Kids - Vanguard University
Transcription
Kids - Vanguard University
Vanguard University of Southern California vanguard winter 2008 Building Kids’ Character Tony Salerno ’66, pioneering producer of family entertainment From the White House to VU 5 Learning to Serve 7 Homecoming 2007 18 truth ~ virtue ~ service Revival in the Bronx 20 www.vanguard.edu truth ~ virtue ~ service 5 7 18 26 20 mission statement As a Christian comprehensive university,“the purpose of Vanguard University is to pursue knowledge, cultivate character, deepen faith, and equip each student for a life of leadership and service.” vanguard magazine winter 2008 In This Issue Contents Volume 8 number 3 • winter 2008 features Character Builder............................................................. 2 Tony Salerno ’66 has created some of the most popular character-building entertainment for families, from the million-selling Music Machine and Agapeland series, to Bibleman and the ABC’s of Success. Musical Excellence........................................................... 5 From the White House to the Hollywood Bowl, VU professor of music Ken Foerch has found continued success playing and teaching music. Learning to Serve............................................................. 7 Student Dominica Scibetta came to VU with filmmaking in mind, but found her passion was actually to help the poor. Homecoming 2007......................................................... 18 Revival in the Bronx........................................................ 20 Fernando Cabrera ’86 is pastor of one of the few large churches in New York City. With a large new facility and a relational approach to ministry, he and his congregation are revolutionizing their borough. departments From the President........................................................... 1 Class Notes...................................................................... 9 Windows......................................................................... 15 Advancing Vision 2010................................................... 16 A Vine of His Own Planting............................................ 23 On Campus.................................................................... 24 Sports............................................................................. 26 Calendar......................................................................... 28 Postcards....................................................................... 29 University Governance Chair, Board of Trustees T. Ray Rachels University Administration President Murray Dempster Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs Carol Taylor Vice President for Business and Finance Bob Allison Vice President for Enrollment Management Jessica Mireles Vice President for Student Affairs Ann Hamilton Vice President for University Advancement Rick Hardy Editor Joel Kilpatrick Art Director Chauncey D. Bayes Director of Marketing and Communications Patti Ammerman A t Vanguard we train our students to have an extraordinary impact wherever they serve. This issue of vanguard magazine showcases a few of the alums, faculty and VU students who are doing just that, serving others with excellence in fields from music, to books, to ministry. Our cover story is on Tony Salerno ’66 who produced the genredefining Music Machine series and created Bibleman and many other well-known albums and characters. His albums have sold millions of copies, but best of all, Tony and wife Kathy ’66 aim to build kids’ character and enrich families with their creativity. You’ll enjoy reading about their extraordinary career. VU professor Ken Foerch came to Vanguard after spending eight years at the White House playing saxophone in the U.S. Marine Band. Foerch’s music skills have opened doors to play at the Hollywood Bowl with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, and in recording sessions at Capitol Records. Vanguard is privileged to have Ken here training our music students and taking them to even higher levels of professionalism and musicianship. Fernando Cabrera ’86 helped turn around a neighborhood in the Bronx by starting a church there and growing it to hundreds of people. The people in the church are focused outward on having genuine relationships with the people in their community, and the result is nothing short of a revolution in hearts and minds. Student Dominica Scibetta’s path is probably familiar to other VU students and alums: she came here thinking she wanted to go into one line of work — filmmaking — but discovered that her own skills and desires were actually leading her in another direction: serving the poor and outcast. Her story inspires all of us to remember that God’s heart is with the poor, and that when we comfort and supply them we are doing his work. Class Notes, alumni news and much more round out this issue. Take a moment to enjoy reading about what other members of the Vanguard community are doing, and let’s keep reaching for the extraordinary. Director of Alumni Relations Heather Clements Vanguard University of Southern California, in compliance with laws and regulations, does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, gender, age, disability, national origin, or status as a veteran in any of its policies, practices, or procedures. vanguard magazine is a free publication published quarterly by Vanguard University of Southern California. All contents copyrighted, 2008, Vanguard University of Southern California. Bulk rate postage paid at Santa Ana, CA. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: VUSC Alumni Relations Office, 55 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. vanguard magazine winter 2008 1 Alumni Profile Building Kids’ T Characte ony Salerno ’66 has influenced generations of kids and families through his dazzlingly creative music, videos and book projects, which include Music Machine and Bibleman. Albums he produced have sold millions of copies, earned multiple Grammy nominations and re-defined kids Christian entertainment. Today, Salerno continues to create projects that, with the same sparkling creativity, teach kids to have good character. “Part of my goal in life is to see revival come to our country,” says 2 vanguard magazine winter 2008 Salerno. “The things we’re doing are tools to get people to the Lord.” Born to Italian immigrants, Salerno spent much of his childhood at church, sometimes sleeping under the piano during all-night prayer meetings. He well remembers watching young people pray into the wee hours of the morning. “I never forgot the dynamic youth group that impressed me as a kid to serve God,” he says. He soon had a chance to build his own youth group when his family moved to Oregon to help establish a church. The 15-year-old Salerno Alumni Profile “I tried to do things that were meaningful, that had purpose. If we want revival, first we have to break up the hardened ground. The way we’re doing that is going in [to schools] and talking about character.” er grew the youth group from three to 65 kids in less than a year, before moving back to southern California. president, and Salerno won two years in a row. He and soon-to-bewife Kathy Vawter ’66 ministered together on evangelistic teams. At age 20, Salerno devoted his life to the ministry. During a visit to Israel he knelt in what was said to be Jesus’ tomb and “had this tremendous experience with God,” he says. Realizing the sacrifice Jesus had made for him, Salerno committed himself to God’s work. After graduating, Tony turned down offers from large churches, accepting instead a youth pastor position at a church with a youth group of only four. Within a few years the youth group became the largest in the Assemblies of God in southern California, with 300 kids and a 150-voice youth choir which Tony directed. He returned home and enrolled at Vanguard. It was “the happiest time in my life up to that time. I loved being there,” he says. He worked his way through school, played sports and studied hard. Though he was shy, a friend convinced him to run for student body “Our kids really loved God,” he says. “We knew that if they were touched once by Jesus, there’s nothing they would want that would be better than that.” Tony Salerno, continued on page 4 vanguard magazine winter 2008 3 Alumni Profile Salerno, continued from page 3 Tony Salerno, continued from page 3 The Jesus movement was just beginning, and Tony began ministering to street youths who were strung out on drugs. He opened a coffee house in a little building in the church parking lot and dozens of street kids were saved. Local Christian artists like Love Song and Andrae Crouch came to perform. In 1972, Salerno founded Agape Force and modeled it after the Salvation Army, to train young believers for ministry and service. Agape Force grew in size and scope along with the Jesus movement and soon moved to Tyler, Texas, where hundreds of people lived and trained on its campus. Salerno continued to use music and other media to reach young people, and soon he felt inspired to put together an album and stage production called Music Machine. earlier pop hit with “Eve of Destruction” and had been influenced by Tony’s ministry. Bullfrogs and Butterflies sold Calli Dye ’05 (left, with mic) more than 900,000 copies. at an ABCs of Character public school assembly. Kathy The albums were nominated and Tony Salerno (above). for eight Grammys and won four Dove awards and two Wonder, makers of the hugely successful Billboard Music awards. Teddy Ruxpin talking bear. Salerno created Salerno went on to make two dozen albums a series of toys, books and recordings for the with Sparrow, including Nathaniel the company, and also a children’s cartoon, Little Grublet and Sir Oliver’s Song. His work Clowns of Happytown, which aired on ABC redefined kids Christian music. for a season. In those years he also worked “My talent is to come with the idea,” Salerno with Nest Entertainment. says. “I’d have other people write the songs. “I was sitting there when the Lord dropped in my heart the whole Music Machine idea,” he says. “God gave me the title and told me how to do it.” It was a team effort. One thing I wanted was quality. Everything God does is excellent. We hired all live musicians — the best of the best. I think God helped us to write melodies. We didn’t treat it as a kids album where you talk down to the kids. We made it for everyone because there’s a kid in all of us.” Christian record labels initially passed on the idea, and some laughed when Salerno said he believed it would sell a million copies. Eventually, fledgling Sparrow Records put out Music Machine on its Birdwing label, and the album went on to sell more than 1 million copies worldwide. Salerno’s second album with Sparrow, Bullfrogs and Butterflies, featured songs and narration by former folk singer Barry McGuire, who had scored an Salerno had also put together a group called Silverwind whose albums sold widely in the Christian market. But as the Jesus movement wound down in the early ’80s, the Salernos realized they were spread too thin with the 26 ministries at their training center in Texas. They decided to pare back to their core calling: creating media that would influence kids for Christ. Soon they were invited to work with Worlds of In the mid-1990s, Salerno created a character called Bibleman, hiring former Eight is Enough star Willie Aames to play the lead role in the video series. A young girl named Calli Dye ’05, now a VU alum, acted in the first Bibleman videos. “The idea was that the word of God transforms your life, and the hero of the series was the word of God,” Salerno says. “I meet kids all the time who just love Bibleman.” Bibleman remains one of the top Christian kids properties, with a live touring show, video series, books and action figures. In the 1990s, Salerno also created a book and CD called Character Classics which put characterbuilding lyrics to classical music. It won a Tony Salerno, continued on page 17 4 vanguard magazine winter 2008 Faculty Profile The Sound of F rom the White House to the Hollywood Bowl to Capitol Records Studio “A”, VU professor Ken Foerch has had many opportunities to use his saxophone talents to entertain and inspire. At Vanguard, he is helping student musicians reach higher levels of excellence. Excellence “At Vanguard we’re serious about making good music and teaching students about the opportunities, goals and ideas of what to do with their music once they graduate,” he says. “We expose students to the excellence of the arts.” Foerch knows what it takes to succeed at a high level. This summer he played several concerts, which included saxophone solos, with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl. He also spent eight years as a member of the U.S. Marine Band, in which he played “Hail to the Chief ” every time the President made a public appearance, and provided music and anthems for state dinners, funerals and more. Foerch took up the sax in sixth grade. The school district where he lived in Michigan had a strong band program, and his father enrolled him in private lessons. “I had the drive to be good at it,” Foerch says. “I saw that if you worked at it, you got solos. The teacher saw I had drive. When you work at something and get moved up, that’s the reward. ... I knew Ken Foerch, continued on page 6 vanguard magazine winter 2008 5 Faculty Profile Foerch has played concerts with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl. He also spent eight years as a member of the U.S. Marine Band, in which he played “Hail to the Chief” every time the President made a public appearance. Ken Foerch, continued from page 5 this was what God wanted me to do.” By junior high he had decided to make music for a living. He participated in statewide music festivals and won a spot on the state of Michigan’s honor band. At Michigan State University he studied music under internationally renowned faculty. During a summer job playing at Disneyland in the All American College Band in 1986, he fell in love with California. He also traveled to Japan to play in a featured group at the World Saxophone Congress. After receiving his master of music degree at Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, he started his doctoral program at the University of Southern California. Then one day a professor handed him a flyer advertising auditions for the U.S. Marine Band which was conducting a national search. Foerch followed through and participated in a rigorous tryout with 45 other musicians, which involved difficult sight reading. The purpose of the Marine Band is to play for White House events, promote public art and support Marine recruitment. It has a long history going back to famous bandleader John Philip Sousa. Foerch got the job and for the next eight 6 vanguard magazine winter 2008 years, under two presidents, played “Hail to the Chief ” thousands of times, along with anthems from dozens of other countries to announce the entrance of foreign dignitaries. “The hardest part of the job was the ceremonial aspect,” he says. “We did a lot of funerals at Arlington and full dignitary honors at the Pentagon and White House. You had to stand at attention, play military honors and various musical pieces, national anthems of foreign countries. The nice thing was we didn’t have to go through boot camp. You get hired directly as a military musician.” During his tenure there, the Marine Band became the first ensemble to be inducted into the Classical Music Hall of Fame in Cincinnati, Ohio. They performed for the induction ceremony. “That was a major highlight,” Foerch says. Foerch then left D.C. to finish his doctorate in music at USC. He also began teaching privately and in local colleges, and played concerts with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the Los Angeles Master Chorale and a rhythm and blues band to which he still belongs. He finished his degree in 2003 and came to VU in 2004. “I heard about Vanguard through a friend I’d met at church gigs and who was a member of a Christian big band we played in,” he says. “I was newly married and had just finished my doctorate, so I thought this would be a wonderful opportunity.” As assistant professor of music Foerch teaches a variety of classes, from jazz band to basic musicianship and aural theory. His bands from VU perform in many community events and church services. He is also taking the groups to more festivals and competitions. Recently, two VU students earned soloist awards at the Reno Jazz Festival. “I want students to look at it competitively and get to hear other good groups,” Foerch says. In April, VU’s jazz ensemble will travel by invitation to a clinic and concert in New York City where they will receive daily coaching with some of the world’s top jazz artists. The event will culminate with a concert featuring VU’s jazz ensemble and three other bands. “To be one of four bands out of countless great jazz programs chosen for this is tremendous for us,” Foerch says. Back in southern California, Foerch has begun to work with filmmakers, and to play sessions at major record labels. He also directs the music for VU’s musicals, and in the spring will direct the music for Thoroughly Modern Millie with an all-VU student orchestra. “It’s been a thrilling fall semester and summer, with all the opportunities,” he says. Student Profile Scibetta grew up in Long Island, New York, where she was adopted from Korea into a Christian family. She wanted to study film, so after two years at Stony Brook University she decided to venture west. A family friend recommended Vanguard, so Scibetta visited, loved the area and enrolled. Touching the Outcast D ominica Scibetta always felt drawn to help the less fortunate, but didn’t know exactly how. When she came to Vanguard her passion for social action flourished. Today she leads teams of students to Skid Row in Los Angeles, and to places like Seattle to help the homeless. “Social action is all about realizing that people are more alike than we are different,” Scibetta says. “We all deserve dignity. We all want to be loved and noticed. It should be innate in everybody’s lifestyle to offer that same courtesy to other people.” At Vanguard, Scibetta also discovered a depth of relationships with peers and mentors that helped her grow as a person and enriched her ability to reach out to others. “I was taken aback by how nice people were,” she says. “I hadn’t seen that in New York, and especially not at the larger university I’d gone to. People at Vanguard cared that I was there. That was very weird for me to experience. I remember going into a class for the first time and the professor writing his cell phone number on the board and saying, ‘If you have question, call anytime except for after ten.’ I was like, ‘He’s giving us his number?’ That became an on-going theme. The faculty really are here for us. They want to mentor you.” She also enjoyed how faith was such a central part of campus life. “I wasn’t used to people having chapel to go to, or praying as a way of life,” she says. “Even now I’m still so touched. This is a special place. The community is close for the right reasons.” Though she came in as a film major, she soon took a greater interest in social work. As a child, she and her parents had always volunteered at local charities. Now she went with teams of students to help homeless people in Los Angeles and Costa Mesa. A trip to Seattle to conduct “night strikes” — delivering food, blankets and more to people living on the streets — profoundly affected her. “I knew I always felt sad and empathic for people, but I didn’t know what to do,” she says. “Everything I had a passion for before coming to Vanguard exploded once I was here. The people here work to make sure the passion you have can be increased and used toward something. There are things you can plug yourself into that will take that little seed and make it bigger than you ever thought.” She added a sociology minor and used her communication skills to publicize service opportunities for students through the Outreach Dominica Scibetta, continued on page 8 vanguard magazine winter 2008 7 Student Profile Dominica Scibetta, continued from page 7 Ministries office. She felt personally challenged at a retreat for student body leaders when the leader asked them all to commit to serve God every day in their personal lives and in their posts. Scibetta realized then that “the jobs you take at VU aren’t just jobs, and Vanguard is more than an academic institution.” Her approach to homeless ministry is more than just delivering goods or sharing the gospel. Often it means simply having conversations with people who live on the streets. “Social action to me is about relationships,” she says. “Building a friendship with someone can speak more loudly than handing them a Bible. That’s why I go up there. Everyone needs a friend. I might as well be that person.” In her present position as intern and publicity director of inner city ministries with Vanguard’s Outreach Ministries office, she creates opportunities for other students to serve the less fortunate, by planning trips, transportation and other practical matters. “I work really hard to make sure I live intentionally,” she says. “I feel that’s my job to make venues for other students to do the same.” She is now starting an AIDS awareness campaign and leading another team to Seattle to serve the homeless. “I’m learning about how to lead people and to cast the vision and structure the vision so it comes to fruition,” she says. “Coming to VU has taught me so much about relationships, and about who God is. Much of that learning has come outside the classroom. I have people surrounding me who help me throughout life.” Scibetta graduates in May. One life-affirming experience leads to another. “Vanguard University set the direction for our lives and prepared us for our careers. Because we believe in VU’s ability to transform lives through its mission and values, we want to be a part of helping other students benefit from the same experience. Remembering VU in our will is the perfect opportunity for us to demonstrate our appreciation and help other students prepare for their future.” John Campbell ’96 Rina (Taniguchi) Campbell ’00 If VU has impacted you in a meaningful way, consider how your legacy can impact others. To learn more about our Wills and Bequest Program and other giving opportunities, contact the Office of Planned Giving at 714-556-3610 ext. 4030. Vanguard. Illuminating. Vanguard University of Southern California 55 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, California 92626, 714 556-3610 vanguard.edu 8 vanguard magazine winter 2008 Class Notes Let us know what’s going on with you! Email Heather Clements, director of alumni relations, at hclements@vanguard.edu, visit the Vanguard Connection at www.vanguard.edu/alumni or call 714-966-5494. ’40s Joe Wright ’49 is retired from twenty-three years as senior pastor of Calvary Temple church in Modesto. There he established Calvary Temple Christian School, founded a three-year Bible institute and led five major building programs, including the current 2,500-seat sanctuary. Wright was director of men’s ministry for the Northern California and Nevada District of the Assemblies of God. He now works with God’s Door Keepers, a ministry that provides prison chaplains with an evangelistic book called New Life in Christ. ’50s Flora (Snow ’53) and Ollen Hardin ’66 met at SCBC and have been married fiftythree years. Both taught Sunday school for thirty years and were teachers in several school systems until their recent retirement. They have two sons and four grandchildren and live in Hemet. Ron Hittenberger ’57 and wife Carolyn are Assemblies of God missionaries and part of the roving faculty of the Caribbean School of Theology. They teach national ministry leaders in that region. Bob Jones ’52 leads Missionary Task Force, a ministry that builds homes and churches in South America and recently completed the construction of an orphanage in Mexico. While living in Torrance, he built a church and high school, designed churches for several congregations, and was a pastor. He now lives in Auburn with wife Lolita. Paul Raymond ’56 of Shasta was recognized by the Northern California and Nevada District of the Assemblies of God for fifty years of ministry in the pulpit and to his community. National Latino leader named VU Alumnus of the Year Jesse Miranda ’66 was chosen as the 2007 Alumnus of the Year by the Vanguard University Alumni Association. “To receive this award was a big surprise,” says Miranda. “Vanguard University is the home where my life began to take shape and where I hope to leave a lasting contribution. It is indeed an honor.” Miranda has ministered to the church, in academics and to the community for fifty years. He is renowned for his leadership in Latino civic engagement and his work in social ethics, racial reconciliation and theological education. His wife Susan is his longtime partner in ministry. After serving as a pastor, Miranda became an instructor and later interim president at Latin American Bible Institute. He spent ten years as the district superintendent for the Pacific Latin American District Council before becoming associate dean of Urban and Ethnic Affairs of the Haggard School of Theology at Azusa Pacific University. Miranda returned to Vanguard in 2000 to launch and direct the Center for Urban Studies and Ethnic Leadership, now known as the Jesse Miranda Center for Hispanic Leadership, and to serve as the Distinguished Professor of Urban and Hispanic Leadership. He was also president of AMEN, a national association of Hispanic evangelicals, and co-researcher in a Pew-sponsored study of the role of Hispanic churches in American public life. While at Vanguard, Miranda’s influence was recognized by President George Bush, who appointed him to the advisory committee of the Presidential Initiative on Race Reconciliation and brought him to the White House on various occasions as an advisor on Hispanic issues and concerns. Miranda has higher degrees from Talbot Theological Seminary, California State University at Fullerton, and a doctoral degree from Fuller Seminary. He also did doctoral work in social ethics at USC. ’60s William Black ’68 is a retired pastor who ministers with the senior men’s group at Covina Assemblies of God. He lives in Glendora. Timothy Brown ’68 earned an MA in education/biology from Pacific Union College, an administrative credential from Portland State University and a counseling credential from University of Redlands. He is a guidance counselor at Canyon Springs High School in Moreno Valley. Timothy and wife Linda have been married thirty years and have four grown children: Tim II, Kristen, Ron and Chris. They live in Banning. Neal ’60 and Yvonne (Hill) Pirolo ’60 live in San Diego and have thirteen grandchildren, five greatgrandchildren and four grown children: Kevin, Greg, Byron and Tamara. Neal was a public school teacher in Las Vegas and Torrance and earned an MA in Class Notes, continued on page 10 vanguard magazine winter 2008 9 Class Notes ‘Rising star’ attorney named VU Young Alumnus of the Year Darren Cottriel ’91 was named the 2007 Young Alumnus of the Year by the Vanguard University Alumni Association. Cottriel is an accomplished attorney with Jones Day in Irvine. Los Angeles Magazine and Law & Politics called him a “Rising Star” for business litigation in Southern California in 2004, 2005 and 2006. Cottriel’s practice focuses on business litigation and prelitigation disputes for private and public companies and financial institutions. He has tried many cases in federal and state courts. Before joining Jones Day he was a managing partner of the Orange County office of Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP and chair of that firm’s Orange County litigation practice. the Young Alumnus of the Year award,” Cottriel says. “Many Vanguard alums in business, ministry, medicine, law, education, family and other life pursuits deserve this same recognition. All of us owe a lot to Vanguard for equipping us to accomplish our life pursuits. I personally owe a lot to Vanguard — not only did I receive a great education that prepared me for the academic rigors of law school and my legal career, but I also met my wife Kimberly (Petersen ’93) there. Vanguard continues to be a big part of our lives.” Cottriel is a member of the Orange County Bar Association and serves on the business and finance committee of the Vanguard University board of trustees. “There are a lot of exciting things happening at Vanguard right now, and the next several years will bring new campus facilities and significant growth of the student body,” he says. “It is a real privilege for me to give back to Vanguard, to be involved in these developments and to see how Vanguard will continue to impact the lives of students for generations to come.” “It is a real honor to be recognized with Class Notes, continued from page 9 educational administration from Pepperdine University. He was the principal of Westminster Christian School before serving in the Wycliffe Center in Peru. Neal established Maranatha Christian Academy for Chuck Smith at Calvary Chapel, then was principal and superintendent of schools for Wycliffe in Cuiaba, Brazil. The Pirolos returned to San Diego to direct a ministry school focused on cross-cultural outreach. Neal has written four books including Serving as Senders, The Reentry Team and I Think God Wants Me to be a Missionary. The Pirolos’ schedule for 2008 includes ministry in Asia, Spain and Eastern Europe. Learn more at www.eri.org. 10 vanguard magazine winter 2008 ’70s Cary Cook ’77 lives in Tustin and selfpublished the book Abram that can be found at www.sanityquestpublishing.com. Jeff Hamilton ’76 lives in Escondido and has two sons. He’s involved in the men’s and prayer ministries at his church and has served for eight years at Camp Ellendale, a grade 4-12 camp for foster kids. James Higgins ’73 founded the The Higgy Foundation, a mentoring organization that promotes youth, family and community development in Fillmore, Moorpark, Santa Clarita and Santa Paula. More than 15,000 public school students are involved and the programs have been nationally recognized. Lynell (Marshall 1974-1976) and Victor Hoffer ’76 live in Mount Angel, Ore. Victor was recently awarded a community service medal by the Oregon Department of Human Services, Emergency Medical Services and Trauma Systems for his contributions to the public as a career emergency medical technician (EMT) and for his efforts to enhance Oregon’s laws protecting the elderly and disabled. Victor has worked for Metro West Ambulance since 1982 and is now employed as a senior paramedic and field training officer. He is a member of attorney general Hardy Myers’ Elder Abuse Task Force and has received other community service awards for his work. Steven McCredie ’76 is an executive partner with Procurement Services Associates, a job placement and consulting firm. He has twentyfive years of advanced experience in purchasing and supply chain management. Steven is a member of Trinity Life Center in Sacramento. He and wife Sandra are proud parents of Rebecca Siobhan, 1. Linda (Bailey) Morrow ’72 was in the Army for two years, then served as a substitute teacher. Today she works for Carlsbad Medical Center and is a proud mother to two grown children, Kimberly and Japheth. Linda has five grandchildren. David Seidman ’77 is a middle school principal for Santa Fe Christian Schools. He and wife Nina are proud parents of two children and live in Encinitas. Judy (Benson ’73) Whittinghill received another BA in art history from UCI in 1977. She and husband Gerge, an aerospace engineer at Whittinghill Aerospace LLC, have been married twenty-nine years. They have two grown children, Ian and Catherine. ’80s Jacob Abshire ’81 is a high school business teacher at Alexandria-Monro High School in Indiana. Ronald Adcock ’82 and wife Leslie celebrate twenty years of marriage and have three children, Philip, 19, Catherine, 10, and Class Notes April, 7. Leslie is a teacher and Ronald is the owner of Travel of Orange (www. traveloforange.com). They are also proud of their nieces Charlene ’00 and Christine, daughter of the late Karen (Adcock ’76) Floyd. Dan Alexander ’86 recently relocated to Jacksonville, Fla., after living seventeen years in Virginia. Jeanette Beland ’89 is a former social worker and child advocate with twentytwo years of experience in child and family relations. She is transitioning into full-time ministry and is pursuing an MDiv at Fuller Theological Seminary. She lives in San Ramon. Robert and Lorri (Tipton) Bradford ’89 have been married eighteen years. They live in Santa Fe, N.M., with their three children, RJ, 17, Jessica, 12, and Mariah, 11. They recently attended Pre-VU with their son and were excited to reconnect with their former professor Jerry Camery-Hoggatt ’75. Janice (Wilson) Duhan ’84 has spent seventeen years in production and art direction for an Orange County news station. She lives in Anaheim with husband Eddy. Roxanne (Anguiano ’85) and Walter Eilers ’82 pioneered a church and are proud parents of son Joseph, 14. Roxanne has written two Bible studies and Walter is a manager at Marriot. The Eilers live in Indio. Tamara (Carter) Guiso ’87 and husband Brad, a business analyst, have been married eighteen years. Tammy is a stayat-home mom to their two children Elliott, 14, and Lauren, 11. The Guisos live in Keller, Texas. Larry and Diane (Miller) Howard ’86 have been married twenty-one years and have two daughters, Leslie, 9, and Damaris, 6. They live in Lancaster where Larry is a junior high and high school teacher, and Diane is a daycare staff worker. Jonathan Kudla ’85 and wife Jill live in Trabuco Canyon with their three sons, Jack, 11, Joe, 10, and Josh, 6. Jonathan and Annette (Rzepa) Reed ’85 live in Claremont. Jonathan is an Saddleback youth pastor receives VU Career Achievement Award Doug Fields ’84 received the 2007 Career Achievement Award from the Vanguard University Alumni Association. Fields is one of the most influential youth pastors in America. He has served as youth pastor at Saddleback Church since 1992, and hosts a weekly podcast with 50,000 listeners. Before coming to Saddleback he served at South Coast Community Church (now Mariners Church) for eleven years. Fields is also a global youth ministry leader through his books, speaking and youth ministry resources. His forty books have sold far more copies than books by any other youth ministry author. Seven of his books have been nominated for the prestigious Gold Medallion Book Award, which he has won twice. Achievement Award,” says Fields. “I felt like it should have been the other way around — I should have been awarding VU for preparing me to speak, write and minister. I count it one of the great privileges of my life to have had such a strong, personalized and empowered education at Vanguard.” Fields also received his MDiv from Fuller Theological Seminary in 1986. Doug and Cathy, his wife of 23 years, have three teenage children. “It was a total honor to receive the Career archeologist who has done research on Jesus and Paul, and has been featured on the History Channel. Sue (Williams) Haber ’84 and husband Rudy have been married ten years and live in Cathedral City. Sue received her RN license in 1994. Margot (Bobgan ’85) and David Woodworth ’85, ’93 MA are returning to Colombia to work with missions and missionary training programs. They will be a part of the annual School of Missions and Colombian Assemblies of God General Council. They have enjoyed their rest and fellowship this past year. Their children are Davis, Marcus and Lucas. ’90s Steven Buehler ’96 lives in Lakeland, Fla., and is a volunteer leader with the Celebrate Recovery ministry at Bell Shoals Baptist Church in Brandon. He is working as a freelance multimedia presentation designer. He and wife Cherissa have been married nine years and have one son, Samuel, 3. Susan (Bailey) Busch ’96 has been married to husband David for eight years. David is an assistant pastor at Church of the Open Door and is attending Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary. Susan worked at the St. Vincent School for Boys residential treatment center for nine years before becoming a stay-atClass Notes, continued on page 12 vanguard magazine winter 2008 11 Class Notes International author, missionary receives VU Distinguished Service Award pray. She makes her home in Santa Ana. William and Libby O’Linger ’90 have been married twenty-five years. They homeschool their three children, Erin, 17, Caitlin, 13, and Liam, 5. They also mentor women who are going through drug and alcohol rehabilitation. The O’Linger family lives in Coeur D’Alene, Idaho. Janice (Cunningham ’63) Rogers received the 2007 Distinguished Service Award from the Vanguard University Alumni Association. While still in college, Rogers began working with her brother, Loren, who had recently founded Youth With A Mission (YWAM). Janice and husband Jimmy soon went into full-time service with YWAM, ministering in 64 countries during 41 years of missionary service. They started YWAM centers in New Zealand, Australia, Denmark, Korea, and Texas. During those years YWAM grew to become one of the largest missionary organizations in the world with 20,000 fulltime staff from 126 countries. Janice also pioneered media and publishing ministries within YWAM, and has trained writers from many countries. She coauthored Loren’s first book, Is That Really You, God? which has been translated into 100 languages, with more than 2 million copies in print. Her latest book, co-authored with Loren, is The Book That ’00s Transforms Nations: The Power of the Bible to Change Any Country. “Vanguard has an unusually nurturing environment,” she said in her acceptance remarks. “I think that’s why so many leaders and exceptional people in various careers and walks of life have come out of this school. I can’t imagine my life without the foundation of faith and learning I received here. I received a sense of the high calling from faculty, administrators, and my fellow students. I’m deeply grateful for my years at SCC.” Janice and Jimmy have three children and six grandchildren. Class Notes, continued from page 11 home mom to daughters Moriah Elizabeth, 3, and Abigail Karyss-Renee, 1. The Busch family lives in Petaluma. Marlyn (Lamsen) De Mesa ’93 and husband Anthony live in Chula Vista. Marlyn is a financial aid officer at Point Loma Nazarene University. Anna Ferraro ’99 recently moved to the Columbus, Ga., area. She is a budget analyst at the Army’s Infantry School at Fort Benning. Claudia (Dean) Gleason ’99 and husband Eric have been married for three years. They live in Glendale. 12 vanguard magazine winter 2008 Martin Lippens ’98 played and coached professional soccer with the Orange County Waves for several years before becoming more involved with coaching youth soccer. He established the men’s soccer program at Santiago Canyon College and currently coaches a girls under-16 soccer team with the SoCal Blues in San Juan Capistrano. He and wife Elizabeth work and live at their home in Ladera Ranch where they opened Elizabeth’s hair salon, Textures Hair Studio. Martin operates a real estate business. Sheryl McGrew ’99 leads a Character Club at Mariners Church that equips children to Christin Anaya ’06 lives in Santa Maria and directs the children’s ministry at the Village Chapel in Vandenberg Village. David Blackman ’03, ’06 MA is the vice president for First American Title Insurance Company in Santa Ana where he manages the corporate software development group. He is pursuing a PhD in organization and management information at Capella University. He and wife Mindy have been married twenty years and have three children. They live in Moreno Valley. More information on Dave’s latest adventures can be found at http://www. daveblackman.com. Veronica Castaneda ’06 is a student at Fuller Theological Seminary pursuing an MDiv and specializing in Hispanic church studies. She lives in Alhambra. Laura (Deeter ’00) and Anthony Cota ’07 live in Tulare with their three daughters, Lily, 5, Evie, 3, and Megan, 1. Tony is a manager at Best Western Tulare and Laura is a stay-athome mom and homeschool teacher to their oldest daughter. They attend Visalia First Assembly where they volunteer in various ministries. Jesse Gallegos ’06 is a music teacher and worship leader at an Assemblies of God church. He has worked in juvenile hall and makes his home in Rubidoux. Brenda (Dreier) Gesell ’02 MS is on the faculty at Vanguard. She and husband Jeff, an attorney, have been married three years and live in Huntington Beach with their dog Dakota. Class Notes Kanani Grover ’05 just bought and moved into her brand new home in Sahuarita, Ariz. She is a group home leader at The Centers for Habilitation that assists adults with developmental disabilities. Rob Josefsson ’03 completed nearly eight years of schooling at VU and recently opened his own chiropractic office. He lives in Torrance. Amy (Bennett ’04) and Brian Lay ’04 live in Irvine. Amy works in the office of the registrar at Vanguard while Brian is a research biologist at Allergan. Nick Smith ’05, ’07 MA and Jessica Pasquale ’07 will be married May 24, 2008. Jessica is pursuing her teaching credential at VU. Nick is a youth pastor at Life Church in Whittier and ministers to urban teens. Nick and Jessica introduced these youth to youth conventions, camps, service projects and participation in the National Fine Arts Festival, where they advanced from state to national competition. Nolan Steputis ’06 is the associate athletic director at VU. He lives in Costa Mesa, attends Shorelife Church in Huntington Beach, and loves welcoming alumni back to campus at every home game. Jeremiah Taylor ’00 received an MBA from Seattle University and is a regional sales director at Cogent Desing (www. iwanttops.com), a small software company that sells practice management software to orthodontists. He and wife Kelly, an orthodontist, have been married four years and live in Carlsbad. Sarah (Christensen ’02) and Thomas Taylor ’03 live in Costa Mesa. Thomas recently received his MBA in finance from Pepperdine University. Michael Teague ’06 works in Newport Beach with animal control and is a selfemployed distributor of Xango, a health juice product and network marketing business (www.xango.com). He lives in Huntington Beach and has a son, 20. Carlee Trautman ’07 is pursuing a credential to be an Assemblies of God minister and will begin the application process to be a missionary in training and work with Youth Alive. She makes her home in Portland, Ore. Future Alumni Karissa (LeFavre ’05) and Micah Adams ’07 welcomed their son Micah Elijah on September 26, 2007. Karissa is a teacher. Micah works at His Life Woodworks. They started a youth-led worship team at The Harbor church in Lomita. The Adams live in Torrance. Jennifer (Cannon ’00) and Peter Johnston ’97 added a third son to their family on June 15, 2007. He joins big brothers Mark, 15, and Alex, 4. Jennifer is the owner of Mammoth Front Desk, a vacation rental business that manages, markets and rents properties in Mammoth Lakes (www.mammothfrontdesk. com). Peter is the pastor of Mammoth Lighthouse Church. Stephanie (Jacobson ’03) and Jared Ekizian ’04 are proud parents to Gavin Thomas, born August 24, 2007, and Isabella Grace, 3. The Ekizians live in Kingsburg where Stephanie teaches at Sierra Charter School. Ann-Marie (Jones) Soltwedel ’95, and her husband welcomed their first child, Caleb Robert, on July 5, 2007. They live in Quartz Hill. Elizabeth (Whitlow) Pickens ’03 and husband Mark have been married two years. Elizabeth recently graduated from the University of Oklahoma Law School and took the bar exam this summer. They are expecting their first child in January 2008. Class Notes, continued on page 14 vanguard magazine winter 2008 13 Class Notes Class Notes, continued from page 13 Just Married Megan (Borges) Aguirre ’05 married Jose on September 22, 2007. She is an assistant planner for the transportation planning division of San Joaquin County’s Public Works department. Jose is pursuing a degree in nursing. They attend Primera Iglesia Bautista in Stockton where Jose is on the worship team and Megan is in the choir. Julie (Hernandez) Atkinson ’05 married Brad in March 2006. Julie works for Procter and Gamble as a fragrance model. Brad is an air traffic controller. They live in Mesa, Ariz. Ralph and Glynnis (Ellis) Gideon ’90 were married April 21, 2007. Glynnis is an eighth grade teacher. Ralph is an executive salesman. They live in Moreno Valley. Jeremy and Kristen (Heath) Riley ’07 were married October 2007. Jeremy works for Congressman John Campbell. The newlyweds live in Laguna Hills. Briana (Helmick ’04) and James Moore ’05 were married September 6, 2007, in Dublin, Ireland. Briana is a freelance photographer and the assistant childcare director at a local YMCA. James works for Cambridge Tutoring & Test Prep. He will teach Old Testament survey at VU in the spring, and recently completed post-graduate studies in Haifa, Israel. The Moores live in Costa Mesa. Kelsey (Harvey ’06) and Marcus Zimmer ’04 were married July 20, 2007, at Doheny State Beach in Dana Point. They honeymooned in Maui and reside in Laguna Hills. They both teach at Saddleback Valley Christian School and are youth leaders at Newport Mesa Church. In Memory Allan Berg ’47 passed away October 19, 2007. Elmer Bradley 1948-1950 passed away January 24, 2007. Allen Joe Brown ’49 passed away September 1, 2007. Kenneth Clewett ’83 passed away March 3, 2007. Thank You ANOTHER SPECTACULAR SUCCESS... TO ALL WHO MADE IT POSSIBLE! Vanguard University kindly thanks all the Christmas Fantasia Sponsors for partnering with us in our mission to pursue knowledge, cultivate character, deepen faith and equip each student for a life of leadership and service. Karen (Adcock) Floyd ’76 passed away July 26, 2004. Lydia Graner ’29 passed away October 5, 2007. Esther (Graner ’29) Griffin passed away October 5, 2007. Marguerite Hawley ’56 passed away May 30, 2007. Roger Wesley Jobe 1966-1969 passed away October 6, 2006. Jeanette (Ferguson ’54) Lee passed away March 9, 2006. Charles Opie ’44 passed away October 15, 2007. Joseph Opperman ’46 passed away October 15, 2006. George Perkins ’52 passed away January 20, 2007. David Schliebe ’54 passed away October 17, 2007. Albert Stavish ’43 passed away October 25, 2007. Lola (Braden ’74) Tapia passed away November 13, 2007. Linda (Irwin ’75) Tonnochy passed away September 12, 2007. MEGUIAR’S, INC. HASKELL & WHITE LLP THE REDIGER FAMILY FOUNDATION CHURM MEDIA UNION BANK OF CALIFORNIA CALIFORNIA BANK & TRUST HILL PARTNERSHIP, INC. WAHOO’S FISH TACO SANTA ANA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE SUPERIOR PROPERTY SERVICES, INC. GARNETT-POWERS & ASSOCIATES AT&T DOCUSOURCE TERRY WALKER & FAMILY OC MARKETPLACE PREMIER COMMERCIAL BANK MBC, INC. HAL AND DEBORAH MCNAUGHTON QUESTAR CONSTRUCTION DGWB ADVERTISING & COMMUNICATIONS o r i n f omagazine r m a t i owinter n o n 2008 h ow yo u c a n p a r t n e r w i t h Va n g u a rd U n i ve r s i t y, p l e a s e c a l l ( 7 1 4 ) 5 5 6 - 3 6 1 0 x 2 0 0 0 . 14 F vanguard Windows Editor’s note: This column gives a view into student and university life from a different perspective in each issue. Reginald Scott Senior communications major The Scariest Class I Ever Took “W atch out for media crit.” That was the warning I’d heard many times from seniors in communication studies. As the day approached for me to take this capstone class, which was required to graduate, I got more concerned. I’d heard horror stories of 50-page papers and tough grading. was passionate about: “Jesus Walks” by Kanye West. I analyzed the metaphors in the song and argued that West used them in the same way that black leaders have done for centuries to gain the respect of their audiences. I argued that West was placing himself in the line of social prophets by using metaphor in the same way great orators like Martin Luther King, Jr., had done. I even communication labs. When I finally printed out my 60-page paper, I felt as proud as a new father. I walked to class carrying it in two hands, as if it were too big to carry with one hand. I wanted everybody to see it. One of the traditions of the class is that when a person walks in with a completed paper, the class gives him or her a round of applause. Then On the first day of class, all the rumors Professor Carmody does seemed to be confirmed. something scary. He thumbs Professor Tom Carmody walked in wearing all black, When I finally printed out my 60-page paper, through each paper with a big green marker and checks for with not even a hint of a I felt as proud as a new father. I walked to formatting errors. If he finds smile. He didn’t seem to any, he hands the paper back want to establish rapport class carrying it in two hands, as if it were to you and gives you 24 hours with us. Rather, he told us too big to carry with one hand. I wanted to correct them. You also he would offer no grace to are docked one letter grade. underperforming students. everybody to see it. Fortunately, after a nerveWe would either excel or racking period of watching fail in his class. “You’ll work him go through each paper, none of us got harder than you’ve ever worked in your discussed the history of metaphors going our papers back. We had passed the first life,” he promised. “I won’t give anyone any back to Aristotle. hurdle. grace whatsoever. You have to excel, and if It took months to research and write, but you don’t, I’ll see you next semester.” Our Without having received my final grade yet, as the semester wore on, my classmates and reactions were grim. The classroom was as I can still say with confidence that media crit I found ourselves carried away by our big quiet as a church sanctuary on Monday changed the way I see the world. It turned project. The moaning and complaining we’d morning. me into a rhetorical critic. If I’m in church or done at the beginning turned to excited watching a movie or watching the president The purpose of media criticism is to teach conversations about how our papers were give a speech, I see things I never saw before. students how to become rhetorical critics, coming along. Soon, the most important I examine things more deeply, and I know able to analyze what is being communicated part of our day was sitting together over how to make a better argument about what in a variety of media, from movies to lunch talking about our papers. We stayed I believe. speeches to music. The other purpose is to up late and worked. We ordered pizza and teach students how to make an effective, Now I have the pleasure of warning those helped each other with our Turabian style sustained argument. We did this through students under me, “Watch out for media (if you don’t know what Turabian style is, plenty of small- and medium-sized crit.” I mean it as a warning. But I also know clearly you’ve never taken media crit). On assignments, and one huge one: that 50-page now that, as scary as it seems, media crit can the night before the due date, many of us paper. change your life for the better. stayed up all night in the computer and I decided to write my paper on a song I vanguard magazine winter 2008 15 Advancing Vision 2010 President’s Medallion Club members make VU education possible for students R ick ’79 and Margaret (Harris ’79) Quisenberry have spent nearly 30 years in the software industry, working for companies like Charles Schwab, Volt Delta, Isuzu and Sybase. They also regularly contribute to Vanguard, and are members of the President’s Medallion Club (PMC), a distinguished group of donors that supports the University Excellence Fund by giving more than $1,000 annually. PMC members are leaders in helping to provide opportunities for today’s students to become community leaders and world changers. “I want to support Vanguard because it has a Christian emphasis,” says Rick from their home in Oakland, California. “It’s very much part of our faith to develop ourselves intellectually and academically. I’ve always thought Vanguard is an excellent place for that to happen. ... I want to see Vanguard succeed and continue. I have such respect for the leadership of the University.” When Rick came to VU, he was the only person in his entire family to ever attend college. He met Margaret on her first night there. The education they received at VU shaped their lives. “I became aware how valuable critical thinking about our faith and worldview was,” says Rick. “The relationships with professors at Vanguard were really encouraging. It was the first time I’d been encouraged to pursue academics. It gave me a sense that the Christian community is a very special place. That’s never left me.” 16 vanguard magazine winter 2008 The experience also taught him “to seek truth, to really grow spiritually and intellectually and creatively,” he says. “I came into school thinking I’d have to get good grades and learn a bunch of stuff, but I left with an interest in pursuing knowledge and trying to see God in everything.” Margaret appreciated the “involvement of the professors. We would eat with them in the cafeteria and sometimes they’d have Bible studies at their home. They were godly people and human people,” she says. She also enjoyed how “God was brought into every class. That was unique for me. It was not done in a stuffy way, but was part of the exploration. It’s a dimension you don’t get in a state college.” Rick and Margaret married the day after they graduated and entered the then-new computer industry. Margaret had flourished in writing and the social sciences at Vanguard, and she quickly gravitated to technical writing for telecommunications companies. Rick became a mainframe programmer for companies including Mazda, Arco and Northrop, where he worked on the program for the Stealth Bomber. “Computers were just coming into the mainstream at that time and there had been no training in it, but our general education prepared us for it,” Margaret says. “We had a background in finding out what you don’t know. That speaks highly of the education we got at Vanguard.” Advancing Vision 2010 “Vanguard offers a wonderful platform for young adults to identify what is true and important in life and to give them a sense of direction. If we didn’t have Vanguard, where would these people go? ... If we don’t support it, who will?” In 1997 the Quisenberrys moved to the San Francisco Bay Area where Rick now works for Charles Schwab, helping write the software that makes Schwab.com function smoothly for Internet users. Margaret continues to work as a technical writer. The couple has donated regularly to Vanguard for a number of years. As PMC members, they are among VU’s most generous philanthropic donors, whose generosity sets an example for others. Each year, PMC members are invited to a special luncheon with VU president Murray Dempster, are offered VIP seating at Christmas Fantasia and are acknowledged in the annual report publication of vanguard magazine. People may join the PMC at a variety of levels, from the Medallion level — $1,000 to $2,499 annually — to the Platinum level of $25,000 or more, and all levels in between. Gifts to the President’s Medallion Club ensure that future business leaders, doctors, pastors, teachers, athletes and social workers are all offered an education marked by excellence and spiritual vitality regardless of background or need. Margaret says they began giving as they reflected on how important VU had been in their life development. “You start appreciating things, re-assessing and realizing the value of the Christian education we got there,” she says. Rick says one of his goals is to be “an encouragement to students who don’t have scholarships or any other way [to help pay for school].” He also wants to encourage the kind of growth that took place in his own life while there. Recently, he returned to his original field of study, psychology, and enrolled in graduate school to earn his master’s degree in psychology, with encouragement and recommendations from Vince Gil and other VU professors. He is considering pursuing counseling as a second career. The Quisenberrys also have a 21-yearold son. “We are so grateful for Rick and Margaret’s generosity, and the generosity of all Vanguard PMC members,” says President Murray Dempster. “PMC members are a vital part of our community because they make it possible for Vanguard to continue to offer students the kind of personalized, highquality education that equips them to go out and change the world for the better.” Rick agrees. “Vanguard offers a wonderful platform for young adults to identify what is true and important in life and to give them a sense of direction,” Rick says. “If we didn’t have Vanguard, where would these people go? How would we train people to be Christian leaders? ... Vanguard is a great place to develop those characteristics in young people. If we don’t support it, who will?” To join Rick and Margaret as members of this leadership group of donors, please call 714.556.3610 x2026 or visit www.vanguard. edu/pmc Tony Salerno, continued from page 4 Teacher’s Choice Award from Learning magazine. Mark Bell, a thirty-year Christian music veteran and producer of live Christian shows and tours, calls Salerno “a visionary.” “It’s amazing how God has blessed the products that Tony has produced over the years,” says Bell. “He’s very much an idea guy, very creative. He has an enormous wealth of material. The biggest things are yet to come.” Tony credits wife Kathy for much of his success. “Without Kathy, none of this would have happened,” he says. “She has covered all my mistakes and does a lot of the work herself. God really gave me a Proverbs 31 wife.” school kids about good character through music and story. His vision is “to give every kid a chance to live a life of character,” and to give the book free to every elementary school child in the U.S. The response in Los Angeles-area schools has been strong. Salerno’s son is part of the music group that performs in the ABCs of Character school assemblies, and a member of Sempiternity, the ‘tween music group Salerno is now developing. “I never thought I’d spend my life on kids character-building,” says Salerno. “As a producer I tried to do things that were meaningful, that had purpose, some reason behind them. If we want revival, first we have to break up the hardened ground. The way we’re doing that is going in and talking about character.” Salerno’s latest book and production, the ABCs of Character, teaches vanguard magazine winter 2008 17 Homecoming 2007 Homecoming H 2007 omecoming 2007 offered a fun and varied schedule of events, including athletic competition, an art show and plenty of time to socialize with friends old and new. Lewis Wilson (above, left) spoke at Homecoming chapel on Saturday morning in Needham Chapel. Visitors then attended the Alumni Awards luncheon at Newport Mesa Church, where the Golden Vanguard Society (above) inducted the class of ’57 into the group. Faculty and staff squared off against alums in an afternoon softball game (below, left). The evening was capped off with men’s and women’s Blue-Gold games, in which alumni players competed against the current teams (right, and facing page on middle right). During the men’s game halftime, the court of The Pit was dedicated in honor of former VU men’s coach Bill Reynolds and his wife Shirley in a moving ceremony (see Sports on page 26). Former players Greg Ward ’85, Dave Corsi ’84 and many others attended. 18 vanguard magazine magazine winter winter 2008 2008 18 vanguard Homecoming 2007 Attendees at the Alumni Awards luncheon enjoyed the Vanguard Concert Choir (top left). Alumni artist John Doughty ’82 held an art show in the Heath building (top right, with VU president Murray Dempster). Young alums had dinner together at a nearby restaurant (above left, one table shown). The ’74-’75 wrestling team (bottom left), former cross-country champ Sheri (Hall ’91) Curl (left, with Bob Wilson, VU athletics director) and 20-year VU track and field and cross-country coach Bryan Wilkins (below, right) were inducted into the Vanguard University Athletic Hall of Fame. Virgil Ziegler (right), perhaps the greatest Vanguard sports fan in the University’s history, and a longtime VU employee, was named an honorary inductee into the hall of fame. “Homecoming this year was another great week of activities and events that connected our alums from all generations back to Vanguard,” says alumni director Heather (Rachels ’02) Clements. “There was a wide spectrum of activities throughout the week and a real welcome-home spirit.” vanguard magazine winter 2008 19 VU Profile Revolution Bronx in the F ernando Cabrera ’86 is pastor of one of the Bronx’s largest and most vibrant churches, New Life Outreach International, which he founded 19 years ago after graduating from Vanguard. “We’re having a revival here,” he says. “We want to win this city for the Lord.” New Life Outreach began to grow exponentially when, several years ago, Cabrera made home groups the heart of the church’s ministry and put the ministry in the hands of the people. Now the church is constructing a $3.5 million facility in what used to be a dangerous and drug-infested neighborhood. Cabrera’s career in ministry began at a church retreat in southern California where a choir from Vanguard was performing. During a time of prayer, Cabrera “had an encounter with God. It was really powerful,” he says. “I was called to the ministry that night.” He felt such a connection with the students in the choir that he enrolled at Vanguard. There, the student missions trips to Costa Rica, Mexico and the streets of Orange County gave him “a mission- 20 vanguard magazine winter 2008 focused mentality,” he says. The professors shaped his life, too. “I met some really awesome professors and students,” he says. “Professor Nancy Heidebrecht was an inspired teacher. Professor Bill Williams took me under his wing. He was the first person who asked me if I had ever thought about getting a doctorate. I thought, ‘This man believes in me.’ He planted that seed. ... The prayer meetings, the speakers that came to chapel, the presence of the Lord in those chapel meetings — those times were very uplifting.” His twin brother, Angelo, also enrolled and graduated from VU three years later. VU Profile Fernando soon felt called to start a church in the Bronx. After running a rehabilitation program in Virginia for three years, he and his wife moved to New York and started holding meetings in his aunt’s living room in the northeast part of the Bronx, which has a largely Hispanic population. As the meetings drew more people, they rented a storefront and then a former car generator repair shop to meet in. “We felt like missionaries,” he says. “People said, ‘Why did you come here?’ We said, ‘Because this is where the souls are.’” The Bronx then was dangerous. Many people wouldn’t venture outside their buildings past dark. Special units of police were assigned to the church’s neighborhood because both ends of the block were known as drug markets. Cabrera calls the atmosphere then “horrible.” But the church started winning people to the Lord, including many young people. In one service the congregation faced in the direction of the worst drug dealer hang-out and asked God to “throw the enemy into confusion.” That week a drug dealer from another area came against the local drug dealer and both were not seen again. Fernando Cabrera, continued on page 22 vanguard magazine winter 2008 21 VU Profile “Our approach became very relational. There are a lot of lonely and hurting people. Without relationships you become an anonymous Christian, and in a city of 8 million that’s a big deal. ... We’ve taken the gospel out of the church building into the neighborhood. It’s been a major breakthrough.” The church’s new three-story facility, now under construction, will offer a variety of ministries, from Sunday services to daycare. Cabrera likens it to a cultural center. The sanctuary will seat 1,000, making it one of the largest church sanctuaries in New York. Amazingly, in nearly 20 years at the church, Cabrera has never taken a salary. Instead, he works full time as the director of two graduate programs at nearby Mercy College. “I’m living proof you can still work and have a church of 400,” he says. He had taken Professor Williams’ advice and earned a doctorate in counseling. For years he worked as a school counselor, but always wanted to teach at the college level. “I love the college scene,” he says. “You can have such an influence on students. I’ve been able to lead students to the Lord and transmit biblical principles to my profession, and prepare future counselors with integrity. Many come back and thank me for helping them gain practical skills so they can have a good profession as school, mental health or drug counselors.” Student attendance has more than doubled in his program since he took the helm. Mercy College graduates more minorities than any other college in the state with the exception of Syracuse University. Fernando Cabrera, continued from page 21 But it wasn’t until the church created small groups that met in homes during the week that the church’s ministry was revolutionized. The congregation grew quickly from 85 to 400 — a large church for New York City, given the city’s space limitations. “Our approach became very relational,” Cabrera says. “There are a lot of lonely and hurting people. Without relationships you become an anonymous Christian, 22 vanguard magazine winter 2008 and in a city of 8 million that’s a big deal. Now, as soon as you walk in, people start a relationship with you. We train everyone to open a cell group. We’ve taken the gospel out of the church building into the neighborhood. It’s been a major breakthrough. Now the people carry out the ministry of the church instead of leaving it to the pastor. You grow a church full of pastors.” Cabrera’s children are now in leadership positions within the church. His twin brother is a missionary in Ghana. With the church growing so quickly, Cabrera says that one day he’ll have to become a full-time pastor. The Bronx is still needy and has New York City’s highest incidence of homicide, suicide, asthma and poverty. But the area around the church is much safer than it was when Cabrera first arrived. “People are moving in,” he says. “Now they call it a good block.” A Vine of His Own Planting Editor’s note: This column looks at major episodes in Vanguard University’s history. Lewis Wilson Academic Dean Emeritus A culinary blessing early in VU’s history O ver its history Vanguard has been blessed by talented, dedicated staff who have served God through serving students. Probably the first was Christine Olson, whose career at the school extended over thirty years and to all three campuses. Her name was actually Sophia though she preferred Christine, her middle name, and to most students she was “Mother Olson.” Born in Sweden in 1869, she had emigrated to Chicago where her culinary skill won her employment as the principal cook for the Busch family of beverage fame. though it required getting up at four o’clock in the morning and many times working until midnight. When the college moved to Pasadena, she used her life’s savings to equip the kitchen with tables, stoves and a variety of utensils. Limited budgets, particularly during the Great Depression, made providing balanced, nutritious meals a challenge. During the summer months she would can hundreds of quarts of fresh fruit and vegetables to be used during the school year. Though bread earliest days, wrote “I have never seen nor heard of a person with any more fervent love for God and His work, nor a more dedicated Christian.” The 1955 college yearbook carried a tribute asserting that “Mother Olson has been to the school a real source of inspiration. She has maintained a serenity that comes only from living daily in the presence of the Lord. . . Her great love to God and people. . . have taught rich lessons to students.” She early felt a strong compulsion to evangelize and would obtain boxes of gospel tracts which she delivered door to door through the greater Los Angeles area. In her last years spent on the Costa Mesa campus when she could no longer personally distribute the tracts, she would send them by mail. Mother Olson’s culinary skill won her employment as the principal cook for the Busch family of beverage fame ... but after a remarkable healing from cancer, she volunteered at the new Southern California Bible School in the Echo Park section of Los Angeles. In 1910 she moved to California with the family, but after a remarkable healing from cancer, volunteered her services to President Needham at the new Southern California Bible School in the Echo Park section of Los Angeles. His goal was to make the school one of excellence in every way, and he recognized this quiet, able and deeply committed lady as a gift from God. Contemporary reports and the alumni who knew her agree that she was an excellent cook, loved the students and was totally committed to God. Some have called her “a saint.” In the early years she prepared three meals a day for the entire student body pudding was served more often than some would have liked, at least one alumnus insists, “her cooking was delicious and I never heard a complaint from a fellow student.” On special occasions her skill was particularly demonstrated. A student publication describes a Thanksgiving dinner as one which would “gladden the heart of the most painstaking chef.” To further enhance the meals, she spent hours growing flowers for the dining tables. Her profound faith would influence many students. One, who knew her from her She cared nothing for money. Any gift, unless it was specified that she must use it for herself, would be sent to a missionary or other Christian worker. When on February 28, 1955, she died in the Orange County Hospital, her assets were $200 to be used for her burial and a long owned plot at the Inglewood Park Cemetery where she was buried. Her brief obituary published in the local papers described her as “a cook,” but to all who knew her, Christine Olson was much, much more. vanguard magazine winter 2008 23 On Campus VU president and others named to list of influential people in the Newport-Mesa area VU president Murray Dempster and other members of the VU community were recognized as some of the most influential people in the Newport-Mesa area, according to an annual list published by the Daily Pilot newspaper. The list, know as the DP 103, identifies people — ranging from congressmen to educators to athletes and business-owners — who play key roles in community development. Dempster was honored for his work at Vanguard. Since becoming the president of the University in 2000, Dempster has worked to increase name recognition for VU, landing it in the annual rankings by U.S. News and World Report, and the Princeton Review. The article also applauds Dempster for maintaining a “close relationship policy between students and faculty, with a 15-to-1 ratio on the campus, where there are slightly more than 2,000 enrolled.” VU women’s basketball coach Russ Davis was also named to the list, an acknowledgement of his teams’ on-going success and his record of 289-75 in eleven seasons at VU. Davis’s teams have topped the national rankings and won major awards within the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA). He has coached NAIA National Player of the Year honorees each of the last three seasons and has guided the Lions to two straight NAIA semifinal appearances. Other notable honorees include Mary Hornbuckle ’96, former Costa Mesa mayor; and two members of the VU Foundation board, Jeff Teller, president of the Orange County Marketplace, and Martin Diedrich, owner of Kean’s Coffee. 24 vanguard magazine winter 2008 “It’s gratifying to see Vanguard’s president, its outstanding women’s basketball head coach, and many of the University’s supporters and friends recognized as influential difference-makers in contributing to the quality of our life together as a community,” says Dave Elliott, associate vice president for University relations and executive director of the Vanguard University Foundation. Vanguard 5K supports women’s causes The Vanguard 5K run, dubbed the Rocka-thon this year, raised more than $3,000 for local women’s causes and drew 100 participants, including students, faculty and staff, in November. The 5K was run on the Vanguard campus for the second year in a row. Music groups were stationed along the course to encourage runners. The course began at the Heath building, went past the Cove, around Huntington, through the baseball and soccer fields, through the Catalina lobby, around Balboa and Newport, around the campus mall and eventually finished at the Heath building after two laps. The fastest runner finished in about 20 minutes. Winners in each category received an iPod Shuffle. The money this year went to support Pathways for Independence, a non-profit organization that helps women who are leaving abusive situations by giving them free counseling, child care, rent assistance, medical care and a four-year education at a state college. Proceeds also benefited VU adjunct professor Olivia Klaus’s documentary film “Sin By Silence.” The film tells the stories of five women who are in prison for killing their abusers. It is based on the research of VU sociology professor Elizabeth Leonard. “I’d love to see the event continue to grow and benefit more people,” says Jeremey King, resident director and 5K organizer. “It’s fun and raises money for a really good cause. We’re investing not only in our present but our future when you think about all the families that are affected by domestic abuse.” Learn more at www.vanguard5k.com Pre-VU draws interested students In November, Vanguard held its fall Pre-VU, a campus-wide open house for high school students and transfer students who are considering attending Vanguard University. Nearly 300 students and parents attended Pre-VU this fall. “They come to our campus and get to know the Vanguard community, the academic On Campus Photo courtesy of Christian Kaysen experience and the spiritual experience we have to offer, to see if Vanguard might be a good fit for them,” says Amberley Wolf, director of undergraduate admissions. “We try to help them see all aspects of the University.” A lot was packed into students’ 24-hour stay: they ate in the cafeteria, attended a class and a chapel service, spent a night in dorms, met professors, went to a financial aid meeting and watched the Delivery Boys and Entourage perform. In past years, about half the students who came to Pre-VU became VU students. Pre-VU also offers a track for parents to get to know the VU faculty and staff. Parents attended a dinner where they heard from President Murray Dempster, vice presidents and faculty members. They also attended a financial aid seminar and a panel on student life, ate in the cafeteria and attended a chapel service. “We know that choosing a college is not just a student decision but a parent decision,” says Wolf. “Everyone really enjoyed it. A lot of students said they can’t wait to come or apply. Parents were thankful they had the opportunity to get to know our community as well.” Spring Pre-VU will be held Monday, April 7. Parents can call 800 722-6279 or visit www.vanguard.edu/admissions for more information. Jeremiah Project introduces local kids to college experience In December, VU hosted fifteen junior high and high school students from disadvantaged neighborhoods in Costa Mesa, introducing them to campus life and encouraging them to attend college. “A lot of kids have no idea how to get to college and what the whole experience is like,” says VU junior Shaun Blaylock, who developed the event and is the team leader for the At Risk ministries arm of Vanguard’s student outreach program. “We hope to show them the amazing future God has for them whether it be at Vanguard or another institution.” The event, called the Jeremiah Project, included taking students on a campus tour and having them meet representatives from various academic departments. The group also ate in the cafeteria and attended a Lions basketball game. Many of the young students came from one of VU’s local ministry partners, MIKA’s Center Street Learning Center, which serves local youth through tutoring. VU is already planning an expanded second event for the spring semester and plans to host 100 young people for a sports event. “The students had an awesome time and got to see a lot of aspects of college life,” says Blaylock. “I hope they left knowing that college is in their future.” For more information on involvement with the Jeremiah Project, contact atrisk@ vanguard.edu. Also visit www.vanguard.edu/ outreachministries. VU observes International Human Rights Day VU students observed International Human Rights Day in December with two seminars led by human rights experts, faculty and students. The morning seminar, which drew 90 students, featured Reverend Richard Fenn, a Seventh-Day Adventist Church liaison to the United Nations. Fenn has monitored human rights for two decades, and spoke about the persecution of Christians around the world. The seminar also featured presentations by six students of Sharon Linzey, associate provost for special projects and organizer of the Human Rights Day events. Her students gave brief but powerful analysis and facts about troubled spots around the world, including Darfur and Albania. “The students who attended were impressed at hearing their fellow students talk, because it showed them what they could do if they were interested,” says Linzey. On Campus, continued on page 28 vanguard magazine winter 2008 25 Sports VU court dedicated in honor of former coach Bill Reynolds and wife Shirley A t the Vanguard homecoming men’s basketball game in November, a special ceremony was held at halftime to dedicate the floor of the gym in honor of former VU coach Bill Reynolds and wife Shirley. The newly named Bill and Shirley Reynolds Court honors their long-time legacy at Vanguard, where Bill was coach of the men’s basketball team for 17 years. “The halftime ceremony was phenomenal,” says Dave Corsi ’84, who played for 26 vanguard magazine winter 2008 Reynolds and is now vice president of sales for Pony International, a footwear company. “To be out there on the court with all the players and their families and kids, and to see the legacy that coach created and left with us was really a moving experience.” year, 1989, the team went 29-5. In 1990, the team won the district title and advanced to the NAIA “sweet 16” at Kemper Arena in Kansas City. It was the first time in VU history that the men’s basketball team had gone to the national tournament. Reynolds passed away in 2006 from cancer. From 1981 to 1998 he established himself as one of the most beloved and successful coaches in VU’s history. His teams made the playoffs every year and won an average of twenty games a season. In Reynolds’ best More important, during his coaching career Reynolds shaped the lives of dozens of young men and prepared them to be productive, successful people after they graduated. Many of those former players returned to Vanguard and The Pit to honor the Reynolds in Sports Many former players stood with Shirley during the ceremony. “We were all there because of her and Bill,” says Eric Walker ’97, who played for the Washington Generals, the team that plays against the Harlem Globetrotters. “She had to sacrifice a lot for Bill to live out his dream as a college basketball coach, and all of Bill’s former players benefited from her sacrifice. We’ll never forget her or him.” Today, a remarkable number of former players are carrying the Reynolds’ legacy onto courts in Orange County and beyond. Dozens of former players have coached at all levels, from grade school through college. More than a few have made a career of coaching and built highly successful teams. November. A special reception was held in the Heath building before the game, where President Murray Dempster talked about the impact Bill and Shirley had had on the University. Former players including Robert Aviles ’86 spoke, as did Tina Witmer ’91, the Reynolds’ daughter. “It was very emotional, like a family reunion,” says Larry Hirst ’84, who now coaches basketball at Newport Harbor high school. The reception was followed by alumni basketball games. During the halftime ceremony of the men’s game, people who had been impacted by the Reynolds were invited onto the court. Hundreds of people flooded the floor as Dempster spoke of the Reynolds’ achievements. Academic dean emeritus Lewis Wilson prayed a dedicatory prayer over the court, and an original painting of Coach Reynolds by VU artist-in-residence Keith Ewing was presented to Shirley. After playing for Reynolds and serving as his assistant for two years, Hirst coached for nine years at Edison High School, taking the team to its only appearance in the CIF finals. At Newport Harbor High School for the past thirteen years, he holds the record for wins, with more than 200, and averages 18 wins a year. He still uses the coaching system he learned under Reynolds. He even named the school’s annual basketball tournament the Bill Reynolds Classic. “Great coaches like Coach Reynolds don’t only coach but teach young men about life,” he says. “I had a great foundation that Coach Reynolds started for me when I was 19. Coaching as a career came out of that time.” Dave Corsi recently founded a private basketball club for grade-school boys which now has more than 100 players competing against other club teams in the San Diego area. Another former player, Todd Dixon ’88, has coached in Orange County for 19 years, and now coaches at El Toro High School. He was Reynolds’ assistant for two years and traveled with Reynolds’ all-star teams to Hong Kong, Denmark and London. At El Toro, Dixon turned the boys’ program around. His teams consistently rank in the top five in Orange County and have averaged 21 wins per season for eleven years. They have competed in two CIF title games and earned six league titles. Dixon has retained not only the style of play but the sense of family that Reynolds cultivated in his teams. Like Reynolds, Dixon and his players say “Family!” on the count of three before breaking their huddles. “Bill was known for creating a family atmosphere among his teams, and Shirley was a huge part of that,” says former player Justin McIntee ’98, who headed up the effort to dedicate the court to the Reynolds. McIntee is VU’s associate director of donor relations. “She was as much a part of the success Bill had as he was.” The Reynolds were known for taking in players for meals, or even to live with them during the summer or school year. Hirst says Shirley “was like a mom to some of us.” Walker, who was often at the Reynolds’ home, says “[Bill] Reynolds was the best thing to happen to me. I had the raw talent but not the fundamentals. Reynolds taught us the fundamentals. It was crazy the impact he had on me. He knew what he was doing, and it was more than basketball.” Mike Roberts ’83 has been an assistant coach at a private school in Irvine for ten years. He played for and later assisted Reynolds’ teams. He calls Reynolds “one of the best coaches that ever coached in Orange County. I’m convinced I could go anywhere on the planet and teach young boys to play basketball and be successful. That’s all due to Coach Reynolds.” McIntee says the homecoming alumni games this year were “the perfect opportunity to bring former players back on campus and honor Shirley and Coach Reynolds the way they deserved to be honored.” vanguard magazine winter 2008 27 Calendar Athletics Theatre Music Ensembles The Crucible February 22 – March 2 April 18 & 20 Spring Concert Men’s & Women’s Tennis Season begins February 2 Thoroughly Modern Millie March 28 – April 13 For more information on performances please contact the music events office at 714.662.522 or concerts@vanguard.edu For additional information on game dates and times, visit www.vanguard.edu/athletics. For box office information and show synopses please visit www.vanguard.edu/theatrearts. Women’s Softball Season begins February 2 Men’s Baseball Season begins February 2 University Events February 8 & 9 Family Weekend Celebrate the 12th Annual April 2 Ethics in America Awards Honoring Individuals of Ethical Excellence Featuring 2008 National Honoree Dennis Prager May 8 Graduate Hooding Ceremony May 9 Baccalaureate May 10 Commencement On Campus, continued from page 25 Join university, community and business leaders in honoring the 2008 American Heritage Award of Ethical Distinction recipient Dennis Prager. The Vanguard Pillar Award will also be presented to four individuals who exemplify outstanding ethical leadership in the areas of: • • • • Business – Hilary Kaye, Hilary Kaye Associates, Inc. Education – Erin Gruwell, Freedom Writers Foundation Social/Community – Augie Nieto, Augie’s Quest Sports/Entertainment – John Speraw, UCI Men’s Volleyball Wednesday, April 2, 2008 The Grove of Anaheim Presented by Vanguard University of Southern California in partnership with Passkey’s Foundation To purchase tickets call 714.556.3610 ext. 2021. To sponsor this event call 714.556-3610 ext. 2000. For more information visit www.vanguard.edu/eiaa. National Honoree Sponsor Presenting Media Sponsor The second seminar, which drew 150 students, featured Len Bartlotti, an expert on Muslim culture who lived in Pakistan for fourteen years with the largest Muslim tribal society in the world. He is now a consultant to faith-based non-governmental orgaizations conducting humanitarian work in Afghanistan and central Asia. Following his presentation, Bartlotti was joined by VU faculty members Elizabeth Leonard, Ed Rybarczyk and John Wilson who spoke further about issues raised by the presentation. Both sessions offered an opportunity to gain a clearer understanding of human rights issues that are at stake around the globe. “It was the first time Vanguard has tried to draw attention to Human Rights Day, and it was quite successful,” says Linzey, who is a human rights lawyer and has presented her findings on religious persecution to the United Nations. She teaches world civilization and sociology of religion at VU. “It was an awareness-creating opportunity for students to apply what they’re learning, and to open their eyes and make a connection to what’s going on in real political terms regarding our religious interests around the world,” she says. Postcards Editor’s note: This column features an essay by a different alum in each issue. Another Chance at Life Sacramento, Ca. D uring my fourth year at VU, a friend called me from a call box on the 57 freeway one night. His car was broken down, he and his fiancé were stranded and needed someone to pick them up. I grabbed my keys and headed out the door. That was the last thing I remember for the next twelve days. the inside, too. Students comforted my family. They decorated my room with posters, pictures and Bible verses. People at the hospital wondered how there could be such joy amidst such tragedy, and thus they encountered the presence of Jesus. After twenty-three days in the hospital, my recovery was already remarkable. I had never experienced such a strong presence of the Holy Spirit in my life. Having come so close to death, I appreciated everything, from what I ate, to relationships, to even just breathing. I got out of the hospital and the miracle began to become evident. Two months later I was well enough to make the Delivery Boys and begin to tour with them. We were the first team to travel coast to coast. My facial reconstruction had not been completed, and my retainer with six false teeth made a great prop in skits. I also got to share my testimony and a slideshow of how God had miraculously preserved my life from the accident. On the way there, my car rounded a bend on the freeway and ran into a stalled 22-foot flatbed construction trailer. The other passenger in my car, a close friend from VU, suffered only minor scrapes, but I was in very bad shape. Every bone on my face from my eyes down was pulverized. My left While the surgeons rebuilt my arm — my throwing arm, because I was a varsity baseball player and face ... people from VU were NAIA scholar-athlete — was almost there daily to make sure I was By the following spring, I had decided to do the severed. My brain was bleeding; impossible: return to the baseball field for my several vertebrae were crushed, and healing on the inside, too. final season with the Lions. That spring I took I slipped into a coma. It took a long my position at first base and finished out my baseball career. KTLA time for emergency personnel just to get me out of the car. channel 5, USA Today, the Los Angeles Times, the Orange County I had come to VU on a baseball scholarship in 1994, and though I Register and various magazines heard about my amazing recovery and was successful on the field, my first year was pretty lonely. I didn’t ran news stories on me. make real friends. Baseball was the “god” of my life. But in my sophomore year a sports injury had forced me to step back and take stock of my priorities. I realized I was empty inside; that’s when God brought me to my knees, and I made him the center of my life. From that point on I began to develop great friendships with a group of five other guys, all VU students. They became my accountability partners and encouragers for the next three years. Because of their influence I began to volunteer for various ministries. I became a Delivery Boy and co-founder and president of the VU chapter of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Suddenly, I belonged to a community of people who cared about me. Little did I know that I would need that community so much after my life-threatening accident. Vanguard students, staff and faculty rallied around me while I was in the hospital. After the initial stabilization, the surgeons rebuilt my face with bones from my skull and hip, and titanium plates, screws and wires. During this time, people from VU were there daily to make sure I was healing on I graduated from VU in ’99 as valedictorian, then I traveled and spoke at churches and elsewhere on the topic of adversity and suffering. Today I am the college pastor at a church in the Sacramento area. Interestingly, all five of my close friends from VU are now in full-time ministry, though only one of us entered college as a ministry major. Today, most of my scars have faded and I don’t look much different than I did before the accident. What hasn’t faded is my appreciation for Vanguard, where I spent the greatest years of my life. The relationships I made there changed me from being a self-centered baseball player to being others-centered. And at my darkest hour, when I stood between life and death, those relationships helped sustain me. Matt Newton ’99 is a pastor at First Covenant Church of Sacramento vanguard magazine winter 2008 29 Editor. A nalyst. Leader. Servant. Nathan G onzales, class of ’00 Incorporating academic excellence with biblical truth is a key focus at Vanguard University. By helping students cultivate character while pursuing knowledge, they learn that being a light to the world also means being a light to the workforce. Nathan is a respected political editor and analyst in Washington, D.C. For him, being a leader in his church also means being a groundskeeper and servant for an inner city kids baseball league. Doing Good. Find out how your gift to the University Excellence Fund can inspire today’s students to make a difference in their community, our country and the world, just like Nathan. Call 714-556-3610, ext 2026 or visit www.vanguard.edu/excellencefund. Vanguard University of Southern California. Illuminating. Vanguard University 55 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Change Service Requested Non Profit Organization U.S. POSTAGE PAID Vanguard University of Southern California
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