arizona state university...80 arizona state football 2010 president/regents m i c h a e l m. crow b...

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ARIZONA STATE FOOTBALL 2010 78 A t once the youngest and the largest of the roughly 150 public and private research- grade universities in the nation, Arizona State University enrolls more than 68,000 undergraduate, graduate and professional students on four cam- puses of equally high aspiration configured across metropolitan Phoenix, a region negotiating societal and environmental challenges that anticipate coming trends worldwide. ASU offers outstanding resources for study and research, including libraries and museums with impor- tant collections, studios and performing arts spaces for creative endeavor, and unsurpassed state-of-the-art scientific and technological laboratories and research facilities. ASU’s historic campus in Tempe, which serves more than 55,500 students, offers the feel of a college town in the midst of a dynamic metropolitan region. The West campus, which serves 10,300 students in northwest Phoenix, and Polytechnic campus, which serves 9,146 students in Mesa, offer more specialized missions. The Downtown Phoenix campus, which opened in fall 2006 as part of a larger plan to revitalize the city’s urban core, provides a university experience in a modern, urban atmosphere for more than 11,500 students. ASU is research-driven but focused on learning – teaching is carried out in a context that encourages the creation of new knowledge. The faculty includes recipients of prestigious academic and professional awards, members of the various national academies and a Nobel Laureate. Research and discovery featur- ing ASU faculty can be found regularly in the nation’s top publications and journals. The university annually attracts some of the nation’s top scholars, including a higher number of freshman National Merit Scholars than almost any other public university in the United States. ASU has the most undergraduates (12) named to USA Today’s Academic First Team of any public univer- sity in the nation. ASU also champions diversity, boasting one of the nation’s largest Hispanic student enrollments and among the most Native American faculty members nationally. The university is international in scope, welcoming students from all 50 states and nations across the globe, and engaging in educational partnerships world- wide. ASU has formed strategic partnerships with countries such as China where the university is secur- ing an enduring niche in higher education, research and policy. ASU has also formed strategic partnerships with: Tecnologico de Monterrey in Mexico; Sichuan University in China; Dublin City University in Ireland; Monash University in Australia; and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. ASU is an active partner with the private sector in initiatives to enhance the social well-being, economic competitiveness, cultural depth, and quality of life of metropolitan Phoenix and the state. Palm Walk is one of the most picturesque spots on the Arizona State campus. • ASU is a Doctoral/Research-Extensive I Institution, the highest distinction of the prestigious Carnegie Foundation classification system. • Enrollment for the fall 2009 semester was 68,064 with 55,552 students at the Tempe campus; 11,503 at the Downtown Phoenix campus, 10,380 at the West campus and 9,146 at the Polytechnic campus. • Of the 68,064 students, 54,277 were undergraduates and 13,787 were graduate students. • ASU students have more than 250 majors and more than 12,000 classes from which to choose on four campuses in Metropolitan Phoenix. • The university’s faculty includes recipients of prestigious academic and professional awards, members of the various national academies and a Nobel Laureate. • The number of National Merit Scholars at ASU has increased substantially since 2002. The 2009 freshman class included 156, with more than 610 National Merit Scholars enrolled at ASU. • The ASU freshman class in 2009 included 118 National Hispanic Scholars, with more than 320 enrolled overall. • Twelve ASU students have been named among the top 20 undergraduates in the U.S. by USA Today, on the All-USA College Academic First Team, since 1992. This is the best record of any public university in the nation. Only Harvard, Yale and Duke have had more. (Another 8 ASU students were named to the second team of 20 and 2 to the third team of 20.) A national team of judges chooses top students based on grades, leadership, activities and how the students extend their intellectual talents beyond the classroom. • ASU students’ record of winning Fulbright Fellowships is double the national average. Ten percent of applicants nominated from any given university actually will be awarded a Fulbright, but ASU applicants win at the rate of 36 percent. In 2009, 17 students won Fulbrights to study or do research abroad next year, a record for ASU, placing the university 4th among public universities and 14th overall. • ASU is home to the nation’s first School of Sustainability, established in 2007. The school addresses critical challenges facing the world by bringing together disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability. • Princeton Review named ASU as one of the nation’s greenest universities and Kaplan College guide cited ASU as one of the nation’s top 25 environmentally responsible universities. Sierra Magazine has named ASU as one of the “coolest” schools. • U.S. News & World Report named ASU as one of the best “Up-and-Coming Schools” in the 2009 edition of “America’s Best Colleges.” This ranking highlights colleges and universities that have recently made the most promising and innovative changes in academics, faculty, students, campus life, diversity and facilities. Academic Highlights at Arizona State University

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Page 1: ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY...80 ARIZONA STATE FOOTbAll 2010 PRESIDENT/REGENTS M i c h a e l M. Crow b e c a m e the 16th president of Arizona State University on July 1, 2002. He is

A R I Z O N A S TAT E F O O T b A l l 2 0 1 078

ArizonA StAte UniverSity

At once the youngest and the largest of the roughly 150 public and private research-grade universities in the nation, Arizona State

University enrolls more than 68,000 undergraduate, graduate and professional students on four cam-puses of equally high aspiration configured across metropolitan Phoenix, a region negotiating societal and environmental challenges that anticipate coming trends worldwide.

ASU offers outstanding resources for study and research, including libraries and museums with impor-tant collections, studios and performing arts spaces for creative endeavor, and unsurpassed state-of-the-art scientific and technological laboratories

and research facilities. ASU’s historic campus in Tempe, which serves more than 55,500 students, offers the feel of a college town in the midst of a dynamic metropolitan region. The West campus, which serves 10,300 students in northwest Phoenix, and Polytechnic campus, which serves 9,146 students in Mesa, offer more specialized missions. The Downtown Phoenix campus, which opened in fall 2006 as part of a larger plan to revitalize the city’s urban core, provides a university experience in a modern, urban atmosphere for more than 11,500 students.

ASU is research-driven but focused on learning – teaching is carried out in a context that encourages the creation of new knowledge. The faculty includes recipients of prestigious academic and professional awards, members of the various national academies and a Nobel Laureate. Research and discovery featur-ing ASU faculty can be found regularly in the nation’s top publications and journals.

The university annually attracts some of the nation’s top scholars, including a higher number of freshman National Merit Scholars than almost any other public university in the United States. ASU has the most undergraduates (12) named to USA

Today’s Academic First Team of any public univer-sity in the nation.

ASU also champions diversity, boasting one of the nation’s largest Hispanic student enrollments and among the most Native American faculty members nationally.

The university is international in scope, welcoming students from all 50 states and nations across the globe, and engaging in educational partnerships world-wide. ASU has formed strategic partnerships with countries such as China where the university is secur-

ing an enduring niche in higher education, research and policy. ASU has also formed strategic partnerships with: Tecnologico de Monterrey in Mexico; Sichuan University in China; Dublin City University in Ireland; Monash University

in Australia; and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

ASU is an active partner with the private sector in initiatives to enhance the social well-being, economic competitiveness, cultural depth, and quality of life of metropolitan Phoenix and the state.

Palm Walk is one of the most picturesque spots on the Arizona State campus.

• ASU is a Doctoral/Research-Extensive I Institution, the highest distinction of the prestigious Carnegie Foundation classification system.• Enrollment for the fall 2009 semester was 68,064 with 55,552 students at the Tempe campus; 11,503 at the Downtown Phoenix campus, 10,380 at the West campus and 9,146 at the Polytechnic campus.• Of the 68,064 students, 54,277 were undergraduates and 13,787 were graduate students.• ASU students have more than 250 majors and more than 12,000 classes from which to choose on four campuses in Metropolitan Phoenix.• The university’s faculty includes recipients of prestigious academic and professional awards, members of the various national academies and a Nobel Laureate.• The number of National Merit Scholars at ASU has increased substantially since 2002. The 2009 freshman class included 156, with more than 610 National Merit Scholars enrolled at ASU. • The ASU freshman class in 2009 included 118 National Hispanic Scholars, with more than 320 enrolled overall.• Twelve ASU students have been named among the top 20 undergraduates in the U.S. by USA Today, on the All-USA College Academic First Team, since 1992. This is the best record of any public universityin the nation. Only Harvard, Yale and Duke have had more. (Another 8 ASU students were named to the second team of 20 and 2 to the third team of 20.) A national team of judges chooses top students

based on grades, leadership, activities and how the students extend their intellectual talents beyond the classroom.• ASU students’ record of winning Fulbright Fellowships is double the national average. Ten percent of applicants nominated from any given university actually will be awarded a Fulbright, but ASU applicants win at the rate of 36 percent. In 2009, 17 students won Fulbrights to study or do research abroad next year, a record for ASU, placing the university 4th among public universities and 14th overall.• ASU is home to the nation’s first School of Sustainability, established in 2007. The school addresses critical challenges facing the world by bringing together disciplines and leaders to create and share knowledge, train scholars and practitioners, and develop practical solutions to pressing environmental, economic, and social challenges of sustainability.• Princeton Review named ASU as one of the nation’s greenest universities and Kaplan College guide citedASU as one of the nation’s top 25 environmentally responsible universities. Sierra Magazine has named ASU as one of the “coolest” schools.• U.S. News & World Report named ASU as one of the best “Up-and-Coming Schools” in the 2009 edition of “America’s Best Colleges.” This ranking highlights colleges and universities that have recently made the most promising and innovative changes in academics, faculty, students, campus life, diversity and facilities.

Academic Highlights at Arizona State University

Page 2: ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY...80 ARIZONA STATE FOOTbAll 2010 PRESIDENT/REGENTS M i c h a e l M. Crow b e c a m e the 16th president of Arizona State University on July 1, 2002. He is

79A R I Z O N A S TAT E F O O T b A l l 2 0 1 0

ArizonA StAte UniverSity

W. P. Carey School of Business - The W. P. Carey School is ranked at No. 11 among public schools; is ranked in the top 30 for its full-time MBA program; and is among the top 5 business schools in the western United States. Ranked programs include: International Supply Chain and Logistics (5); Information Systems (16); and Accounting (27).

College of Education - Ranked No. 25 among public universi-ties. Ranked programs include: Education Policy (11); Secondary Teacher Education (11); Education Psychology (12); Elementary Teacher Education (14); Student Counseling and Personnel Services (15); Education Curriculum and Instruction (17); and Education Administration and Supervision (17).

Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering - Engineering programs at ASU, overall, are ranked No. 24 among public universities. Ranked programs include: Industrial Engineering (16); Environmental Engineering (21); and Aerospace Engineering (24).

Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts - The Herberger Institute features top rankings in Printmaking (3); Photography (5 and 2 among public institutions); Art Education (7); Master’s of Fine Arts program (13 and 8 among public institutions); and Ceramics (14 and 11 among public institutions). The School of Music masters programs rank 19 and 8 among public institutions. The Department of Dance was named one of the “most highly recognized programs in the country,” with national rankings for graduate programs (5) and undergraduate programs (9). The School of Theatre & Film features ranked programs for Theatre for Youth program (top 3) and Creative Writing/Playwriting (20 and 15 among public institutions).

College of Liberal Arts and Sciences - Ranked programs include: Earth Sciences, Archaeology, Creative Writing, Kinesiology, Geological Sciences, and Speech and Hearing Sciences.

College of Nursing & Health Innovation - Ranked 32 out of 396 graduate programs. The college’s Pediatric Nurse Practitioner specialty track program ranked 13th out of 76th existing PNP programs.

College of Public Programs - The School of Public Affairs ranked 25th nationally and top 15 for public institutions. Ranked programs include City Management and Urban Policy (6); Public Management and Administration (8); Public Finance and Budgeting (18); Nonprofit Management (23); and Public Policy Analysis (27).

ASU Academic Programs Ranked in the Top 25 in the Nation

Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, Grady Gammage Auditorium is home to Broadway shows and other productions. Phantom of the Opera, Les Miserables and Rent are just a few of the Broadway shows to come to Gammage Auditorium.

Robert E. Mittelstaedt Jr.W.P. Carey School of Business

Kwang-Wu KimHerberger Institute for Design

and the Arts

Deirdre Meldrum(Paul Johnson, effective Jan. 1, 2011)Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

Maria AllisonGraduate College

Mark JacobsBarrett Honors College

Elizabeth LanglandNew College of Interdisciplinary

Arts and Sciences

Christopher CallahanWalter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass

Communication

Paul Schiff BermanSandra Day O’Connor College of

Law

Quentin WheelerCollege of Liberal Arts and

Sciences

Bernadette MelnykCollege of Nursing and Health

Innovation

Philip RegierASU Online

Debra FriedmanCollege of Public Programs

Sander van der LeeuwSchool of Sustainability

Mari KoernerMary Lou Fulton Teachers College

Keith HjelmstadCollege of Technology and

Innovation

Frederick CoreyUniversity College

Arizona State University Deans

Page 3: ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY...80 ARIZONA STATE FOOTbAll 2010 PRESIDENT/REGENTS M i c h a e l M. Crow b e c a m e the 16th president of Arizona State University on July 1, 2002. He is

A R I Z O N A S TAT E F O O T b A l l 2 0 1 080

PRESIDENT/REGENTS

Mi c h a e l M. Crow b e c a m e

the 16th president of Arizona State University on July 1, 2002. He is guiding the transformation of ASU into one of the nation’s leading public metropolitan research universities, one that is directly engaged in the economic, social, and cultural vitality of its region.

Under his direction the university pursues teaching, research, and creative excellence focused on the major challenges and questions of our time, as well as those central to the building of a sustainable environment and economy for Arizona. He has committed the university to global engagement, community engagement and to setting a new standard for public service.

Since he took office, ASU has marked a number of important milestones, including the establishment of major interdisciplinary research initiatives such as the Biodesign Institute; the Global Institute for Sustainability; and MacroTechnology Works, a program integrating science and technology for large-scale applications, including the Flexible Display Center, a cooperative agreement with the U.S. Army.

Under his direction ASU has initiated a dramatic research infrastructure expansion to create more than one million square feet of new research space, and has announced naming gifts endowing the W. P. Carey School of Business, the Ira A. Fulton School of Engineering, the Mary Lou Fulton School of Education and the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing.

The university has also named the Sandra Day O’Connor School of Law.

In 2007, ASU established the nation’s first School of Sustainability. The school, part of the Global Institute of Sustainability, addresses some of the most critical challenges of our time, with a specific focus on creating solutions for future generations.

Prior to joining ASU, he was executive vice provost of Columbia University, where he also was professor of science and technology policy in the School of International and Public Affairs. As chief strategist of Columbia’s research enterprise, he led technology and innovation transfer operations, establishing Columbia Innovation Enterprises (now Science and Technology Ventures), the Strategic

Initiative Program, and the Columbia Digital Media Initiative, as well as advancing interdisciplinary program development.

He helped found the Center for Science, Policy, and Outcomes (CSPO) in Washington, D.C., a think tank dedicated to linking science and technology to optimal social, economic, and environmental outcomes.

In 2003 CSPO was reestablished at ASU as the Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes.

A fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration, he is the author of books and articles relating to the analysis of research organizations, technology transfer, science and technology policy, and the theory and practice of public policy.

Dr. Michael Crow

United States President Barack Obama talks with ASU President Michael Crow during the university’s 2009 spring commencement ceremony.

Jan BrewerGovernor

Ernest Calderón

Dennis DeConcini

LuAnn Leonard

Not Pictured:Jennifer GintherStudent Regent

William R. HolmesStudent Regent

Rick Myers

Anne Mariucci

Fred DuVal

Bob McLendon

Tom HorneSuperintendent ofPublic Instruction

Mark Killian

Arizona Board of Regents

University President History

Name Title Time LineHiram Bradford Farmer principal 1886-1888Robert Lindley Long principal 1888-1890Dayton Alonzo Reed principal 1890-1892Edgar L. Storment- principal 1892-1895James McNaughton principal 1895-1899Joseph Warren Smith principal 1899-1900Arthur John Matthews principal 1900-1904Arthur John Matthews president 1904-1930Ralph W. Swetman president 1930-1933Grady Gammage president 1933-1959Harold D. Richardson acting 1959-1960G. Homer Durham president 1960-1969Harry K. Newburn acting 1969-1970Harry K. Newburn president 1970-1971John W. Schwada president- 1971-1981J. Russell Nelson president 1981-1989Richard E. Peck interim 1989-1990Lattie F. Coor president 1990-2002Michael Crow president 2002-present

Page 4: ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY...80 ARIZONA STATE FOOTbAll 2010 PRESIDENT/REGENTS M i c h a e l M. Crow b e c a m e the 16th president of Arizona State University on July 1, 2002. He is

81A R I Z O N A S TAT E F O O T b A l l 2 0 1 0

Lisa Love

Directors of AthleticsFred M. Irish ............................................................................ 1896-1913George Schaeffer ...................................................................1914-1916George Edwin Cooper ..........................................................1917-1921Ernest Wills ......................................................................................... 1922Aaron M. McCreary ................................................................1923-1929Ted Edwin Shipkey .................................................................1930-1932Rudolf M. Lavik ....................................................................... 1933-1949Donn Kinzle ............................................................................. 1949-1952Donald R. Van Petten ............................................................1952-1954Clyde B. Smith .......................................................................1955-1971Fred L. Miller ............................................................................1971-1980Joe Kearney .........................................................................................1980Dick Tamburo .......................................................................... 1980-1984Frank Sackton (interim) ........................................................ 1984-1985Charles S. Harris ................................................................... 1985-1995Dr. Christine K. Wilkinson (interim) .......... 1995-1996, 2000, 2005Dr. Kevin White ...................................................................... 1996-2000Gene Smith ..............................................................................2000-2005Lisa Love ...............................................................................2005-present Lisa Love was named Arizona State’s Vice President for University Athletics on April

23, 2005.

Lisa Love was named Arizona State’s Vice President for University Athletics on April 23, 2005.

At ASU, Love serves as the senior administrative officer of the university’s athletic program, which fea-tures 12 women’s and nine men’s sports, including men’s and women’s basketball, men’s and women’s golf, swimming and diving, women’s tennis, track/field and cross country; women’s gymnastics, soccer, softball, volleyball, and water polo, baseball, wrestling and football.

ASU has won six national championships since Love took over in 2005.

Love is responsible for the management and devel-opment of one of the finest and most comprehensive athletic physical plants in the nation at ASU, playing host to nearly 1 million patrons each year. ASU’s

athletic staff includes more than 150 full and part-time coaches and administrative and support personnel who provide services to about 500 student-athletes.

Love has served on the NCAA Leadership Council and chaired the Pac-10 Conference’s Athletic Director’s Revenue Sharing Committee in 2006-07. She has participated in both Teach for America and Read for America, which required teaching and reading to seventh and eighth-graders at C.J. Jorgensen School and Copper King Elementary School.

In the short time she has presided over the affairs of ASU Athletics, Love has already established herself as one of the rising administrators in the country.

Love’s ability to lead was evident right from the start. She had been on the job a little more than two months (officially began July 1, 2005) when ASU had to move its scheduled football game with LSU from Baton Rouge, La., to Tempe - in less than a week’s time - because of the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina in the state of Louisiana. In the end, $1 million was raised through ticket sales from the game to assist with the Hurricane relief effort.

One of only six female athletic directors out of 119 at Division I Schools with football, Love has taken important steps since her appointment to ensure that ASU remains one of the premier athletic programs in the country. She has extended the contracts of women’s basketball coach Charli Turner Thorne (two Pac-10 Championships and five NCAA Tournament appearances); head track and field coach Greg Kraft (four national championships in the last two years); head women’s tennis coach Sheila McInerney and women’s golf coach Melissa Luellen (2009 national champions).

In addition, Love has received praise around the country for hiring a powerful class of head coaches, including veteran football coach Dennis Erickson, the 9th-winningest active coach in the nation and two-time national champion who helped ASU fashion a 10-3 record and a Pac-10 co-championship in 2007. In addition, she hired North

Carolina State’s Herb Sendek (the 2010 Pac-10 Coach of the Year), who has guided the ASU men’s basketball program to three straight 20+ win seasons and an appear-ance in the 2009 NCAA Men’s Basketball tournament in 2009. She also hired softball coach Clint Myers, who coached the team to a national championship in 2008, base-ball coach Tim Esmay, who led the Devils to a Pac-10 Title and College World Series appearance in his first season, women’s soccer coach Kevin Boyd, who led the Sun Devils to an NCAA appearance in 2009, and volleyball coach Jason Watson, who led BYU to the Elite Eight in 2007.

“Lisa Love has made an impact that places her along side the great collegiate athlet-ics leaders of our nation,” Arizona State President Michael Crow said. “She has set the bar high, both for athletic and academic performance. She has demonstrated strategic skill in hiring, retaining and developing an exceptional athletic staff. Her vision and per-sonal leadership skills are laying a foundation for sustained success.”

Love came to ASU from the University of Southern California where she had been since 1989 as head women’s volleyball coach (1989-98) and senior administrator (1991-2005).

At USC, Love handled the day-to-day supervision of eight sports and was active in the athletic department’s strategic planning, gender equity, civil rights and NCAA certi-fication issues and she served on both the Pac-10 Council and the NCAA Management Council. She also served two stints (1992 - 1993 and 2001 - 2002) as vice president of the Pacific-10 Conference.

As a coach, Love was a master teacher at the pinnacle of her profession. She com-piled an impressive 404-171 as a college head coach for 17 seasons at Texas Arlington (199-78 from 1982-88) and USC (205-93 from 1989-98). At USC, she led the Trojans to nine NCAA tournament berths and eight finishes in the national Top 15. She was selected as the Pac-10 Co-Coach of the Year in 1997. She was national Coach of the Year in 1988 when Arlington went 30-4 and fell one win shy of the Final Four.

Love served as president of the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) from 1997-98 and as the chair of the NCAA Division I Volleyball Committee. In 2005, Love was inducted into the AVCA Hall of Fame.

As a varsity athlete in the sport of volleyball, Love was elected to the Hall of Honor at Texas Tech, her alma mater, and as a coach, Love was elected to both the AVCA and Texas-Arlington Halls of Honor.

Lisa Love’s Leadership AppointmentsPac-10 Council Executive - VP (until 2011)Pac-10 Budget and Finance - Chair (until 2012)Pac-10 Diversity Leadership Initiative Review (until 2013)Pac-10 Recruiting Guidelines (until 2011)Pac-10 Athletic Directors’ TV - Chair (until 2011)Rose Bowl Management committee (ex off)Operations Review Board for Karsten Golf Course

Page 5: ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY...80 ARIZONA STATE FOOTbAll 2010 PRESIDENT/REGENTS M i c h a e l M. Crow b e c a m e the 16th president of Arizona State University on July 1, 2002. He is

A R I Z O N A S TAT E F O O T b A l l 2 0 1 082

DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI

Martin Alvarez ’72President, Sun Eagle ConstructionDanielle Ammaccapane x’88Professional GolferHattie Babbitt ’69, ’72 J.D.Attorney, Jennings Strouss & Salmon, PLCFormer U.S. Ambassador, Organization of

American StatesBarbara McConnell Barrett ’72, ’75

M.P.A., ’78 J.D.AttorneyEmerita Member, ASU Foundation Board Former adviser, Bush and Reagan admin-

istrationsPresident and CEO, T.C. Ranch LLCWilliam J. Barrington ’73CEO, Savannah YachtsRebecca Berch ’76, ’79 J.D., ’90 M.A.Vice Chief Justice, Arizona Supreme CourtFrank Blethen ‘68Publisher and CEO, The Seattle TimesBarry Bonds x’86Professional Baseball Player, San

Francisco GiantsMajor League Single-Season Home Run

Record-holder (73) Richard Boals ‘79President and CEO, Blue Cross and Blue

Shield of ArizonaBob Bulla ’61President, Arizona Board of RegentsHenry Carr x ’63Double Olympic Gold Medalist, Track &

FieldTony Carrillo ’04 Cartoonist, United Features SyndicateEdward M. Carson ’51Past Board Member, Wells Fargo BankPast Chairman & CEO, First Interstate

BancorpChristopher J. Cohan ’73President & CEO, Sonic Communications

Owner, Golden State WarriorsEric Crown ’84Chairman Emeritus and Co-Founder,

Insight Enterprises, Inc.Christine Yara Devine ’87News Anchor, Fox Network (LA affiliate)Gary Dirks ‘80 PH.D.President, BP/AMOCO – AsiaDoug Ducey ’86Founder & Owner, Cold Stone CreameryFlorence “Flo” Eckstein ’76 M.S.W.Publisher, Jewish News of Greater PhoenixFloyd L. English ’62 M.S., ’66 Ph.D.Past President, CEO & Chairman, Andrew

CorporationThomas R. Evans ’76President & CEO, Bankrate, Inc.Susan Falk ’72Group President, HartmarxHerman Frazier ’77Olympic Gold Medalist, Track & FieldFormer Senior Associate Athletics Director,

Arizona State UniversityDirector of Athletics, University of HawaiiRabih Gholam ‘96Executive Producer, MTVDaniel M. Grow ’68Past President and CEO, Drexel Heritage

Furnishings, Inc.Albert Hale ’73Past President, Navajo NationArizona Senator, District 2Derrick Hall ’91President, Arizona DiamondbacksGreg Harney ’78President, Global Sports PartnersMichael D. Hawkins ’67, ’70 J.D.Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit Lionel Hollins ‘86Former Professional Basketball PlayerAssistant Coach, Memphis Grizzlies (NBA)

Reggie Jackson x’69 Former Professional Baseball PlayerInductee, Major League Baseball Hall of

FameTina Jonas ‘82Undersecretary of Defense (Comptroller),

U.S. Department of DefenseChief Financial Officer, U.S. Department

of DefenseTayari Jones ’00 M.F.A.Award-winning NovelistJim Kane ‘88President, Southwest GasStephen Knott ’59Former Managing Partner, Knott’s Berry

FarmVani Kola ’87 M.S.Technology entrepreneurPast President, Certus Software, Inc.Kim Komando ‘85Nationally syndicated columnist and radio

show hostPaul Lo Duca x’94Professional Baseball Player, New York

MetsJames L. Loper ’53Director, USC Annenberg Program for the

Study of Public BroadcastingPast Executive Director, National Academy

of Television Arts & SciencesMaicel Malone ’95Olympian, Track & FieldHead Coach, Women’s Track & Field,

Florida A & M Vada Manager ‘83Director of Global Management, NikeRuth McGregor ’74 J.D.Chief Justice, Arizona Supreme CourtAl Michaels ’66Broadcaster, NBC SportsPhil Mickelson ’92Professional Golfer, PGA Tour

John Molina ’83, ’05 J.D.Founder/Director, Las Fuentes Health Clinic of Guadalupe (Ariz.)Linda Brock Nelson ’75 M.C., ’98

M.BA., ’98 Ph.D.President and Manager, Linda Brock

Nelson and Associates, L.L.C.Ed Pastor ’66, ’74 J.D.U.S. Congressman, Arizona District 4Melissa Payner-Gregor ‘81President/CEO, Bluefly, Inc.Bill Post ’73Chairman & CEO, Pinnacle West Capital CorporationMember, Sun Angel Foundation Board of DirectorsJake Plummer x’97Former Professional Football PlayerRaman Rao ’78 M.B.A.Chairman and CEO, International Semiconductor TechnologiesDenise Resnik ’82Owner, Denise Resnik & AssociatesCo-Founder, Southwest Autism Research CenterGuy Roberts ‘72Deputy Assistant Secretary General, NATOJohn Rood ‘90Assistant Secretary of State for

International Security and Non-Proliferation, U.S. Department of State

Barry S. Rosenblum ’75 Executive Vice President, Time Warner

Cable Michael D. Ryan ’77 J.D.Justice, Arizona Supreme CourtMatt Salmon ’81Former U.S. CongressmanFormer State SenatorDirector of Governmental Affairs, Phoenix,

Greenberg TraurigJoe Shirley ‘82 MSWPresident of the Navajo NationJoe Shoen ’81 J.D.Chairman, AMERCO, Inc.Chairman and President, U-Haul, Inc.Volker Sonntag ‘67Neurosurgeon, Barrow Neurological

InstituteKate Spade ’85Kate Spade LLCBrenda Strong ‘82Actor, “Desperate Housewives”Pat Tillman ’97U.S. Army Special Forces (deceased)Posthumously awarded the Silver Star,

Meritorious Service Medal and Purple Heart

Kurt Tingey ’92 M.B.A.Executive Vice President/CFO, Clear

Channel OutdoorGary Tooker ’62 Past Chairman of the Board, Motorola Inc.Craig Weatherup ’67 Former Chairman & CEO, Pepsi-Cola, Inc. Chairman, ASU FoundationJohn Whiteman ‘63Past Chairman and President, Empire

SouthwestJohn Zanotti ’74 J.D.President, Cincinnati BiomedicalBob Zollars ’79President/CEO, Wound Care Solutions

LLC

x = Year of intended graduation

Martin Alvarez Henry Carr

Al Michaels

Barbara Barrett Rebecca Berch Barry Bonds

Edward Carson Eric Crown Christine Devine

Bob Bulla

Ruth McGregor

Phil Mickelson Craig Weatherup

Arizona State University’s alumni have made their mark in athletics, business, industry, education, government, the arts and many other fields. Prominent ASU alumni include:

Bill Post Matt Salmon

Herman Frazier

Pat TillmanEd Pastor