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The Sacramento Bee from Sacramento, California • A4

Location:
Sacramento, California
Issue Date:
Page:
A4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OUTPUT: 22:14 USER: DSWEENEYNEWS MASTER 10-12-10 BLACKYELLOWCYANMAGENTA young misbehaving celebrities, and a culture that certainly represent our French-style mansion is in the Estates of the Oaks of Calabasas, the inner gated sanctum of another gated community, the Oaks of Calabasas. Residents say Bieber ignores postedspeed tion laws, and pretty much all the rules of life in a gated community. Gardeners in the Oaks have come to know car as a white blur, and neighbors say he and a fraternity of twentysomething friends race motorbikes and throw rau- cous parties. Bieber his car like a bat out of hell. It wakes the whole neighborhood said Galia Pistotnik, 47, who lives in the Oaks of Calabasas.

Bieber was recently confronted by former NFL wide receiver Keyshawn Johnson after the Ferrari was seen speeding on a road where young daughter was playing in a toy car. The Los Angeles County De- partment is investigating another inci- dent in which Bieber is alleged to have spit on a neighbor after a profanity- laced exchange outside their homes. Last May, Bieber got intoa tussle with a photographer at a Calabasas shopping center. camp has denied he has done anything wrong and says he is try- ing to be a good neighbor. In any case, this is not the image Cala- basas officials want to put forward.

malcy in their Mayor Fred Gaines said. out of the FROM PAGE A3 what you have is an organization that has some confusion about its mission. What is not happening here is an evangelical revision of a biblical sex- ual Chambers discussed his change of heart in an interview with the Los Angeles Times on Thursday as well as in a lengthy statement and speech to a religious convention in Irvine. need tochange the way we do he said. Chambers said that gays had been wrongly made to feel rejected by God, and that Christians should accept themevenif theybelievehomosexual- ity like pride and gluttony is a sin.

am sorry that some of you spent yearsworking through theshame and guilt you felt when your attractions Chambers wrote in a statement on his website. am sorry that I failed to share publicly that the gay and lesbian people I know were every bit as capable of being amazing parents as the straight peo- ple that I know. I am sorry that I have communicatedthatyou andyour fam- ilies are less than me and Chambers, who is married to a woman and has two adopted chil- dren, told the Times he is still at- tracted to men and comfortably lives with that tension, but that others may be unable to do so. He said that 99 percent of people who went through gay-conversion therapy did not lose their same-sex desires. apology was welcomed by gay rights activists.

think it is demonstrative of the major shift that we as a society have gone through in terms of our under- standingof whogay and lesbian peo- ple are and how they said Ross Murray, director of news and faith initiatives at GLAAD. Chambers first made his apology Wednesday night at annual conference in Irvine and in advance of a show that aired Thursday night with journalist Lisa Ling in which he is confronted by was he said. told stories of abuse and pain, missed opportunities, awful words that were spoken to them. Stories of abuse and pain from the church and even from FROM PAGE A3 STATE Al Seib Los Angeles Times The posted 25-mph speed limit in normally quiet Calabasas is routinely ignored by resident Justin Bieber, his neighbors say. Calabasas: Spitting report probed Doctor of Humane Letters, honoris causa Scott Syphax Master of Business Administration Shanto Corey Ahmad Fahad Ahmed Jamal Akbar Vanessa Denyse Caigoy Corey Anne De Roo Rashetta Edwards Daniel Fleetwood Lindsey Michelle Fostinis Darin Eugene Gale Stuart A.

Hall Jessica Hodson Brian L. Hunter Jeffrey E. James Alma D. Ibarra-Salazar Braye Eliza Jombo Vitaliy Klymishen Karl William Lohse Marie Washington Maddy Atanas Mitkov Manev Michael A. Perez Sally Phonthachack Tim Rosales Jennifer Leigh Rosendall Maurice A.

Shayani Marselo Bravo Sianez Michael Edgar Smith Mark P. Stinson Vincent Darrell Teat Jr. Fredric Walkover Melissa A. Williams Michael Carr Wilson Master of Science in Finance Jing Cao Bukuan Dai Ye Han Wei He Peiyu Hong Ying Li Tianxiong Liu Wenhui Liu Chen Qing Qianzi Wang Shanshan Wei Master of Science in Library and Information Science Megan Marie Brown Maryssa Dillon Michael R. Perkins Keli N.

Senkevich Master of Science in Information Systems Benjamin Jesse Baird Christopher J. Craig Kim Ann Rodriguez Post-Baccalaureate Certificate in Interdepartmental Medical Science Argin Baghramian Katharine T. Casey Reza Garajehdaghi Kimberly Jane Harrison Liuyuan He Shiwei Huang Catherine Kim Genevieve Corazon Manahan Anoshiravan Andrew Shajari Michelle Leslie Smith Elizabeth Joan Usedom Master of Science in Medical Science Tan Huu Duong Sarah Ansari Hashmi Joseph Jee Jean Suzanne Kamal Shah Master of Science in Biological Science Cristina Granado Gesmundo Amanda Nicole Hinton Michelle Sin Ting Lee-Yuen Fady Mohammed Mousa-Ibrahim Bachelor of Science in General Studies Dinorah Feliciano Doctor of Education in Educational Leadership and Management Michael Eric Agostini Aparna Bhatia Curtis L. Borton III Davin Elizabeth Brown Victoire Chochezi Jennifer Lynn Lampson Coleman Addie Lucille Ellis David Michael Garrison Jr. Jory Andrew Hadsell Tracy Ann Ken Brian Doyle Knirk Jessica P.

Kriegel Jenkins K. Kumeh Joe Kaonai Liow Robert Anthony Martinez Melissa Joann McManus Joshua Sean Emily Christie Cabasa Oliva Philip Timothy Palacio Alexander H. Taghavian Benjamin Walker Mohammad I. Warrad Camille Broussard Wise Master of Science in Higher Education Rosa Delia Alvarado Crystal Avila Katherine M. Baird Yolanda Christine Brown-Dawson Christopher Andrew Chavez Melissa R.

Dean Brenda May Freeman Manuel Guillot Katherine Hansen Elizabeth Forrest Lambert Katrina Neill James Matthew Register Sokun Mean Somsack Daniel J. Turner Anne M. Wong Master of Science in Human Resource Development Kathryn Bailey Gurjeet Singh Barayah Anthony Michael Campanario Katherine Ann Dufek Stephanie Ahlana Hawthorne Robert Lamar Johnson Sarah Ann Manzi Sheila B. McShane Shannon K. Murray Anne Marie Degala Montero Nicholls Amanda Sanchez Phillip E.

Seibel Jr. Phetsvan Mimi Sullivan Crystal Ann Vanderpool Master of Public Health Jahan Ahrary Aaron Jonathan Brincko Rosalinda Cerna Diana Maria Hernandez Benton Angela Justice Arvin Magusara Joann Chris Morales Rachna Bihari Pandya Carol A Stanford Michelle Connie Woo Find out more about our exceptional programs and how to enroll for Fall 2013 at drexel.edu/sacramento. With a 122-year tradition of breaking tradition, Drexel University has always encouraged its graduates to make a difference in the world not for the purpose of being seen, but to push the world forward. We congratulate the exceptional graduates of Drexel University Class of 2013. To these outstanding individuals, we just have this to say: always be hungry for change.

Break the constraints of the status quo, and write your own rulebook. We, and the rest of the world, will thank you for it. This is the beginning of a new era. Your era. to tHe rare leaders of tomorrow.

Ministry: Leader now advises that Christians should accept gays Death of woman found in water tank ruled accident LOS ANGELES Authorities say a Canadian woman whose body was discovered in a downtown Los Angeles rooftop water tank accidentally drowned. Lt. Fred Corral says 21-year-old Elisa cause of death was ruled an accident on Thursday. Cor- ral says the body had no sign of trauma indicating foul play. Lam also had bipolar disorder.

Lam traveled alone to Los Angeles from Vancouver, British Columbia, on Jan. 26 and was last seen five days later by workers at the historic Cecil Hotel near Skid Row. Before she died, hotel surveillance footage showed Lam inside an elevator pushing buttons and stick- ing her head out the doors, looking in both directions. body was found on Feb. 20 in the water tank after hotel guests complained of low water pressure.

Mother: Son with dog that killed him UNION CITY The mother of a 6-year-old Northern Cali- fornia boy killed by a family dog said Thursday that the attack felt like a betrayal. was like one best friend turning on the Tilema Selu told San Fran- KGO-TV. had no signs of being hostile. In fact, we felt confident that it was a protector of our Selu said her son Nephi Selu adored the pit bull mix that killed him at his grand- home in Union City on Monday. The dog was euthanized Tuesday.

Selu confirmed earlier suggestions that the boy had been riding the dog like a horse just before he was bitten on top of the head. He was declared dead at a hospital in Palo Alto about hours later. Sacramento man pleads guilty in smuggling case SAN DIEGO A California man has pleaded guilty to smuggling endangered fish bladders into the United States from Mexico to later sell to Asia. The U.S. office in San Diego says Jason Xie entered his plea before a federal judge on Wednesday.

He is one of seven defen- dants charged with unlawful trade in wildlife. The 49-year-old Sacra- mento man admitted that in February and March he received five coolers contain- ing the swim bladders of 270 Totoaba fish from across the border. The blad- ders were valued at more than $400,000. Xie agreed to forfeit 170 bladders and a $350,000 residence in Seattle. Authorities say the blad- ders are used in a highly desired soup in China and Hong Kong.

From the Associated Press IN BRIEF A4 The Sacramento Bee Friday, June 21, 2013.

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Pages Available:
4,934,533
Years Available:
1857-2024