true, it would man confirmed that Gordon be one of the most audacious worked at Con tellation Power heists in Wall Street history. Source from October 1997 Gordon has not been through July 1998 but declined to charged with any wrongdo- comment further. ing. His attorney, Alan Lev- A source familiar with Gordon ine, declined to comment on said that he was a mid-level sales- the allegations and said Gor- man at Constellation and that his don would be unavailable for com- hiring and rapid rise at Merrill ment. Merrill would not comment came as something of a shock. "He on either the allegations or Gor- rose so quickly to a position of don's tenure with the firm. such incredible responsibility at Nonetheless, the allegations Merrill," the source said. "It was have stunned Wall Street watch- quite a fast step up." Public re- ers. cords indicate that while Gordon Frank Partnoy, a professor at was in Baltimore he may have the University of San Diego law lived in a luxurious apartment schoo and an expert in the com- complex overlooking the Inner plex energy-trading and deriva- Harbor. tives markets, compared the Gor- According to prosecutors, the don allegations to the case of Nick events under investigation began Leeson, the young trader who in the summer of 2000. helped bring down Barings Bank Merrill had a big long-term con- in Britain in 1995 with bad bets on tract with the Williams Cos. ener-

46 gy firmto purchase power. ln Au- bene ficially owned gust 2000, Gordon told Merrill in New York and used it to buy a by Gordon executives he needed to purchase 70 percent stake in the Connecti- himself." Merrill dismissed a call option, essentially an insur- cut d ata-storage firm Daticon the conten- Inc. tion, saying ance contract, to protect Merrill Gordon's father is now presi it did not learn of po- in dent tential case Williams could not deliver and ch ief executive of fraud in the Falcon trans- Daticon. action the power, prosecutors say. After Gordon served as non-executive until the fall of 2002. In any event Merrill proposed hedging deal with Aqui- chairman of the company until said, if the allega- last tions were la Energy Corp. fell through, pros- year. A D aticon spokesman true then Merrill, not re- Allegheny ecutors say, Gordon recom- ferred a call to a New York was the victim. public Merrill also mended a company called Falcon relations agent, who in noted in its filing tum re- that it had Energy Holdings SA, a firm _head- fe rred the call to Gordon's wired a $550,000 "ter- at- mination quartered in the Caribbean island torney, who declined to fee" for the Falcon con- comment. tract of Anguilla. Daticon rel eased a statement to Allegheny in the third say- quarter of No one at Merrill had heard of . ing the Gordon probe has 2002, compensating Al- nothing leghe the company. to do with the company, ny for a contract, acquired as . which part of According to a letter wntten by pr ovides document managing the energy-trading busi- ser- ness, vices for lawyers. that no longer served any Assistant U.S. Attorney Jane purpose. Prosecutors A Late in 2000, Merrill Lynch allege that Levine, Gordon told credit- de- the $550 and cided it did not have a future ,000 payment came not risk-management officials in the from Falcon at Mer- energy-trading busine but from another ac- rill that Falcon was affiliated s after all count with and began shopping its controlled by Gordon. the French energy GEM unit Gordon company Elf around. In January 's current whereabouts Aquitaine. Levine 2001, Hagers- aid that in in- town, Md.-b are unknown. ternal Merrill ased Allegheny Ener- documents, Gordon gy Inc. purchased Allegheny fired him on Sept. 5 described Falcon GEM for $490 as an interna- million and a 2 of last year, saying he had vio- tional energy percent stake m firm wi th i nvest- the business, lated internal corporate policies ments in power valued at $115 mil- plant , oil fields lion. Allegheny hired regarding conflicts of interest." and gas re erves, an Gordon to According d as an active lead the unit. to the letter from Assis- ener gy trader. tant U.S. The d eal went sour fa st, Attorney Levine, those According to prosecutors largely conflicts , Fal- due to disputes over Gordon.- of interest included two con was none of those things. fuel-oil contracts In- In September 2002, as the ener- entered into by stead, prosecutors say, it was a Allegheny with gy-trading market faltered, All Eastern Energy shell company set up by Gor e- Group, which don gheny filed suit a gain corporate filings with the he lp of Canad st Merrill, showed ian b ank- saying the securities was controlled by Gordon. consulting firm New firm failed to port Pacific disclose problem at In addition, Levine said in her Financial Group the ener gy . Attorneys for unit and mi letter that Gordon caused Alleghe- Newport have srepresented Gordon's said they believed age, experienc ny to sign a multimillion-dollar the dealings were e and qualifications. with Merrill and Allegheny also lease for a backup facility in Con- were legitimate. alleged that Merrill "knew or should necticut. After Allegheny an- Gordon allegedly have known that told his supe- Daniel Gordon nounced its intention to downsize, riors tha controlled or had t Falcon required a "reser- interest Levine said in her letter, Gordon vation fee" s in a series of other com- of $43 million fo r the panies" negotiated a termination of the contract, and accused Merrill of fail- which was scheduled to ing lease for $2.5 million. The pay- run to explain that Gordon was from July 1, 2003, through "very ment was made to a real estate 2012 difficult to control or su- . He produced a document on company allegedly controlled by Aug. 18, 2000, signed by "R. Gil- pervise." Gordon. In a court hotra" on behalf of Falcon. Merrill filing responding to At some point last year, Gordon Allegheny's charges took Gordon at his world that the about Gor- purchased a $3.6 million house don, Merrill Lynch in contract was v alid and wired to said, "If Alle- the quaint Connecticut town gheny truly cared of $43 million to a bank account held about Mr. Gor- Old Lyme, hard on the banks in the don's age or of name of Newport Pacific Fi- qualifications, they the Connecticut River, which could have he nancial Group at AIG Private asked to see his driv- still owns. According to public er's license re- Bank in Zurich. Prosecutors allege or birth certificate." cord s, Gordon once In a c again bor- that no insurance contract ever ex- ourt filing in June, Alle- rowed from Merrill Lynch gheny Credit isted and that Gordon transferred accused Merrill Lynch of Corp. to help pay for knowing the house. the money from Falcon to Ostrich, about the illicit nature of Merrill declined to comment the Falcon on another o ffshore holding compa- transaction, calling it the loans. ny. the "most egregious example" of Gordon appears information to have made From there, prosecutors say, concealed by Merrill. very few public comments Allegheny on his Gordon moved $30 million of the said Merrill knew that own behalf. mon Falcon was " actually ey to an account he controlled an entity as- He did, however, issue a brief sociated with. controlled by or stateme nt after his dismissal by

47 AIJegneny last year. "I deeply re- gret and strongly disagree with the various statements that have been made about me," he said, ac- cording to Knight Ridder/Tri- bune Business News. "These statements are erroneous, hurtful and reflect personal attacks as op- posed to statements of fact. deep- ly appreciate the outpouringof support that I have received. Researcher Richard S. Drezen contributed to this report.

Merrill lynch, the New York-based brokerage in 1998 when giant, recruited Daniel Gordon it wanted to expand its energy-trading 22 but had business. Gordon a master's ·degree from Yale was and a year's experience in energy.

48 Former Merrill Lynchchief trader under ' investigation in $43 million _theft

By David Evans / Gordon's transactions, Assistant U.S. At- Merrill cooperating Bloomberg News torney Jane Levine in New York wrote in Merrill Lynch was unaware of Daniel Gordon, former chief energy a letter to Canadian law-enforcement of- the alleged theft until last Octo- trader for Merrill Lynch & Co., is being ficials, citing interviews with witnesses ber, two years after Gordon al- investigated for embezzling $43 million in Merrill's credit department and writ- legedly took the money, said · from the world's largest securities firm in ten internal communications. Merrill spokesman Bill Halldin. 2000 by disguising the theft as an energy He said that in all the time Gor- trade, according to a letter written by a Potentially wider problem don was at Merrill, the firm was U.S. Justice Department prosecutor and Partnoy, the San Diego.law professor unaware of any wrongdoing by interviews with Canadian law-enforce- Gordon. "We're cooperating fully ment officials. and author of "Infectious · Greed," said the episode should with the appropriate law · en- Merrill Lynch, based in New York, concern the company's in- · forcement officials on this mat- hasn't disclosed the loss in public filings. vestors. ter," he said. Gordon sent the money in 2000 to a . "This is highly material infor- Gordon's energy-trading unit Caribbean-incorporated .shell company mation about how Merrill.Lynch was under the supervision of he controlled, according to the Justice is run and how their controls Kelly Martin, senior vice presi- Department letter. Merrill, the largest se- and credit checks are able.to de- dent and head of global debt curities firm by capital, said in a civil- tect theft or fraud," Partnoy said. markets at Merrill, Halldin said. court filing on July 14 that it recognized "It's evidence of a potentially Martin resigned last ,December the possibility of "the alleged fraud." wider control problem. In my and is now chief executive of The embezzlement would be the opinion', because of the nature of Elan Corp., Ireland's largest drug largest employee theft from a financial in- the transactions, the $43 million maker. loss should have -been dis- · Martin reported to Thomas stitution in modem times, said John Cof- closed." . · Davis, then head of Merrill's in- fee, Adolf A. Berle professor of law at Co- vestment banking and capital lumbia Law School in New York, where Merrill reported $1.02 billion net income in the quarter ended markets business, Halldin said. he directs the Center on Corporate Gov- Davis was fired in September ernance. Frank Partnoy, a securities-law June 30. "The $43 million is a · · bucket for Merrill," for refusing to testify to the Se- professor at the University of San Diego U1Curities and Exchange Commis- School of Law, said the case suggests . "That's not the ry concern. It's the sion and U.S. Justice Depart- Merrill's oversight and control of its ex- ment about ·Merrill's ecutives was inadequate. breakdown in controls." Gordon, now chairman of transactions with Enron .Coro. "We're alleging Dan Gordon defraud- in 1999, Halldin said. ed Merrill Lynch of $43 million" and Daticon Inc., a legal-document- J storage company in Norwich, laundered the money with the help of a Conn., didn't return three 'Constantly improving' Canadian offshore-banking consultant, phone messages to Daticon and Asked what Merrill Chair- said Gregg Lepp, a Canadian prosecutor his mobile phone requesting an man and Chief Executive Stan- in Edmonton, Alberta, in·a Monday tele- interview. · ley O'Neal has done to tighten phone interview. Gordon, also under in- · Gordon's attorney, Alan internal controls, Halldin said, vestigation by federal prosecutors in Levine, managing partner of "We're continually improving New York, hasn't been formally charged Kronish Lieb Weiner &Hellman our internal controls and compli- with any wrongdoing. LLP in New York, declined to ance procedures." "The usual credit-check and due-dili- comment. Levine also didn't re- The , bre

49 supervise its employees. . . Merrill agreed to pay $80 mil- don are contained in a 76-page lion in March to settle SEC sworn statement filed by Sgt. charges that it helped Enron Joseph Mamela of the Royal VENTURA COUNTY STAR Corp ..commit accounting fraud. Canadian Mounted Police in the (THOUSAND OAKS) In April, Merrill agreed to pay Provincial Court of Alberta in . $200 million to settle accusa- Edmonton, and in a 12-page let- THOUSAND OAKS, CA tions by state and federal regula- .ter written to Alberta's attorney TUESDAY 16,000 tors that the firm allowed con- general .by Assistant U.S. Attor- ·, AUG 12 2003 flicts of interest. by its research ney Levine. . analysts. · Mamela filed the ·statement Merrill neither admitted nor with the Alberta court in De- denied wrongdoing in either cember to establish probable VENTURA COUNTY STAR case. cause to obtain a search warrant. (CAMARILLO) The court granted the warrant Sold to Allegheny · to search Newport Pacific Finan- VENTURA, CA Merrill sold its energy-trad- cial Group SA, an Edmonton TUESDAY 12,136 ing unit to Allegheny Energy company ·Gordon had hired to AUG 12 2003 Inc., a Maryland-based utility, in establish .two offshore compa- January 2001, and Gordon be- . .nies, according to Canadian .came Allegheny's chief energy prosecutor Lepp . trader. The utility fired Gordon Levine's letter, sent from the VENTURA COUNTY STAR in September for ·violating com- U.S. Attorney's. New York office (OXNARD) pany conflict-of-interest rules, and titled "Requestfor Assis- spokeswoman Cynthia Shoop tance in . the Investigation of OXNARD, CA said. She declined ·to say what Daniel L. Gordon," sought help TUESDAY 18,690 the conflicts were. in tracking Gordon's use cf off- AUG 12 2003 Merrill's decision to sell the shore bank accounts. unit was made by Merrill's then- Chief Executive David Koman- Shell comp..-y sky, saying the division wasn't "This office has developed VENTURA COUNTY STAR part of Merrill's core ·business, evidence that Daniel L. Gordon (SIMI VALLEY) Halldin said. · was involved in the ·embezzle- Two months ment and SIMIVALLEY, CA ago, in a law- laundering of approx- TUESDAY suit that began last year in fed- imately $43 million," Levine 101,028 eral court in New York City, Al- wrote. She wrote that Gordon AUG 12 2003 legheny accused Merrill of directed Merrill to send the concealing knowledge · ofGor- $43 ·million to Falcon Energy . don's wrongdoing at the time of · Holdings SA, a shell company · the sale. Merrill denied the ac- · incorporated in Anguilla, a VENTURA COUNTY cusation. "The only party that Caribbean island, as payment STAR suffered damages was Merrill for a "fraudulent contract." (MOORPARK) Lynch," Merrill wrote in a July · Merrill wired the money to MOORPARK, CA 14 legal r.esponse filed in U.S Fakon on . or about Aug. 30, TUESDAY 3,164 District Court in New York 2000, "to a bank account held AUG 12 2003 City. in the name of Newport Pacific Financial Group at AIG Private Gordon's age Bank Ltd. in Zurich, Switzer- Another issue in dispute is land, for further credit to Fal- Gordon's age. Allegheny said in con," she wrote. . court documents that "Gordon . Levine declined to com- was several years youriger than ment,. citing Justice Depart- had been represented to Al- ment policy. legheny." Assistant U.S. Attor- Merrill had accepted Gor- ney Levine wrote iri her letter don's word that Falcon was "an dated Nov. 21, 2002, that Gor- international energy firm with don was 26. investments in power plants, The allegations against Gor- oilfields and gas • reserves," . . Levine wrote. · ·

50 VENTURA COUNTY STAR ADVOCATE (VENTURA EDITION) STAMFORD, CT VENTURA, CA TUESDAY 27,213 TUESDAY 95,855 AUG 12 2003 AUG 12 2003

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79 TD .xz2c. XX ... b Ex-MerrillLynch exec investigated By David Evan ton, Alberta, in a telephone Maryland-based utility, in Janu- Bloomberg News interview. Gordon, also under ary 2001 , and Gordon became Daniel Gordon, former chief investigation by federal prose- Allegheny's chief energy trader. energy trader for Merrill Lynch cutors in New York, hasn't been The utility fired Gordon in Sep- &Co., is beinginvesti~atedinthe formally charged with any tember for violating company embezzling of $43 nullion from wrongdoing. conflict-of-interest rules, theworld'slargestsecuritiesfirm "The usual credit-check and spokeswoman Cynthia Shoop in 2000 by disguising the theft as due-diligence procedures in said. She declined to say what the an energy trade, according to a place at Merrill Lynch were not conflicts were. letter written by a U.S. Justice followed with respect to" Gor- Merrill's decision to sell the Department prosecutor and don's transactions, Assistant unit was made by Merrill's then- interviews with Canadian law- U.S. Attorney Jane Levine in Chief Executive David Koman- enforcement officials. New York wrote in a letter to sky, saying the division wasn't Merrill Lynch, based in New Canadian law-enforcement offi- part of Merrill's core business, York, hasn't disclosed the loss cials, citing interviews with wit- Halldin said. in public filings. Gordon sent nesses in Merrill's credit Two months ago, in a lawsuit the money in 2000 to a department and written internal ·that began last year in federal Caribbean-incorporated shell communications. court in New York City, Alleghe- company he controlled, accord- Gordon, now chairman of ny accused Merrill of concealing ing to the Justice Department Daticon Inc., a legal-document- knowledge of Gordon's wrong- letter. Merrill, the largest secu- storage company in Norwich doingatthetimeofthesale. Mer- rities firm by capital, said in a didn't return three phone mes- rill denied the accusation. ''The civil-court filing on July 14 that sages to Daticon and his mobile only party that suffered damages it recognized the possibility of phone, requesting an interview. was Merrill Lynch," Merrill "the alleged fraud." Gordon' s attorney, Alan wrote in a July 14 legalresponse The embezzlement would be Levine, managing partner of filed in U.SDistrictCourtinNew the largest employee theft from a Kronish Lieb Weiner & Hell- York City. financial institution in modem man LLP in New York, Another issue in dispute is times, said John Coffee, Adolf declined to comment. Levine Gordon's age. Allegheny said in Berle professoroflaw at Colum- also didn' t respond to two court documents that "Gordon bia Law School in New York, faxes detailing the allegations was several years younger than where he directs the Center on against Gordon. had been represented toAlleghe- Corporate Governance. Frank Merrill Lynch was unaware of ny." Assistant U.S. Attorney Partnoy, a securities-law profes- ft until last Octo- Levine wrote in her letter dated sor at the University of San Diego s after Gordon Nov. 21 , 2002, that Gordon was S boo! of Law,_said the case sug- the money, said 26. gests Merrill's oversight and em spo esman Bill Halldin. The allegations against Gor- control of its executives was He said that in all the time Gor- don are contained in a 76-page inadequate. don was at Merrill, the firm was sworn statement filed by "We 're alleging Dan Gordon unaware of any wrongdoing by Sergeant Joseph Mamela of the defrauded Merrill Lynch of $43 -Gordon. "We 're cooperating Royal Canadian Mounted Police million" and laundered the fully with the appropriate law in the Provincial Court of Alber- money with the help of a Cana- enforcement officials on this ta in Edmonton, and in a 12-page dian offshore-banking consul- matter," he said. letter written to Alberta's attor- tant, said Gregg Lepp, a Merrill sold its energy-trading ney general by Assistant U.S. Canadian prosecutor in Edmon- unit to Allegheny Energy Inc., a Attorney Levine.

51 NEW YORK TIMES (NATIONAL EDITION) NE W YORK , NY TUESDAY 248 , 860 AUG 12 2003

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480 5 QK .IZ11 ...... , T I • • I ..). andd ana E professor at the University of San ian Inquiries Into ner iego, said the case suggested t at It'soversight and control of its money to a By Bloombe rg News sheU company he con- cials. A Canadian prosecutor Gregg executives were inadequate. troUed in the Caribbean Daniel Gordon, the former chief . Lepp, said by phone from Edmonton, Gordon 1 no respon to energy trader for phone messages requesting an inter- Merrill Lynch, is Mr. Gordon has not been charged Alberta, " We're alleging Dan Gor- view. His lawyer being investigated on suspicion , Alan Levine, de- of with any wrongdoing. don defrauded Merrill Lynch of $43 clined to comment. embezzling $43 million from Merrill "The usual credit check and due million" and laundered the money A Merrill Lynch spokesman, Bill in 2000 by disguising the theft as an diligence procedures in place at Mer- with help from a Canadian _offshore- HaUdin, said that in the time Mr. energy trade, according to a letter rill Lynch were not foUowed with banking consultant. Gordon was at Merrill, the firm was written by a federal prosecutor in respect to" Mr . Gordon's transac- Merrill Lynch said in a civil court unaware of any wrongdoing by him. New_ York and interviews with Cana- tions, Jane Levine , an assistant Unit- filing on July 14 that it recognized the " We 're coop·erating fuUy with the dian law enforcement officials. ed States attorney in Manhattan, possibility of " the alleged fraud. " appropriate I enforcement offi- The letter said Mr. Gordon sent the wrote in the letter to Canadian offi- Frank Partn6y, a securities law cials on this matter," he said. I

OREGONIAN PORTLAND, OR TUESDAY 344,550 AUG 12 2003

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Former Merrill Lynch trader under fraud investigation Daniel Gordon, former chief energy trader for Merrill Lynch & Co., is being investigated for em- bezzling $43 million from the world's largest securities firm in 2000 by disguising the theft as an energy trade, according to a letter writtenby a U.S. Justice Department prosecutor and interviews with Canadian law enforcement officials. Merrill Lynch, based in New York, hasn't disclosed the loss in public filings. Gordon sent the money in 2000 to a Caribbean- incorporated shell company he controlled, according to the Jus- tice Department letter. Merrill, the largest securities firm by capital, said in a civil-court filing on July 14 that it recognized the possibility of "the alleged fraud." The embezzlement would be the largest employee theft from a financial institution in modem times, said John Coffee, Adolf A. Berle professor of law at Colum- bia Law School in New York, where he directs the Center on Corporate Governance. Frank Partnoy, a securities law profes- sor at the JUniversity of San Di go School of Law said the case suggests Merrill's oversight and control of its executives was in- adequate. "We're alleging Dan Gordon defrauded Merrill Lynch of$43 . million" and laundered the money with the help of a Cana- dian offshore-banking consul- tant, said Gregg Lepp, a Cana- dian prosecutor in Edmonton, Alberta, in a telephone inter- view. Gordon, also under inves- tigation by federal prosecutors in New York, hasn't been for- mally charged with any wrong- doing. - From wire reports

53 NEWSDAY (NASSAU TRIBUNE REVIEW HOUSTON CHRONICLE EDITION) GREENSBURG , PA HOUSTON , TX LONG ISLAND , NY TUESDAY 116,346 TUESDAY 545,727 TUESDAY 463,406 AUG 12 2003 AUG 12 2003 AUG 12 2003 Probe Eyes Ex-Merrill Lynch Exec By David Evans "The usual credit-check and due-dili- BLOOMBERG NEWS gence procedures in place at Merrill Daniel Gordon, former chief ener- Lynch were not followed with respect gy trader for Merrill Lynch & Co., is to" Gordon's transactions Assistant being investigated for allegedly em- U.S. Attorney Jane Levine in Manhat- bezzling $43 million from the world's tan wrote in a letter to Canadian largest securities firm in 2000 by dis- Jaw-enforcement officials, citing inter- guising the theft as an energy trade, views with witnesses in Merrill according to a letter written by a Lynch's credit department and written U.S. Justice Department prosecutor internal communications. and interviews with Canadian Gordon, now chairman of Daticon Jaw-enforcement officials. In c. , a legal-document-storage compa- didn t return Merrill Lynch, based in Manhattan, ny in Norwich, Conn., es. to Daticon and hasn't disclosed the loss in public fil- three phone messag his mobile phone requestmg an inter- ings. Gordon sent the money in 2000 to view. Gordon's attorney, Alan Levme, a Caribbean-incorporated shell compa- managing partner of Kronish Lieb ny he controlled, according to the Jus- Weiner & Hellman Lip in Manhattan, tice Department letter Merrill Lynch declined to comment. - the largest securities firm by capital Merrill Lynch was unaware of the - said in a civil-court filing on July 14 theft until last October, two years that it recognized the possibility of after Gordon allegedly took the money, alleged fraud." "the Lynch spokesman Bill would be the larg- said Merrill The embezzlement Halldin. He said th at in all the time est employee theft from a financial insti- was at Merrill Lynch, the firm Coffee, professor oflaw Gordon tution,said John was unaware of any wrongdoing by at Columbia Law School, where he di- Gordon. "We're cooperating fully with Center on Corporate Gover- rects the law enforcement nance. Frank Partnoy, a securities-law the appropriate officials on this matter," he said. at the University of San Diego professor in internal controls School of Law, said the case suggests The breakdown in s oversight and control of is the third incident in the past year Merrill Lyne has failed to • its executives was inadequate. which Merrill Lynch adequately supervise its employees. alleging Dan Gordon defraud- "We're agreed to pay $80 ed Merrill Lynch of $43 million" and Merrill Lynch laundered the money with the help of a million in March to settle SEC charg- Enron Corp. com- Canadian offshore-banking consult- es that it helped April, Mer- ant, said Gregg Lepp, a Canadian pros- mit accounting fraud. In ecutor in Edmonton, Alberta, in a rill Lynch agreed to pay $200 mil- telephone interview. lion to settle accusations by state Gordon, also under investigation by and federal regulators that the firm federal pro ecutors in New York, allowed conflicts of interest by its hasn't been formally charged with any research analysts. Merrill Lynch wrongdoing. neither admitted nor denied wrong- doing in either case.

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First Whiz Kid, Now Center Of $43.Million Storm How Young Trader Wowed Merrill, Made Rapid Rise, Then Wound Up Target In Theft Probe I I ( / By BEN WHITE spent a year working at an energy- Frank Partnoy a professor at the At first, Gordon seemed like a gift WASHINGTON POST . trading firm in Baltimore. University of San Die o School of Law from heaven for Merrill. A trading Within two years of joining Merrill, and an expert in the complex energy- wizard whose boyish looks made him NEW YORK - It was the summer of prosecutors allege, Gordon stole $43 trading and derivatives markets, com- seem younger than his 22 years, Gor- 1998. The bull-market was kicking into million. If true, it would be one of the pared the Gordon allegations to the don raced through the ranks, taking full swing. Wall Street banks barely most audacious heists case of Nick Leeson, the young trader over as head of Merrill's Global En- gave a second thought to hiring young in Wall Street history. who helped bring down Barings Bank ergy Markets business in 1999, the fol- whiz kids straight out of college. Gordon has not been in Britain in 1995 with bad bets on fu- lowing year. He lived in high style in a The historically staid brokerage gi- charged with any tures trades. Only in Gordon's case, he multimillion-dollar condo on Man- ant Merrill Lynch & Co. sensed an op- wrongdoing. His at- was allegedly taking money for him· hattan's wealthy and exclusive Upper portunity .to make big money in the torney, Alan Levine, self, not trying to cover up losses for his . East Side, purchased in part with new Wild West world of deregulated declined to comment firm. money lent by Merrill Lynch Credit energy trading, but no one at the firm on the allegations and "Usually in order to pull something Corp., according to public records. understood the market So Merrill GORDON said Gordon was not like this off, it takes a person at least 30 He came to Merrill with what ap- went out and hired people who said available for com- years old with a decade of experience," peared to be strong credentials: an ad- they did. ment Merrill would not comment on Partnoy said. "And usually the way vanced degree from Yaleand a year Among the recruits was Daniel L. either the allegations or Gordon's ten- these things happen is someone gets in a working · at Constellation Power Gordon, a 22-year-old wonder boy, who ure with the firm. hole, loses money and lies to cover it up. Source in Baltimore, then a joint ven- already had a master's degree in inter- The allegations have stunned Wall ... Iftheseallegationsaretrue, [Gordon] national economics from Yale and had Street watchers. is an even more brazen Nick Leeson." PLEASE SEE TARGET, PAGE 06 ture between Goldman Sachs anu 2012. He produced a doc- through · ed by "R. Baltimore Gas and Electric Co. A ument Aug.18, 2000, sign Fal n Constellation spokesman con- Gilhotra" on behalf of . co . firmed that Gordon worked at Merrill took Gordon at hisword Constellation Power Source from that the contract was valid an October 1997 through July 1998 the $43.million to a bank ac- but declined to comment further. count held in the name of New::,_ A source familiar with Gordon said he was a mid-level salesman port Pacific Financial Group at at Constellation and that his hir- AIG Private Bank in Zurich. ing and rapid rise at Merrill came Prosecutors allege thatno insur- as something of a shock. "He rose ance contract ever existed and so quickly to a position ofsuch in- that Gordon transferred the credible responsibility at Mer- money from Falcon to Ostrich, rill," the source said. "It was quite another offshore -holding com- a fast step up." According to pros- pany. ecutors, the events under in- From there, prosecutors say, vestigation began in the summer Gordon moved $30 million of the of2000. money to an account he con- Merrill had a big long-term trolled in New York and used it to contract with the Williams Cos. buy a 70 percent stake in the Con- energy firm to purchase power. necticut data-storage firm Dat- In August 2000, Gordon told Mer- icon Inc. Gordon's father is now rill executives he needed to pur- president and chief executive of chase a call option, essentially an Daticon. Gordon served as non- insurance contract, to protect executive chairman of the com- Merrill in case Williams could pany until last year. A Daticon not deliver the power, prosecu- spokesman referred a call to a tors say. After a proposed hedg- New York public relations agent, ing deal with Aquila Energy who in turn referred the call to Corp. fell through, prosecutors Gordon's attorney, who declined say, Gordon recommended a com- to comment Daticon released a pany called Falcon Energy Hold- statement saying the Gordon in- ings SA, a firm with headquarters vestigation has nothing to do in the Caribbean island of Anguil- with the company, which pro- la No one at Merrill had heard of vides document managing the company. services for lawyers. According to a letter written by Late in 2000, Merrill Lynch de- Assistant U.S. Attorney Jane A cided it did not have a future in Levine, Gordon told credit- and the energy-trading business after risk-management officials at all and began shopping its GEM Merrill that Falcon was affiliated unit around. In January 2001, Ha- with the French energy company gerstown, Md.-based Allegheny Elf Aquitaine. Levine said that in Energy Inc. purchased GEM for internal Merrill documents, Gor- $490 million and a 2 percent stake don described Falcon as an inter- in the business, valued at $115 national energy firm with in- million. Allegheny hired Gordon vestments in power plants, oil to lead the unit. fields and gas reserves, and as an The deal went sour quickly active energy trader. due largely to disputes over Gor- According to prosecutors, Fal- don. con was none of those things. In- In September 2002, as the en- stead, prosecutors say, it was a ergy-trading market faltered, Al- shell company set up by Gordon legheny filed suit against Merrill, with the help of Canadian bank- saying the securities firm failed consulting firm Newport Pacific to disclose problems at the energy Financial Group. Attorneys for unit and misrepresented Gor- Newport have said they believed don's age, experience and qual- the dealings were with Merrill ifications. Allegheny also alleged and were legitimate. that Merrill "knew or should Gordon allegedly told his su- have known that Daniel Gordon periors that Falcon required a controlled or had interests in a se- "reservation fee" of $43 million ries of other companies" and ac- for the contract, which was sched- cused Merrill of failing to explain uled to run from July 1, 2003,

56 that Gordon was "very difficult to of the lease for $2.5 million. The control or supervise." , payment was made to areal estate In a court filing responding to company allegedly controlled Allegheny's charges by about Gor- Gordon. don, Merrill Lynch said, "If Al- At some point last year, Gor legheny truly cared about - Mr. don purchased a $3.6 Gordon's age or qualifications, million house in the Connecticut they could have town of asked to see his Old Lyme, which driver's license he still owns. or birth certif- According to icate." public records, Gor- don again borrowed from Merrill In a court filing in June, Al- Lynch Credit Corp. to help pay for legheny accused Merrill Lynch of the house. Merrill declined knowing about the illicit to nature comment on the of the Falcon transaction loans. , calling Gordon appears it the "most egregious to have made example" very few public comments of information concealed on his by Mer- own behalf. rill. Allegheny said Merrill knew He did, however, issue a brief Falcon was "actually an entity as- statement after his dismissal by Allegheny sociated with, controlled by or last year. "I deeply beneficially owned by Gordon regret and strongly himself." disagree with the various state- ments that Merrill dismissed the conten- have been made about me," he said, according tion, saying it did not learn of po- to Knight Ridder/ Tribune tential fraud in the Falcon trans- Business News. "These statements action until the fall of 2002. In any are erroneous, hurtful and event, Merrill said, if the allega- reflect personal at- tacks tions were true then Merrill as opposed to statements of , not fact. Allegheny, was the victim. I deeply appreciate the out- pouring of support Merrill also noted in its filing that I have re- that it had wired a $550,000 "ter- ceived." j mination fee" for the Falcon con- tract to Allegheny in the third quarter of 2002, compensating Al- legheny for a contract, acquired as part of the energy-trading business, that no longer served any purpose. Prosecutors allege that the $550,000 payment came not from Falcon but from another account controlled by Gordon. Gordon's currentwhereabouts are unknown. Allegheny fired him Sept. 5, 2002, saying he had "violated in- ternal corporate policies regard- ing conflicts of interest." Accord- ing to the letter from Assistant U.S. Attorney Levine, those con- flicts of interest included two fuel- oil contracts entered into by Al- legheny with Eastern Energy Group, which corporate filings showed was controlled by Gor- don. In addition, Levine said in her letter that Gordon caused Al- legheny to sign a multimillion- dollar lease for a backup facility in Connecticut. After Allegheny announced its intention to down- size, Levine said in her letter, Gordon negotiated a termination

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FCC rule - Continued from Page 2A . icant impacts on smaller broadcast- Media groups on hold awaiting ing companies who w ould be squeezed out by larger me dia com- panies;• said Andrea L. Johnson, a outcome of FCC rule change review professor at California Western By LAURA MALLGREN own in a particular market, but governmental relations for Clear School of Law, who thinks there The Daily Transcript raise the limit on the number of TV Channel Communications. " New needs to be more regulation of the SAN DIEGO - Limits on the stations a company could own in rules did loosen rules on television industry, not less. "There needs to number of radio or TV stations one the market. and newspapers. On the radio side, be checks and balances. Media can own in the San Diego market The U.S. Court of Appeals, 3rd the FCC became more restrictive." companies are motivated by profits, won't change anytime soon because Circuit, in Philadelphia, issued the Under the old mles, still in effect, so the public tmst is oftentimes sec- of a federal court's Sept. 3 order to order because of potential wide- the company could have owned ondary to the profit motivation. I block the Federal Communications spread and irreversible harms eight radio stations in San Diego, believe the two goals can be incon- Commission's new media-owner- alleged by Prometheus Radio the maximum number any sistent." ship rules. Project, an activist organization, company can own in any market, The debate over the FCC rules Opponents of the mles called represented by Washington, D.C.- he said. has been taken up by Congress. The restrictions on radio station owners based Media Access-Project. ·•The ··FCC was• rash. in forming House voted against the new FCC tighter and limits on TVstationand , "Given . the, magnitude of ,this . new rules,for. radio station owner- rules earlier this summer and the newspaper chain owners looser. matter and the public's interest in ship, he said. 'They threw out the Senate is expected to vote on the The mles, approved by the FCC reaching the proper resolution, a baby with the bath water;• Levin issue soon, Johnson said. on June 2, were set to go into law stay is warranted pending thorough said. "Those companies that were con- Sept. 4. Under the new rules, a and efficient judicial review," the There are about 28 radio stations templating expanding probably put company could own TV stations federal court stated in a document. licensed by the FCC in San Diego, their plans on hold when Congress that could reach up to 45 percent of This review process could last the seventh largest radio station reacted a nd they're wa iting to see the national television-watching more than a year at the very least, market, according to Arbitron, a how this thing fleshes out,"she said. audience, at least a IO-percent according to Andrew Serwin, an media research company. University of San Diego School of increase over lhe current limit. In attorney with Foley & Lardner,who There arc sixTVstations licensed Law professor Bob Fellmeth said he 1996, Congress approved increas- specializes in both media and c- by the FCC in San Diego, the 26th secs mcdiaconsolidalion as a threat ing the limit from 25 percent to 35 commercc law. largest television market in the lo Democracy. percent, a de cision a court struck "The interesting thing is the country, a ccording to media "The rule relaxes the limits on down in 2002. court took the extraordina1y step of research company Nielsen. cross-media ownership and lhal's The new rules also would tighten suspending the effect of the rule,"he Fox Entertainment Group Inc., lhc las t thing in the world lhal we existing rules for the number of said. 'There will be no change, it Fox Television Stations Inc., need," he said. radio stations a company could will be status quo. And that is very National Broadcasting Company The most impmtant area for dis- unusual." Inc., Telemundo Communications persion of market power and diver- That could mean there will be Inc. and Viacom Inc. were among sity is the media;• according to fewer large acquisitions of broad- companies supporting the new Fellmeth. casting stations in San Diego if it rules. Critics of media consolida- "The real danger is not Orwell of puts a company over the limit tion contend diverse viewpoints are '1984,' it's Huxley's 'Brave New spelled out in the new rules, he said. lost in the process. World,'"he said. "Because in 'Brave Clear Channel Communications The federal court's stay was seen New World' y ou didn't h ave Big Inc., a San Antonio-based as a positive step, according to two Brother watching over yo u in a company, owns seven radio stations local law professors. tyrannical fashion, b ecause in in San Diego. "I do think had the stay not been 'Brave New World' all you knew "The whole radio industry was granted you would have seen signif- was what you were told." very critical of the new rules,"said [email protected] Andy Levin, senior vice president of See FCC rule on 6A Source Code: 20030904tbe Southern Cross

University of San Diego School of Law • St. Thomas More Society of San Diego Members AlisonP. Adema, Esq. Katherine S. Kruis, Esq. Tony Albers. f:...i . Steven H. Kruis, Esq. and the Mereededith G. Alcock, Esq. Joseph C. La Costa, Esq. John Altomare, Esq. BarryLamont, Esq. John G. Appel, J,., Esq. Marilyn G. Laurence Ann August,Esq. JosephM. Lesko, Esq. Jane Austin Tom Lewis St. Thomas More Society of San Diego Ronald J. Backes,Esq. CharlesS. LiMandri Esq. Douglas H. Baker Patricia M . Lopez, Esq. Richard E. Ball, Esq. Hon William T. Low (Ret.)) :--.!c1l Balmert, Esq. Frederick. Maguire Nicholas C. Banche Esq. Patrick W.Martin,f5..t . you to John F. Bannon, Es..1 , Kevin McConville Invite Robert R. Barnes, Esq. Michael McGlinn, Esq. Samantha BEgovic h Harold O. McNeil, Esq. Brian L. Behmer. Esq. I enise McGuire, Esq. Larry S. Beversdort,Esq. Michael Meaney. bf1. Cin A. Ban Esq. Mihilli. Esq. Joseph P. Brannigan, Esq. James Mullen Micha el Burke Esq. Marjorie Musgrave Phil Burkhardt Joseph E. O'Connor,Esq. The Red Mass Clarence 11. C.unrt-..•11 Ja .. kie •\ Oliver, Esq. Rev.Msgr.Mark . Campbell Hon. Robert F. O'Neil (Ret.) Sandra Castro Appaswamy Arokra Vino Paja r Craig Cherney, Esq. Mar F Palid ThomasE. Coffey, Esq. Wendy L. Patrick, Esq. Ce lebrated by Steven Cologne, Esq. Margaret AnnePayne, Esq. Kacey Coon•:, Esq. Daniel J. Perwich. Esq. The Most Reverend Salvatore ] . Cordileone , Joseph I. Darby.Esq. MaryFrances Prevost DianaL. Day Fr. john G. Proctor. Jr. Mark T. Dea. Esq. AndrewRa uch. Esq. Auxiliary Bishop of San Diego Michael S. Dea. Esq. Alfred G. Rava LmJ,1 Wagner Decker, EM.i , Roberta Repasy Tamara D. Dehaan, Esq. Donald G. Rez, Esq. Rev. Msgr. Daniel J. Dillabough Jane A. Rheinhemer, Esq. Mike Ditter, Esq . Robert F. Richards Monday , October 6, 2003 Joseph E. Driscoll,Es.,. Maria C. Roberts,Esq. Michael E. Dullea, Esq. Daniel B. Rodrigue: JamesJ. Eischen,Jr., Esq. Lynda A. Romero 5 :30 p.m . Theresa M. Filicia, Esq. Michael R oss, Esq. Michael H. Fish Luke Ryan. Esq. Brian P. Funk, Esq. Hon. Dana M. Sabraw Sister Sally M. Furay Barbara B. Savaglio, Esq. Founders Hall Patricia M. Galligan,Esq. Clarence H. Schlehuber, Esq. Founders Chapel~ Shirley Gauvin JosephC. Schwalbach, Esq. Helen Ghio Denniso. Seymour. Esq. Hon. David M. G i ll Robert M. Shaughnessy Randal L. Glaser Elizabeth A. Smith, Esq. Michael E. Gleason Anthony Smyth University of San Diego Thomas Goeltz Jeff Steichen Hon. Irma E. Gonzalez Summer S. Stephan 5998 Alcala Park James Goodwin, Esq. Thomas). Stoddard, Esq. John K. Grant, Esq. JosephJ.S tn:ml, Esq. Stephen David Greenberg Art Sue,Esq. San Diego, Califomia Ronald Haddad,Esq. Donald J. Sullivan, Esq. Hon. John J. Hargrove LeoF. Sullivan, Esq. DanielC. Herbert.Esq. Michelle Sullivan, Esq. Rev. Michael Higgins Vi ncent E. Sullivan, Esq. Capt. Carl H. Horst David W. Tiffany, Esq. Kenneth C Hoyt FrancesTobin, R. S.LJ .• Esq. Theresa A. Hrenchir Victor M. Torres PeterJ. Hughes, Esq. Araceli Tovar William 0 . H ughes, Esq. Donold P. Tremblay, Esq. Georg. E. Hu,lcy, Jr.,Esq. Maurilc C T remblay, Esq. R. Tribble,Esq. James S. lagmin, Esq. RobertDouglas John G. lannarelli Valentino, Esq. A reception will follow in the M. Anne Ishinabe Paul L. Van Loon, Esq. BlaiseJackson, Esq. Richard J. Vattuone,Esq. the French Parlor Andrew P. Johnson Rachel Viana Founders Foyer & Patio and Patricia Johnson Matthew S. Wal ker PaulJohnson Michael C. Webb Jeffrey A. Joseph. Esq. Mark D. Wieczorek, Esq. Thomas R. Juettner,Esq. Vincent E. Whelan. Esq. Please respond by September 30, 2003: Hon. Nicholas Kasimatis (Rer.) DennisJ, Wickham, Esq . Alexandra Tunney Ke ll y L Frederick Williams, Esq. Hon. William H. Kennedy Sally G. Williams,Esq. Voice : 619-260-6848 Brian R. Kingston W. Allan Williams, Esq. Anita M. Kirkpatrick Hon. Donald L. Wilson (Ret.) Fax: 619-260-6815 Garrison Bud) Kleuck, Esq. J. Clancy Wilson, Esq. E-mail : usdlawevent©sandiego . edu Dennis K. Knight, Esq. John Wynne, Esq.

Visitor parking permits will be available at the kiosk at the main campus entrance . Please be sure to obtain a permit and display it in your vehicle.

60 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 444 1 216 AUG 10 2003 - ···- --·

Wedding AmyAu and JasonBooth A sweet way to bestow ring asTAFFWRITER special .- "Thatwasn'tourfirstdate, cnangectmtoatraditionalred it?" Amyasks Jason from dress for the reception. She Jason Booth had no idea he their Fashion Valley apartment also arranged for a was going to ask the most Jason looks confused. performance by the San Diego important question of his life "I think that qualifies," he Lucky Lion Dancers. Jason that day. answers. created a photo montage that He didn't realize it at LAX, as Whatever their first date was screened at the reception. he waited five hours for his was, at McGregor's or · "Weddings are big, huge girlfriend,Amy Au, to return watching an "Indiana Jones" parties for the Chinese," Amy from her trip to Hong Kong. It video at his house a few days says. "It's a time to celebrate.· didn't cross his mind as they later, one thing is for sure. They are always the first on the drove on the quiet freeway to There was definitely a dance floor and the last to leave dinner that Christmas connection. the party." afternoon. "I think we're both the type The couple didn't mean to But as they were having of people who are driven." says make their families wait three dinner with Jason's family, a Jason who nixed law school years for a wedding, but they feeling just overwhelmed him were busy with school and and he asked her: and is working at Gateway work. Amy had to take the bar "Hey, you want to marry while he's applying to medical exam and Jason was busy with me?" school. "We don't really have a his career. Jason, 30, had known Amy, lot of the same interests, but Finally, Amy decided if this 25, for little more than a year. that makes our relationship wedding was going to happen, He noticed her recruiting more interesting." she'd have to quit her job with students to join Phi Alpha He likes action movies, she the DA's department of child Delta, a professional fraternity, meal support services, where she at the University of San Diego was clocking in 60 hours a Law School. a or week. Law school being such an After all, this was a wedding intimate environment, the two chicken piccata. to the man who gave her an eventually became friends. The couple got engaged in engagement ring in a They'd stop and chat between 2000, but they only just got handmade box made out of classes. They'd grab a bite in married last weekend at the Godiva chocolate. the cafeteria Sometimes, Four Points Sheraton Hotel in a A few weeks after he they'd wind up going to the celebration that combined his proposed, Jason bought sheets same bars. American and her Chinese of chocolate and fashioned One night, Jason asked Amy traditions. them together to make a box. to go shoot pool at McGregor's. The bridewore a white dress He placed Amy's engagement Bv themselves to the ceremony but later ring inside and sealed it shut . . .

61 "Thechocolate had solidified," remembers Amy. "So I wasn't quite sure what to do, so I was picking away at it with a knife. I thought the people at Godiva made it I couldn't believe he made it himself, it was so Passages runs weekly in Currents. If you have a significant, life-changing event you'd like to share, e-mail Nina Garin at [email protected]

enough to get In a Jason Booth and Amy Au met at school but their similarities end there. These opposites attracted blended their American and Chinese traditions. Howard Lipin Union-Tribune/ ceremony that ' ..

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62 WREN/WESTERN REAL ESTATE NEWS SAN FRANCISCO, CA SEMI-MONTHLY 22,000 AUG 1 2003

Los Angeles, CA and corporate and partnership taxa- ALLEN MATKINS NAMES 5 NEW tion. He has extensive experience PARTNERS structuring a wide variety of corporate Allen Matkins Leck Gamble & Mallory and partnership transactions involving LLP, has elected five attorneys to part- formation of entities, mergers and ner in four of its offices statewide. acquisitions, and other related mat- The new partners, effective July 2003, ters. Also a certified public accountant, are Deborah L. Babb in Los Angeles; Walburn earned both his L.L.M ., Jan S. Driscoll and Allen B. Wal- summa cum laude, in taxation and his burn in San Diego; Sandra A. J.D., magna cum laude, from the Jacobson in Orange County, CA; and University of San Diego School of Todd E. Whitman in Century City, Law, and his B.S., cum laude, from CA. The new partners represent a San Diego State University. wide array of burgeoning, core prac- Jacobsbn practices real estate law, tice areas, including land use, environ- representing both institutional clients mental & natural resources, litigation, and small developers. Her practice real estate,. tax and water rights & involves acquisitions, sales and leas- resources . ing of commercial and industrial prop- The elevation of these five attorneys erties. Jacobson has extensive expe- brings the total number of partners to rience in · the development of retail 102 firmwide with more than 210 shopping centers and has represent- attorneys overall. Allen Matkins is con- ed anchor tenants and developers in sistently ranked among the top 20 complex lease, CC&R and develop- largest law firms in four of California's ment agreement negotiations. She most important legal markets: Los earned her J.D. from Loyola Law Angeles, Orange County, San Diego School and her B.A. from the and San Francisco. University of California, Los Angeles. With clients ranging from large institu- With an emphasis in partnership and tional investors to small companies, large-scale contract disputes, Babb concentrates her practice on Whitman focuses his practice on com- commercial real estate transactions, mercial litigation. He has extensive with an emphasis on leasing. She has experience representing numero,us extensive experience in representing partners in breach of fiduciary duty landlords and tenants in all types of lawsuits and commercial landlords in lease transactions, and she regularly a broad range of real estate disputes. provides advice to her landlord clients Whitman earned his J.D. from the on property management issues . University of Southern California Law Babb earned her J.D. from the School and his B.B.A.,with distinction, University of Southern California Law from the University of Michigan, Ann School and her B.A. from Smith Arbor. College. Driscoll practices environmental, land use and water rights law. In these . spheres, she has extensive expen- ence representing publicly and pri- vately held companies and govern- ment entities in a broad range of mat- ters, including permitting, environmen- tal review, negotiations with regulatory agencies and litigation. Driscoll received her J.D. from the University of San Diego School of Law and her B.A. from The George Washington University. Walburn focuses his practice on a broad range of taxation matters, including stock-based compensation . . . . . 63

/ SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA • WEEKLY 14,000 AUG 4 2003

KEY HIRES AND PROMOTIONS

GOVERNMENT AND NONPROFIT Colette Carson Royston, founding mem- ber of The San Diego Women's Foundation, has been named incoming board chair of The San Diego Foundation, and Mary Walshok will continue to serve as immediate past chair. There are also new members of the Founda- tion's board of governors: Dennis V. Arriola, vice president of investor relations for Sempra Energy; Jerry Katzin, community leader; Carisa M. Wisniewski, partner at Deloitte & Touche; and John D. Wylie, president of Nicholas/Applegate Mutual Funds and chief investment offrcer of InvestorServices Group. Six San Diegans have joined the Mercy Hos- pital Foundation board: Gail Andrade, John Corrente, Robert Horsman, Maureen King, William Stanton, and Frederick Vandeveer. San Diego resident Cynthia Roark has been elected to serve as chairman of the national board of directors for Mothers Against Drunk Driving. Roark began serving with MADD in 1984. Mayor. Dick Murphy has appointed Lance Abbott, Wendy Gillespie, and Jef- frey Lowe, and reappointed Mike Choi, Jacqueline Corey, Joseph Darby, Anthony Samson, and Linda Bejarano Stepp to the International Affairs Board. Abbott is vice president of finance at Grupo Batiz. Gillespie is a principal at Frontier Trading, Inc. Lowe is co-owner and foundi:ng partner of Quality Plus Automotive Parts, . Inc. Choi serves on the mayor's Asian Pacific Islander Advisory Board. Corey is active with the Sister Cities International Corp. Darby is a law professor at the p niversity of San Diego. Samson is a San Diego County deputy district attorney. Stepp has been involved in international busi- ness since 1974.

64 WHITTIER DAILY NEWS I PASADENA STAR-NEWS WHITTIER , CA SUNDAY 16,85? PASADENA, CA AUG 18 2003 SUNDAY 45,000 AUG 10 2003 SAN GABRIEL VALLEY IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII TRIBUNE Burrelle COVINA, CA 4900 's SE SUNDAY .xz2c. 2 XX .. .. 49,400 AUG 18 2003

Prior to joining Richardson PEOPLE I and Harman, Paul Schimley recently Schimley was became a partner at Pasadena- a partner at based law finn of Ric the lawfinn hardson of Wolfe and Harman LLP. and The Altadena Wyman. He resident's founded responsibilities will include SCHIMLEY its overseeing its employment Pasadena liti- office and was chairman of its gation department. employment During practices group. his legal career, He is also a former Schimley has handled partner of more Anderson, McPharlin and Con- than 200 employment-related nors, where he helped disputes before found such govern- and chaired its employment ment regulatory bodies as the practices group. California Department of Fair Schimley, who is licensed to Employment and Housing and practice before the all California Equal Employment Oppor- state courts and tunity Commission various federal . courts, is a member of the labor He was admitted to practice and employment in California sections of in 1981. both the California State He has handled Bar cases such as and the Los Angeles County Bar wrongful termination, discrimi- Association. nation and harassment claims, He earned his as well as bachelor's claims and litigation degree magna cum laude in stemming from wage disputes, political science whistle-blowing from Niagra issues and Uruvers1ty. He received his downsizing issues. juris doctor degree from Uni- versity of San Die o.

65 DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO, CA WEDNESDAY 15,000 AUG 13 2003 Sullivan, Wertz, McDade names Hissong COO announced that Yvonne L. Nichols Law has joined the firm as an associate. Briefs She will join the firm's Tax By Laura Mallgren Planning & Advocacy and Estate Planning & Probate practices. Nichols, who has extensive tax Judy A. Hissong, CLM, has experience, recently worked with a joined Sullivan, Wertz, McDade & Big Four accounting firm. Source Wallace APC, as chief operating Code:20030812tjd officer. • • • Hissong was previously adminis- Juanita Brooks, an intellectual trative manager at Solomon. property litigator and principal with Grindle, Silverman & Spinella APC. Fish & Richardson PC, has been She is currently serving as presi- named one of California's top dent-elect of the San Diego chapter female litigators by the Los Angeles of the Association of Legal Daily Journal. She received the Administrators. Source Code: same honor in 2002. 20030812tja Brooks, who has been practicing • • • law for more than 25 years, has ·The San Diego office of Baker & developed significant national McKenzie announced on Aug. 11 recognition for her complex intel- that Colin H. Murray has been lectual property and antitrust litiga- elected partner. tion skills for clients such as Murray is a member of the Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) and Litigation Practice Group, focusing Intel (Nasdaq: INTC). She was lead on complex commercial litigation defense counsel in charge of the sci- securities and white-collar criminal entific issues in the national Fen- defense, intellectual property and Phen litigation and successfully employment disputes. defended automaker John Z. Murray served as a deputy district DeLorean against charges of RICO attorney in San Diego from 1993 to violations, mail fraud and tax 2000. Source Code: 20030812tjb evasion. Source Code: 20030812tje • • • • • • The San Diego office of Best Best Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & & Krieger LLP has added a new Hampton LLP announced on Aug. associate, Tyree K. Dorward. 5 that Robert S. Gerber was Doward, whose clients include appointed as member of the water and school districts, practices Judicial Nominees Evaluation in the areas of education law and Commission by the State Bar of water law. Doward is a 2000 gradu- nors.He ate of the University of San Diego I private School of w an o an under I, which graduate degree in environmental covers San Diego County. policy, analysis and planning from The JNE Commission is the State the University of California, Davis, Bar agency that evaluates all candi- in 1997. He was previously with dates who are under consideration Bowie, Arneson, Wiles & Giannone for a judicial appointment by the of Newport Beach. Source Code: governor. Gerber's two-year term is 20030812tjc effective Feb. 1, 2004. Source Code: • • • 20030812tjf Duckor Spradling & Metzger [email protected]

66 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 374 , 858 AUG 30 2003

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/ ON THE MOVE Personnel moves in n Diego County • I Elsa Castillohas b en 6amed project coordinator at Asset Marketing Systems. She joined the firm in 2002 as human resources representative. San Diego National Bank has hired VirginiaCraig as vice president and branch manager of the Carlsbad location. TyreeK.Dorwardhas been hired as an associate for Best Best & Krieger LLPwhose clients include water and school districts. Dorward was previously with Bowie, Arneson, Wiles & Gian- none of Newport Beach. He gradua University of San Diego School of Law an undergraduate degree in environme cy, analysis and planning from UC Davis.

Send Items for this column to: Dar1ene M. Alllaln, On the Move, The San Diego Union-Tribune, P.O. Box 120191, San Diego, CA 92112-0191, or e-mail them to [email protected]. SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA WEEKLY 14,000 AUG 11 2003

IIIIIIII IIIIII II lllll llllll lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrelle'S _ I JL 5878 1112.. 29 be ... b $105 Million Pala·Resort Is Set to Open ori August · 19 Janet Beronio Returns to ment rooms, plus treats like out- sino. That was Harrah's first casino near Interstate 8 in Alpine. door rain showers and Swiss foray into Indian gaming. The study will be more exhaustive than the San Diego as New GM at power showers. Beronio opened the casino and environmental assessment recently completed Two restaurants wi!J open Aug. served as its general manager for for the tribe. Community and county leaders Harrah's Rincon Casino 19, bringing the number of eater- nine years. She led the develop- reportedly asked for a more detailed analysis The Pala Band of Mission Indians opens ies at Pala to eight. ment of the Arizona resort's ho- of the project. its 507-room resort hotel and spa on its inland Pala, on Highway 76, has 2,000 tel two years ago. Ewiiaapaayp leaders said the extra scrutiny North County reservation Aug. 19. slot machines. With the expan- Beronio received her juris ' toward the Alpine The.$105 million project augments the $115 sion, it is adding 18 table games doctorate from the University of million Pala Casino, which opened in April to the 57 it already has. San Die o. Early in her career ost the tribe between 2001. she was a deputy attorney gen- $500,000 and $2 million, said Will Micklin, The tribe says the resort project will bring The GM's Job: Janet Beronio INDIAN eral for Nevada. She joined executive director for the tribe. 300 new jobs to the area. As yet, not all is settling in this summer as se- Harrah's in 1984 as associate If built as proposed, the project would re- positions have been filled. nior vice president and general GAMING general counsel. place an Indian health clinic with a 237,000- Pala's 10-story hotel will offer 82 suites, manager of Harrah's Rincon Brad square-foot casino complex. The tribe plans whose amenities include oversized Jacuzzi Casino & Resort - another in- EIS Sought: The Ewiiaapaayp to build a replacement clinic in Alpine. tubs. land North County venue. Graves Tribe has asked the Bureau of In- Send Indian gaming news to Brad Graves The spa is 10,000 square feet, incorporat- Beronio arrived in June from dian Affairs to complete an envi- via fax at (858) 571-3628 or via e-mail at ing a fitness center, a salon, and 14 treat- Harrah's Phoenix Ak-Chin hotel and ca- ronmental impact statement for its proposed [email protected].

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DAILY TRANSCRIPT SAN DIEGO, CA WEDNESDAY 15,000 AUG 20 2003

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Burrelle 's -L219 I JL tn1d . 28 be .... SheppardMullin names Biel special counsel Property Section, the State Bar of Law in 1995 and 1994, respectively. Christine E. Baur and Charles L. Law Briefs California and is the director of the He earned his B.S. cum laude in Rees have joined the firm as as soci-· U.S. Institute of Amateur Athletics. 1982 from San Diego State ates. By Laura Mallgren Source Code: 20030819tja University. Source Code: Baur is a member of the financial • • • 20030819t;jb restructuring, credi tor ' rights and Jan S. Driscoll and Allen B. • • • bankruptcy practice group, wh ere Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Walburn are among the new part- Andrew Serwin of Foley & she concentrates her practice on Hampton LLP announced Aug. 14 nces at Allen Motkins Leek Gamble Lardner has been selected to serve. representing creditor , de btors, that W. Scott Biel has joined the & Mallory LLP, a business and real on the State B ar of Califo rnia's trustees and committees in Chapter firm as special counsel in the Real estate law firm, officials announced Committee on Administration of 11 bankruptcy proceedings. Prior to Estate, Land Use, Natural June 24. Justice beginning Sept. 7. joining Baker & McKenzie, Baur Resources and Environmental Driscoll, 57, practices environ- The committee, which serves an was an associate with the San Diego Practice Group in Del Mar Heights .. mental, land use and water rights advisory role, s tudies and reports office of Luce, Forward Hamilton & As an experienced real estate law. She received her J.D. from the recommendations · on proposed Scripps LLP. lawyer, Biel has specific expertise in University of San Diego School of changes in civil procedure, court Rees is a member of the litigation assisting clients with the financing Law in 1975 and her B.A. from The rules and administration, rules of practice group, where he focuses of office research and manufactur- George Washington University in evidence and other matters having his practice on commercial litiga- ing facilities and campus develop- 1968. an impact on the administration of tion and white-collar c riminal ment for electronics and Walburn, 42, focuses his practice justice in the civil courts. defense. Prior to joining Baker & biotechnology companies including on a broad range of taxation Serwin also currently serves on McKenzie, Re worked as an as is- financing, purchase and sales matters including stock-based the State Bar's Cyberspace Law tant U.S. attorney fo r the U.S. agreements, design, engineering compensation and corporate and Committee and chairs the San Attorney's Office in the Southern and construction contracts, insur- partnership taxation. Walburn, also Diego County Bar Association's Dis trict of Califo rnia, where he ance matters and entitlements. a certified public accountant, Web site subcommittee. Source tried cases in di trict court and Biel received his law degree from earned both his L.L.M., summa Code: 20030819tjc argued before the 9th Circuit Comt the University of Pennsylvania Law cum laude, in taxation and his J.D., • • • of Appeals. Source Code: School in 1992. He is a member of magna cum laude, from the San Diego 20030819tjd the American Bar Association, Real University of San Diego School g. 13 th at [email protected] BUFFALO f AW JOURNAL BUFFALO, NY MONDAY ),000 AUG 4 2003.

WHO'S WHO IN w ' .

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Susan Roney Managing partner, Nixon Peabody LLP Work address: 1600 Main Place Tower, Buffalo, N.Y.14202 Phone: 853-81 oo E-mail: sroney@ nixonpeabody.com Age:45 Birthplace: Buffalo Residence: Buffalo College:BA, Universityat Buffalo; J.D., University of San Di o Spouse: Steven Children: Victoria, 8; Stephanie, 6 Joined currrent organization: 1990 Favorite restaurant: Too many to list Best thing about liv- Ing In WNY: Quality of life

70 School of Nursing and Health Science

( SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA WEDNESDAY 374,856 AUG 6 2003

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___O_N_T_R_E_M_O_V_E __ _ Personnelmoves in San Diego County

Sally B. Hardinh as joined.. the niversity of San Piego as dean of the Hahn Sc ool of Nursing mRtnealth Science. Cardiff Software named Crtlllda Groseto direc- tor of marketing communications. The University of San Diego School of Law has added TrevinHartwellas director of develop- ment and alumni relations. He formerly was the associate director of West Coast development for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University. JamesKeithlyhas joined Anchor Environmental as environmental scientist

Send items for this column to: Darlene M. Alilain, On the Move, The San Diego Union-Tribune, P.O. Box 120191, San Diego, CA 92112-0191, or e-mail them to [email protected].

71 SAN DIEGO METROPOLITAN SAN DIEGO, CA MONTHLY 50,000 METROPOLITAN MOVERS AUGUST 2003 CONGRATULATIONS OR CONDOLENCES

30 aggie T. ect manager. Penney has more than tructi on MWatkins has years' experience in the cons been named presi- industry. dent of Meritas. a group of more than ••• a partner at I 65 full-service law Lawrence J. Kaplan, firm Solomon firms with more San Diego-based law Ward Seidenwurm & Smith, is o ne of than 4.900 attorneys Maggie Watkins e to be selected by located in 50-plus 30 people nationwid for taxpay- countries. Meritas' l ocal member firm is the IRS as a qualified neutral . Sullivan, Hill, Lewin, Rez & Engel ers who elect to enter binding arbitration with offices in both San Diego and Las Vegas. Watkins. 47. wi ll assume her pres- ••• the idency Aug. 11 . Most recently. she has ,. Sally Hardin has joined e dean of been director of marketing for Luce, Universit of San Die o as th nd Health Forward, Hamilton & Scripps. a the Hahn School of Nursing a former director national law firn1 based in San Diego. Science. Hardin was the at the She has served in marketing and sales of the Ph.D. nursing program s. positions for Ernst & Young. as chair and University of Missouri. St. Loui vice ch air o f the National Legal Marketing Associati on and is chair of the *** promoted association's 2004 annual conference. Roel Construction has Pete Sara to senior v.p. in it s Automotive ••• Group. and Gaurav Shah to project Mark W. Danis has b een appointed manager. Sara has 20 years of experience one of Morrison & Foerster's three in construction. Shah joined the company managing partners of operations for the in 1998. national law firm. Danis has been with the firm since 1 990. and is al so currently ••• as managing partner of the San Diego offi ce. Walter Altmann has been hired on-staff naval architect and designer by ••• Knight & Carver YachtCenter, a boat- Jerry Dressel, president of Dressel building and repair company on the bay Financial Services. is the new president founded in I 971. Altmann 's I 5 years of of the SDSU Alumni Association board experience in the yachting industry for 2003-04. Also on the board are Bruce include new product design for Hatteras Ives. president and CEO of Cuyamaca Yachts in North Carolina. Born in the , Bank. president-elect; Matt Dathe, pres- Dutch East Indies, one of nine c hildren he ident of Encompas Printing and Graphics, Altmann moved to San Diego when immediate past president; and v.p.s was 14, and now lives in Clairemonl. Chuck Luby. General Atomics commu- nications manager; Eric Reifschneider, *** president of Calital; Margo Kasch, Joseph Wu has joined instructor with Design institute of San Mullin, Richter & Hampton as partner San Diego; Erica Opstad. g. m. at U.S. Bank; in the business practice group in and Glen Vieria. consultanl. Diego. Wu 's specialty is resolving busi- ness disputes b etween companies across *** the P acific Rim. Joyce Black has been selected as chapter president of the National ••• Association of Women Business Burnham Real Estate Services has Owners, San Diego. Black founded her named Lynn LaChapelle to head its new graphic design firm. J. Bird Design. in specialty group, Burnham Capital 1996. Markets Investment Group. LaChapelle has been with Burnham for ••• 13 years . Joanne Reel has been elected presi- dent of Balboa Park's House of ••• Hospitality Association. Reel succeeds B. Craig Horwat has joined Kathy Millisor. director of community Architects Delawie Wilkes Rodrigues has and member services for the San Diego Barker as an architect. Horwat Convention & Visitors Bureau. Reel is more than seven years of experience in retired from SDG&E. the field, previously working for Zagrodnik & Thomas Architects. Kate ••• Kress has been hired as a designer/job John R. Penney has joined the captain. Kress previously worked for an Group as senior proj- lrvine Firm. Pacific Building ' 72 SAN DIEGO MAGAZINE SAN DIEGO, CA MONTHLY 54,000 SEPTEMBER 2003

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Distress Signal . c- As a healthcare provider, I was dis- tressed to see "A Memoir of Madness" given such prominence in your maga- zine. Mr. Murray's article was one per- son's perception of events. Please know that there are numerous legal and regu- latory organizations that shape the poli- cies and procedures of hospitals. There is also a Patient Advocates Offi the University of San Diego a to address patient grievances in time at the time of concern. My fear is that this article will lead some to make erroneous assumptions about healthcare providers and health- care organizations that, for the most part, are dedicated to quality and com- passionate treatment of those with mental illness. Such assumptions may inhibit those in need from seeking treatment. Mental illness affects ap- proximately one in five. Wouldn't it be sad if this article prevented someone in need from seeking treatment? NAME WITHHELD La Jolla

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73 Other USO-related News PRESS-ENTERPRISE RIVERSIDE, CA THURSDAY 169,444 SEP 4 2003

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Burrelle's 532 Qf . u21. 181 .b .... 'New prepaid-tuition plan starts Private invest it. The family's one year way to offer families a discount. LOOKING AHEAD: oftmt10n holds 1t value regard- The funds are transferable to colleges and universities less of how tho e inve tment other family members. They turn out, Doolittle aid. can al o be rolled over into a are now included in the "It' like a pending c rtificate state 529 plan if the student money-saving system. at the mall .. . except it's good choose to go to a public college for a guarantee of a percentage or cashed out if he or she de- BY KATIE ORLOFF of tuition," aid Douglas M. cides not to attend college at all. THE PRESS -ENTE RPRI SE ex- Brown, president and chief The consortium r eceived ap- Plan Con- The University of Redlands is ecutive of the Tuition proximately 8,000 hits Wednes- N.M. , one of 220 private colleges and sortium of Albuquerque, day on www.independent- plan. The universities nationally offering which operates the 529plan.org Doolittle said. families a new way to plan consortium is a nonprofit orga- plan to ahead for the rising costs of tu- nization run by repre entative Participating schools in various ition. from variou univer ities. market the venture ads in The Independent 529 plan al- Southern California chools ways, such as putting lows a parent or grandparent to participating in the plan include alumni magazines. University to prepay tuition at today's rates California Lutheran University, of Redlands will send mailers for children to use when they Occidental College, Pepperdine all of its alumni. reach co1Jege age, said Phillip University, Pomona Coll . Hurley, president Doolittle, senior vice president Universit of San Diego executive of saving- at the University of Redlands. Whittier Coiiege. e.com and an expert on "It makes private education Nationally, the program in- the Section 529 programs, said more accessible and more af- cludes Harvard, Yale, Prince- the new plan should be attrac- fordable for families," Doolittle ton and the University of Chica- tive to parents who want their said by phone. The plan was un- go. children to go to a private col- veiled Wednesday. Most states offer ection 529 lege and are worrying about the For example, a grandparent education savings plans, named steep rise in tuition. may receive a tuition certificate for the IRS tax code that define don't after paying $20,000 for one year them. But this is the first tai- "You pay now, o you in- of college tuition at current lored for private colleges and have to worry about those sub-. rates. When that grandchild is a univer ities. creases, which have been co1Jege. freshman he or she can "It's a good way for families to stantial," Hurley said. use the certificate for the then save for education," Doolittle said. "For us in the private ec- Reach Katie Orloff at (909) 806-3054 or fu11 cost of that year's tuition. [email protected] Meanwhile, the plan's manag- tor where the perception is that The Associated Press cantributed to this ers take the original $20,000 and we are expen sive, thi is a good report.

74 SISTER ACT Siblings nail down manicure business By Michael D. Hernandez El Paso Times Success tip Sibling rivalry has never been an issue for the five sisters who own Nail Cre- Some entrepreneurial ad- ations, a family-operated riail and hair sa- vice from Norma Pedroza and lon on the West Side. Carmen McBain of Nail Cre- "People do ask us how we get along so ations: well, and we just· do," said Carmen McBain, one of the sisters. "And the thing People are either attracted is, we wouldn't even have the time to ar- or displeased by the atmos- gue or fight because we're' so busy with our phere you create.at your customers." place of business. If you What began as a risky, post-beauty-school make it inviting, they'll stop venture in 1989 for McBain and sisters Edie by just to talk. Medina and Norma Pedroza has flo urished into a steady, eight-woman, full-service op- More words of wisdom 4F eration that boasts a loyal clientele. An allegiant Lynn Kobren has been head- lieves will sustain the salon's success. ing to th e shop for about five years to en- From retailer Wal-Mart and beer giant joy relaxing manicures because she feels Coors to smaller mom-and-pop opera- that the e nvironment at Nail Creations is tions, family-owned businesses have a like stepping into the home of a warm con- long history as the country's economic fid ante. lifeblood. "They're the best here," Kobren said. Findings by the l..!n1versity of San "When I c ome here, it's .not to just some- Diego's International Ins ,itute for Family- one. They are my friends, and when some- Owned Business show t at 80 percent·or thing h appens to me, I usually can't wait to more of all businesses in the United States Six of the family members involved in tell (them)." are family-owned or fami -controlled, ac- Nai l Cr eations are , bottom f rom left, Three more sisters - Imelda Brock, counting for 175 of the Fo une 500 largest Carmen McBain, Ed ie Medina and Pat Mary Correa and Pat Mendoza - eventu- businesses in the country. ally joined in the business, along with a Mendoza , and, top from left, Imelda second generation - da ughter and niece Brock, Jenelle Pedroza and Norma .Pe- Jenelle Pedroza - whom the family be- Plea see Sister 4F droza .

EL PASO TIMES EL PASO, TX SATURDAY 47,000 AUG 9 2003

75 Yet the i nstitute also found that fewer than 30 percent family of all -owned businesses survive the transfer to the second tion genera- CONTINUED and fe wer than 10 perc FROM survive ent 1F to a third generation. But the local that grad from clan uated El Pa so High is optimistic about t he future despite knowing they belong More entrepreneur- to a fickle industry, spect that which casts off ial advice from Norma person's as many salons as opin it attracts. Pedroza and Carmen ions and move "There seem to be a lot McBain of Nail on to the next that of places Cre- idea. don't su rvive in El ations: Nor Paso," Never assume ma Pedroza said. " Bu any- lucky t w e're Always thing. Always enough to not lack try out new listen tomers. cus- products to It's n ever too slow to see your clients and around her whether e, and when it does get you enjoy ask them what that way, we they see it as a bl essing, them before offering want. as a tim them to your clients. e when we get to r est our If you have hands. In an a busi- " equal part- ness with As television shows and nership, different zin maga- if just one partners, es promote be tter livi of split up the throu ng person disagrees gh facials, manicur duties and mass es and with a new idea, find out age therapy, going to th re- who or salon e spa does what best. has becom more ac- ceptable, even for men, Imelda Brock said. "I think more men are willing com to e in for that," she sa husband id. "My brings a lot of new friends in , and they seem to like it." Still , pa mpering oneself main re- s an exercise dominated by women, who typically crowd salon the before special occasions such as Christmas, Mother's Day and Valentine's Day. "That's made us realize real that we ly need more space," Norma Pedroza s aid, adding that the sis- ters have briefly thou moving ght about to another location. "But

we're g oing to stick around caus be- e we've made so many friends here. This place is like our home away from home." Michael D. Hernandez may be reached at [email protected]

Rudy Gutierrez / El Paso Jenelle Times Pedroza styled Terry Creati Samaniego's hair Th urs ons. In the background, day at Nail ed Pedroza's aunt, Imelda to another customer. Brock, tend -

76 Photos Edie Medina, right, gives a manicure by Rudy Gutierrez / El Paso Times to longtime client Laurie sisters Carmen Miller at Nail Creations, 5813 N. McBain and Norma Pedroza started the Mesa. In 1989, Medina and business. nail AIR LINE PILOT - HERNDON, VA 10-TIMES/YEAR 78,354 AUGUST 2003 Association recommends applica- ALPA Announces 2003 tions be made no later than late Scholarship Winners January or early February. Lt f Scholarship application forms Corylie Suarez, d ughter of long- · and additional informaton about term disabled Capt. Rafael Suarez the program may be obtained from as (US Airways), has been selected Jan Redden, ALPA Scholarship of ALPA's 4- the 2003-2004 winner Monitor, Air Line PilotsAssociatior year college scholarship award. 1625 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., a $3,000 ALPA presents annually Washington, D.C. 2003 or e-mail . scholarship to an eligible high [email protected]. school graduate or college student who is selected by the ALPA review committee. The annual grant may be renewed if the student maintains a B average. An additional $2,000 is autho- rized annually by the Executive Council for scholarship funding, which may be used to augment current awards or be used for special 1-year awards. For 2003-2004, ALPA awarded special 1-year $1,000 awards to Sean I Poindexter, son of deceased FedEx member Mark Poindexter, and to ALPA's 1999 college scholarship re- Alison Jones, daughter of deceased cipient Scott Golich, here with his Alaska Airlines member David father, S/O J. X. Golich (FedEx), and Jones. Additional funds received as mother, Vicki Golich, graduated donations to the ALPAScholarship from the University of San Diego Fund were added to the awards, this year, was commissioned an en- making their total award amount sign in the U.S. Navy, and will begi for this year $1,068. flight training in Pensacola, Fla. Students receiving renewals of initial 4-year grants were Katrina Maria Kuntz (2000 recipient), daughter of retired First Officer J. Gary Kuntz (Continental); Leslie Azurdia (2001 recipient}, daughter of retired First Officer Maurice Azurdia (TWA); and Taylor Jillian Altman (2002 recipient),daughter of deceased First Officer Ronald Altman (TWA). Eligible applicants for the scholar- ship program must be the depender of a medically retired, long-term dis- abled, or deceased ALPA member. Interested students may apply for the scholarships at any time, but the

78 St. Louis Catholic High School grads attending many colleges St. Louis Catholic High University Rh odes Coll ege, School students consistently Rice University, Santa C lara receive acceptances to colleges Uni versity, Savannah School of and universiti es throughout th e Art and Design, Southeastern United States. Each year, Loui siana State Uni ve rsit y, approxim ately 97 percent of th e Southern Methodi st Uni versity, seni or class enro ll in a fo ur-year Southern Uni versity, Spring in stitution with the other per- Hill Coll ege, St. Edwards centage attending community Uni versit y and St. Johns coll eges, technical schools or Coll ege, entering th e military. Over the Also, St. Joseph Seminary, pass fe w years some of th e in sti- Texas A & M Coll ege Stati on, tutions offering enrollment to Texas A & M Galveston, Texas St. Louis Catholic High stu- Christi an Uni versit y, Tulane dents are: American University, Universi ty, Tuskegee Art Institute of Houston, University, Uni versity o f Auburn University, Baylor California, Santa Barbara, University, Berklee School of University of Chicago, Music, Birmingham Southern University of Dallas, University College, Boston College, of Hawaii, Louisiana State Boston University, Centenary University, University of College, Christian Brothers Louisiana-Lafayette, University University and Davidson of Louisiana-Monroe, College. University of Mississippi, Also, Dillard , University University of Mi ssouri- Duke University, Elon College, Columbia, University of New Florida A & M University, Mexico, University of New Franciscan University of Orleans, University of North Steubenville, Fordham Carolina at Chapel Hill, University, Furman University, University of Richmond, Hampton University, Harding University of Rochester, University, Harvard University, Universit of San Die Haverford College, Kansas University of Sout State University, Lon Morris California and University of University, Thomas Houston. Louisiana Scholars College, Also, University of St. Louisiana Tech University, Thomas St.Paul Minn., Loyola Marymount University, University of Texas, University Loyola University New of the South-Sewanee, Orleans, Mary Washington and University of Virginia, McGill University-Canada, Vanderbilt University, Also, Mc Neese State Washington and Lee, University, Miami University- Washington University - St. Ohio, Millsaps College, Louis, United States Military University of Notre Dame, Academy at West Point, Oklahoma State University, Wofferd, Xavier University and SOUTHWEST CATHOLIC Pomona College, Purdue Yale University. LAKE CHARLES, LA MONTHLY AUGUST 2003

79 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA WEDNESDAY 374,85d AUG 13 2003

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JOSEPH MICHAEL Feb. 13, 1954 to July 2, 2003 Beloved son, .brother, un- cle and friend passed away July 2, 2003. He had just completed the final hike of this life's jour- ney in the surreal set- ting of Wood's Lake, Calif. He found comfort, peace and har- mony surrounded by the awe- some beauty of nature. Joe was a '72 graduate of Saint Paul High School, and '78 graduat of University of San Diego. · unique talents and versatilit lead him in many directions, such as coaching football at USD, restaurant management and Attractions Host at Disney- land/Anaheim where his love of children and wonderful sense of humor blossomed. In 2001 he re- located to Reno, Nev. and was employed by the Reno/Tahoe AirPOrt and later by the Feder- al TSA. His second family at TSA will remember Joe's kind and gentle manner, sense of hu- mor, wonderful smile and hearty laugh, along with his hugs and positive attitude. They claim that he brought a bit of Disneyland to the airPOrt with his comic relief. He joins his mother, Jean Therese (deceased 1989), and leaves his father Wendell •Joe•, brother's Chuck and Dave, sis- ter Donna, niece Kendra Ami- don, and nephew's Eric and Bryan Johnston. A Memorial was held July 8, 2003 at Re- no/Tahoe International AirPOrt with the help of Joe's co-work- ers, management of the TSA and AirPOrt Authority. The family extends its' gratitude for their generous SUPPOrt, as- sistance and beautiful tributes to Joe. Joe touched the hearts of his family, co-workers and long- time friends. We have been blessed by his brief presence in our lives. •We'll see you on the other side of the trail, Joe• and release you as one of heavens newest comedians! A memorial area is being planned at Ran- cho San Rafael Park tum. Donations can be sent to May Arboretum, 1502 Washing- ton Street, Reno, Nev, 89503, C/o Joe Amidon Memorial, 80 SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL SAN DIEGO, CA WEEKLY 14,000 AUG 4 2003

Consortium's Goal is Getting Students Back to School Prospecti e Students knowledgebase is precisely what the non- profit-designated SDEC set out to do earlier Can Compare, Contrast this year. Comprising volunteer representa- 1 tives from many of the accredited colleges in Are.a _Schools' Programs San Diego, the consortium is working toward establishing a comprehensive source for local BY DAN L LEVINSON education opportunities. Each day in San Diego County, thousands "It's like an 'Auto Park' for San Diego of executives, managers, and assistants con- schools," said Bob Hertel, undergraduate pro- template the idea of going back to school. gram manager for Chapman University Col- Whether it is to complete undergraduate stud- lege. "When consumers know of all the ies, pursue an advanced degree, or attain spe- choices available, they feel more comfortable cialized certifications, the inherent rewards knowing they're choosing the best fit for their of higher education - both financial and needs. The consortium brings all the schools intellectual fill the minds of professionals together for the educational consumer to make across almost every industry sector. the most logical choice." Hertel, who also Companies are also increasingly recogniz- heads a local CEU (Continued Education Unit) ing the investment potential of supporting the program in leadership called the San Diego educational advancements of their employ- Leadership Initiative, is a regular advisor to ees, often through tuition reimbursement pro- the consortium. grams and flexible schedules to help make the ' The SDEC Web site (www.sandiegocol- decision easier. leges.org) not only includes a list of accred- For many, going back to school will be a· 1 ited educational institutions in the greater San significant economic burden, not to mention a I Diego area for you to begin your search for drain on whatever free time is currently avail- the right school, but also provides a section able. How does one easily find a program that that instructs you on how to organize an edu- fits both schedule and fiscal limitations? A cation fair, which, according to Yates, is the newly launched consortium of San Diego-area most personalized and effective way to find educational institutions hopes to make your the right school and program. pursuit of lifelong learning goals a lot easier. Education fairs can comprise select col- According to Alex Yates, president of the leges or included representatives form all area San Diego Education Consortium and commu- schools, depending on your company's spe- nity relations manager at Webster University's cific needs. These events can be extremely San Diego campus, "Investing one's reputation, helpful in answering many of the questions time, and money in an institution should be a and concerns that often create entry barriers little more involved than simply hearing a com- for the education seeker. mercial, seeing an ad, or driving by a school's "The fairs allow groups of people to have building. Unfortunately, without an unbiased access to school representatives who can best resource for information, this is how many are help to determine if their programs are a good forced to make such a critical decision." fit for their needs," Yates said. Holding such • Developing A "ed-fairs" at larger corporations as well as One Stop S,ource 1 business parks - where several companies Providing San Diegans with that vital , participate - often builds interest in employ-

81 ees who previously hadn 't considered con- Platt College. Career advancement certifi- tinuing their education. cate and CEU programs in leadership and Though still in its infancy, the consortium education are also available at most of the is hoping to build an online resource that will SDEC member schools. become the default reference for exploring The· SDEC gives the smaller "satellite" in- educational opportunities in virtually every stitutions such as Azusa Pacific University's field of study. Over the next few months the San Diego Regional Center, the visibility to site's additional offerings will include educa- be found by students in search of their spe- tional related articles and news, educational cialized "degree completion" undergraduate job postings, a calendar of education fairs, programs and graduate studies in education lectures and theology. and related events, and a search tool 1 to help applicants find the information perti- "Although Azusa is known well within sec- nent to their needs. Yates hopes the SDEC tions of the Christian community, our non- site and the education fairs it promotes will denominational open policies and specialized quickly become known as the easiest ways to programs often find a match with those who find the right schools and programs for San previously didn' t know about us ," says Diegans. Karinna Topete, marketing educational re- • Programs Come cruiter for Azusa in San Diego. "Attending a In All Shapes, Sizes consortium ed-fair gives people the ability to San Diego County has almost every kind of find schools where their unique life experi- continuing education opportunity available- ences can aid them to fulfill their lifetime more than most residents think. Traditional education universities such as University of California, r education is not a deci- San Diego; San Diego State University,,Uni - htly - but one ultimately versity of San Diego, and University of can make. Much like you probably Redlands offer a wi e spectrum of studies for wouldn't make a high value purchase such undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral degrees. as a new automobile without doing your re- Public two-year colleges such as Palomar, search and test-driving the models you like, Grossmont, and San Diego City College offer you should also investigate all of your edu- a variety of associate's degree and continued cational options and talk with the represen- learning programs. tatives of those schools before making this There are several executive and online life-altering choice. If the SDEC is to be MBA programs offered at the local cam- successful, San Diegans need to take full puses of National University and the Univer- advantage of its offering•. So, go on, con- sity of Phoenix. Local campuses of larger tact the consortium, schedule an ed-fair, and private universities, such as Azusa Pacific take a test drive of your educational oppor- Webster, and Chapman offer specialized tunities today. bachelor's and master's degrees, focusing Levinson is president of The Art Institute of on the adult learner. And for those 30 and California - San Diego and a volunteer mem- 40-something "career-switchers," several ber of the San Diego Education Consortium. schools offer accredited creative and culi- nary arts degree programs, including The BIii Hall Art Institute of California - San Diego and 425593

82 Southern Cross August 28, 2003

ARAB CHRISTIANS DISCUSS ROADMAP TO PEACE AT USD By Vincent Gragnani "Even though they're a tiny minor- SAN DIEGO - The Holy Land h as ity, they're a bridge," he said. "Chris- synonymous with conflict. become tians can bring different With Christian emigration from the perspectives on political and reli- region on the rise, fewer and fewer Christians are witnessing the conflict can make a directly. This month the University of . East, e Middle Diego was the site of an extended San religion is a person's primary identity, reflection of the ever-changing s itua- a strange notion for Westerners. And tion from Christians who work in the whereas Jews and Muslims have sup- visited. region or have recently their fellow believers The Knights and Ladies of the Holy port from the world, many Christians are Sepulcher organized the symposium, around without support "The Christian Road Map to Pe ace," caught in the conflict from Christians world- held at the Joan B. Kroc Institute for and solidarity , he said. Peace and Justice. wide the speaker's lineup was Speakers called on the mo re than Next on , a na tive of Nazareth who 100 Knights and Ladies in attendance Rola Karam lifelong struggle to answer to be well-informed, e ducate o thers, shared her , " Who am I?" She pray for peace, contact elected offi- the qu estion cials,and support humanitarian and describes herself as a "Palestinian social programs. Roman Catholic Christian Arab with Leading the speakers was Msgr. lsraeli and American citizenship." Robert Stem, general secretary of the "Reading the Bible is like going back Catholic Near East Welfare Associa- home," she said. "I can picture the tion, a New York-based Vatican agency places as I read the Bible. Reading the that supports the people and churches Bible makes me homesick." of the Middle East. But in her textbooks, Karem never Msgr. Stem gave a timeline of key read about Palestine or Palestinians, historic moments in the last half cen- and this inspired her to become an tury that have led up to the present sit- educator after earning her master's uation. degree in International Affairs from Today, mutual demonizing between George Washington University. warring factions, cultural misunder- "I am constantly addressing the standings, an ethic of retaliation and question, 'How can you be Christian revenge, power struggles on both and Arab?"' she said. "A lot of educat- sides and the dominance of extremists ing needs to be done." are preventing a lasting peace, he said. Msgr. William Shomaly, general In an interview after the event, administrator of the Latin Patriarchate Msgr. Stem said that the fewer Chris- of Jerusalem, spoke about the current tians there are in the Holy Land, the conditions in the Holy Land and more polarized the situation becomes. issues that are preventing peace (see

83 accompanying story). Msgr. Dennis Mikulanis, vicar for ecumenical and interreligious affairs in the Diocese of San Diego, moder- ated a question-and-answer session with the speakers - who also includ- ed Corrine Withlatch, executive director of Churches for Middle East Peace, and Denise Scalzo, vice presi- dent of the Franciscan Foundation for the Holy Land. After the event, Msgr. Mikulanis said the day made San Diegans aware of the living presence of Christians in the Holy Land and our need to sup- port that presence. "We need firsthand testimony of people like this," he said. For more firsthand information, visit: Catholic Near East Welfare Association: www.cnewa.org; Franciscan Foundation fo r the Holy Land: www.ffhl.org; Churches f or Middle E ast Peace: www.cmep.org The Southern Cross

84 ------SAN DIEGO BUSINESS ) JOURNAL COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES SAN DIEGO, CA Ranked by fall 2002 total enrollment WEEKLY 14,000 Total AUG 4 2003 Total fall Students: operating enrollment: • Full-time 2002-2003 budget •2002 • Part-time tuition:• 2002-2003 •2001 • Percent Faculty: • Resident • Restricted • Type of • President School • Director of Telephone •% change California as of • Nonresident • Unrestricted Institution MaJor disciplines Rank Address • Accredited by** of study admissions (last year) Web site Fu (Ion) resident 3/1/03 • Graduate $Mllllons 1897 33,391 24,997 1,947 $1,572 na Diego StateUniversity (619) 594-5200 I 5500 Campanile DriveSan Diego 92182 33,285 18,394 $8,460 Ill 1 97 $1,732 (1) www.sdsu.edu .3 Vocational, transfer programs, sciences, Dr. Sherrill Amador 1946 , (760) 744-1150 28,915 7,240 1,133 $459 $22 Two-year public community Palomar College college technology, arts Hennan Lee 2 1140 W.Mission Road San Marcos 92069 (760) 744-8123 29,715 21,675 $4,839 $92.9 , ADA, BRN,NLN (2) www.palomar.edu (3) 91 NA WASC l1l$rS (except Robert Dynes 1960 (858) 53,M831 23,548 23,548 1,092 $3,950 $678 Four-yearpublicuniversity Afull spectrumof Universityof California,SanDiego business and physical education) MaeBrown 3 9500 GIiman DriveLaJolla92093 (858) 534-5629 21 ,568 0 $16,430 $1 ,095 WASC, ACSCU (4) www.ucsd.edu 9 97 $5,014 college Fine arts and sciences Constance Carroll 1964 Su Diego MesaCollege (619) 388-2682 21 ,482 na 732 $315 $19.5 Public community WASC Ivonne Alvarez 4 7250 Mesa College Drive San Diego 92111 23,716 na $1 ,880 $41 (3) www.sandiegomesacollege.net (9) 90 NA community Computer services,h-1h sciences, Norma 1961 SouthwesternCollege (619) 421-6700 19,175 6,211 925 $362 $9.2 Publlc college WASC criminal justice, childdevelopment Georgia Copeland 5 900 OlayLakes Road Chula Vista 91910 (619) 482-6413 19,538 12,964 $4,712 $66.3 (5) www .swc.cc.ca.us (2) 98 NA public community Generaleducatlon,occupatlonal,transfer Or. Ted Martinez Jr. 1961 College (619) 644-7000 18,241 7;009 989 $288 $12.4 Two-year GrossmontCommunity college programs Brad Tiffany 6 8800 Grossmont College Drive ElCajon 92020 (619) 644 -7922 16,911 11,232 $3,672 $45.6 1 (6) www .grossmont.edu 5 93 NA WASC Four-year private,nonprofit Business, computer science, information Jerry Lee 1971 (858) 642-8100 17,865 na 1,900 $7,080 na - University 3 technology, liberalstudies, teacher PatriciaPotter 7 N.Torrey PinesRoad LaJolla 92037 17,048 na $7,080 $125 university 11255 WASC, CCNE, IACBE. CCTC . education (8) www.nu.edu 5 $7,960 studies, business Terrance Burgess 1914 (619) 388-3400 15,120 2,419 584 $288 $32 Two-year public community Liberal arts, transfer San Diego City College studies, child development, nursing Lou Humphries 8 92101 (619) 388-3453 16,021 12,700 $3,408 $27 college 1313 12th Ave. San Diego education (7) www.sdcity.edu (6) 95 NA WASC Privatecollege 1978 liallllDIII College for Health Sciences (619) 477-4800 11 ,628 79 24 Ill wnd 9 2423 Hoover Ave. National City91950 10,444 11 ,547 Ill $5.5 ACTTS (NR) www.cchs.edu 11 18 NA , lire protection Patricia Keir 1969 (619) 388-7800 10,899 1,654 270 $290 $4.3 Two-year nonprofit, public Liberal arts, business San Diego Miramar College , administration of justice, Dana Andras 10 92126 (619) 388-7902 9,885 9,245 $1,718 $17 community college technology 10440 Black MountainRoad San Diego psychology (10) www.miramar.sdccd.net 10 96 NA WASC Publiccommunitycollege Dr. Tim Dong 1934 MiraCosta College (760) 757-2121 10,176 3,003 425 $298 $5.1 WASC, ACCJC . AliciaTerry 11 One BarnardDrive Oceanside 92056 (760) 795-6609 9,909 7,173 $3,514 $53 (9) www.miracosta.edu 3 96 NA public community General education, transfer programs, Dr. Geraldine Perri 1978 College (619) 660-4000 7,964 1,960 363 na $4.4 Two-year Cuyamaca college vocational Or. Beth Appenzeller 12 900 Rancho San Diego Parkway ElCajon 92019 (619) 660-4399 7,423 6,004 na $20 (11) www.cuyamaca.net 7 98 NA WASC arts university Arts, sciences, business administration University,SanMarcos (760) 750-4000 7,678 4,903 432 $1,940 na Public,liberal California State WASC education 333 S. Twin Oaks ValleyRoad (760) 750-4030 6,496 2,775 $9,413 $71 13 18 91 $2,102 (13) San Marcos 92096 www.csusm.eckl ciences, business, nursing, Or. Alice Hayes 1949 (619) 260 4600 7,126 6,004 678 $21 ,988 NA Four-year private university Arts and s of San Diego education, law, doctoral Intensive Stephen Pultz 14 5998 Alcala Park San Diego 92108 1,122 $21 ,988 $187 WASC www.sandiego.edu $14,000- (12) $18,650

University of Phoenix (800) 473-4346 5,521 5,521 626 $9,180 NA Private, professional college Undergraduate and graduate programs In Dr. Laura 15 3890 Murphy CanyonRoad, #100 (858) 573-0032 4,840 NA $9,180 Palmer 1989 NA NCA-CIHE business, nursing, counseling Bruce Wi (14) SanDiego 92123 8 $10,665 liams WWW phoenix.edu technology, education Chapman University (619) 296-8690 16 4,600 wnd wnd wnd wnd Private, liberal arts university Education, 7460 Mission Valley Road San Diego 92108 (619) 296-8696 4,200 psychology, computer James Doti 1970 (15) wnd wnd wnd wnd WASC science www.chapman.edu 10 , human resources, Michael Peny 95 wnd $10,800 organizational leadership Point Loma NazareneUniversity (619) 849-2200 17 2,644 2,470 268 $15,760 NA Four-yearprivate, liberalarts 3900 Lomaland Drive San Diego 92106 (619) 849-2601 2,576 Liberal studies, communicationstudies, Dr. Bob Brower 1973 (16) 174 $15,762 $58 university psychology accountacy/business/ www. ptloma.edu 3 Scott Shoemaker na WASC econonics, nursing Alliant International University (858) 635-4370 18 1,752 1,346 385 $20,520 NA Four-year private, liberal arts International 10455 Pornerado Road San Diego 921 31 (858) 635-4355 1,600 business, psychology, Dr. Judith Albino 1952 (17) 591 $14,340 NA university business administration www. .aJUant.edu 10 , marital and Susan Topham na varies WASC family therapy IColeman College (619) 465-3990 1,132 1,132 123 $13,900 na Private nonprofit, career college Computer information 19 7380 Parkway Drive La Mesa 91942 (619) 463-0162 1,125 science, computer Dr. Coleman Furr 1963 0 $13,900 $10 ACICS business administration, computer (18) www.coleman.edu .6 100 Darlene Ankton $15,000 network technology, computer graphic design Webster University (858) 458-9310 1,000 200 45 $4 6480 ,215 wnd Private nonprofit, business MBA, international business, finance, Dr. Kim 20 Weathers Place, #104 (858) 458-0914 990 800 $4,215 Varey 1980 San Diego 92121 wnd college human resources; health sciences, IT Stephanie Becerra (19) 1 100 $5 www.webster.edu ,325 NCACS management, organizational security ICalifornia Western School of Law (619) 239-0391 1,000 857 108 $24,850 21 225 wnd Private nonprofit, three-year Criminallaw, Internationallaw, family Steven Smith Cedar St.San Diego 92101 (619) 525-7092 760 143 $24,850 1924 (21) www.cwsl.edu 1, wnd law school law, labor law, creativeproblem solving Traci Howard 32 63 NA ABA ITT TechnicalInstitute (858) 571-8500 926 834 35 22 9680 Granite na na Private two-year, proprietary Electronics, drafting, Information John Byers Ridge Drive San Diego 92123 (858) 571-1277 885 92 na 1981 (20) www.ltt-tech.edu na college technology Sheryl Schulgen 35 100 NA ACICS The Art Instituteof California-SanDiego (619) 598-1399 23 801 729 54 $16,464 wnd Private college Applied arts, culinary arts, graphic 7650 MissionValleyRoad SanDiego 92108 (619) 291-3206 597 72 DanielLevinson 1981 (NR) $16,464 wnd ACCSCT design, advertising, Web design, media Sandy Park www.alcasd.ll1klslbas.edu 34 85 . NA arts Universityof Redlands (619) 284-9292 700 700 50 NA NA Nonproftt liberal arts university 24 9040 Friars Road, #31 o, San Diego 92108 (619) 284-9042 700 Business management, Information Dr. James Appleton 1979 0 NA NA WASC systems (22) www .redlands.edu 0 MBA, M.S. In interactive Constance Rothmund 100 $10,860- telecommunications $11,500 Thomas Jefferson School of Law (619) 297-9700 25 691 496 53 $23,450 NA Privatelaw school studies 2121 SanDiego Ave. San Diego 92110 (619) 294-4713 612 195 Legal KennethVandevelde 1969 (25) $23,450 NA ABA, WASC, CSE Jennifer I www.tjsi.edu ·13 42 NA Keller

*Unlessotherwise noted, tuitionreflects a full-time program for the 2002-03 school year. For community colleges, alull-time wnd Would not disclose program consists ol 12 units per semester . na Not available **The institutions on The List are accredited . by various organizations, Including Accrediting Commission for Independent Colleges NA Not applicable and Schools (ACICS); Accrediting Commission for Trade and Technical Schools otthe Career College Association (ACTTS-CCA); (NR) Not ranked . American Bar Association (ABA); American Dental Association (ADA) ; American Psychological Association (APA); Association I of Notes:Colleges and universities on The List are accredited and offer degree programs. Kelsey.Jenney College, American Law Schools (AALS); American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB); Accreditation Board for No. 23 last year, did not return a survey this year. Christian Heritage College, No. 24 last year, Azusa Pacific University, Newschool of Engineering and Technology Inc. (ABET) ; American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AMFTA); Board of Registered Architectureand Design, KeUer Graduate School of Management, and The California School of International Management returned surveys Nursing (BRN); Committee of Bar Examiners (CBE); Community College League of California (CCLC); Commission for Teacher but did not qualify for Credentialing The List. (CTC); Department of Education (DOE) ; Llalson Commission for Medical Education (LCME); National League of Nursing Source: The institutions (NLN); North Central Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA); Transnational Association of Christian Schools(TACS) ; and Western It is not the intent of this Ust to endorse the participants nor to imply an institution's size or numericalrank indicates Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) . · its quality. t This Is a partial listing. 1 lndlvlduaJ Is a chancellor. 2 lndlviduaJ is an Interim president. 3 Last year's figure ol 11 ,177 was Incorrect. Researched by Sally Ardizzone Originallypublished March 10, 2003 ( ( SAN DIEGO BUSINESS JOURNAL MBA SCHOOLS Ranked by spring 2003 total enrollment of MBA students SAN DIEGO J CA L WEEKLY 14,000 Total sprlng enrollment: Number olfaculty AUG 4 2003 • 2003 Number of as of 5/31/03: 2002-03 Rank School • 2002 students : • Full-time tuition: • Type of • school director Year (last Address Telephone • % cha r, ge • Full-time • Part-time • Resident Institution Major dlsclpllnes MBA • Director of admissions established year) Web site Fax (loss) • Part-time • Total • Nonresident • Accredited by* of study 1 Azordegan 1971 National University (858) 642-8000 840 479 35 $885 Private, four-year, Management, a-business , Or. Shahram 1 11255 N. Torrey Pines Road (619) 563-7299 921 361 • 463 $885 1 nonprofit International business,health care Nancy Rohland La JoHa 92037 (9) .... 49B IACBE management, human resources (1) I www.nu.edu ' management 1959 San Diego State University (619) 594-8073 792' 382 99 $2,176 Public , four-year Accounting, information systems, Or. Kenneth Marino 5500 Campanile Drive (619) 594-1863 752 352 41 $9,226 3 AACSB finance, marketing , management, Or. Kenneth Marino 2 international business, (2) San Diego 92182 5 140 www.sdsu .edu/mba entrepreneurship University of Phoenix (800) 473-4346 621 621 11 $10,430 Private, four-year Business, global management, Dr. Michael Reilly 1990 3890 Murphy Canyon Road , # 100 (858) 576-0032 673 0 86 $10,430 NCA technology man.1gement, health care Devin Dodson 3 management I (3) San Diego 92123 (8) 97 www.phoenix.edu ·. I University of Redlands (619) 284-9292 451 4.51 21 $10,186 Private, nonprofit Business administration Jerry Groshek 1979 9040 Friars Road, #31 O (619) 284-9042 400 0 46 $10,186 WASC management, :;cience inlormalion Kimmi Grulke 4 tec.mology I (4) San Diego 92108 13 67 www.redlands.edu Universityof San Diego 118 35 ', $18,650 Private, four-year, Information technology, finance , Dirk Yandell' 1972 I 5 5998 Alcala Park 131 5 $18,650 nonprofit supply chin management, Stephen Pultz International business, real estate (5) San Diego 92110 40 AACSB http://business.sandiego.edu .. , , Alliant International University (858) 271-4300 177 161 15 $14 ,550 Private , four-year, Strategic management, international Dr. MinkStavenga 1952 I 6 10455 Pomerado Road (858) 635-4739 176 16 35 $14 ,550 non profit business, information technology, Susan Topham finance , marketing , business (6) San Diego 92131 1 50 WASC www.alliant.edu administration Webster University (858) 458-9310 168 0 0 $5,475 Private , four-year, International business, finance, Dr. Kim Varey 1980 Stephanie Becerra I 7 6480 Weathers Place, #104 (858) 458-0914 152 168 45 $5,475 nonprofit human reso urces, health care I I security (7) San Diego 92121 11 45 NCA management, organizational www.webster.edu/ca I Keller Graduate School of DeVry University (619) 683-2446 11 2 82 0 $9 ,060 Private, two-year Project management, finance, Thomas Horstmann 1998 8 2655 Camino del Rio N.,#201 (619) 683-2448 97 30 17 $9 ,060 NCA information ;ystems , human Wendi Wilson resources (8) San Diego 921 08 15 17 www.keller.edu I California StateUniversity, San Marcos (760) 750-4267 104 58 10 $2,102 Public, four-year General :nanagement Dr. Beverlee Anderson 1995 9 333 S. Twin Oaks Valley Road (760) 750-4263 103 46 5 $7,187 WASC Dr. Beverlee Anderson (9) San Marcos 92096 1 15 www.csusm.edu/mba Point Loma Nazarene University (619) 849-2200 30 0 8 $10,000 Private, four-year, General MBA curriculum Dr. Bruce A. Schooling 1975 10 3900 Lomaland Drive (619) 849 -71 89 15 30 1 $10,000 nonprofit Scott Shoemaker (10) San Diego 92106 100 9 ACBSP www.pnoma.edu/mba

*The instiMions on The List are accredited by various organizations , including the American Assembly of Collegiate 2Includes 58 executive MBA students . Schools of Bu siness (AACSB) , International Assembly of Collegiate Bu siness Education (IACBE) , North Central ' Executive MBA program is $3 2,880 for two years . Association of Colleges and Schools (NCA) , and Western Association of Schoolo and Colleges (WASC) . 'Interim director. wnd Would not disclose Notes: Spring enrollment figures are for San Diego County rnly. Full -time and part-time status varies between different MBA schools. na Not available Source : The schools NA Not applicable It is not the intent of this Ust to endorse the participants no' to imply a school's size or numerical rank indicates its quality. (NR) Not ranked •Cost per class. co

Athletics SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 374,858 AUG 30 2003

Illlllll llll 111111111111111 lllll 1111111111111111111111111111 Burrelles 580 ,IZll , QB 28 . 1 ... 1 Torero is a man for all seasons By Richard J . Marcus coach Rich Hill said. "I lost sight of the ball SPECIAL TO THE UNION-TRIBUNE because of the angle, but the players who saw it said that it was the best catch they have ever USD senior Gavin Ng is a paradox in football seen." pads. Said Ng: "I just ran and Is he a ran and dived and football player who plays baseball or a happened to catch the ball." baseball player who plays football? Ng acknowledges that he likes baseball slight- Is he a kick return specialist or a defensive ly better than football. back? But it's football season, and he is focusing on USD's Is he a native opener a week from Hawaiian whose playing style is tonight against Azusa Pacific. cahn and hang-loose or is he a transplanted Ng averaged Californian 22.1 yards per kickoff return and who has a measured intensity on the 9.1 per punt return last field? season and will continue the return duties this season. Turns out the 5-foot-9, 160-pound Ng is all of In his other role, Ng is the starting the above. right comerback and the veteran in the secondary. One thing is for certain: Tore- Although he gives up a lot in height, he makes ros coach Kevin McGarry is up for it with his 4.5 40-yardspeed. happy to have the chameleon "Gavin has one of the fastest from breaks I've seen Mililani, Hawaii, on his at this level," Toreros free safety side. Bryan· New- brough said. "He's really small, but he can stick "Gavin is a hyper kid. He's pretty good. He is a hard hitter." got a lot of energy and move- Perhaps most importantly, Ng is focusing ment," McGarry this said. "He is camp on continuing to improve his cover tech- Gavin Ng like a hummingbird.'' nique. From the get-go, Ng made an "I hope to not get beat this year impression on McGarry. so McGarry In his first touch of the won't yell at me," Ng said. "I only had ball as a sophomore, he returned two a kickoff 98 interceptions last year because I dropped a lot of yards. for a touchd.own against Azusa Pacific, balls. I'm hoping to get more interceptions this tying the Pioneer Football League record. year." 'That return was a huge turning point that According game," to McGarry, Ng is steadily improv- McGarry said. l'I expect that he will be an ing his cover ability. exciting return guy this year and make some big "He's making some plays." more plays in this camp and is more of a factor," . Not limiting McGarry said. "We his penchant for drama to •foot- really need Gavin to ball, Ng shoulder some of the load turned in a spectacular diving catch for (in the secondary) and the Toreros be a dominant player." baseball team in the first round of Through it all, Ng is the NCAARegional still a Hawaiian in style s in 2002. Ng made the snag and spirit. He is one of six players in left field with two from tl1e Aloha outs and two on in the eighth State and one in a long line of Hawaiians inning to preserve a 2-1 win . - who . . ' ve suited up for the Toreros. State to proptl USD into 'Sometimes I wonder if Coach McGarry "When the ballwas hit is ing out to Hawaii to recruit or for a vacation," this is it, our season is I I gjokes.

88 f

Revamped Toreros

-. 0 0 should be explosive By Richard J. the type of guy to brush - Marcus it off," .

SPECIAL TO THE UNION-TRIBUNEsenior tight end Jeff Incerty said. "Eric is really modest" USD senior quarterback Eric Last year, during a 5-5sea-

Rasmussen doesn't hesitate, son in which USD finished sec- -

even for a second. ond in the Pioneer Football When told football coach League North with a 3-1 record, Kevin McGarryhad mentioned Rasmussen was forced to evac- that the keys to drive the 2003 uate the pocket frequently be- Toreros squad would be his, cause of an inconsistent offen- Rasmussen responded as one sive line. might expect of a three-year "Eric had happy feet early in starter. the season last year. We want "Let's drive it as fast as we him to hang in there a little bit can,'' Rasmussen said. 'This is longer," said McGarry a great offense. There really is No arguments from Rasmus- no way to stop sen. it" "I think I will have more time Rasmussen in the pocket because right is referring to now this is by far the best offen- the newly in- sive line we have had since I've stalled West been here,'' said Rasmussen. "I Coast offense want to stay in the pocket and implemented go through my progression of by first-year of- reads." fensive coordi- Eric There will, however, be nator Tim Rasmussen times when Rasmussen will put Drevno. The his wheels to good use. new look will be unveiled dur- "We are going to ask Eric to ing USD's opener, Sept. 6 sprint out and bootleg because against Azusa Paci.fie at Torero it puts pressure on the de- Stadium. fense,'' McGarry ·said. "We Not that Rasmussen, a 6- don't want to pull the reins in foot-3, 220-pound Sacramento on hin1 too much." native, needed more incentive Because of the loss of stand- to throw the ball. Last season out receiver Mike Gasperson to Rasmussen led Division I-Min a knee injury, Rasmussen will passing efficiency with a 164.2 be spreading the ball around to rating. He completed 170-of-279 a stable of receivers and tight attempts for 2,470 yards and 25 ends: Hannula, Incerty, Brent touchdowns with just one inter- Labarrere, Nick Garton, Kyle ception. This fall, he is poised O'Connor and Dustin Owen. to add to his seven USD career The running game will be by passing records. committee. Now that the fate of the team McGarrysaid that after Ras- has been placed largely upon mussen's freshman year there him and the expectations to top was serious consideration giv- last season are looming, the en to repositioning him at free pressure is on. safety because of his size, "If Eric feels pressure, I can't speed (4.8 in the 40) and a glut tell,'' said sophomore receiver. at the quarterback position: Adam Hannula. ''He is as cool Rasmussen, however, had a as they come." good spring practice after his Perhaps it's in Rasmussen's first year on the team and his genes. His father, Terry, played competition thinned out quarterback at Chico State Ultimately, Rasmussen from 1972-74. Or maybe Ras- stayed at quarterback. mussen doesn't feel the heat "I guarantee you I would because of his affable personali- have been a pretty bad safety," ty. Rasmussen said. "I would have "I can see how·there is a lot told coach, 'I need to play quar- of pressure on Eric, but he is terback.'" 89 . SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA TUESDAY 374,856 AUG 12 2003

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Burrelle's 580 QA .xz1a 26 . I .. , I Defense is key for USD By Richard J. Marcus practice through Aug. 30 to advocate for the football pro- SPECIAL TO THE UNION·T IBUNE work on what McGarry calls gram. his 4-2 nickel defense that "The architect of this pro- When USD football coach uses five defensive backs and gram and major voice for what Kevin McGarry heads out to a strong safety. Senior line- we are doing is gone," McGar- Manchester Athletic Field to- backer Andy Guzenski will ry said. "Tomunderstood our night at 7:30 for the Toreros' lead the defense. issues." first practice of the season, the The fate of the team's sea- A permanent successor to question that looms is a famil- son could rest largely on the Iannacone is likely to be iar one. shoulders of senior quarter- named in early January. Can the experienced, talent- back Eric Rasmussen, who Another big loss is junior ed and deep offense carrythe threw for 2,470 yards and 25 receiver Michael Gasperson, team, or will the less-experi- touchdowns with one intercep- who tore his left ACL and in- enced, less-talented and rela- tion. He completed l 70-of-279 jured his femur while jumping tively thin defense be ex- passes. for a ball in the final spring ploited enough for a Toreros "I think that we have the top practice in April. It's not clear downfall? quarterback in the league, and whether Gasperson will make USD (5-5 overall last year, some would argue the top QB it back for part of the season. 3-1 in Pioneer Football League in Division I-AA,"McGarry "Gasperson was a big part North Division, finishing sec- said of Rasmussen, a 2002 sec- of our offense. He is a big ond among five teams) will ond-team All-PFL selection. receiver who did a lot of good find out some answers on Another factor in USD's fa- things for us," McGarry said. Sept 6 when it hosts Azusa vor is its schedule. While the "Fortunately, wide receiver is Pacific at Torero Stadium. The Toreros have some tough non- one of the areas where we Toreros were soundly beaten conference foes (Holy Cross, have some depth." in their opener at Azusa last Azusa), USD plays seven of its Fmally, as always, there is season, 41-25. 10 games at home. Dayton, the perennial PFL "I'm hoping that our de- "We schedule up more than powerhouse that USD will fense won't be our weak link anybody in our conference," have to beat to win the North this year," McGarry said. "Our McGarry said. Division. secondary is my biggest con- There are some notable "For us, the next step is to cern. We were not really good changes in the football pro- win our division and beat Day- or experienced in the second- gram. Former athletic director ton," McGarry said. "We are ary last year. But I think that Tom Iannacone, at the USD starting to scare them a little will be better there this year." helm for 15 years, recently re- bit We are getting closer to USD will have 18 days of tired. · Iannacone was a major them every year." ·

90 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA FRIDAY 374,856 A COACH FOR ALL AGES squad defeated the Rage tion their parents. New USD women's (Pleasanton) in the finals to "When someone messes up, will age group soccer in the Surf he doesn't yell at them while skipper has Cup. . they're on the field," said Patti won at Greenwood, 31, grew up m Ryan, whose daughter, every level Eastwood, Court- England, about 40 ney, plays on the under-13 miles southeast By Whitelaw Reid of London. He squad. "He waits to tell them says his father COMMUNITY SPORTS WRITER had him kick- what they did wrong when they get to the ing a soccer ball around sideline." da Greenwood says from Devon De La Rosa, the the time he was a toddler. a mid- ages of the players he fielder on the under-13 In 1991, Greenwood came team, coaches makes little dif- to says she loves playing A the United States to play soc- for ference in the Greenwood, way he ap- cer at Dominican even though he's proaches his job. College of known for making San Rafael. In 1998, the team do "Good players after plenty of extra have a lot of coaching club running during similar habits," teams in the practices. Greenwood area for a few said. "It's just years after grad- "He a difference in uation, Greenwood pushes us to be our the speed of play had two as- best, and and the tech- sistant coaching makes our practices nical ability. offers - from fun," De Cal and USD. La Rosa said. "'The reading of Added midfielder the game Greenwood says Alissa and the common sense the chance Sanchez: "He of the to also do some coaching always wants us game isn't as established for to be in shape." at the the Surf, with its reputation, younger ages, but it's still a Greenwood's motor is swayed him to come to USD. what good standard of soccer." makes him special, said Surf Especially when you're "I had done the whole director of coaching Colin coaching club for the San Diego thing in Northern California Chesters. Surf, one of the country's top and it was a good level," "He has a ton of energy and youth soccer pretty clubs. Greenwood said, "but to be much brings it every weekend, Last Greenwood honest, this was a way better day" Chesters said. was coaching "He de- 12-year-old play- serves everything he ers in the 's got 23rd annual San level." He's worked his tail off. Diego Surf Greenwood hi If any- Cup tournament says coac ng one can make a USD-type In the fall, Greenwood the Surf has pro- will helped prepare gram successful, it's coach college-age him for goingto women, college coaching. take that type of when "It's person. he begins his first sea- made me a better Greenwood says son he expects as head coach at USD. the talent pipeline If coach," Greenwood said. "It's from the Greenwood's track record Surf to USD at been a place where could to continue. the youth level can equate to try There are currently the college my own ideas out with my nine play- game, USD should own ers on his USD be team and do my own roster who in good shape. Over the last thing." have played six Greenwood descnbes for the Surf. years, Greenwood has won him- "Over the self as a players' coach. years we've had numerous tournaments as He lot of Surf says he likes to give players interested in coach of the Surf while also his play- USD," Greenwood ers the freedom to be said. "It's a serving as a USD assistant creative win-win and aggressive, and not situation." Greenwood coached last have USD assistant year's to worry about making coach Lucas Surfunder-17 team to a mis- Curtolo says State Greenwood's Cup title. Earlier this takes. . concern for week, That style has endeare his players' lives Greenwoo_d's_ under-13 m outside of soccer to his players - not to men- is what sepa-

91 rates him from other coaches. "Ada's really focused on kids heading in the right direction in life and getting a good edu- cation," Curtolo said. Greenwood says one of the keys to his success is not tak- ing things too seriously, as evi- denced by the ugly hat and socks he wears to his Surf games for good luck. ''You have to be happy-go- lucky," Greenwood said, "be- cause at the end of the day it's still just a game, mate." No matter how old the play- ers are.

Whitelaw Reid can be reached at (619) 293-1829 or [email protected]

Ada Greenwood watches his girls under-13 team practice recently In preparation for the Surf Cup. He will take over as women's head coach at USD this season. Don Kohlbauer/ Union-Tribune

92 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 444,218 AUG 31 2003

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LOCAL COLLEGES USD volleyball team wins two in Arizona

UNION-TRIBUNE Women's soccer Junior Alisa , USD won Boon scored twic la: t night at three goals in the Sun D vii Voll PLNU's 5-1 vic- yhall Clas- tory over host Southern sic in Tempe, Naz- Ariz., be ating arene. PLNU is 2-0. Utah 30-18, 30-16, 27-30, 27,30, 15-7 a Devon Forster had 22 kills and 15 digs while Cross country Lindsey Sherburne had 61 as- SDSU placed sixth at the sists. Against host Arizona 5K Fullerton Opener at Car- State,.USD swept 30-26, 30-15, bon Ganyon Regional Park in 37-35. Fors ter had 16 kills and Brea. Cal State Fullerton Sherbw11e 44 as ists and 12 won the meet with 90 points; digs for the Torero (3-0). SDSU tallied 164 at the 14- team race . . .. PLNU's wom- en won a three-team 2.5-mile More volleyball race at the UCSD North Cam- Behind 11 kills and 11 dig pu Course with 21 points, from !Aspen McPartland and nudging out UCSD (34) and 36 assists by ara Eng trom, Grossmont College (83). SDSU swe pt visiting UC Riv- Crusaders runner Jasmine erside 30-25, 30-17, 30-15. Ka- Marks won in 15:26.3. The ra Moriarty and Me gan UCSD men beat PLNU 20-43 Schauermann had 10 kills in the 4-mile race. Ryan Bur- apiece for the Azt cs (1-1). nett of PLNU won in 22:03.3.

SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 374,858 SEP 6 2003

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'. LOCAL COLLEGES USD defeats UCR in soccer UNION-TRIBUNE Sy Reeves scored less than four minutes into the gan1e to give USD's men's soccer team a lead it never relinquished en route to a 3-0 victory over visiting UC Riverside yesterday. Eric Wunderle and Ryan Guy al- so scored goals for USD (1-1-1) , and Wunderle had an assist. An- drew Ehrich also had an assist for the Toreros. Women's soccer Michelle Rowe had the lone goal as USO (2-0-1) escaped with a 1-0 win over visiting UNLV. Libby Bas- sett had two saves for the Toreros. Women's volleyball USO fell 25-30,25-30, 33-35 to fourth-ranked Stanford in Palo Al- to despite Devon Forster's team- high 15 kills. Cassie Wolpem had 10 kills for the Toreros (3-1) ... San Diego State (4-2) had a rough day, losing to Miami 21-30, 30-23, 21-30, 23-30, "then to Santa Clara 23-30, 33-31, 30-27,25-30,13-15 in a tournament at the University of Ari- zona in Tucson. SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SATURDAY 374,858 AUG 30 2003

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LOCAL COLLEGES SDSU men's soccer rallies for late win

Ryan Curtis scored with , six seconds left in regulation to send the game to overtime, and Colin Jennings sent home the game winner three minutes into the extra period to give San Diego State's men's soccer team a 2-1 victor over visiting Oregon State yesterday. Kenny Fechner's lob bounced over the head of the OSU goalkeeper and Curtis was there to finish for the Aztecs (1-0). Fechner notched his second assist when he found Jennings on the left side of the penalty box. More soccer Oregon State used a second-half goal by Brianna Monker to beat host SDSU 1-0 in women's play. It was the first time in six years that the Aztecs lost their season opener ... Two overtimes were not enough to settle the score between Long Island and USD as the men's teams tied 1-1 in their season opener. Kevin Wilson scored for USD in the 69th minute . .. Freshman Cassie Wolpern had 18 kills in her first collegiate game as USD downed Ohio 3-1 at the Sun Devil Classic at Arizona State .. . PLNU (1-0) got a gem of a performance from Jackie Jewell as the senior forward scored a hat trick in the Sea Lions' 4-1 victory over ninth - ranked Oklahoma City in Oklahoma.

95 CHRONICLE-TELEGRAM ELYRIA, OH SATURDAY 33,000 AUG 9 2003

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131 zy .u2c. .... COLLEGE ALMA - Named Matt Chova men's track and field coach. BAYLOR - Announced t signation of Dave Bliss, men's basketball coach, and Tom Stanton, athletic director. COLORADO STATE - Named Mark Driscoll athletic director. DOMINICAN, N.Y. - Named Phil Fluhr women's soccer coach and Dale Abel- ingmen's lacrosse coach. HIR M - Named Mike Lazusky men's and women's track and field coach and Sean McDonnell women's golf coach. MIDDLE TENNESSEE - Named Chavonne Hammond-Taylor women's assistant basketball coach. SAN DIEGO - Named Will Guarino men's and women's cross country coach. VERMONT - Named Matt Belfield cross country and track and field coach. WASHINGTON - Signed Keith Gilbert· son, lootball coach, to a lour-year con- tract. WESTERN KENTUCKY - Named Paul Sanderford assistant to athletic director and Andy Allison director of basketball operations. WINTHROP - Named Jessica Zinobile women's assistant basketball coach.

96 DAILY RECORD WOOSTER, OH SATURDAY 25,200 AUG 9 2003

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ransactions LOS A G LES G ALA XY- Ac quired F Friday's Sport Transactions nd for t wo By The Associated Press Diego ern a from ew Engla condi tional draft choices. I J BASE BALL ague A-League American Le ded D C hris OX- Pl aced R II P II LWA UKEE WA E-Ad BOSTO RED hite and MF Marce lo o Mendoza on th e 15-da y disabled li st. Morman,MF Pat Ramir r the ro ter for th e remainder of the Reca ll ed LHP Casey Fos um fro m Paw1uckct Fo nta na fo of the I L. cason. SOX- Purcha ed the COLLEGE HI GO WHITE att Chova nec men's ct of C Ja mie Burke froni Charlollc of ALM A- amed M contra ie ld coach. the IL. Optioned RHP Ma ll Gint er 10 track and f BAYLOR- Announced the re ignatio n of harlolle. tba ll coach. and Tom Eastern League Dave Bliss. men' baske dded J.R . House tan ton. athleti director. ALTOO, A RVE- STAT E- amed M ark oster. Announced LHP Tom Fordh am C L RAD 10 the r letic director. ha been promoted to ashv ille of th e PCL. Dri scoll ath DART IOUTH- amed y nth ia Central League nd OF Derry rutchfield director of facilities a ALEXA DRI A A ES--Traded rd on Morton and nd OF Ca rlo do lf t C astal operation· for athl etics. Go Hamm ond a ass istant spo rts in fo rm atio n fo r O Marcus Kn ight and cas h. Sold Hea th er Croze Bend nd Mall Dough rt y spo rt s th e cont ract of OF Brian Sc hm ill to 'o rth directors. a e. Acquired the informati on a ·ista nt. Shore of the o rthcast Leagu Phi l Flu hr rt Hewes from Shreveport DO 11 I CA , .Y.- 'amcd nghts to I 'F R obe h a nd Dale Abeling r to be named. igncd RHP Sea n wo men's soccer coac for a pl aye coach. Kra mer and I FR an Dambac h. men·s lac ro e MO T I FRA KU & MA R H ALL- a 111 ed F. PRI NG FIELD OZA RK 's track and Corey Hennesy. Carl Schnabel men· a nd women D K - Signed RHP coach. orthcast League fi eld assi ta nt cro s country Mike Laz u ky men' • and BA GO R L M BE RJACK - Rel eased HIR AM- amcd tra ck a nd fi eld coach and ca n RHP Matt Tindell. women's Mc Donne ll women's golf c ac h. BASKETBALL amed tball As ociation MIDDL T ESS ·- ati onal Baske aylor women 's EAT- Signed F John Wall ace havo nn e Hammond-T MIAMI H tball coach. and C Loren Woods. assistant baske R ER WI LLI M - amed Jo h Ki ng FOOTBALL Freder ic k tball League a sist an t at hl etic t ra iner and Nati onal Foo 's as ista nt IKI NG - Rel eased FB Las hl ey-Saunders women Ml OTA ll coach. Jeremy All en. Signed TE Matt Hue bner. bas ketba AM FO RD- amed J oey Mull ins as istan t HO KEY nd Ad am ockey League ·port inform ati on dir ector a Na ti onal H ati on intern . SAB RES- Re- igned F l es Prendergast sport info rm B FFALO GO- amcd Wi ll ,uarin o men's Kotali k a nd F C urtis Brown to on e-year A DI and women r oss oun tr coach. c ntracts tt Belfi eld cro s W JE RS EY DEVI LS- Signed D Paul VERMO T- amed Ma count r a nd trac k and field coach. Marti n. , - Signed Keith Gi lbert on. TAMPA BAY LIGHT, I G- Re- ign ed D WA 111 GTO football coach. to a fo ur-yea r cont ract. Janne Laukk ancn to a one-yea r contract. Na med Pa ul ECHL WESTER K E, T C KY- nt 10 athl etic director a nd Dl 1 G ROYALS- amed Derck Sanderford assista REA i on dir ector of b as ketba ll lancey coach. And y A ll y League opera tion . United Hocke esica Zinobi le 'D RI ERDOGS- am ed WI T I-IR OP- amed J RI H MO nt bas ketball coach . Davi d Da rt ch director of co mmun ity women· a ista YAL - Announced the r esignati on of Jim relati ons. ie 13crtoth y CCER Pyrch. diving coach. amed Ern SO . Major League Soccer sport publicit y off in tern

97 NCAA NEWS INDIANAPOLIS, IN BI-WEEKLY 30,000 JUL 21 2003

NCAA Record

Hen's and women's cross country - Rich Cota retired, as head men's_ and women s coach at Sa:n Die o after gu1din the programs for 18 years. Cota was d1e West Coast Conference women's coach of d1e year this season ... Bill Meiers was hired .as I ' head men's and women's coach at Arcadia ... Stevens Institute of Technology added Kevin McGinn as head men's and women's coach to replace Al Alonso. McGinn spent the past two seasons as an assistant at Co- lumbia.

98 SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE SAN DIEGO, CA SUNDAY 444,218 AUG 24 2003 Is cup half full or half empty? The WUSA would desperately like The brokering, however, was not WUSA title tickets to know. As the league closes out its helped when, at regular season's end third season and moves headlong to- some players and management won- overall ward a fourth, the answers are more WUSA's once-blue sky available; critical than ever. In the past few weeks, it was been "We don't know if, come Septem- attendance down reported that the owners of three fran- ber, we will be here or not," San Jose and Carolina general manager Marlene Bjomsrud chi e - New York th Tod Leonard (AOL Tune-Warner) and Philadelphia told e San JoseMercury News. insists Morgan, STAFF WRITER (Comcast Corp.) - are either looking They will be here, on their commitment or who reportedly bristled at the negative On a wann summer afternoon four to cut back get out altogether. comments. But Morgan said the · years ago, 90,000 squealing kids and WUSA CEO and President Lynn league must continue to analyze ways their parents packed Pasadena's Rose this week that from one to be more attractive while running to witness history. Morgan said Bowl investors could join the more efficiently. The U.S. national soccer team de- to three n w e 2004 season and that "'The challenges we face in women's feated China to win the Women's league for th while he hopes all the franchises pro leagues are real," Morgan said World Cup, and, given the record would remain in their current cities, to coiattending meetingsin San Diego crowd and the millions in the televi- coinci e WI the Founders Cup. "I she couldn't guarantee it think that while we would definitely it wa considered a ion audience, This, after a 2003 regular season in say that we've got a solid base of fans moment in the evolution of watershed which the top players accepted a 25 in this countrywho are supportive of women's sports. percent pay cut, attendance fell 4.2 the WUSA and women's sports the on a wann summer after- Today, percent (to an average of 6,667), and frustration comes when we can'tal- 's Torero Stadium, some noon D cable television ratings remained ways get them to cast their vote by players from '99, includ- the of those same tiny (about 115,000 viewers per game comingout and supporting the teams. Hamm, will take lhe .field ing icon Mia "'That's where you start scratching the Washington Fr edom plays the on PAXTV). as backed by your head. It's a cultural shift, in order Beat in the Women's United The league, which is still Atlanta sponsors as to get people to understand that Association's third Founders such powerful national Soccer Johnson they've got to make commitments like Cup championship game. Coca-Cola, McDonald's and s taken forceful action. that in order for a league like ours to And in a San Diego market that is & Johnson, ha in April to replace its single-en- be around." considered a model by the league, It voted a modified fran- It has been professional soccer's there were still about 400 tickets avail- tity ownership with which teams would bugaboo for three decades in this yesterday in a stadium lhat seats chise model in able spending. It also country. While millions of kids play fewer than 7,000 people. account for theirown & 1 the game, that hasn't converted to It begs the question: Wh re the has hired investment bankers Moag investors strong ticket sales. heck are all those little girls? Company to seek out new '- former CBS Sports President Neil negotiate n_ ew1V deals. The WUSA had every reason to Pilson to hope it would be different Unlike

99 American men, the women were the · clearer picture of what the future will best in the world in soccer, and they hold, and we feel good about things." were tapping into the market of young ·. The outlook is not all doom-and- girls who were mostly ignored by · gloom. sports franchises. According to the league, there are "Women haven't had that (atten- as many as 18 prospective investors tion) in the past," said Spirit and U.S. being considered for ownership, and team captain Julie Foudy. "It just Soccer America reported recently an wasn't part of our upbringing; guys intriguing range: from a construction went to sporting events and supported magnate in Philadelphia to the Span- ish soccer power FC Barcelona. teams. Now we're saying to these kids, Soccer America also reported that you_ should be this is something Cary, N.C.-based software company as player to get better. I watching a SAS likely will take over the Carolina it happen." think will franchise, while four investors are be- done admirably well The WUSA has considered in New York. · on the field. By signing the top players ing Morgan has expressed the desire to teams around the world, from national expand intothe Midwest and West, it has produced mostly attractive, at- and she covets the new, made-for-soc- The parity is so good tacking soccer. cer Home Depot Center in Carson, that the winner of today's Founders where the Women's World Cup final Cup will be the third different champi- will be staged in October. on, while last year's winner, Carolina, While she declined to identify spe- didn't even make the playoffs. cific investors, Morgan said, "These Off the field, the players have guys are showing us they believe in reached out to their communities. In our product for a variety of reasons. San Diego, they've made hundreds of They believe in these women and love personal appearances in three years what they represent That's pretty ex- and they patiently sign autographs at citing for us. It makes us feel like this was a good idea at the time (in '99) and a good idea now." the first-row railing at USO, long after Diego, Presher won- ·, the games are over. Here in San the fuss is about The "This league has athletes who relate ders what all is coming off its most successful to and interact with the kids," said Spirit on the field and at the gate, and Spirit general manager Dave Presher. · season partnership has athletes who are doing this for the team has a rock-solid "It . more than just sport. They're not do- with its owner, Cox Communications said. "It's ing it for the paycheck; they're doing it "I'm optimistic," Presher unsettling when players take pay cuts, to be pioneers." and you change your league model Unfortunately for the WUSA, its franchises are unsettled. It's hu- first championship game was played and man nature to be unsettled. 17 days before the terrorist attacks of "But I do believe that with the up- Sept 11, 2001, and it has struggled in coming World Cup and Olympics, this the tough economy ever since. The has traction. At the end of the league didn't help itself by spending so league wildly in the first year that it blew day, we're going to move forward. It's unrealistic to put a rubber stamp through its initial $40 million, which just on it and say everything is fine." was supposed to last five years. "We spent money like. it grew on trees," Foudy said. ·

Since theri, the WUSA has slashed spending at all levels to get its finances under control, and the average player now earns $37,000 per season. "We're still learning a lot," Morgan said, "and getting a lot smarter about what it takes to make the teams a long-term success. There's a much

100 Loweringthe goal Duringthe 2003 regular season, attendance In the WUSA was down 4.2 percent compared to last year. WUSA attendance compared against last year's final average: 2003 zooz TEAM DATES TOTAL AVG. TOTAL AVG. % +/- 10 102,264 9,297 +6a 6,958 67,842 6,784 +2.6% 6,324 75,685 6,880 ·8.1% 11 63,109 5,196 58,392 5,839 -11.0% 11 61,983 S.011 58,832 5,883 -14.8% SanJoseCyberRays 10 67,912 5,667 78,836 7,167 ·20.9% 11 76.244 6.332 81,202 8.120 -22.0% 4,249 61,324 5,575 ·23.8% 6,667 584,377 6,957 -4.2% Source: Sports Business Daily

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