ISSUE NO. 12
SEPTEMBER
29, 2000
OUR 79th YEAR
http://RotaryClubofSantaMonica.org
Suppose you are
a skier determined to reach the finals of the winter Olympics. In 1994 you
fail. In 1995 an accident leaves you in such pain that you can’t even stand
upright. Pain becomes chronic, and you seem unlikely ever to walk again.
End of
story?
It would be for many people. But it wasn’t for Nikki Stone, a smallish (five feet seven) skier. She exercised her way back to health. Then she reentered a newly adopted Olympic sport called “inverted aerials”, whatever that may be, in which she’d won a U.S. championship in 1993.
She went on to win some 52 national and international
trophies in inverted aerials – climaxed by the gold medal at the 1998
Olympics in Nagano (when she was 29). This was one of the most remarkable
comebacks in sport history.
Publications and broadcasters picked up her story.
She found herself featured in Time and Newsweek, on the David
Letterman show, and as a sports broadcaster on ABC and CBS. That was two years
ago. Since then she’s been booked as a motivational speaker for John
Hancock, Delta Airlines, and ten other organizations.
“Your story is one of the most emotional and motivating stories of any Olympic athlete,” said Tom Kelley, an official of the U.S. ski team. It’s the story we’ll hear for ourselves at this Friday’s meeting.
October 6 – Visit from Vince
Lombardi, ostensibly
October 13 – Killer Bees, Fire Ants
and Other Pests
October 20 – Josephson Institute on
Ethics
October 27 – Dr. Mark Scholz on
prostate cancer
For
presiding in shirtsleeves, President John Lehne assessed himself a nominal sum.
He pleaded poor memory in neglecting to bring a jacket.
He
also prodded son Steve Lehne’s memory about a raise given him (presumably by
Father John, though this wasn’t specified). Steve paid $50 plus another $50
for having a birthday.
Other
fines/honors on September 15: $25 from Mark Olson for posing as a male model;
$125 from Tom Loo for surprising the president by delivering a lecture in San
Francisco.
LOU TURNER IS INDESTRUCTIBLE
Several
weeks ago Lou Turner stumbled on a sidewalk and broke his back. Fortunately he
now lives at Pacific Gardens, a retirement home on Second Street, where ample
care is available. So he’s already walking again, and expects to be at Rotary
by mid-October.
LOOKING BACK
Do you ever wonder why the Rotary Club of Santa Monica meets in Pacific
Palisades? It’s not a bad question. We did meet in Santa Monica for most of
our first fifty-five years. During that time we met at the original Santa Monica
Athletic Club on PCH, the Uplifters Ranch in Santa Monica Canyon, the Brentwood
Country Club and the Miramar Hotel.
But
in 1977 things changed. The Miramar had recently been sold and the new owners
wanted to increase profits. One day the owner’s representative, a local
attorney, without prior notice informed club president Ed Rafeedie that our meal
price was doubled. Ed was furious. When the rep would not relent, Ed went
looking for a new home. There are not many venues that can handle a group of our
size in Santa Monica. Even though many members enjoyed walking from their nearby
offices to the Miramar, we moved to our present meeting place at the Riviera
Country Club.
During
my years as president many members felt we should try to get back to Santa
Monica. I approached the Miramar and was met by a very enthusiastic manager. He
wanted our business. I told him he’d better check with the same owner’s rep.
He did, then phoned me and asked if Judge Rafeedie was still a member. I assured
him that the judge was an honored and respected member. Then the manager told me
that the Miramar was not interested in our business. So here we are in beautiful
Pacific Palisades.
Bill Fritzsche, club historian
(One
of a series on new members of our club)
Financially
speaking, these are hectic times for hospitals. They are rethinking budgets,
feeling out possibilities of merging with other organizations. Santa
Monica–UCLA Medical Center has been maneuvering as strenuously as any to
adjust to changing times.
The times have put particular pressure on one of our new members, Daniel M.
Graham. He is Executive Director of the Office of Development (rough
translation: fund-raising) for Santa Monica–UCLA Medical Center. Before Santa
Monica Hospital was purchased by UCLA in 1995, he had been the hospital’s
executive in charge of encouraging “planned giving programs” since 1990.
“The merger took some adjustment,” he says now. “UCLA is a many-layered
organization. My life with it is more complex that when I just dealt with the
hospital.”
Dan’s life from now on will include keeping up with the construction of a $208
million building just starting at the 16th Street site of the 74-year-old
institution. The design architect is Robert A. M. Stern, Dean of Yale University
School of Architecture.
So far, much that is visible of the new establishment is parking ramps. Work on
the central building will start next June, and is due to be completed in January
2005.
By then Dan is expected to bring in $100 million to help pay for it. He has
already raised $32 million of that amount, and now devotes most of his time to
cultivating other potential donors.
Such work isn’t what he envisioned while growing up in Minneapolis. At the age
of three he conceived a passion for piano playing, and by the time he graduated
from the University of Minnesota he was launched on a career as a concert
pianist and recording artist. He earned advanced degrees in music from Yale and
Johns Hopkins, then became a professor of music at the University of Northern
Colorado.