Friday, December 14, 2007

Aztecs to Write Home About

Jan and Jim Sinegal are a couple of Aztecs to write home about. If there were an Alumni Hall of Fame they would be inaugural members. Come to think of it there is an Alumni Hall of Fame for SDSU. It’s called the Montys. Last week Jan was in town because she won one and will be properly feted on March 29, 2008 at the 38th annual Montys at the Marriott Hotel and Marina.

So while Jan was being interviewed and videoed about her difference-making involvement in granting scholarships to future Aztec alumni, Jim sat on a concrete planter in front of the Athletics building returning phone calls and answering emails. As the president of Costco, idle time is not an option for Jim Sinegal.

As alumni director, I enjoyed golf-cart chauffeuring and being a part of the subsequent conversation with Jan, Jim, President Weber, Vice President Carleton and Education Dean Rick Hovda.

Steve asked Jim about Sol Price, founder of Price Club and a mentor to Jim. “I go to lunch with Sol every few months, Jim said. He is 90 and still as sharp as ever. He treats me as if I am still an 18 year old shelf stocker.”

The irony here is that Jim is the CEO of one of the world’s greatest retail operations. As one of Time Magazine’s “2006 Top 100 Most Influential People” you would think he might project something other than immodest humility.

But he doesn’t. Steve and Jim talked about Sol Price. The president stated that Sol once told him that he would best serve SDSU by being a harsh critic. He may have been, but the result of Sol’s vision and SDSU’s talent was what Dr. Weber characterized as the “most important thing the university has ever done.” He was talking about the City Heights project where State took over the management of Rosa Parks Elementary, Monroe Clark Middle and Hoover High School. In fact, the Sinegals are using the model at Seattle University.

Hearing Steve and Jim talk about the visionary Sol Price fueled some more of my Aztec pride. Sol Price, Jim Sinegal and Jan Sinegal are the type of people who tackle monumental social challenges. Through their experience, creative problem solving and extreme generosity they actually improve our world.

Just the type of Aztecs you’d want to write home about.

Friday, December 7, 2007

The Football Operations Center

Well, we are finally going to do it. We are going to tear down these hallowed halls known as the Football Operations Center, now occupied by the staff of the SDSU Alumni Association. I sit in the southwest corner in a room formerly used by Denny Stolz, Al Luginbill and Ted Tollner and their staffers.

This is a great place. Before it became the Football Operations Center it was a wedge of dirt between Choc Sportsman Oval (Aztrack) and Terry Pool and Peterson Gym. Don Coryell spent some quality time on this very spot. In 1986 in Denny Stolz’s first year we won the WAC and made it to the Holiday Bowl. In January 1987 Fred Miller and Al Luginbill fired up the local construction and contracting community with an enthusiastic plea for a better facility for Athletics. Those guys could get pretty fired up. Bill Cowling of Dixieline Lumber jumped up and said “Count me in for the lumber.” Dozens of others joined the parade and this building got built as if it were an old fashioned barn raising. The Associated General Contractors led by Bill Burke and Art Lujan were among the dozens of generous entities that stepped up and provided tradesmen and sub contractors to handle every aspect. They did it all for football season tickets. By 1988 this $3,000,000 building was operating at a total cost to SDSU of only $70,000.

This became the hub of the athletics department. While the majority of the staff sweltered or froze in Peterson Gym our athletes got taped up, weight trained, counseled, and tutored here. It was a state of the art athletic oasis.

Then John Moores came along and built a better oasis and plenty of other stuff. Fred’s lament that we had no competitive facilities has been completely eradicated in the past 20 years.

So now we are going to build something even better on this historic site: Our Alumni Center. This is going to become an even more incredible gathering spot for Aztecs than this FOC. But that will remain a topic for another day. Gotta pack up.