Careers Briefs Wake Law named a 'Best Value' Wake Forest University School of Law is once again among the nation's "Best Value" law schools, according to the National Jurist and prel.aw maga zines. Wake Forest is among 60 law schools that made me list 01 Best value taw schools, preLaw magazine announced this week. This is the fifth time since 2(K>4 that the magazine has honored law schools for providing a good value. The methodology was modified this year to enhance fairness. The magazine's ranking takes into account in-state tuition. debt and the percent of graduates employed nine months after graduation, in addition to bar passage. The magazine will not a-lease the final ranking and grades of the 60 honorees until the Fall issue, which ships in early October. The Wake Forest University School of I .aw offers six degree programs: the JD. the JD/MDiv. the JD/MA in Religion, the JD/MA in Bioethics. the Master of Laws in American Law and the JD/MBA in conjunction with the university's Schools of Business. National Jurist I Howi muchwiii you earn JT Fain joins Brady Brady has hired David Fain as a service techni cian for the Winston-Salem i wiiii. i iii 1 1 inn _7 wan vu experience in healing venti lation and air-conditioning maintenance and repair. Headquartered in Greensboro. Brady has offices in Raleigh. Fayetteville. Wilmington and Charlotte. The family owned company employs 327 associates. Brady provides high-effi r'ipn f\r HVAP (h^'itinn \ An _ ww.v/ . -v.. tilation. and air conditioning) systems and com prehensive building solutions tor commercial and industrial facilities across the state. I I Fain Deese elected A&T Board chair Willie A. Deese, executive vice president and pres ident of the Merck Manufacturing Division, has been elected chairman of North Carolina A&T Stale University Board of Trustees. Deese was elected at the bo;ird's retreat in July. He replaces Pamela McCorkle Buncum . Deese is responsible for Merck's worldwide manufac turing operations. He over sees 85 manufacturing and dis tribution sites in over 25 countries around the world with 26,(XX) people reporting to him and with an operating bucket of $9 billion. He is also responsi ble for Merck's global procurement organization. Deese serves as a member of Merck's Executive Committee. Deese earned his B.A. in business administration at A&T in 1977. and his M.B.A. at Western New England College in 1483. He and his wife. Carol, live in Doylestown. Pa. Patricia Miller Zollar has been elected vice chair of the board. Albert (Al) Shuler Lineberry Jr. has been elected secretary of the Board. Other members serving on the Board are Stanley L. Allen. Spence Broadiurst. Pamela McCorkle Buncum. Karen J. Collins. Charles C. Comelio. Emerson U. Full wood. Janice Bryant Howroyd, Christian Robinson. Bertram Walls and Faye Tate Williams. Deesr Wake welcomes Turkheimer Richard J. Turkheimer is the new assistant direc tor of Development at Wake Forest University School of Law . turkneimer orings a wealth of experience and knowledge to Wake Forest. He has more than 25 years of national radio sales experi ence. A few of his past posi tions include General Sales Manager and Director of Sales with Cox Broadcasting; Director of Sales and National Sales Manager with Clear Channel; Manager of National Sales / Affiliations with Associated Press Radio: and Affiliations Manager (Western U.S.) with Trartle.com/Navteq. He comes to the law school most recently from Graylyn International Conference Center. A New York native, Turkheimer is no stranger to North Carolina. He lived in Chapel Hill for a num ber of years and worked in sales at radio stations in ?Raleigh and Charlotte. He and his wife moved to Winston-Salem after they were displaced from their New Orleans home of 15 years by Hurricane Katrina. His wife, Mary Ashley Manning, was born and raised in Winston-Salem. Six years ago they came to stay with her mother after the storm and decided to make Winston-Salem home. Among Turkheimer's goals for his new role is to further engage alumni, faculty, the parents of stu dents and friends of the school and advance Dean Blake D. Morant's vision. Turkheimer Hispanic woman named leader of Girl Scouts USA SPECI \l ro [Hj CHRONIC! I Girl Scouts of the USA (GSUSA) has announced that Anna Maria Chavez, who grew up in a small town in southern Arizona and rose to become deputy chief of staff to that state's then Gov. Janet Napolitano. has been appointed to the top post at the iconic organization. Chavez is set to officially assume her new role at the Girl Scouts National Council Session/52nd Convention in November. Chavez's appointment as the 19th chief execu tive of Girl Scouts, among the largest and most w idely recognized nonprofits in the country, comes as the organization readies to launch a national cel ebration as part of its 100th anniversary designed to honor its legacy anu create urgency around girls' issues. She will replace K a t h y C I o n i n g er , who is retir ing after lead ing the organ ization for eight years. "Girl Scouts is the premier lead ership organi zation for girls with a t rai I b I azi ng legacy that stretches near - , ^-U (nr! Sv.mtv Photi. said Chavez. Anna Maria Chavez who currently serves as chief executive officer of Girl Scouts of Southwest Texas. "The country has never needed Girl Scouts more than it does today. What girls are accom plishing in Girl Scouting is inspiring. 1 have seen it firsthand in Texas, and I intend to tell that story far and wide. I'm eager to work with our partners across the country as the organization embarks on a new century of empowering girls to take the lead in their own lives and make a difference in their communities and across the world." Chavez was appointed chief executive of the Girl Scouts of Southwest Texas in 2009 after serv ing as deputy chief of staff for urban relations and community development for former Arizona gover nor and current U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano. As deputy chief of staff, she promoted the governor's policies, pro grams and initiatives through coordination and partnership with city, county, and tribal govern ments. federal agencies and community organiza tions. In addition, she served as the governor's policy advisor to the Arizona Department of Housing and advised Napolitano on strategies for coordinating housing and economic development. Prior to being appointed as deputy chief of staff. Chavez serv ed as Napolitano's director of intergov ernmental affairs from 2003 to 2007. She also served as in-house counsel and assistant director for the Division of Aging & Community Services (DACS) at the Arizona Department of Economic Security. Chavez entered state government after serving as senior policy advisor to U.S. Secretary of Transportation Rodney E. Slater. Previously, she had been chief of staff to the deputy adminis trator at the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) in Washington. D C. Chavez also served as chief of staff for SBA's Office of Government Contracting and Minority Enterprise Development. Chavez will take over as chief executive after a dramatic period of change for the organization. Cloninger has led Girl Scouts through a historic transformation designed to ensure that the organi zation delivers the best leadership experience for a new generation of girls whose lives ? and the opportunities they face? are ever changing. LEADERSHIP - WINSTON-SALEM Igniting Community Leadership Leadership Winston-Salem Board has new leadership SPECIAL TO THE CHRONICLE I ...J l.'- ? LcuuLTsnip winsion Salem has announced the addition of three new mem bers of its Board of Directors and the election of officers. Chairing the Board of Directors this year is Dr. Shari B. Covitz of Forsyth Technical Community College. Other officers include Vice Chair Cheryl D. Joyner, BB&T: Secretary Alison Y. Ashe-Card. Womble Carlyle Sandridge & Rice; Treasurer Benjamin Rowe. City of Winston Salem: and immediate past Chair Pamela D. Corbett. Spectrum Psychological Services. Newly appointed board members include Jeffrey T. Lindsay, horsyth Medical Center; C. Edward Pleasants, co founder of Leadership Winston-Salem and community volunteer; and E. Scott Seawell. Wells Fargo. The Board of Directors . .1. ^ ?.>.l nrln thp rnntri Kit. aCKNUWICUgtU inv vuiunuu tions of outgoing board mem bers Mary L. Cameron, Clemmons Village Council, and Donna H. Hamilton, Wake Forest University. Cameron has served on the Board for the past seven years and will continue her involvement as a planning committee member. With a mission of educat ing, connecting and energiz ing leaders to serve and improve the community. Leadership Winston-Salem, a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt charita ble organization founded in 1984, offers a nine-month program that challenges par ticipants to increase their per sonal and collective capacity to transform the community through civic engagement, servant leadership and building social capital. Covitz Ashe-Card Local CFOs honored CHRONIC! L STAll REPORT Winston-Salem State University Vice Chancellor for Finance Administration Gerald Hunter and Denise C. Bell, the chief financial officer for the City of Winston-Salem, were among the 18 financial executives honored recently by The Business Journal. The publication held its annual CFO of the Year Awaixk pro gram on July 27 at High Point University. The program recog nized CFOs from five different areas. Hunter was a finalist in the Government Category, which was won by Bell. Hunter was selected as a finalist because of his vision and nl'inmnn tK'it in mn t k.> ? i ??> i t ? .in ? t \ t<\ miti |/iuiiiiiii?. iiiui iiavt uw.ii i\cv in aiuivviii^ uiv. u 1 1 1 v v,i :>i i_y iv > iiiiu gale the effects of state budget reductions on the campus. He was also noted for lis grace and patience in dealing with the budget uncertainty. He was named WSSU's CFO on June 23. 2(H)8. Prior to his appointment. Hunter held the position of chief financial offi cer at Antioch University in Yellow Springs. Ohio. "CFOs have long been key advisers wherever they work, but it is evident that their stock is only going up." said Douglas W. Copeland. Jr. president and publisher of The Business Journal of the Triad. "Increasingly, CFOs are being called up by top exec utives as strategic thinkers and problem solvers." Hell Hunter Proudly Serving Two Traditions Submitted Photo Retired Marine Major General Charles Bolden, the current NASA Administrator, was among the droves in Washington, D.C. in July to celebrate the centennial of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity. Here, Bolden, an Omega Man, poses with other Marines who are also members of the fraternity . Persistent activist continues fight to be 'NJWeedman.com' CHRONIC 1 I S I M l REPORT Patent attorney Curtis Edmondson of Beaverton. Ore. has begun to argue a California Appellate Court case on behalf of activist Ed Forchion. who wants the right to legally change his name to NJWeedman.com. Edmondson is seeking to bring closure to an effort that has engaged Forchion in as far back as 2001 . That's when Ed Forchion. while in prison, first approached the courts with a request to change his legal name to NJWeedman.com. Should Forchion get his way. he will be the first person to ever legally change his name to a dot.com." Forchion has been an inter nationally recognized advocate in the battle to legalize mari juana in the United States for more than a decade. NJWeedman.com is an actual pro-marijuana legalization Web Photo courtesy of H. Forchion Ed Forchion site that Forchion operates. It features news items in favor of his cause, promotions for pro legalization events and an option for visitors to the site to donate to his legal fund. Forchion's public displays of civil disobedience have included lighting up a joint in front of the New Jersey State Assembly and at the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia. Yet. nothing in the last decade has deterred Forchion in his determination to change his name to NJWeedman.com. "This battle started in New Jersey back in 2001 when I wanted to change my name to NJWeedman.com." Forchion said. "Now. over 10 years later, the internet has exploded and the stakes are even higher." Edmonds on adds. "In this age of internet computing. where people are judged more by their computer profile on a Facebook account than the grip of their handshake, the desired replacement of a person's 'actual name' with their 'domain name' is bound to occur." Over the last decade, Forchion's case has been argued and denied in several courts, most recently in Los Angeles last year. After relocat ing from New Jersey to Los Angeles. Forchion petitioned the California Courts to legal ly change his name to N J Weedm an . com . In one opinion, a judge ruled that a '.com' name would be confusing to peo ple. and the owner ship of dot corns are the property of ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers* Forchion disagreed with the verdict and filed an appeal. Forchion is the founder of the Legalize Marijuana Party of New Jersey and has run pre vious politieal campaigns in New Jersey for Governor. U.S. Senate. Congress, the State Legislature, and the Burlington County (N.J.) Board of Freeholders. Edmondson