Alumni list for 2002

These are the current known alumni of the Daily Trojan, the newspaper of the University of Southern California. Exactly 2101 names are listed. Look for your old girlfriend by her maiden name, the same way you always think of her. For a list of recent changes, click here. There are also lists sorted by year, by place and by department. To change or remove an entry, please use the feedback page, or e-mail Travis Smith, (nep@hopstudios.com).

28 people...

Merrill Balassone    Last updated: 6/14/2004
Esme Bermudez    Last updated: 12/4/2003
Elizabeth Brotherton    Last updated: 1/21/2005
Amanda Caracci    Last updated: 5/11/2003
Michael Carter    Last updated: 4/21/2002
Justin Chang    Last updated: 10/17/2004
Loren Chidoni    Last updated: 7/21/2003
David Cisneros    Last updated: 5/11/2003
Meredith Cooper    Last updated: 8/19/2002
Minal Hasan    Last updated: 3/29/2003
Blake Hennon    Last updated: 10/17/2004
Sophia Kazmi    Last updated: 9/3/2003
Jeanne Klein    Last updated: 7/11/2002
Crystal Lauderdale    Last updated: 11/22/2004
Andrew Long    Last updated: 7/11/2002
Arash Markazi    Last updated: 11/30/2004
Jennifer "Jenny" Medina    Last updated: 11/22/2004
Yvonne "Evie" Ngai    Last updated: 7/15/2004
Alexander "Alex" Nguyen    Last updated: 7/16/2004
Dana Nichols    Last updated: 9/15/2002
Kevin Pang    Last updated: 7/27/2003
Ryan Pearson    Last updated: 4/17/2003
Peter Anthony Rasmussen    Last updated: 7/15/2004
Brian Reed    Last updated: 1/21/2005
Gloria Rodriguez    Last updated: 11/30/2004
Gary Semerjian    Last updated: 9/28/2003
Kimberly Taba    Last updated: 7/11/2002
Heather Wadowski    Last updated: 7/11/2002
Names in italics may not be from this year,
because the information is not verified.
Items in red were updated recently.

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...and their memories

Blake Hennon
Blake started at the DT as a music reviewer, but wrangled by then-Theatre/Feature Editor Alexander Nguyen to write a few theatre reviews and feature pieces for him. As a reward for his services, Blake was sent to review a concert at the House of Blues while he was still under age. Blake, however, talked his way in and was able to review the concert on the balcony away from the guests and bar -- by himself. He moved on to the copy desk, which was perfect for him because he had a knack for using obscure words such as "avuncular" in his stories. Blake has a very dry sense of humor, which the office found out when he was editorial director and had to read about issues that no one on the staff gave crap about. Blake was also the one who broke the recount/revote curse that had befallen the editor in chief elections of late. (Gee, I hope this didn't read like a funeral eulogy.) Add your own memory

Arash Markazi
I was looking at your site the other night while I was at work. Anyway, I'm a junior at USC right now and I was the Sports Editor of the DT last fall (2001) and an Assistant Sports Editor before that in the Spring. I guess I came to the DT at the perfect time for a sports writer as I got to travel to the Great Eight with the men's basketball team, the College World Series with the baseball team and the Las Vegas Bowl with the football team. I'm currently working at the Daily News, doing agate and covering mostly prep sports. I've run across my fair share of DT alumni recently so I though I'd give you some updates. Add your own memory

Yvonne "Evie" Ngai
A quote that describes Evie well: "The Oregonian thinks they're getting a copy editor, but what they're really getting is an obsessive-complusive freak." -- Blake Hennon (spring 2003's editorial director). Says Evie: When Petey was EiC and I was managing editor, we tried to fool the "rookies" (first-time senior editors) into thinking there was an initiation process involved with becoming a senior editor. We told them to beware, that we would make them do something crazy their first night of boxing. I remember two distinctly: Patrick Kinmartin, sports editor, and Katie Lemmon, copy chief. On Patrick's night, we made him run up and down the hallway while yelling repeatedly at the top of his lungs, "Peter is the best editor ever, and Yvonne is a beautiful princess." For Katie, she had to somehow get a DT hanging from Tommy Trojan's sword. She ended up wrapping a paper around a water bottle that was tied to a rope, and she threw the bottle around the sword, letting it loop several times so it would stay. I'm surprised we never got in trouble because of the TommyCam, which caught every moment of our adventure. Then there was the time when I was city editor and freezing to death at my desk in the corner. Mona had bought me a heater and an extra one that she put in Ron's office, although he never used it because he was never cold. So that day, I went in there and took his, too, and plugged it in next to mine in the same outlet. I turned both of them on, and five minutes later, the entire back wall of the office went black. "Pop, pop, pop, pop" went the computers along that wall, one by one shutting themselves off. I'd blown a fuse! After that, I was never again allowed to have both heaters on at the same time. Add your own memory

Kevin Pang
Rachel Campbell and Mark Carpowich chose me to pen a column for the then-Diversions section my freshman year in 1999, and only now do I realize one thing: none of them [columns] ain't even close to a good clip when applying for news internships. Then somewhere along the line, I became Lifestyle Editor and Design Director. I recently (May2003) visited STU 421 for the first time in about 6 months. Saw Ron Flores and made fun of some of the DT staffers...but otherwise, good times. The Daily Trojan was for a lot us, our home away from apartment/dorm during our college years. Here are some memories I can recollect, 1999-2002:

  • The 10-year retrospect on the L.A. Riots, under the editorship of one Jenny Medina and David Cisneros (Ovalle), still the two best editors I've had at any paper on any level. Beautifully designed by Justin Chang, wonderfully written and researched by the paper's top writers, and a supplement that actually justified having a supplement. By that, I meant it's not just the semester mandate of having a special section for the sake of having one. I had nothing to do with it, but when I picked up the paper that day, I sorely wished I had.
  • Photo editor guru Mason Poole and myself drove to Tucson for a story about Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Randy Johnson, a former DT staff photographer. The notion of spending half our spring break on a story -- though it makes me wish I had a life -- was a reason why being on the DT staff has its perks. A damn cool pic of baseball's best pitcher reading a Daily Trojan.
  • Esme Bermudez's (now at The Oregonian) piece about a transgender student and life at USC. People in the newsroom still talking about the story to this day.
  • In the fall of 2000, when Joel Sandi and Ian Young tirelessly editing/layout not one, but two Lifestyle sections (32 pages) of the Orientation Issue ... only to get fired by the EIC after all that work. I can't comment much beyond that, as I don't know the whole story. But I still say a little prayer for Joel and Ian before I go to bed each night.
  • When USC Center of Women and Men director Elizabeth Davenport, "the Hermann Goering of political correctness", complained during the all-staff meeting that women's sports doesn't get enough play as football coverage in the DT. Legendary professor Ed Guthman speaking out, angrily saying something to the matter of football is not the same as women's rhythm gymanastic...or something like that.
  • Speaking of which, I had written a Lifestyle (Diversions) column in the fall of 2000, poking fun of the UCLA Marching Band. In it, I referenced their mascot as a "clarinet-playing lesbian chimp" who "threw feces from her cage when you got too near." Granted, I would never write that now, but for a sophomore, I qualified for being sophomoric. So the EIC, who I thought was supposed to read through the paper before sending it off to the printers, let it ran unchanged. The next day, I received an angry phone call, and was subsequently pulled into the office of Elizabeth Davenport. Honest to heavenly God, she lectured me for two hours about the following: 1) I was insensitive to lesbians, only because I used the word "lesbian" without the words "gay rights," "women power," "empowerment," "strong-willed" in the story. Apparently, some people at the school were so shaken by that word, they had at one point considered litigation. I kid you not. 2) I was being cruel to animal. Again, I swear, she really said that.
  • Incidentally, my freshman year I had written a column using ebonics, a la Herbert Kornfeld of The Onion. I had the intention of being a "gangsta Asian rapper" trying to get football tickets for the "Notre Dizzle game." I was pulled into a meeting with a fuming group from the Black Students Association, and with my supportive editors Rachel Campbell and Dave Khalaf, tried to prove I had nothing against minorities, being that I'm a minority myself.
  • And of course, the after-Thursday trips to the Pantry, where we commiserated the newsroom strife with greasy steaks and equally greasy pancakes. Add your own memory

    Ryan Pearson
    Ryan won the Jim Murray scholarship in 2000. Add your own memory

    Gloria Rodriguez
    Sez Alexander Nguyen: "Gloria was one of the few girls able to hold her own in the male-dominated sports office." Add your own memory

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