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California University
Vo l u me 13, Nu mbe r 19 Au G. 29, 2011
Read the Journal online: www.calu.edu/news/the-journal
Summit
Speakers
Inspire
Educators
A
Sean Covey, executive vice president of global solutions and partnerships for FranklinCovey, joins California University President Angelo
Armenti, Jr. to announce that Cal U has been named the world’s first FranklinCovey Leadership University.
Cal U named FranklinCovey
Leadership University
C
al U has been named the world’s
first FranklinCovey Leadership
University in recognition of its
efforts to incorporate leadership
principles into teaching, learning and
campus life.
The announcement was made Aug. 3
by Sean Covey, FranklinCovey’s
education practice leader, during the
annual Leader in Me Global Education
Summit.
The designation recognizes Cal U’s
longtime commitment to character
building and leadership training based on
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People and
other works by Dr. Stephen R. Covey.
It also signals Cal U’s commitment to
reaching Lighthouse University status by
instituting the campus-wide Cal U Leader
for Life leadership development process
and achieving measurable results among
students, faculty and staff. FranklinCovey
confers “lighthouse” status on model
schools that meet specific criteria and
demonstrate improvements based on the
leadership model.
“As a 7 Habits instructor for more
than a decade, I have seen the power of
Dr. Covey’s ideas firsthand,” said
University President Angelo Armenti, Jr.
“By positioning Cal U as the first
FranklinCovey Leadership University, we
hope to strengthen the character-building
efforts that are a core component of Cal
U’s mission and give every member of
our campus community the opportunity
to become an effective leader.”
Beginning this fall, the Cal U Leader
for Life process will encourage all students
to participate in Character Quotient (cQ)
surveys and a Leadership Foundations
module, complete 7 Habits training in
face-to-face sessions or online, complete
the Great Work, Great Career online
course and meet with a career counselor
for a career assessment, and take part in
capstone leadership activities.
Students who complete the program
will receive certificates and special
recognition at Commencement. Similar
multi-step programs are being developed
for faculty and non-teaching staff.
Eventually, parents also will be involved
in the leadership initiative.
“I congratulate Cal U for becoming
the world’s first FranklinCovey
Leadership University and for committing
to achieve Lighthouse University status,”
said Sean Covey.
“For students, staff and faculty, it
promises to help them develop 21stcentury skills and leadership capabilities
that are critical for success in today’s fastchanging world. We believe Cal U will be
an inspiring example to all universities
around the world.”
n international audience of more
than 600 teachers and school
administrators heard from
groundbreaking educators at The Leader
in Me Global Education Summit, held
Aug. 3-4 at Cal U.
A highlight of the summit was the
announcement that Cal U has been
named the world’s first FranklinCovey
Leadership University. The University
will institute the campus-wide Leader for
Life leadership development process
beginning this fall.
“Because of our long history of
preparing teachers, I think it is important
that Cal U be involved as a leader in the
effort to continuously improve our
schools and the education they provide
to our nation’s students,” said Cal U
President Angelo Armenti, Jr. in his
keynote address.
“The Leader for Life program will not
only help students get a job, it will help
them do their job. I believe that every
student at every level can become a
leader for life.”
Cal U has hosted the Global
Education Summit each of the past three
summers. This year’s attendees came
from schools in 26 states and 14
countries.
After a videotaped welcome by Dr.
Stephen R. Covey, who was unable to
travel to the event, his son Sean Covey
discussed The Leader in Me, describing it
as an “operating system” that can
transform schools.
He explained how The Leader in Me
changed his own children’s school, and
he introduced teachers from
FranklinCovey Lighthouse Schools
across the country. There are more than
500 leadership schools in North
American and 880 worldwide.
“The Leader in Me is an idea whose
— Continued on page 2
Gates Chasing Olympic Berth
REadthe J
L
Next year Cal U senior women’s swimmer Melissa Gates will try to make the
U.S. Olympic Team and also defend her NCAA national championship in the
50 freestyle event.
ast spring Melissa Gates became Cal U’s
first NCAA national champion in
swimming when she won the Division II
50-yard Freestyle National Championship.
In July she will compete for a spot on the
U.S. team for the 2012 Olympic Games in
London.
The senior from Leola, Pa., reached the 2012
Olympic Team Trial qualifying time in the 50
freestyle last month at the USA Swimming
Eastern Zone Super Section, at Trees Pool in
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Gates won the finals of the 50-meter event
with a time of 26.23 seconds.
“What a tribute to a student-athlete who has
worked hard the past three years while at Cal U
and at home with her club team during the
summers!” said Cal U head swimming coach Ed
Denny. “Melissa has specific goals each season,
and each builds upon the previous ones.”
The Olympic Team Trials will be held in
Omaha, Neb., from June 25-July 2. The
preliminary and semifinal heats of the women’s
50-yard freestyle are scheduled for July 1, and
the finals are set for July 2.
The swimmers with the best two times in the
finals will represent Team USA at the 2012
— Continued on page 2
Partnership Links Cal U, California Elementary
I
n the spirit of The Leader in Me Global Education
Summit, a special partnership is about to begin
between Cal U and the California Area School
District.
University President Angelo Armenti, Jr. has
announced that Cal U will provide the first full year of
the Leader in Me process to all administrators, teachers
and staff of California Elementary School.
Through the partnership, certified Leader in Me
facilitators from Cal U’s faculty and staff will lead a
series of training sessions at California Elementary.
The Leader in Me is a school-wide program based on
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Dr. Stephen R.
Covey. By instilling the 7 Habits principles, it aims to
transform a school’s culture to improve academic
achievement, minimize discipline problems, increase
engagement among teachers and parents, and give
students the skills and self-confidence they need to
thrive.
“I want to do whatever I can to provide, encourage
and inspire kids to take more of an active role in their
own education,” said Michael Sears, principal at
California Elementary.
Students in grades K-4 will learn The Leader in Me
principles, Sears said, then continue on to high school
and perhaps attend Cal U, the world’s first
FranklinCovey Leadership University.
“Then we get that (Leader in Me experience) in
return when they come back to the school district as
teachers that we hire. It’s going to be a wonderful
process were we have teachers who really understand
and teach our students the 7 Habits, and it will just
spread from there.”
Although Dr. Stephen Covey was unable to attend
the Global Education Summit Aug. 3-4, Cal U has
dedicated the partnership agreement to him as a token
President Armenti and Sean Covey (center) award the Stephen R. Covey Leader In Me Partnership to California Elementary
School Principal Michael Sears in Steele Hall during the Global Education Summit. Cal U will provide the first full year of the
Leader in Me process to all administrators, teachers and staff of California Elementary School.
of the University’s longstanding relationship with
FranklinCovey, the company he founded, and in
appreciation for his contributions to building leadership
effectiveness over many decades.
In his honor, the initiative will be called “The
Stephen R. Covey Leader in Me Partnership.”
Summit Speakers Inspire Educators
— Continued from page 1
time has come,” said Sean Covey, FranklinCovey’s
executive vice president of global solutions and
partnerships. “Leadership is convincing people of their
own worth and potential so clearly that they are inspired
to see it in themselves.”
Summit attendees gave a standing ovation to speaker
Erin Gruwell, a former teacher in the tough Long Beach
(Calif.) School District. The district had written off her
students, but their journal entries became the basis for a
New York Times bestseller, The Freedom Writers’ Diary.
In 2007, Academy Award winner Hilary Swank
starred in the feature film Freedom Writers, based on the
book. During her presentation Gruwell urged the
audience to “treat children like they have a Ph.D. of
their own.”
“These kids need to find their voice, become leaders
and start telling their stories to other people,” she said.
“They all have a unique odyssey and journey.”
Speaker Stone Kyambadde also drew an enthusiastic
response. A former professional soccer player, he now
uses the sport to help teenage boys in his native Uganda
grow into men of character.
Kyambadde, who appears in a FranklinCovey video,
emphasized the importance of love in influencing
tomorrow’s leaders.
“You can love people without leading them, but you
can’t lead people without loving them,” he said.
Closing the summit was Muriel Summers, principal
of A.B. Combs Leadership Magnet Elementary School
in Raleigh, N.C.
Summers turned the once-failing school into a
thriving magnet school when she focused on leadership
and infused the 7 Habits principles into every class,
creating The Leader in Me model. Nine of her A.B.
Combs students appeared onstage during the opening
session to discuss the 7 Habits and answer questions
from the audience.
At left, Erin Gruwell, a former teacher in the tough Long Beach
(Calif.) School District, delivers an inspiring talk to educators at
The Leader in Me Global Education Summit’s opening morning.
Above, Northeastern Elementary School employees Tracy
Huffman (left) Lauren Burkhardt (center) and Heather Wechta
enjoy the summit, which attracted an international audience of
more than 600 educators and school administrators.
“Shine your light on others so they can see their
own worth and potential,” Summers told the educators.
“As our students return to our classrooms this fall, we
need to greet them with messages of hope and
promise.”
The conference made an impact, participants said.
Greer Parker, principal of Cal-Allen Elementary
School near Corpus Christi, Texas, said she plans to
start the leadership program when her school moves to a
new campus.
“We need a new climate, a new morale, and this
conference has been absolutely phenomenal,” she said.
“It’s been the most positive, uplifting and motivational
experience I have ever had in my life. This gives hope
for everyone, and I plan on bringing back all I can.”
Among summit “veterans” was Dr. Tom Hajzus,
assistant to the superintendent for operations in the
Peters Township (Pa.) School District.
“Peters has bought into Covey very heavily,” Hajzus
said. “Our meetings revolve around the principles, and
you can walk down the halls in our building and see the
different points on the walls, such as (Habit 3), ‘Put
First Things First.’
“This is a very worthwhile endeavor which teaches
extremely important lessons in life.”
Senior Swimmer Competing for Spot on 2012 Olympic team
— Continued from page 1
Summer Olympics.
“When Melissa puts on the bathing
cap with the Cal logo on it next summer
2
in Omaha and steps up on the blocks,
she’ll know that we are all there with
her,” Denny said.
A five-time All-American, Gates
became just the fifth individual national
champion in school history and first in
more than 20 years. She won the 50-yard
freestyle national title with a school and
Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference
record time of 22.72 seconds on March 9
at the NCAA Division II Championships
in San Antonio, Texas. Gates established
a combined eight school records (three
individual, five relay) last year and was
selected Swimmer of the Week five times.
AmeriCorps
Link Leads
to Summer
of Service
A
A performance by nationally known pop punk band Forever The Sickest Kids highlights the Party in the Park festivities leading into the
Vulcan football team’s season-opening game against St. Cloud State.
Party Features Pop Punk Band
C
al U will kick off the 2011 football season with its
sixth annual Party in the Park and a performance by
the nationally known pop punk band Forever The
Sickest Kids.
The party gets started at 3:30 p.m. Thursday with a
performance by the band Beyond Daylight and a Welcome
Back Picnic hosted by University President Angelo Armenti,
Jr. at Roadman Park, on Cal U’s south campus.
Cal U students, faculty and staff may attend the picnic
free with a valid CalCard. Picnic guests pay $6.75 for adults,
$3.75 for children age 7 and younger.
An alumni tailgate party begins at 5 p.m. at the
Roadman Park pavilions.
Forever The Sickest Kids will perform from 5-6:30 p.m.
T
FTSK, from Dallas, Texas, was named the No. 1
underground band in the “22 Best Underground Bands” by
Alternative Press.
The party concludes with a 7 p.m. football game at
Adamson Stadium’s Hepner-Bailey Field, where the
nationally ranked Cal U Vulcans take on St. Cloud State
(Minn.).
Cal U students with valid CalCards may attend the
football game at no charge. Game tickets are available at the
gate. Cost is $8 for general admission seating, $5 for
students who do not attend Cal U.
For more information, contact Jenifer Sigado, director of
student orientation programs and the University Welcome Center,
at 724-938-1626 or sigado@calu.edu .
Two Join Board of Governors
he state Senate has confirmed
Ronald G. Henry of Bryn Mawr
and Robert S. Taylor of New
Hope as the newest members of the
Pennsylvania State System of Higher
Education’s Board of Governors.
Henry is a senior consultant with
Capitol Strategies Group LLC, of
Harrisburg, and is an independent
consultant in the areas of public
finance, organization and
management. He served as chairman
of the Corbett-Cawley Budget,
Revenue and Pensions Transition
Committee.
Taylor is chairman and chief
executive officer of Cameron
Companies LLC, a diversified holding
company specializing in business and
government affairs consulting, real
estate investment and acquisition, legal
affairs and turnaround management.
He is a 1978 graduate of Slippery Rock
University of Pennsylvania and a
member of the university’s Council of
Trustees, having previously served as
Council Chair.
The 20-member Board of
Governors is responsible for planning
and coordinating development and
operation of PASSHE. The board
establishes broad educational, fiscal
and personnel policies. Among other
tasks, the board appoints the chancellor
and university presidents, approves new
academic programs, sets tuition and
approves PASSHE’s budget.
The Board comprises 11 members
appointed by the governor and
confirmed by the Senate; four state
legislators, two each from the House
and Senate; the governor; the secretary
of education; and three students
selected from among the student
government leaders at the 14 PASSHE
universities.
Henry is a graduate of Georgetown
University and the Georgetown
University Law Center. He is a
member of the Board of Trustees of
the International Visitors Council of
Philadelphia, having served as the
organization’s chairman from 1997 to
2001. He is a member of the
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and
American bar associations and the Bar
Association of the District of
Columbia. He is a former assistant
attorney general and counsel to the
state Department of Commerce.
Taylor is a graduate of Temple
University School of Law and is
admitted to the United States Third
Circuit Court of Appeals, the United
States District Court of Eastern
Pennsylvania and the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court. He has been a White
House appointee to the Environmental
Protection Agency, a trustee in
bankruptcy in the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania and a staff attorney to
the Pennsylvania Worker’s
Compensation Appeal Board.
The other members of the Board of
Governors are Kenneth M. Jarin,
chairman; C.R. “Chuck” Pennoni and
Aaron A. Walton, vice chairmen;
Leonard Altieri III, Representative
Matthew Baker, Marie Conley,
Governor Tom Corbett, Representative
Michael Hanna, Senator Vincent
Hughes, Jonathan Mack, Joseph F.
McGinn, Senator Jeffrey E. Piccola,
Guido Pichini, Harold C. Shields,
Secretary of Education Ronald
Tomalis and Christine Toretti. There
are two vacancies.
Campus BRIEFS
OSD Registration Meetings Set
New Site for Forum Meetings
The Office for Students with Disabilities (OSD) is
available to California University students. The office is
located in the Room 105, Azorsky Hall. Office hours are 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays.To contact OSD, call 724-9385871 or e-mail osdmail@calu.edu .
Interested students are invited to attend Semester
Registration Meetings scheduled in the Johnson Hall
Multipurpose Room; call OSD for dates and times.
More information can be found on the Cal U website,
www.calu.edu ; search for the keyword “disability.”
The Cal U Forum, the University’s governance
structure, has changed its meeting venue.
The monthly meetings will now take place in Room
327, Dixon Hall.
As always, the meetings will begin at 4 p.m.
The 2011-2012 meeting dates are Sept. 6, Oct. 4, Nov.
1, Dec. 6, Jan. 24, Feb. 21, March 20, and April 17.
The meetings are open to the University Community.
For more information call 724-938-1633 or e-mail
turcic@calu.edu .
growing relationship between Cal
U’s Center for Civic Engagement
and AmeriCorps, a national service program that focuses on needs in areas
such as education, public safety, health and
the environment, led to a summer of service for one recent graduate.
Lauren Kross, who graduated in May
with a degree in applied sociology, was one
of two students to participate in the
Scholars in Service to Pennsylvania, an
AmeriCorps program that requires at least
300 hours of community service in
exchange for scholarship dollars.
The other, junior
Kelly Horrell,
worked at the Kiski
Valley YMCA to
earn her hours.
They are the first
of what Diane
Williams, who
Lauren Kross
directs the Center for
Civic Engagement at
Cal U, expects to be many students who
will become Scholars in Service as the program grows and more positions are awarded to Cal U.
Kross completed her hours with the
Washington Family Center in Washington,
Pa., and The Call to Serve, a nonprofit
organization that partners with other
groups nationwide to provide service
opportunities to college-age students.
Kross and nine others traveled to five
states over 19 days and did projects such as
restoring an oyster bed in Wilmington,
N.C.; completing a hurricane and tornado
awareness project in Pensacola, Fla.; cleaning up flood damage in Nashville, Tenn.;
working with Habitat for Humanity, at a
food bank and foster home, and at an animal sanctuary in Austin, Texas; and with a
charity in New Orleans to build houses in
the ongoing aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina.
“We met a veteran in Pensacola who
was so grateful to see us doing these projects,” Kross said. “He kept telling us how
touched he was and that we were changing
the country for him and his children. So
many people were so gracious to us.
“This was a once-in-a-lifetime thing to
do,” she said. “I may never do anything on
such a large scale as this, but I will always
want to volunteer where I can.”
The Center for Civic Engagement also
has AmeriCorps Community Fellow positions, which have grown from seven to 24
for the 2011-2012 academic year. The fellows program addresses community needs
in the areas of college access and success,
and students works in a variety of jobs.
At Cal U, students are serving as mentors and tutors in local school districts for
at-risk students in K-12 and assisting in
various offices on campus.
Before her Scholars in Service commitment, Kross worked in the Center for Civic
Engagement as a Community Fellow.
“Lauren is very driven,” Williams said.
“She found her passion in service at Cal U,
and now she is trying to find her specific
interest in service as a possible career.”
For more information on AmeriCorps
Scholars in Service or Community Fellow programs, contact Diane Williams in the Center for
Civic Engagement at 724-938-4794 or
williams_d@calu.edu .
3
Four Distinguished Alumni Receive Awards
T
his summer Cal U President
Angelo Armenti, Jr. presented
alumni awards to four
distinguished graduates.
Janis M. Zivic ’64 was honored as
the Alumna of the Year. Michael A.
Perry ’63 received the Alumnus of the
year award, and Aaron ’68 and Gloria
’70 Walton were recognized as the
Alumni Couple of the Year.
helping them to become the first in their
family to attend a four-year college.
Zivic is currently a graduate student
at the University of San Francisco,
where she expects to complete a Master
of Fine Arts in Writing next year. She is
married to Lisa Schoonerman and has a
daughter, Jessica Zivic Chamberlin. Both
women attended a luncheon in Zivic’s
honor held June 12 at the Kara Alumni
House.
Bay Area mentor
A resident of
the San Francisco
Bay Area, Zivic
built a successful
career in
corporate
recruiting and
consulting. After
achieving success
at several
Janis M. Zivic ’64
international
consulting firms, she founded and
managed her own firm, the Zivic Group
Inc., for 11 years before it was acquired
by another industry leader.
Zivic also is a co-founder of
vibrantBrains, described as a “mind
gym” for cognitive exercise. Her own
experience recovering from a traumatic
brain injury led to her work providing
“brain workouts” to maintain and
improve cognitive skills.
An active volunteer and board
member for a number Bay Area
organizations, Zivic is especially proud
of her role as a mentor with the Bay
Area Youth Education Foundation (the
BAY Fund), now known as First
Graduate. The organization assists
children in need, with the goal of
Financial services specialist
During his
40 years in the
financial services
industry, Perry
has worked to
identify, assess
and develop
strategies to
assist people in
efficiently
Michael Perry ’63
accumulating,
protecting and distributing their wealth.
He entered the financial services
industry in 1971, when he joined the
nationwide firm of National Pension
Service Inc. In 1981 he formed Michael
A. Perry and Associates Inc.,
specializing in retirement, financial
services and estate planning, including
business succession planning for business
owners.
To better serve his clients, Perry cofounded PFOsm LLC, which provides
financial analysis and reporting services
to high-net-worth individuals. He also
founded Benefit Resources, which
manages and consults with more than
350 firms in the area of corporate and
executive benefits.
In 2001 Mr. Perry co-founded the
Opus Advisory Group LLC, which
provides all of the above services, as well
as charitable planning through The Opus
Foundation.
His experiences in the world of
finance, as a naval aviator, a United
Airlines captain, a nuclear power-plant
buyer for the U.S. Navy, and a real estate
entrepreneur all have contributed to his
bringing added value to his clients.
Perry lives in Purchase, N.Y., with his
wife, Suzanne. The couple has an adult
daughter. Perry was honored June 26,
also with a luncheon at the Kara Alumni
House.
Wellness advocates
Dr. Gloria ’70 and Aaron Walton ’70
The Waltons are retirees whose
careers were dedicated to the well-being
of western Pennsylvania residents,
especially the region’s children.
As a health insurance executive for
Highmark Inc., Aaron Walton’s career
spanned 40 years and included 14
organizational assignments, including
service on Highmark’s Executive
Leadership Team. In particular, he is
credited with developing the Highmark
Foundation’s $100 million initiative to
address the physical and emotional
health of children in Highmark’s 49
county service regions.
Gloria Walton is a licensed/certified
psychologist, as well as a lecturer, former
university professor and independent
consultant. After many years of
distinguished service in the Pittsburgh
Public Schools, she was an adjunct
professor at Duquesne University. She
also was a weekly contributor to the New
Pittsburgh Courier, where her weekly
column, “Dr. Gloria,” focused on mental
health and wellness issues.
The Waltons both are active
volunteers at their church and in the
community.
A member of California University’s
Council of Trustees, Aaron Walton is
chair of the board of deacons at
Ebenezer Baptist Church, in Pittsburgh;
chair of the August Wilson Center for
African American Culture; and vice
chair of the Board of Governors for the
Pennsylvania State System of Higher
Education. He also serves on a variety of
boards and is president-elect of the Rho
Boule of Sigma Pi Phi fraternity.
Gloria Walton is a deaconess at
Ebenezer Baptist Church, where she also
serves as director of Christian education
and director of Vacation Bible School.
Chair of the board of directors for
Riverset Credit Union (formerly the
Pittsburgh Teachers Credit Union), she is
a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority
Inc. and other organizations.
Married for 41 years, the Waltons live
in Pittsburgh’s North Hills. They are the
parents of two adult children.
Teens Study Sports
Medicine at Workshop
E
ighteen high school students from nine regional school
districts attended a workshop at Cal U Aug. 8-10 to learn
more about athletic training and sports medicine.
Topics included athletic injury assessment, heat-related illnesses
and concussions. Students also were certified in CPR and the use of
an automatic external defibrillator. A highlight of the overnight
camp was a trip to the Pittsburgh Steelers training camp at St.
Vincent College, near Latrobe, Pa. Students took a tour of the
facilities and spoke to members of the team’s medical staff.
The camp was funded by a $11,900 grant from Highmark and
PASSHE. It was run by Dr. Shelly Fetchen DiCesaro, assistant
professor in the Department of Health Science and athletic trainer
at Cal U.
What’s the buzz?
Emeritus professor Dr. Peter J. Belch ‘64 shows off paper-wasp nests he donated to the Department of Biological
and Environmental Sciences, which will add them to the display in the lobby of Frich Hall. Belch retired in 2006
after serving 37 years in the former Department of Social Work and Gerontology at Cal U. He and his wife, Donna
’63, recently moved from their home in Hopwood, Pa., to Colorado. Belch collected three nests by climbing 30 feet
into trees on his property, sawing tree limbs and carefully lowering each nest to the ground. The delicate, papery
nests do not survive the winter, and the wasps will not return to reuse them. Gladly accepting the nests was Lisa
Gillis (left), Belch’s longtime friend and a secretary for the biology department. The Cal U community is welcome
to view the nests and many other displays in Frich Hall. The wasps are long gone.
Faculty Convocation Aug. 30
Cal U President Angelo Armenti, Jr. will host the 2011
Faculty Convocation on Tuesday, Aug. 30, in the Learning
Resource Center auditorium in Morgan Hall during the
University’s common hour, beginning at 11 a.m.
The California Journal is published weekly by California University of Pennsylvania, a member of The Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
Dr. Angelo Armenti, Jr.
University President
Dr. Charles Mance
Vice President for University Technology Services
Craig Butzine
Vice President for Marketing and University Relations
Geraldine M. Jones
Provost/Vice President for Academic Affairs
Ron Huiatt
Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations
Christine Kindl
Editor
Dr. Lenora Angelone
Vice President for Student Affairs
Robert Thorn
Interim Vice President for Administration and Finance
Bruce Wald, Wendy Mackall, Jeff Bender
Writers
Office of Communications and Public Relations
250 University Avenue
California, PA 15419
724-938-4195
wald@calu.edu
The Journal is printed on paper made from trees harvested under the principles of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative ( www.SFIprogram.org ).
4
Vo l u me 13, Nu mbe r 19 Au G. 29, 2011
Read the Journal online: www.calu.edu/news/the-journal
Summit
Speakers
Inspire
Educators
A
Sean Covey, executive vice president of global solutions and partnerships for FranklinCovey, joins California University President Angelo
Armenti, Jr. to announce that Cal U has been named the world’s first FranklinCovey Leadership University.
Cal U named FranklinCovey
Leadership University
C
al U has been named the world’s
first FranklinCovey Leadership
University in recognition of its
efforts to incorporate leadership
principles into teaching, learning and
campus life.
The announcement was made Aug. 3
by Sean Covey, FranklinCovey’s
education practice leader, during the
annual Leader in Me Global Education
Summit.
The designation recognizes Cal U’s
longtime commitment to character
building and leadership training based on
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People and
other works by Dr. Stephen R. Covey.
It also signals Cal U’s commitment to
reaching Lighthouse University status by
instituting the campus-wide Cal U Leader
for Life leadership development process
and achieving measurable results among
students, faculty and staff. FranklinCovey
confers “lighthouse” status on model
schools that meet specific criteria and
demonstrate improvements based on the
leadership model.
“As a 7 Habits instructor for more
than a decade, I have seen the power of
Dr. Covey’s ideas firsthand,” said
University President Angelo Armenti, Jr.
“By positioning Cal U as the first
FranklinCovey Leadership University, we
hope to strengthen the character-building
efforts that are a core component of Cal
U’s mission and give every member of
our campus community the opportunity
to become an effective leader.”
Beginning this fall, the Cal U Leader
for Life process will encourage all students
to participate in Character Quotient (cQ)
surveys and a Leadership Foundations
module, complete 7 Habits training in
face-to-face sessions or online, complete
the Great Work, Great Career online
course and meet with a career counselor
for a career assessment, and take part in
capstone leadership activities.
Students who complete the program
will receive certificates and special
recognition at Commencement. Similar
multi-step programs are being developed
for faculty and non-teaching staff.
Eventually, parents also will be involved
in the leadership initiative.
“I congratulate Cal U for becoming
the world’s first FranklinCovey
Leadership University and for committing
to achieve Lighthouse University status,”
said Sean Covey.
“For students, staff and faculty, it
promises to help them develop 21stcentury skills and leadership capabilities
that are critical for success in today’s fastchanging world. We believe Cal U will be
an inspiring example to all universities
around the world.”
n international audience of more
than 600 teachers and school
administrators heard from
groundbreaking educators at The Leader
in Me Global Education Summit, held
Aug. 3-4 at Cal U.
A highlight of the summit was the
announcement that Cal U has been
named the world’s first FranklinCovey
Leadership University. The University
will institute the campus-wide Leader for
Life leadership development process
beginning this fall.
“Because of our long history of
preparing teachers, I think it is important
that Cal U be involved as a leader in the
effort to continuously improve our
schools and the education they provide
to our nation’s students,” said Cal U
President Angelo Armenti, Jr. in his
keynote address.
“The Leader for Life program will not
only help students get a job, it will help
them do their job. I believe that every
student at every level can become a
leader for life.”
Cal U has hosted the Global
Education Summit each of the past three
summers. This year’s attendees came
from schools in 26 states and 14
countries.
After a videotaped welcome by Dr.
Stephen R. Covey, who was unable to
travel to the event, his son Sean Covey
discussed The Leader in Me, describing it
as an “operating system” that can
transform schools.
He explained how The Leader in Me
changed his own children’s school, and
he introduced teachers from
FranklinCovey Lighthouse Schools
across the country. There are more than
500 leadership schools in North
American and 880 worldwide.
“The Leader in Me is an idea whose
— Continued on page 2
Gates Chasing Olympic Berth
REadthe J
L
Next year Cal U senior women’s swimmer Melissa Gates will try to make the
U.S. Olympic Team and also defend her NCAA national championship in the
50 freestyle event.
ast spring Melissa Gates became Cal U’s
first NCAA national champion in
swimming when she won the Division II
50-yard Freestyle National Championship.
In July she will compete for a spot on the
U.S. team for the 2012 Olympic Games in
London.
The senior from Leola, Pa., reached the 2012
Olympic Team Trial qualifying time in the 50
freestyle last month at the USA Swimming
Eastern Zone Super Section, at Trees Pool in
Pittsburgh, Pa.
Gates won the finals of the 50-meter event
with a time of 26.23 seconds.
“What a tribute to a student-athlete who has
worked hard the past three years while at Cal U
and at home with her club team during the
summers!” said Cal U head swimming coach Ed
Denny. “Melissa has specific goals each season,
and each builds upon the previous ones.”
The Olympic Team Trials will be held in
Omaha, Neb., from June 25-July 2. The
preliminary and semifinal heats of the women’s
50-yard freestyle are scheduled for July 1, and
the finals are set for July 2.
The swimmers with the best two times in the
finals will represent Team USA at the 2012
— Continued on page 2
Partnership Links Cal U, California Elementary
I
n the spirit of The Leader in Me Global Education
Summit, a special partnership is about to begin
between Cal U and the California Area School
District.
University President Angelo Armenti, Jr. has
announced that Cal U will provide the first full year of
the Leader in Me process to all administrators, teachers
and staff of California Elementary School.
Through the partnership, certified Leader in Me
facilitators from Cal U’s faculty and staff will lead a
series of training sessions at California Elementary.
The Leader in Me is a school-wide program based on
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People by Dr. Stephen R.
Covey. By instilling the 7 Habits principles, it aims to
transform a school’s culture to improve academic
achievement, minimize discipline problems, increase
engagement among teachers and parents, and give
students the skills and self-confidence they need to
thrive.
“I want to do whatever I can to provide, encourage
and inspire kids to take more of an active role in their
own education,” said Michael Sears, principal at
California Elementary.
Students in grades K-4 will learn The Leader in Me
principles, Sears said, then continue on to high school
and perhaps attend Cal U, the world’s first
FranklinCovey Leadership University.
“Then we get that (Leader in Me experience) in
return when they come back to the school district as
teachers that we hire. It’s going to be a wonderful
process were we have teachers who really understand
and teach our students the 7 Habits, and it will just
spread from there.”
Although Dr. Stephen Covey was unable to attend
the Global Education Summit Aug. 3-4, Cal U has
dedicated the partnership agreement to him as a token
President Armenti and Sean Covey (center) award the Stephen R. Covey Leader In Me Partnership to California Elementary
School Principal Michael Sears in Steele Hall during the Global Education Summit. Cal U will provide the first full year of the
Leader in Me process to all administrators, teachers and staff of California Elementary School.
of the University’s longstanding relationship with
FranklinCovey, the company he founded, and in
appreciation for his contributions to building leadership
effectiveness over many decades.
In his honor, the initiative will be called “The
Stephen R. Covey Leader in Me Partnership.”
Summit Speakers Inspire Educators
— Continued from page 1
time has come,” said Sean Covey, FranklinCovey’s
executive vice president of global solutions and
partnerships. “Leadership is convincing people of their
own worth and potential so clearly that they are inspired
to see it in themselves.”
Summit attendees gave a standing ovation to speaker
Erin Gruwell, a former teacher in the tough Long Beach
(Calif.) School District. The district had written off her
students, but their journal entries became the basis for a
New York Times bestseller, The Freedom Writers’ Diary.
In 2007, Academy Award winner Hilary Swank
starred in the feature film Freedom Writers, based on the
book. During her presentation Gruwell urged the
audience to “treat children like they have a Ph.D. of
their own.”
“These kids need to find their voice, become leaders
and start telling their stories to other people,” she said.
“They all have a unique odyssey and journey.”
Speaker Stone Kyambadde also drew an enthusiastic
response. A former professional soccer player, he now
uses the sport to help teenage boys in his native Uganda
grow into men of character.
Kyambadde, who appears in a FranklinCovey video,
emphasized the importance of love in influencing
tomorrow’s leaders.
“You can love people without leading them, but you
can’t lead people without loving them,” he said.
Closing the summit was Muriel Summers, principal
of A.B. Combs Leadership Magnet Elementary School
in Raleigh, N.C.
Summers turned the once-failing school into a
thriving magnet school when she focused on leadership
and infused the 7 Habits principles into every class,
creating The Leader in Me model. Nine of her A.B.
Combs students appeared onstage during the opening
session to discuss the 7 Habits and answer questions
from the audience.
At left, Erin Gruwell, a former teacher in the tough Long Beach
(Calif.) School District, delivers an inspiring talk to educators at
The Leader in Me Global Education Summit’s opening morning.
Above, Northeastern Elementary School employees Tracy
Huffman (left) Lauren Burkhardt (center) and Heather Wechta
enjoy the summit, which attracted an international audience of
more than 600 educators and school administrators.
“Shine your light on others so they can see their
own worth and potential,” Summers told the educators.
“As our students return to our classrooms this fall, we
need to greet them with messages of hope and
promise.”
The conference made an impact, participants said.
Greer Parker, principal of Cal-Allen Elementary
School near Corpus Christi, Texas, said she plans to
start the leadership program when her school moves to a
new campus.
“We need a new climate, a new morale, and this
conference has been absolutely phenomenal,” she said.
“It’s been the most positive, uplifting and motivational
experience I have ever had in my life. This gives hope
for everyone, and I plan on bringing back all I can.”
Among summit “veterans” was Dr. Tom Hajzus,
assistant to the superintendent for operations in the
Peters Township (Pa.) School District.
“Peters has bought into Covey very heavily,” Hajzus
said. “Our meetings revolve around the principles, and
you can walk down the halls in our building and see the
different points on the walls, such as (Habit 3), ‘Put
First Things First.’
“This is a very worthwhile endeavor which teaches
extremely important lessons in life.”
Senior Swimmer Competing for Spot on 2012 Olympic team
— Continued from page 1
Summer Olympics.
“When Melissa puts on the bathing
cap with the Cal logo on it next summer
2
in Omaha and steps up on the blocks,
she’ll know that we are all there with
her,” Denny said.
A five-time All-American, Gates
became just the fifth individual national
champion in school history and first in
more than 20 years. She won the 50-yard
freestyle national title with a school and
Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference
record time of 22.72 seconds on March 9
at the NCAA Division II Championships
in San Antonio, Texas. Gates established
a combined eight school records (three
individual, five relay) last year and was
selected Swimmer of the Week five times.
AmeriCorps
Link Leads
to Summer
of Service
A
A performance by nationally known pop punk band Forever The Sickest Kids highlights the Party in the Park festivities leading into the
Vulcan football team’s season-opening game against St. Cloud State.
Party Features Pop Punk Band
C
al U will kick off the 2011 football season with its
sixth annual Party in the Park and a performance by
the nationally known pop punk band Forever The
Sickest Kids.
The party gets started at 3:30 p.m. Thursday with a
performance by the band Beyond Daylight and a Welcome
Back Picnic hosted by University President Angelo Armenti,
Jr. at Roadman Park, on Cal U’s south campus.
Cal U students, faculty and staff may attend the picnic
free with a valid CalCard. Picnic guests pay $6.75 for adults,
$3.75 for children age 7 and younger.
An alumni tailgate party begins at 5 p.m. at the
Roadman Park pavilions.
Forever The Sickest Kids will perform from 5-6:30 p.m.
T
FTSK, from Dallas, Texas, was named the No. 1
underground band in the “22 Best Underground Bands” by
Alternative Press.
The party concludes with a 7 p.m. football game at
Adamson Stadium’s Hepner-Bailey Field, where the
nationally ranked Cal U Vulcans take on St. Cloud State
(Minn.).
Cal U students with valid CalCards may attend the
football game at no charge. Game tickets are available at the
gate. Cost is $8 for general admission seating, $5 for
students who do not attend Cal U.
For more information, contact Jenifer Sigado, director of
student orientation programs and the University Welcome Center,
at 724-938-1626 or sigado@calu.edu .
Two Join Board of Governors
he state Senate has confirmed
Ronald G. Henry of Bryn Mawr
and Robert S. Taylor of New
Hope as the newest members of the
Pennsylvania State System of Higher
Education’s Board of Governors.
Henry is a senior consultant with
Capitol Strategies Group LLC, of
Harrisburg, and is an independent
consultant in the areas of public
finance, organization and
management. He served as chairman
of the Corbett-Cawley Budget,
Revenue and Pensions Transition
Committee.
Taylor is chairman and chief
executive officer of Cameron
Companies LLC, a diversified holding
company specializing in business and
government affairs consulting, real
estate investment and acquisition, legal
affairs and turnaround management.
He is a 1978 graduate of Slippery Rock
University of Pennsylvania and a
member of the university’s Council of
Trustees, having previously served as
Council Chair.
The 20-member Board of
Governors is responsible for planning
and coordinating development and
operation of PASSHE. The board
establishes broad educational, fiscal
and personnel policies. Among other
tasks, the board appoints the chancellor
and university presidents, approves new
academic programs, sets tuition and
approves PASSHE’s budget.
The Board comprises 11 members
appointed by the governor and
confirmed by the Senate; four state
legislators, two each from the House
and Senate; the governor; the secretary
of education; and three students
selected from among the student
government leaders at the 14 PASSHE
universities.
Henry is a graduate of Georgetown
University and the Georgetown
University Law Center. He is a
member of the Board of Trustees of
the International Visitors Council of
Philadelphia, having served as the
organization’s chairman from 1997 to
2001. He is a member of the
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and
American bar associations and the Bar
Association of the District of
Columbia. He is a former assistant
attorney general and counsel to the
state Department of Commerce.
Taylor is a graduate of Temple
University School of Law and is
admitted to the United States Third
Circuit Court of Appeals, the United
States District Court of Eastern
Pennsylvania and the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court. He has been a White
House appointee to the Environmental
Protection Agency, a trustee in
bankruptcy in the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania and a staff attorney to
the Pennsylvania Worker’s
Compensation Appeal Board.
The other members of the Board of
Governors are Kenneth M. Jarin,
chairman; C.R. “Chuck” Pennoni and
Aaron A. Walton, vice chairmen;
Leonard Altieri III, Representative
Matthew Baker, Marie Conley,
Governor Tom Corbett, Representative
Michael Hanna, Senator Vincent
Hughes, Jonathan Mack, Joseph F.
McGinn, Senator Jeffrey E. Piccola,
Guido Pichini, Harold C. Shields,
Secretary of Education Ronald
Tomalis and Christine Toretti. There
are two vacancies.
Campus BRIEFS
OSD Registration Meetings Set
New Site for Forum Meetings
The Office for Students with Disabilities (OSD) is
available to California University students. The office is
located in the Room 105, Azorsky Hall. Office hours are 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. weekdays.To contact OSD, call 724-9385871 or e-mail osdmail@calu.edu .
Interested students are invited to attend Semester
Registration Meetings scheduled in the Johnson Hall
Multipurpose Room; call OSD for dates and times.
More information can be found on the Cal U website,
www.calu.edu ; search for the keyword “disability.”
The Cal U Forum, the University’s governance
structure, has changed its meeting venue.
The monthly meetings will now take place in Room
327, Dixon Hall.
As always, the meetings will begin at 4 p.m.
The 2011-2012 meeting dates are Sept. 6, Oct. 4, Nov.
1, Dec. 6, Jan. 24, Feb. 21, March 20, and April 17.
The meetings are open to the University Community.
For more information call 724-938-1633 or e-mail
turcic@calu.edu .
growing relationship between Cal
U’s Center for Civic Engagement
and AmeriCorps, a national service program that focuses on needs in areas
such as education, public safety, health and
the environment, led to a summer of service for one recent graduate.
Lauren Kross, who graduated in May
with a degree in applied sociology, was one
of two students to participate in the
Scholars in Service to Pennsylvania, an
AmeriCorps program that requires at least
300 hours of community service in
exchange for scholarship dollars.
The other, junior
Kelly Horrell,
worked at the Kiski
Valley YMCA to
earn her hours.
They are the first
of what Diane
Williams, who
Lauren Kross
directs the Center for
Civic Engagement at
Cal U, expects to be many students who
will become Scholars in Service as the program grows and more positions are awarded to Cal U.
Kross completed her hours with the
Washington Family Center in Washington,
Pa., and The Call to Serve, a nonprofit
organization that partners with other
groups nationwide to provide service
opportunities to college-age students.
Kross and nine others traveled to five
states over 19 days and did projects such as
restoring an oyster bed in Wilmington,
N.C.; completing a hurricane and tornado
awareness project in Pensacola, Fla.; cleaning up flood damage in Nashville, Tenn.;
working with Habitat for Humanity, at a
food bank and foster home, and at an animal sanctuary in Austin, Texas; and with a
charity in New Orleans to build houses in
the ongoing aftermath of Hurricane
Katrina.
“We met a veteran in Pensacola who
was so grateful to see us doing these projects,” Kross said. “He kept telling us how
touched he was and that we were changing
the country for him and his children. So
many people were so gracious to us.
“This was a once-in-a-lifetime thing to
do,” she said. “I may never do anything on
such a large scale as this, but I will always
want to volunteer where I can.”
The Center for Civic Engagement also
has AmeriCorps Community Fellow positions, which have grown from seven to 24
for the 2011-2012 academic year. The fellows program addresses community needs
in the areas of college access and success,
and students works in a variety of jobs.
At Cal U, students are serving as mentors and tutors in local school districts for
at-risk students in K-12 and assisting in
various offices on campus.
Before her Scholars in Service commitment, Kross worked in the Center for Civic
Engagement as a Community Fellow.
“Lauren is very driven,” Williams said.
“She found her passion in service at Cal U,
and now she is trying to find her specific
interest in service as a possible career.”
For more information on AmeriCorps
Scholars in Service or Community Fellow programs, contact Diane Williams in the Center for
Civic Engagement at 724-938-4794 or
williams_d@calu.edu .
3
Four Distinguished Alumni Receive Awards
T
his summer Cal U President
Angelo Armenti, Jr. presented
alumni awards to four
distinguished graduates.
Janis M. Zivic ’64 was honored as
the Alumna of the Year. Michael A.
Perry ’63 received the Alumnus of the
year award, and Aaron ’68 and Gloria
’70 Walton were recognized as the
Alumni Couple of the Year.
helping them to become the first in their
family to attend a four-year college.
Zivic is currently a graduate student
at the University of San Francisco,
where she expects to complete a Master
of Fine Arts in Writing next year. She is
married to Lisa Schoonerman and has a
daughter, Jessica Zivic Chamberlin. Both
women attended a luncheon in Zivic’s
honor held June 12 at the Kara Alumni
House.
Bay Area mentor
A resident of
the San Francisco
Bay Area, Zivic
built a successful
career in
corporate
recruiting and
consulting. After
achieving success
at several
Janis M. Zivic ’64
international
consulting firms, she founded and
managed her own firm, the Zivic Group
Inc., for 11 years before it was acquired
by another industry leader.
Zivic also is a co-founder of
vibrantBrains, described as a “mind
gym” for cognitive exercise. Her own
experience recovering from a traumatic
brain injury led to her work providing
“brain workouts” to maintain and
improve cognitive skills.
An active volunteer and board
member for a number Bay Area
organizations, Zivic is especially proud
of her role as a mentor with the Bay
Area Youth Education Foundation (the
BAY Fund), now known as First
Graduate. The organization assists
children in need, with the goal of
Financial services specialist
During his
40 years in the
financial services
industry, Perry
has worked to
identify, assess
and develop
strategies to
assist people in
efficiently
Michael Perry ’63
accumulating,
protecting and distributing their wealth.
He entered the financial services
industry in 1971, when he joined the
nationwide firm of National Pension
Service Inc. In 1981 he formed Michael
A. Perry and Associates Inc.,
specializing in retirement, financial
services and estate planning, including
business succession planning for business
owners.
To better serve his clients, Perry cofounded PFOsm LLC, which provides
financial analysis and reporting services
to high-net-worth individuals. He also
founded Benefit Resources, which
manages and consults with more than
350 firms in the area of corporate and
executive benefits.
In 2001 Mr. Perry co-founded the
Opus Advisory Group LLC, which
provides all of the above services, as well
as charitable planning through The Opus
Foundation.
His experiences in the world of
finance, as a naval aviator, a United
Airlines captain, a nuclear power-plant
buyer for the U.S. Navy, and a real estate
entrepreneur all have contributed to his
bringing added value to his clients.
Perry lives in Purchase, N.Y., with his
wife, Suzanne. The couple has an adult
daughter. Perry was honored June 26,
also with a luncheon at the Kara Alumni
House.
Wellness advocates
Dr. Gloria ’70 and Aaron Walton ’70
The Waltons are retirees whose
careers were dedicated to the well-being
of western Pennsylvania residents,
especially the region’s children.
As a health insurance executive for
Highmark Inc., Aaron Walton’s career
spanned 40 years and included 14
organizational assignments, including
service on Highmark’s Executive
Leadership Team. In particular, he is
credited with developing the Highmark
Foundation’s $100 million initiative to
address the physical and emotional
health of children in Highmark’s 49
county service regions.
Gloria Walton is a licensed/certified
psychologist, as well as a lecturer, former
university professor and independent
consultant. After many years of
distinguished service in the Pittsburgh
Public Schools, she was an adjunct
professor at Duquesne University. She
also was a weekly contributor to the New
Pittsburgh Courier, where her weekly
column, “Dr. Gloria,” focused on mental
health and wellness issues.
The Waltons both are active
volunteers at their church and in the
community.
A member of California University’s
Council of Trustees, Aaron Walton is
chair of the board of deacons at
Ebenezer Baptist Church, in Pittsburgh;
chair of the August Wilson Center for
African American Culture; and vice
chair of the Board of Governors for the
Pennsylvania State System of Higher
Education. He also serves on a variety of
boards and is president-elect of the Rho
Boule of Sigma Pi Phi fraternity.
Gloria Walton is a deaconess at
Ebenezer Baptist Church, where she also
serves as director of Christian education
and director of Vacation Bible School.
Chair of the board of directors for
Riverset Credit Union (formerly the
Pittsburgh Teachers Credit Union), she is
a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority
Inc. and other organizations.
Married for 41 years, the Waltons live
in Pittsburgh’s North Hills. They are the
parents of two adult children.
Teens Study Sports
Medicine at Workshop
E
ighteen high school students from nine regional school
districts attended a workshop at Cal U Aug. 8-10 to learn
more about athletic training and sports medicine.
Topics included athletic injury assessment, heat-related illnesses
and concussions. Students also were certified in CPR and the use of
an automatic external defibrillator. A highlight of the overnight
camp was a trip to the Pittsburgh Steelers training camp at St.
Vincent College, near Latrobe, Pa. Students took a tour of the
facilities and spoke to members of the team’s medical staff.
The camp was funded by a $11,900 grant from Highmark and
PASSHE. It was run by Dr. Shelly Fetchen DiCesaro, assistant
professor in the Department of Health Science and athletic trainer
at Cal U.
What’s the buzz?
Emeritus professor Dr. Peter J. Belch ‘64 shows off paper-wasp nests he donated to the Department of Biological
and Environmental Sciences, which will add them to the display in the lobby of Frich Hall. Belch retired in 2006
after serving 37 years in the former Department of Social Work and Gerontology at Cal U. He and his wife, Donna
’63, recently moved from their home in Hopwood, Pa., to Colorado. Belch collected three nests by climbing 30 feet
into trees on his property, sawing tree limbs and carefully lowering each nest to the ground. The delicate, papery
nests do not survive the winter, and the wasps will not return to reuse them. Gladly accepting the nests was Lisa
Gillis (left), Belch’s longtime friend and a secretary for the biology department. The Cal U community is welcome
to view the nests and many other displays in Frich Hall. The wasps are long gone.
Faculty Convocation Aug. 30
Cal U President Angelo Armenti, Jr. will host the 2011
Faculty Convocation on Tuesday, Aug. 30, in the Learning
Resource Center auditorium in Morgan Hall during the
University’s common hour, beginning at 11 a.m.
The California Journal is published weekly by California University of Pennsylvania, a member of The Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
Dr. Angelo Armenti, Jr.
University President
Dr. Charles Mance
Vice President for University Technology Services
Craig Butzine
Vice President for Marketing and University Relations
Geraldine M. Jones
Provost/Vice President for Academic Affairs
Ron Huiatt
Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations
Christine Kindl
Editor
Dr. Lenora Angelone
Vice President for Student Affairs
Robert Thorn
Interim Vice President for Administration and Finance
Bruce Wald, Wendy Mackall, Jeff Bender
Writers
Office of Communications and Public Relations
250 University Avenue
California, PA 15419
724-938-4195
wald@calu.edu
The Journal is printed on paper made from trees harvested under the principles of the Sustainable Forestry Initiative ( www.SFIprogram.org ).
4