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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: May 31, 2012 01:20 UTC (38 seconds ago)

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David Morehouse
Residence Squirrel Hill, Pittsburgh
Education Community College of Allegheny County
Duquesne University
John F. Kennedy School of Government
Known for President of Pittsburgh Penguins

David Morehouse is a former political official and currently President of Pittsburgh Penguins of the National Hockey League.[1] [2]

Morehouse grew up in the Beechview neighborhood of Pittsburgh. He graduated from South Catholic High School in 1978. After high school, Morehouse worked as a boilermaker in a local steel mill until an injury forced him to quit that line of work. At 24 years old, he enrolled at the Community College of Allegheny County, earning an associate degree in general studies in three years. After graduating from CCAC, he enrolled at Duquesne University. While studying at Duquesne, Morehouse worked for Jay Costa who was the Allegheny County Register of Wills, and became a state senator in 1996.[3]

In 1992, Morehouse worked on the presidential campaign for Bill Clinton. [3] He earned a job with the Clinton administration as Director of Strategy in the Office of National Drug Control Policy. He also served as Deputy Director of Drug Abuse Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.). After these positions, Morehouse attended Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government and earned a Master of Public Administration degree.[3]

Morehouse worked for a political campaign again in 2000, for former Vice President Al Gore. [3] Afterwards he returned to Harvard and served as Deputy Director of Executive Education and as Senior Research Fellow at the Harvard University Institute of Politics.[3]

In 2004 he served John Kerry's presidential campaign, serving as communications director during the primary election, and later traveling chief of state in the general election. [3] After the campaign was unsuccessful, Morehouse returned to Pittsburgh and took a job with the Pittsburgh Penguins. [3]

Morehouse joined the Penguins in December 2004 and served as a consultant for special projects and worked with the team's new arena project. In April 2007, Morehouse promoted to president of the team, responsible for oversight of the redevelopment of the Mellon Arena site, government affairs, corporate relations, ticket sales, marketing, corporate sales and communications.[3]

References

Pittsburgh Penguins staff
Executive Operations
  • Owner(s) - Mario Lemieux, Ron Burkle
  • Chief Executive Officer - Ken Sawyer
  • Chairman - Mario Lemieux
  • President - David Morehouse
  • Executive Vice President/General Manager - Ray Shero
 

Hockey Operations




David Morehouse regularly claims to be a Ph. D., but he is actually not a Ph. D. at all, having obtained his doctorate from a known diploma mill (see James Kirk diploma mills), LaSalle University of Louisiana, which has since been shut down. Mr. Morehouse was a U.S. Army Captain, and a third generation military man. From 1987 to 1991, he was assigned to several highly classified special access programs in the Stargate Project.

He formed Remote Viewing Technologies [1541] in 1997, a company originally designed to train police officers in remote viewing; to date he claims to have trained upward of 15,000 people, including police and federal agents, and civilians from all walks of life. Interestingly, his main demographic of civilians is comprised of engineers.

Dr. Morehouse has twice lectured at the Mikhail Gorbachev Foundation’s State of the World Forum on issues concerning global peace and alternative methods of conflict resolution. In 1999, a committee of scientists and educators from the United States and Europe nominated him for the Nobel Peace Prize in the category of “Alternative Sciences.” More recently he has been a guest lecturer at Stanford University's MBA Creativity in Business course, and at Deepak Chopra's Alliance for a New Humanity in Puerto Rico.

Military History and Controversy



During his tours of duty, Captain Morehouse served in many staff and command positions ranging from Airborne rifle Company Commander to commander of an Airborne Ranger Company—he commanded for over four years while the majority of his peers commanded only eighteen months. He was Aide de Camp to two army generals, the Battalion Executive Officer (second in command) of the 680 men of the 2nd Battalion, 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment, as well as being the Chief of Training for the 13,500 soldiers of the 82nd Airborne Division.

Morehouse resigned from the military in 1994 and was granted a discharge under "other than honorable" conditions in large part because on the advice of his attorney, he refused to address "the ridiculous charges" against him.
  • On 06 March 2006 he appeared before a board of five colonels serving on the Army Discharge Review Board (ADRB) in Washington, DC.

  • On 14 March, 2006 the Secretary of the Army upheld the recommendation of the ADRB that his discharge be upgraded to “Honorable”, and that the charges made against him were “baseless, without merit, and without credible evidence.”


  • Books he has written



    Non Lethal Weapons: War Without Death (1996, Greenwood Publishing) [1542]was written with a philosophical approach to the concept of non- lethality. Morehouse is quoted as saying "War is pure commerce and economics. You can't expect those who are in the business of building weapons of mass destruction to entertain notions of retooling the industry to build weapons on the opposite end of the spectrum. It's too cheap. Plus if you start saving lives and killing equipment, then you force diplomacy to take its rightful place as the tool of conflict resolution in the new millennium. So you start to screw up this perpetual market of death and destruction."

    His second book Psychic Warrior (1998, St. Martin's Paperbacks) [1543] was published in fourteen languages and has well over one million copies in print. This autobiographical work explains how he came to be in the Stargate Project and ultimately why he left.

    Media


  • Proof Positive (Sci Fi Channel) Episode 103 - October 2004 [1544]
  • Unsolved Histories—The Discovery Channel, June, 2004.
















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