64,737 research outputs found
Letter from Hill Ferguson to Louis D. Boylan, University, Alabama, August 17, 1951
Four letters are enclosed with this letter to Ferguson. The first letter is from Louis D. Boylan, Public Accountant, Louis D. Boylan and Company, University, Alabama, to President John M. Gallalee, University, Alabama, August 13, 1951. The second letter is also from Louis D. Boylan to Buford Boone, Publisher, The Tuscaloosa News, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, July 25, 1951. The third letter is from William N. Perry, Fraternity Auditor, Louis D. Boylan and Company, University, Alabama, to Dean Noble B. Hendrix, Dean of Students, University, Alabama, August 7, 1951. The fourth letter is also from William N. Perry to Louis D. Boylan, Louis D. Boylan and Company, University, Alabama, August 7, 1951
Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University
Summer 2006 issue of Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis UniversityS i n g i n g
g roup
wo r k s i n
h a r mo n y
pg. 9
B i o l o gy
fac ult y
m a k e t he ir
m a r k
pg. 12
A l um n i
c h a n g e
c hil d r e n’s
l i v e s
pg. 18
B a s e b a l l
t e a m p l ay s
i n n c a a
t our n a me n t
pg. 6
F E AT U R E S DE PA R TMEN T S
E d i t o r
Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92)
C o n t r i b u t o r s
Allison Babka Burney
Marie Dilg (SW ’94)
Shannon McGuire (Student Assistant)
Rachel Otto
“ O n C a m p u s ” n e w s s t o r i e s
University Communications
Medical Center Media Relations
Billiken Media Relations
D e s i g n
Art Direction: Matthew Krob
Universitas is published by Saint Louis University. Opin-ions
expressed in Universitas are those of the individual
authors and not necessarily those of the University admin-istration.
Unsolicited manuscripts and photographs are
welcome but will be returned only if accompanied by a
stamped, self-addressed envelope. Letters to the editor
must be signed, and letters not intended for publication
should indicate that fact. The editor reserves the right to
edit all items. Address all mail to Universitas, DuBourg Hall
39, 221 N. Grand, St. Louis, Mo. 63103. We accept e-mail
at [email protected] and fax submissions at (314) 977-2249.
Address fax submissions to Editor, Universitas.
Postmaster: Send address changes to
Universitas, Saint Louis University,
221 N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63103.
World Wide Web address:
www.slu.edu/pr/universitas.html
Universitas is printed by Universal Printing Co.
and mailed by Specialty Mailing.
Worldwide circulation: 111,720
© 2006, Saint Louis University
All rights reserved.
Volume 3 2 , I ssue 3
In April, I had the privilege of speaking to a
group of outstanding local citizens to accept
St. Louis’ 2005 “Citizen of the Year” award,
which is presented by a committee of former recip-ients
and sponsored by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
It was truly an honor.
The humbling experience gave me the oppor-tunity
to reflect on my early days in my adopt-ed
hometown and how much I have seen things
change here during the last 19 years.
Although I had a very brief visit to St. Louis
in 1967 on my way to Mexico to hone my Span-ish
skills, I didn’t spend any time in the city
until I was named to Saint Louis University’s
board of trustees in 1983. On my first trip to
SLU for a board meeting, I extended my stay
so I could see the city. After taking the Lindell
Boulevard bus downtown on a Saturday after-noon,
I found so little to do that I caught an
earlier flight back to Chicago.
For four more years, I came to St. Louis for the
trustees’ quarterly meetings — and I came only for
the meetings. Then, in 1987, when I was elected
president of SLU, I decided that I had to get to know the city. One Sunday morning shortly after
my arrival, I took former SLU President Tom Fitzgerald’s old, green-colored Oldsmobile and drove
around downtown, trying to memorize the street names.
I saw progress. In four years, some things had certainly changed for the better. But as I drove
back to campus, I saw that there was still much to do. Right in Midtown, in my own new back yard,
there were dilapidated buildings, plots of asphalt and rundown city blocks.
In my early days at SLU, I was like a new homeowner. I wanted the best for my neighborhood,
and I was willing to make the effort to improve it. When I came to this city to live and work, I
quickly adopted it as my home. But I still needed a shot of hometown pride.
I found that pride away from buildings and ball clubs. I love St. Louis for more than its Arch,
toasted ravioli and Ted Drewes frozen custard. I love it for the people who are trying to make a dif-ference
— visionaries such as Joe Edwards and Richard Baron and many others. And while I did use
my “Citizen of the Year” acceptance speech as an opportunity to challenge my fellow St. Louisans
to aspire to make our city greater, I also know that I — and our University — have enjoyed unprec-edented
cooperation from city officials and local business leaders.
I can remember being here for just a few months and working with then-mayor Vince Schoemehl
(Grad ’86) to get trees — substantial trees — planted along Grand and Lindell. In Chicago, I would
have never had as much direct access to the Board of Aldermen or to the mayor himself. Today, we
continue to receive tremendous support from Mayor Francis Slay (Law ’80) and from the Board of
Aldermen. I am truly grateful for the trust that city officials have always placed in SLU.
And it’s not just the civic leaders who have given us their trust. You, our alumni, friends and do-nors,
have shown how you believe in us, too. Through your gifts of time, talent and treasure, you’ve
been instrumental in building the reputation and stature of Saint Louis University.
We’ve come a long way together. And the city of St. Louis has, too. I am so thankful for your
commitment to Saint Louis University and hope that — no matter where you live now — SLU and
St. Louis will always feel like home.
Lawrence Biondi , S. J .
photo by Steve Dolan
President’s Message
etrolink
On the Map
A special insert gives
you an up-close look
at SLU’s campus.
Map Illustration by
Robert North Jr.
U N I V E R S I TA S S UMME R 2 0 0 6
Fr. Biondi with Dr. Donald Suggs, publisher of the St.
Louis American and the 2004 Citizen of the Year.
2 On Campus
Arena plans taking shape Research
Building gets a name Commencement
U.S. News ranks SLU high again
Social justice magazine debuts
6 Billiken News
Baseball team goes to the NCAA
Tournament Walker is now a coach
7 Campaign Update
Meet Anna and Jesse, students
doing their part for annual giving
22 Class Notes
Catch up with classmates
28 In Memoriam
Remembering those members of the
SLU community who recently died
29 Off the Shelf
Seven books from the SLU community
30 Alumni Events
Find SLU alumni activities
wherever you live
32 Perspective
An alumnus turns from music
fan into record label owner
33 The Last Word
Letters to the editor
9
Brothers in Song
An introduction
to the Bare Naked
Statues, SLU’s all-male
a cappella group.
By Allison Babka Burney
Bio-Diversity
The biology department
faculty are studying
everything from fish to
wasps to liver cancer.
By Marie Dilg
A Haven of Hope
Two alumni have
created a home where
abused and neglected
children thrive.
By Marie Dilg
12 18
Students congregate around a fountain at the Medical Center on a hot June aftternoon.
Photo by Kevin Lowder
U N I V E R S I TA S w w w. s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I TA S S UMME R 2 0 0 6
Groundbreaking is less than three
months away for the new 8 million in TIF funding and bonds,
which will be paid off with revenues from the
Arena. Fund raising continues toward the 39
million goal for the Arena project. Alumni and
benefactors who would like to contribute to the
Arena project can get information about the
project online at arena.slu.edu, or by calling
(314) 977-2499.
Site preparation will begin this summer, with
a groundbreaking date in late August or early
September. Construction is expected to take
approximately 19 months and be completed in
March 2008. At 10,600 seats, the Saint Louis
University Arena will have the second largest
capacity in the Atlantic 10 Conference. The
University anticipates hosting more that 90
events in the Arena in its first year of operation,
with roughly half being non-University events.
Arena plans move forward; groundbreaking soon
Commencement 2006
Saint Louis University celebrated
commencement for more than 1,700
graduates May 20 at Savvis Center.
Chris Lowney, author of Heroic Leadership:
Best Practices from a 450-Year-Old Company
that Changed the World, delivered the com-mencement
address. The book takes the pil-lars
of Ignatian teachings and applies them
to today’s business environment. In addition
to Lowney, other honorary degree recipients
were Maurice B. McNamee, S.J. (A&S ’33,
Grad ’34, ’45), professor emeritus of Eng-lish,
professor emeritus of art and art history
and director emeritus of Samuel Cupples
House; and Frank Stroble (Cook ’52, Grad
’60) and Ruth Stroble, longtime supporters
of Catholic higher education and commu-nity
volunteers. Throughout five decades as a professor
at Saint Louis University School of
Medicine, Dr. Edward A. Doisy was
renowned worldwide for his pioneering work
in the field of biochemistry, including win-ning
the 1943 Nobel Prize for discovering
the chemical nature of vitamin K.
To honor his lifetime of work, SLU’s new
biomedical research tower, a 67 million fa-cility,
will be named the Edward A. Doisy
Research Center. The Doisy family has com-mitted
2 million to establish the James B. and Joan
C. Peter Endowed Chair in Biochemistry
and Molecular Biology. Dr. James B. Peter
(Med ’58) is founder and former chief execu-tive
officer of Specialty Laboratories, a hospi-tal-
focused clinical reference laboratory.
• 2 million to establish the Badeeh A. and
Catherine V. Bander Endowed Chair in Ne-phrology.
Dr. Steven J. Bander (A&S ’75),
adjunct faculty member in nephrology, and
his wife, Patricia, are endowing the chair in
honor of his parents.
• 1.5 million in a challenge grant from the
J.E. and L.E. Mabee Foundation to sup-port
construction of the research building.
The building is expected to open in fall
2007. For more details, visit researchbuild-ing.
slu.edu.
Research building gets name and 30 million gift
For the third consecutive year,
U.S.News & World Report has named
the Saint Louis University School of
Law’s health law program the best in the na-tion.
Since the rankings for the health law
specialty began a decade ago, Saint Louis
University’s Center for Health Law Studies
never has been out of the top three.
Overall, the magazine’s “Best Graduate
Schools 2007” issue ranked the law school
among the nation’s 180 accredited law
schools. The School of Medicine was ranked
No. 62 among the nation’s 144 research-intensive
medical schools surveyed by U.S.
News. The school’s geriatrics program was
ranked 12th in the United States.
In addition, the part-time MBA program
in the John Cook School of Business was
ranked No. 25 in the nation out of 347 part-time
MBA programs accredited by the As-sociation
to Advance Collegiate Schools of
Business (AACSB).
Graduate programs honored by U.S. News again
Annual Atlas Week recognizes
the University’s world view
Through more than 50 special events, including discussions,
open houses and student presentations, Atlas Week 2006 gave
the Saint Louis University community the opportunity to ex-plore
the international dimension of SLU’s academic programs and
celebrate the University’s role in international education and service.
The theme of this year’s Atlas Week, held in April, was “Political
and Social Justice in a Global World.” The Signature Symposium
featured Nobel Peace laureate Jody Williams, who led the passage of
the international treaty banning antipersonnel landmines. Another
highlight was a panel discussion commemorating the first anniver-sary
of the death of Pope John Paul II.
The Billiken World Festival, which featured a Parade of Nations,
international cuisine, music, games and informational booths in the
quadrangle, wrapped up the week.
In SLU’s residence halls
Students living on
campus during the
2005-06 school year
On-campus rooms
Residence halls: Clemens, DeMattias,
Fusz, Griesedieck, Marguerite, Notre
Dame, Reinert and Walsh
Apartment complexes: Grand Forest,
the Language Houses, Marchetti East
and West, and the Village Apartments
3,346
1,785
84
Severson wins
teaching award
Dr. John G. Severson Jr., professor
of biology, received the 41st an-nual
Nancy McNeir Ring Award
from Alpha Sigma Nu, the Jesuit honor
society. It is SLU’s oldest student-initi-ated
teaching award and is named for the
University’s first dean of women. Severson
joined the faculty in 1971, has served as
associate dean of the College of Arts and
Sciences and led the Academic Services
Center from 1993-2001. He played an in-tegral
role in the development of the Pre-
Law and Pre-Med Scholars programs, as
well as SLU 101 and SLU 301 programs
for new students.
A view of the Arena facing northwest.
A student shows her pride during the Parade of Nations.
From left: The Strobles, McNamee and Lowney.
Signing the beam before it is raised (from left): Alderman Michael McMillan; AT&T-Missouri vice president Debra
Hollingsworth; U.S. Senator Christopher “Kit” Bond; Clayco president and SLU trustee Bob Clark; University
President Lawrence Biondi, S.J.; SLU trustee Charles Drury and Shirley Drury, donors to the project.
Photo by Kevin Lowder
Photo by Clayton Berry
Photo by Allison Babka Burney
Photo by Allison Babka Burney
Lincoln Legacy exhibit
coming to SLUMA
From Aug. 25-Dec. 17, Samuel Cupples House,
in partnership with the Saint Louis University
Museum of Art, will present “The Lincoln Legacy:
Presidential Years.” The exhibit, which will be in
the Judith and Adam Aronson Gallery at SLUMA,
showcases the Dr. Bernard Hall Abraham Lincoln
Collection of the University of Saint Mary in
Leavenworth, Kan. It will feature manuscripts
and autographed documents, as well as sig-nificant
historical artifacts relating to Lincoln’s
presidency. The exhibit is free and open to
the public. In conjunction with “The Lincoln
Legacy,” the University will be the site of a Civil
War re-enactment, the “Camp Jackson Historic
Encampment,” during Labor Day weekend, Sept.
1-3. For other programming and updates, visit
http://lincoln.slu.edu or call (314) 977-2666.
t h e A R T S a t S L U
Hand-tinted woodcut of Lincoln (1863).
MOCRA welcomes back
‘Silver Clouds’
They’re back! SLU’s Museum of Contemporary
Religious Art (MOCRA) announces a final show-ing
of its most popular show ever, Andy Warhol’s
“Silver Clouds.” First shown at MOCRA in 2001
and 2002, the largest-ever U.S. “Clouds” instal-lation
features dozens of silver mylar balloons
riding the air currents around MOCRA’s capa-cious
nave gallery. Visitors are invited to enter
into a childlike world of wonder and experience
one of Warhol’s groundbreaking experiments
with creating unique, non-traditional environ-ments.
MOCRA also will be showing a number
of Warhol’s “Sunset” prints. The “Clouds” open
in mid-September and continue through the fall
semester. Call MOCRA at (314) 977-7170 or visit
mocra.slu.edu for more information.
“Silver Clouds” fill the gallery during
the 2002 MOCRA showing.
New administrators join SLU
As of July 1,
Dr. Kent
Porterfield is
Saint Louis University’s
new vice president for
student development.
Porterfield comes to
SLU from Northwest
Missouri State Univer-sity,
where he was vice
president for student
affairs — a role he held
for nearly a decade. At SLU, Porterfield fosters
student formation through non-academic areas,
including residence life, student life, student
health and counseling, campus recreation
and community outreach. He also oversees
contracted services such as the bookstore
and dining services. At Northwest, Porterfield
led many of these same areas and worked to
enhance students’ lives.
Dr. Connie
Evashwick,
previously
an endowed chair and
director of the Center
for Health Care In-novation
at California
State University, Long
Beach, joined SLU as
dean of the Saint Louis
University School of
Public Health on
July 1. Over the years, she has combined her
academic career with consulting and direct
operations management. Evashwick has served
as vice president of long-term care for two
major health care systems and is a national
consultant to health systems, hospitals and
long-term care organizations. She is the author
or editor of 12 books and more than 100 other
publications.
News Briefs
Saint Louis University again opened its doors
to the area’s homeless population to provide
a hot meal and clothing. During SLU’s annual
“Open Doors” event March 23, hundreds
of homeless individuals also received free
employment and housing assistance, legal
services and opportunities to pursue literacy
education.
SLU President Lawrence Biondi, S.J., and Dr.
Ellen Harshman (Grad ’78, Law ’92), dean
of the John Cook School of Business, were
named to the St. Louis Business Journal’s
“Influentials” list this spring. The list recognizes
area business and community leaders who
make a difference to the region. Biondi was
honored as one of 10 “legends” — individuals
“who have gone beyond being influential to
become legends in our region and beyond.”
Dr. Bruce R. Bacon, professor of internal
medicine and director of the division of
gastroenterology and hepatology at the
School of Medicine, has been appointed to the
National Commission on Digestive Diseases,
an institute of the National Institutes of
Health and the National Institute of Diabetes
and Digestive Diseases. The commission,
comprising 16 people, is charged with
conducting an overview of research in digestive
diseases and developing a strategic plan for
the next 10 years of NIH digestive disease
research.
Saint Louis University Provost Dr. Joe
Weixlmann was named “Distinguished
Editor of the Year” by the Council of Editors
of Learned Journals. The award recognizes
Weixlmann’s dedication and excellence in
his work with African American Review, the
official publication of the Modern Language
Association’s Division on Black American
Literature and Culture. He was editor in chief
from 1976-2004.
The St. Louis Jesuits, sometimes called “the
fathers of contemporary American liturgical
music,” received an honorary doctorate of
music from Creighton University this spring.
Roc O’Connor S.J. (A&S ’73), Bob Dufford
S.J. (A&S ’67, Grad ’72, ’75), John Foley S.J.
(A&S ’68, Grad ’68, ’74), and Dan Schutte
(A&S ’72), who were featured in the fall 2005
Universitas, were recognized for their 30 years
of ministry to the Church.
U N I V E R S I TA S w w w. s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I TA S S UMME R 2 0 0 6
Community service tops 750,000 hours
Members of the Saint Louis University community continue to live the institution’s
mission as 14,602 students, faculty and staff contributed 753,808 hours of com-munity
service and outreach during 2005, according to a recently released University
report. This is the second year in a row that members of the University have performed more
than 750,000 hours of service. According to the report, more than 1,270 organizations and
events benefited from SLU faculty and staff volunteerism, up from 1,110 in 2004. Faculty and
staff spent 71,903 hours performing community service in 2005, a drastic jump from 41,533
hours previously. Student service also is intensive. Through academic courses, internships and
campus organizations, students committed more than 76,768 hours to outreach.
SLU students spend
spring break in service
During spring break in March
more than 50 Saint Louis Uni-versity
students participated in
rebuilding efforts in New Orleans. Of
the group, 39 SLU students assisted Ser-vice
International with the demolition of
buildings that were flooded or destroyed
by Hurricane Katrina. After demolition,
the students helped with power washing,
sanitizing and rebuilding efforts. Another
15 SLU students worked with Operation
Helping Hands, where they helped remove
debris in neighborhoods and assisted with
light carpentry, as well as construction and
restoration of homes and buildings.
This year, about 150 SLU students partic-ipated
in spring break mission trips not only
to New Orleans, but other U.S. locations as
well as sites in Mexico and El Salvador.
Social justice magazine
debuts on campus
Current SLU students from various cross-cultural and social
justice groups on campus have collaborated to produce a
student-led, student-run magazine that aims to raise aware-ness
about international social justice issues. Based upon the Jesuit
mission, One World focuses attention on men and women around
the world who are in dire need of help. Whether it’s poverty and
starvation in the developing world or genocide in Sudan, SLU stu-dent
writers explore humanitarian issues in an effort to make read-ers
realize that they have capacity and responsibility to get involved.
To view the magazine online, visit www.sluoneworld.com. Or to
order a copy of the 40-page magazine, send your request and 5 contri-bution
to: One World c/o Donna Bess; Busch Student Center, Suite 237; 20 N. Grand Blvd.; St.
Louis, MO 63103. Make checks payable to Saint Louis University.
AHarvard University team recently won the
Urban Land Institute Gerald D. Hines
Student Urban Design Competition,
which was held March 31 at Saint Louis Univ
Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University
Winter 2014 issue of Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis Universitywinter 2014
Oriflamme
Marks 50 Years
Page 12
Center for
Global Citizenship
Page 16
Alumnus Jimmie
Edwards
Page 18
Art Exhibit with
Local Roots
Page 22
Page 8
C O N T E N T S
f e a t u r e s d e p a r tme n t s
8 | SLU Downtown
The School of Law has moved into its new home in the
heart of St. Louis’ legal community.
— By Lauren Brucker
12 | Warm Welcome
Oriflamme, the student welcome organization, celebrated
its 50th anniversary this fall.
— By Amy Garland
16 | Going Global
The new Center for Global Citizenship has transformed
the former West Pine Gym.
— By Danielle Lacey
18 | The Power of Education
Alumnus Judge Jimmie Edwards is redefining education
for troubled youth in St. Louis.
— By Laura Geiser
22 | No Place Like Home
The latest exhibition at the Saint Louis University
Museum of Art has local ties.
— By Andrew Walker
2 | On Campus
San Ignacio Hall ///
Presidential search update
/// SLU’s latest honors ///
NASA collaboration ///
Health clinic relocation
6 | Biliken News
Basketball schedules
/// Baseball coach
recognized
7 | Advancement News
The impact of
scholarship gifts
23 | Clas Notes
Catch up with classmates.
28 | In Memoriam
Remembering those
members of the SLU
community who recently
died
30 | Al u mni Events
SLU alumni activities
across the country
32 | Perspective
A homily by the late
SLU professor John
Kavanaugh, S.J.
33 | The Last Word
Letters to the editor
Photo by JAMES VISSER
Law students in the
Louis Riethmann Pavilion on
the 12th floor of Scott Hall.
Volume 40, Issue 1
Editor
Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92)
contributors
Lauren Brucker
Amy Garland (A&S ’97)
Danielle Lacey
Katie O’Connor (A&S ’97)
Andrew Walker
On Campus news stories
University Communications
Medical Center Communications
Billiken Media Relations
ON THE Cover
Joe and Loretta Scott Hall, the new home of
the School of Law, in downtown St. Louis.
Photo by James Visser
Design
Art Direction: Matt Krob
Universitas is published by Saint Louis University.
Opinions expressed in Universitas are those of the
individual authors and not necessarily those of the
University administration. Unsolicited manuscripts
and photographs are welcome but will be returned
only if accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed
envelope. Letters to the editor must be signed,
and letters not intended for publication should
indicate that fact. The editor reserves the right
to edit all items. Address all mail to Universitas,
DuBourg Hall 39, One N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis,
Mo. 63103. We accept email at universitas@
slu.edu and fax submissions at 314-977-2249.
Address fax submissions to Editor, Universitas.
Postmaster: Send address changes to
Universitas, Saint Louis University,
One N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63103.
World Wide Web address:
universitas.slu.edu
Universitas is printed by Universal Printing Co.
Worldwide circulation: 121,150
© 2014, Saint Louis University
All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part
without permission is prohibited.
F A L L 2 0 0 4 W I N T E R 2 0 0 5
It is a pleasure to take this
opportunity to address
Saint Louis University
alumni via Universitas. As a
longtime reader of this maga-zine,
it is certainly a different
experience to be writing a mes-sage
for it.
As you may know, I have spent
the past 18 years of my career at
SLU serving as the University’s
general counsel. So in August I
did not anticipate being asked
to become SLU’s interim pres-ident.
Though the request was
unexpected and I had been perfectly content in
my position as a university attorney, I could not
say no. Saint Louis University is an institution
I truly love and have been honored to serve, so
taking on this new role was the right thing to
do.
Since my appointment became effective on
Sept. 2, I have gained an even greater appre-ciation
for the importance and impact of this
outstanding institution. As general counsel, I
met and worked with many people across the
University, but as interim president I have got-ten
to know so many more who are equally as
passionate about Saint Louis University and
about Jesuit education as I am.
In October I had the privilege of attending
a historic meeting with the superior general of
the Society of Jesus, Adolfo Nicolás, S.J., who
was visiting from Rome. Held in Chicago and
hosted by the Association of Jesuit Colleges
and Universities, the gathering included the
presidents and board chairs from all 28 U.S.
Jesuit colleges and universities. It truly was an
honor for me to join this august group of lead-ers
at this first-ever meeting of its kind.
During his remarks Father Nicolás reminded
us of how the spirituality of St. Ignatius Loyola,
founder of the Jesuits, can inspire us today. He
said: “In the understanding of St. Ignatius, the
principal function of a leader is to help the
members of a community grow to become the
living presence of God in the world.”
Perhaps it was the timing, but that statement
struck a chord with me. I always had been aware
of the University’s efforts to encourage growth
and transformation. But as interim president I
know I am seeing Saint Louis University in an
entirely new light.
I am meeting students who
truly embrace our Catholic,
Jesuit values. Whether serving
their fellow students, tutoring
young people or serving meals
to the poor, they truly live our
mission.
I also am meeting faculty
who fully embrace their roles
as leaders and show our stu-dents
how “to become the living
presence of God in the world.”
Our professors teach at prisons,
create healthier school lunches
for local districts and travel the
world to aid indigent communities, assisting
with everything from health care to clean water
wells.
Finally, I am meeting alumni who are living
the lessons they learned at Saint Louis Uni-versity.
In November I started gathering with
alumni groups to provide an update on all of
the great things happening at the University
and to answer questions about SLU. The first
event was held in St. Louis, and in December
I met with alumni in Chicago. In the spring I
plan to travel to even more cities to hold these
information-sharing sessions.
For me, the best parts of these meetings come
before and after my remarks, when I have time
to talk one-on-one with our alumni. I have met
so many SLU graduates who are making a dif-ference
in our world in big and small ways. They
truly illustrate for me the power and promise of
a Saint Louis University education.
I also have enjoyed experiencing the enthu-siasm
our alumni have for their alma mater.
Indeed, Saint Louis University is a wonderful
place, and I am humbled to be at the helm, at
least for a little while.
Please know I am always interested in hear-ing
from alumni. If you would like to reach
out to me, please send an email message to
[email protected].
William R. Kauffman
Interim President
P R E S I D E N T ’ S M E S S A G E
2 | U N I V E R S I T A S | w w w. s l u . e d u wi n t e r ’ 1 4 | U N I V E R S I T A S | 3
Presidential
Search Underway
In September, the Sa int L oui s
University board of trustees officially
launched the search for a new university
president by establishing a search com-mittee
and by engaging the consulting
firm AGB Search. The search commit-tee
is chaired by trustee Jim Smith, and its members are:
James Burshek, S.J. (A&S ’69), trustee
Anne Gagen (Cook ’72, Grad Cook ’76), trustee
Dr. Jeffrey Gfeller, professor and chairman, psychology
department, College of Arts and Sciences
John Griesbach, professor, School of Law
Al Litteken, trustee
Dr. Teri Murray (Nurs ’79, Grad Nurs ’93, E&PS ’97),
dean, School of Nursing
Dr. Frank O’Donnell, trustee
Vidur Sharma, president, Student Government Association
Patrick Sly (Grad Cook ’77), vice chairman of the board
and trustee
Dr. Jane Turner (A&S ’85, Grad ’91, Med ’92), president,
Faculty Senate
This fall, Smith and AGB Search’s managing partner, Dr.
Jamie Ferrare, met with various University groups to discuss the
presidential search and to learn about the characteristics and
qualities that the SLU community seeks in its next president.
They received input from hundreds of people via direct meet-ings
and emails.
In October, the committee released the presidential position
description, which was approved by the board. This description
can be found online at slu.edu/presidential-search.
The committee is now in the next phase of the search, which
includes identifying prospective candidates and discussing
SLU’s presidential position with them. In January, the search
committee will work to narrow the candidate list to approx-imately
two or three candidates who can be proposed to the
board for review.
“We are very enthused about all the advantages that Saint
Louis University has to offer a prospective president,” Smith
said. “And speaking for the search committee, I can assure you
we will do everything possible to find a great new leader for
Saint Louis University.”
Accolades for SL U ’s
Academics, Service and Value
Ranked among the top Jesuit universities in the coun-try,
Saint Louis University continues to earn praise from
new sources as well as established ones. Here are some of the
University’s most recent honors.
University Dedicates
San Ignacio Hall
in Madrid
Saint Louis University’s Spanish presence
continues to grow. In September, the
University celebrated the opening of its
newest building in Madrid, San Ignacio Hall.
The recently renovated, 26,000-square-foot
building nearly doubles the size
of SLU-Madrid and adds a new library,
classroom space, art and dance studios,
and a restaurant. Photo by Ángel García López
o n c a m p u s
Princeton Review
best college
Saint Louis University made
the Princeton Review’s The
Best 378 Colleges: 2014
Edition. Only about 15 percent
of America’s 2,500 four-year
colleges are profiled in the book.
The profile of SLU highlights
its “solid academic programs”
and sustainability efforts. The
Princeton Review also called
SLU a place where “service,
social justice and political
awareness are stressed at
every level of education.”
Top Marks for Commitment to Service
For the third year in a row, Washington Monthly ranked SLU
among the top five universities in the nation for community
service. The publication looks at schools’ contributions to
the public good in three categories: social mobility, research
and service. SLU was No. 4. The University also earned list-ings
as “Top Jesuit School” and “Top Faith-Based School,”
as well as second place on the list of top private institutions.
In addition, SLU was one of a handful of institutions rec-ognized
at the President’s Interfaith and Community Service
Campus Challenge National Gathering in September.
Started by President Barack Obama in 2011, the chal-lenge
calls for campuses to increase interfaith service and
engagement over the course of one year. The University was
honored for hosting nearly 100 interfaith events.
Finally, SLU placed fifth on Hercampus.com’s 2013 list of
“The Most Charitable Schools.” Hercampus.com is a colle-giate
guide and news network for women college students.
Kiplinger’s
best values in
private colleges
The University was recognized
for affordability and academic
quality among Kiplinger’s “Best
Values in Private Colleges.”
The 2014 list includes the
top 200 private colleges
in the country. Saint Louis
University has appeared on
the list multiple times.
Sierra Club
cool school
SLU was named one of
Sierra Club’s “Cool Schools,”
an honor given by the
environmental organization
to colleges and universities
around the country that are
committed to sustainability.
The list recognizes green
accomplishments and
efforts, such as faculty
and departments engaged
in sustainability research,
and sustainability-themed
courses or curricula.
CollegesofDistinction.com
college of
distinction
One of six Missouri schools —
and the only institution from St.
Louis — to make the 2013-14
list, the University was selected
for its commitment to four
areas: engaged students, great
teaching, vibrant community
and successful outcomes.
SLU was also selected as a
“Catholic College of Distinction.”
Smith
4 | U N I V E R S I T A S | w w w. s l u . e d u wi n t e r ’ 1 4 | U N I V E R S I T A S | 5
SL U ’s Free Medical
Clinic Relocates
in North St. Louis
Sa int Louis Univer s it y’s Hea lth
Resource Center, a free clinic oper-ated
by medical school students under the
guidance of SLU faculty physicians, cele-brated
its 20th anniversary of caring for
the underserved and underinsured with
a move to a newer, larger facility in north St. Louis. The new site is known as
the Jesuit Health Resource Center.
Dr. Eva Frazer, a former member of SLU’s board of trustees, and her hus-band
Steven Roberts donated the space.
The new clinic has a large patient waiting room, six patient exam rooms, a
social work room, a conference room, multipurpose rooms, expanded lab space
and a classroom. With the additional space, SLU is exploring the possibility of
offering other services.
Last year the Health Resource Center served more than 1,000 patients at
primary care, well women and pediatrics clinics. About 73 percent lacked
insurance.
Students began seeing patients in the new space during their regular
Saturday morning session late this summer.
NIH Taps SL U to Bid on Nearly
1 billion in projects to study
infectious diseases, including emerging threats.
The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, part of the NIH,
has funded vaccine research at SLU since 1989. The new contract represents
what likely is the largest research contract or grant in the University’s history.
SLU received an “Indefinite Delivery Indefinite Quantity” contract with
an estimated value of up to 951
million for the contract duration. Only centers accepted as VTEUs can bid
on specific projects. This is a change in the federal funding mechanism for
vaccine research, said Dr. Robert Belshe, director of the Center for Vaccine
Development and principal investigator on the project.
Business EnDowed
Professor Named
The John Cook School of Business has
appointed Dr. Bidisha Chakrabarty,
associate professor of finance, to the Edward
Jones Endowed Professorship in Finance.
Edward Jones created the endowed pro-fessorship
in 2007 to recognize an expert in
finance who provides academic leadership
through teaching, research and service.
Chakrabarty joined the business school
facult y in 2003. She has received the
Outstanding Faculty Award given by the
John Cook School of Business Alumni
Board, the Kwak Research Award for the
best research productive faculty, the ICRIER
policy paper grant and the National Stock
Exchange of India Research Initiative Grant.
Chakrabarty is a lso a consultant to
Beyond Housing, an organization that
helps families facing foreclosure. She is an
author and researcher on the topics of mar-ket
microstructure, securities regulation,
disclosure and market reaction, and market
design and price discovery.
Parks
Students,
NASA
Launch
Camera
into Space
COPPER (SLU-
01), Saint Louis
Univer s i t y ’s f i r s t
spacecraft designed,
bui l t , t e s t e d and
operated by students
at Parks College of
Engineering, Aviation
and Technology, launched Nov. 19 from the Mid-Atlantic
Regional Spaceport at Wallops Island, Va. The Air Force
Research Laboratory and NASA Missouri Space Grant
funded the project development, and the launch of
COPPER was sponsored by NASA.
COPPER is a one kilogram, 10-centimeter cube and is
made of commercially available spacecraft parts and stu-dent-
developed electronics.
The mission tests the effectiveness of a commercial infra-red
camera for in-space navigation and object detection, as
well as observes the Earth in the infrared spectrum.
For the next 12 months, Parks College students
will operate COPPER from a radio control station in
McDonnell Douglas Hall on the SLU campus. The space-craft
will de-orbit naturally in less than four years.
COPPER is a product of the Space Systems Research
Laboratory, which is led by Dr. Michael Swartwout and
Dr. Sanjay Jayaram of the department of aerospace and
mechanical engineering, and Dr. Kyle Mitchell of the
department of electrical and computer engineering. More
than 50 undergraduate and graduate students worked to
create COPPER during the past three years.
Class
of 2017
boasts
high
marks
This fall, SLU
welcomed one
of the largest and
most academically
gifted freshman
classes in University
history. The Class of
2017’s credentials
include a mean high
school GPA of 3.81
and an average
ACT score of 27.6.
Geographically,
44 states and
24 countries are
represented in this
year’s freshman
class, and nearly 75
percent of SLU��s
new students
hail from outside
the St. Louis
metropolitan area.
By The Numbers
2013 Make A Difference Day:
SLU’s 16th annual day of
service in October was one of
the largest in University history.
TIAA-CREF was the primary
financial sponsor for the event.
3,691 participants
91% of the volunteers were students.
312 faculty, staff, alumni and
parents participated.
197 Kappa Delta sorority sisters made
the largest volunteer team.
140 community organizations, schools,
churches and homes benefited —
the most sites in the event’s history.
News Bri e fs
University President Emeritus Lawrence Biondi,
S.J., received the 2013 Mayor’s Award for his influence
on economic development in the city of St. Louis.
During Biondi’s tenure, the University had a major
impact on the region’s economy; an independent
study found that SLU generated $715.5 million in
economic impact during 2011 alone. St. Louis Mayor
Francis G. Slay (Law ’80) presented the award in
October.
J. Joe Adorjan (Cook ’63, Grad Cook ’67), chairman
of the University’s board of trustees, was awarded the
Hungarian Order of Merit-Knight’s Cross, Hungary’s
highest state honor. Adorjan is the honorary general
consul of Hungary as well as the founder of the
Hungarian-Missouri Educational Partnership, which
links four Missouri universities, including SLU, with five
Hungarian universities to enhance the education of
emerging leaders who will help create a lasting bond
between the two countries.
Dr. Alexander Garza (PH ’03), the former assistant
secretary for health affairs and chief medical officer
for the Department of Homeland Security, has joined
the faculty of the College for Public Health and Social
Justice. Garza is associate dean for public health
practice and associate professor of epidemiology.
David Cassens is the new dean for University
Libraries. He has served as interim University librarian
since June 2012. Previously he served as assistant
university librarian for administration and director of
Pius XII Memorial Library. He has worked at SLU for
nearly 15 years.
In October, Dr. Mildred Mattfeldt-Beman (Grad E&PS
’92), chair of the department of nutrition and dietetics,
received a Medallion Award from the Academy of
Nutrition and Dietetics for guiding her department
to national prominence. Mattfeldt-Beman has built
a program that is a community resource — advising
congressmen, creating healthier school lunches and
promoting business in the region.
Dr. Mike Shaner, professor at the John Cook School
of Business, has been named the “Best Management
Professor” by the World Education Congress in
Mumbai. Shaner was recognized as a thinker and doer
who served as a “role model and a believer in change.”
He joined the SLU faculty in 1974.
Dr. Diana Carlin, associate vice president for graduate
education and international initiatives, was one of 11
U.S. administrators selected by the U.S. and French
Fulbright commissions to participate in a two-week
seminar in France in October. The purpose was to help
both the Americans and French better understand
the other’s higher education and research areas,
and to explain partnership opportunities with French
universities.
o n c a m p u s
HOMECOMING 2013:
Saint Louis University’s 2013 Homecoming
and Family Weekend drew nearly 2,500 people
to campus Sept. 27-29. The celebration
included the popular golf cart parade, with
the theme “Meet Me in St. Louis,” and
celebrations of SLU’s Golden Billikens,
members of the class of 1963 and earlier.
The weekend was capped off with a win by
the men’s soccer team and a spectacular
fireworks display. The 2014 Homecoming
will be Sept. 25-28. Photo by Steve Dolan
Olivia Johnson gets her ears examined
at the clinic by faculty volunteer
Dr. Marilyn Maxwell, professor of
internal medicine and pediatrics.
A student building COPPER (SLU-01).
From left: Dr. Scott Safranski, interim business dean;
Chakrabarty; Robert J. Ciapciak (Grad Cook ’82) of
Edward Jones; and Interim President William Kauffman.
pictured: Students packing meals for Feed My Starving Children on Make A Difference Day. Photo by Kevin Lowder
Photo by Kevin Lowder
Photo by Katie O’Connor
6 | U N I V E R S I T A S | w w w. s l u . e d u wi n t e r ’ 1 4 | U N I V E R S I T A S | 7
When Saint Louis University freshman Michael Milek got
a call with scholarship news last spring, he wasn’t imme-diately
sure the news was good. “At first I didn’t think I got it
because of the tone of the caller,” said Milek, an athletic training
major in Doisy College of Health Sciences. “However, he told me
that I received it, and I was really happy.”
The Philadelphia native had been awarded the Martin Luther
King Jr. Scholarship, a merit-based University scholarship granted
to students with a mix of academic achievement, demonstrated
leadership and commitment to service. The scholarship w
Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University
Spring 2007 issue of Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis UniversityRemembering Father Mac
PAGE 8
DR. ROB E RT BELSHE
DR. MAR K BULLER
PA UL C Z YS Z
DR. G REG EVANS
DR. DEE ANNA GL ASER
DR. JOEL GOL DS TEIN
DR. JERRY KAT Z
DR. JOHN MORL E Y
DR. K EN WA RREN
DR. TER RI L . WEAVER
VACCINE DEVELOPMENT
VIRAL-BORNE DISEASES
AIR CRASH INVESTIGATION
BIOTERRORISM
COSMETIC DERMATOLOGY
VICE PRESIDENCY
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
GERIATRIC MEDICINE
U.S. POLITICS
POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER
Hearing Voices
PAGE 16
Trophy Life
PAGE 20
Volume 33, Issue 2
E d i t o r
Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92)
C o n t r i b u t o r s
Clayton Berry
Marie Dilg (SW ’94)
Jeff Fowler
Jeanette Grider
Joe Muehlenkamp (A&S, Cook ’89, Grad ’98)
Rachel Otto
Andrea Roewe
Nick Sargent
Nancy Solomon
“ O n C a m p u s ” n e w s s t o r i e s
University Communications
Medical Center Media Relations
Billiken Media Relations
De s i g n
Art Direction: Matthew Krob
Universitas is published by Saint Louis University. Opin-ions
expressed in Universitas are those of the individual
authors and not necessarily those of the University ad-ministration.
Unsolicited manuscripts and photographs
are welcome but will be returned only if accompanied
by a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Letters to the
editor must be signed, and letters not intended for pub-lication
should indicate that fact. The editor reserves the
right to edit all items. Address all mail to Universitas,
DuBourg Hall 39, 221 N. Grand, St. Louis, Mo. 63103.
We accept e-mail at [email protected] and fax submissions
at (314) 977-2249. Address fax submissions to Editor,
Universitas.
Postmaster: Send address changes to
Universitas, Saint Louis University,
221 N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63103.
World Wide Web address:
www.slu.edu/pr/universitas.html
Universitas is printed by Universal Printing Co.
and mailed by Specialty Mailing.
Worldwide circulation: 118,600
© 2007, Saint Louis University
All rights reserved.
Each spring I look forward to our com-mencement
ceremony. There is just
something about the sound of the organ
filling Scottrade Center and the sight of hun-dreds
of graduates having their pictures taken in
their caps and gowns smiling ear-to-ear flanked
by a parent on each side with even bigger smiles
on their faces. I love the banners, the academic
attire and the ritual of it all. It is an exciting
time for professors, students and parents alike,
and the thrill culminates for me when I get to
roar at the end of the ceremony: “I declare you
sons and daughters of Saint Louis University
forever!”
Many students find it difficult to see past my
role as priest and president, but at heart, I am
also an educator. I spent 12 years as a mem-ber
of the faculty at Loyola University Chicago
teaching and six years as a dean at Loyola be-fore
I became president
of SLU. I value my time
as a professor because
what I learned from my
students in the classroom
has influenced the educa-tion-
focused decisions I
have made as president
here.
So, it is a joy for me
to see so many students
excited about what they
have achieved during
their time at SLU and to
witness their enthusiasm
for the future. Every year,
I wonder how the gradu-ates
in the audience will go on to achieve great
things and how the University will play a role in
those successes.
With nearly 108,000 SLU alumni living
around the world, there are many stories of
SLU sons and daughters making the University
proud. But in February, I was blessed to spend
time with one of those sons. He has not only
gone on to achieve great success, he saw fit to
share it with SLU.
I am sure some of you will find familiar the
name that adorns the Chaifetz Arena (read more
on page 2), our long-awaited, on-campus arena,
because its namesake may have been a former
classmate. Dr. Richard A. Chaifetz, who made
a 12 million naming rights gift to the arena
project, graduated from Saint Louis University
in 1975 with a bachelor’s degree in psychology.
During the past 30 years, Chaifetz founded
Chicago-based ComPsych Corp. and oversaw
its growth into the world’s largest provider of
employee-assistance programs.
It’s truly a blessing that Rich is sharing the
success he achieved after graduating from SLU.
But as an educator, I was more touched to hear
Rich tell the story that inspired him to give back
to his alma mater.
During a press conference announcing his do-nation,
Rich told the media in attendance about
the day he visited the office of former University
President Paul Reinert, S.J. As Rich told those
in attendance, he was faced with the possibility
of having to leave SLU because he could not pay
his tuition.
When Rich reached the president’s office, he
was obviously nervous. But Father Reinert took
the time to meet with him and listened to his
story. Rich punctuated his plea to stay at SLU
by promising that if Father Reinert allowed
him to remain in school,
he would not only pay
SLU the tuition he owed
but give back even more
when he established him-self.
Clearly, he’s made
good on that promise.
Rich truly understands
the benefits he received
by attending Saint Louis
University, not only be-cause
of the investment
Father Reinert made in
him, but the kindness
that all those who support
the University showed
him. Donations, whether
small or large, make it possible for future gen-erations
to share in the educational experience
you received at Saint Louis University.
As we push forward to have SLU recognized
as the finest Catholic university in the nation, we
will continue to need the assistance and leader-ship
of sons and daughters like Rich — and like
you. By making the University even better, you
not only give current students the opportunities
you received, you strengthen the value of your
degree as SLU’s stature and reputation improve
across the country.
No matter how long ago it was that you took
those special pictures with your parents or felt
the excitement of graduation rush over you as
“Pomp and Circumstance” began to play, I hope
you will always remember you are sons and
daughters of Saint Louis University, forever.
— Lawrence Biondi, S.J.
P r e s i den t ’ s Me s s age
U N I V E R S I T A S w w w . s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I T A S S P R I N G 2 0 0 7
F EAT U RES
DE PARTMENTS
2 On Campus
Arena named for Chaifetz Service hours grow Med dean to
retire New endowed chairs Rec Center expands
6 Billiken News
Three fall NCAA Tourney appearances New Hall of Fame inductees
7 Campaign Update
A conversation with Tom Keefe, development vice president
24 Class Notes
Catch up with classmates
28 In Memoriam
Remembering those members of the SLU community who recently died
30 Alumni Events
Find SLU alumni activities wherever you live
32 Perspective
An alumnus shares the courage and inspiration of his college roommate
33 The Last Word
Letters to the editor
8
16
Remembering
Father Mac
SLU’s champion of
Cupples House and the
arts, Maurice McNamee,
S.J., died in January.
By Clayton Berry
and Nick Sargent
Meet the Experts
Insights and experiences from 10 faculty members who
frequently appear in the media. 10 Photos by Jim Visser 20
Hearing VOICES
An innovative program
helps members of
the SLU community
find their calling.
By Marie Dilg
Trophy Life
A Q&A with alumnus
Mark Lamping, president
of the St. Louis Cardinals.
By Laura Geiser
A springtime workout at the expanded Simon Recreation Center.
Photo by Jim Visser
U N I V E R S I T A S w w w . s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I T A S S P R I N G 2 0 0 7
6,000 Lineal feet of underground piping used in the construction 34,000 Square feet of brick being used in the project — enough to cover a regulation basketball court 7.25 times »
Saint Louis University announced Feb. 28 that its new 10,600-
seat multipurpose arena will be named in honor of University
alumnus Dr. Richard A. Chaifetz (SHAY-fetz), who made a
12 million naming rights gift to the project. Chaifetz Arena will
open in March 2008. It will be home to Billiken men’s and women’s
basketball and will host other events.
Chaifetz (A&S ’75) is a licensed neuropsychologist and is founder,
chairman and CEO of Chicago-based ComPsych Corp., the world’s
largest provider of employee-assistance programs (EAP). ComPsych
is also the leading provider of fully integrated EAP, behavioral health,
work-life, wellness, crisis intervention services and outsourced human
resources solutions under the GuidanceResources brand. ComPsych
provides services to more than 25 million individuals and 10,000 or-ganizations
throughout the United States and 92 countries. Chaifetz
is one of the world’s most frequently quoted experts on behavioral
health, workplace issues as well as employer and employee trends.
“It is an honor for Saint Louis University to have Dr. Richard
Chaifetz’s name on our arena, which will mean so much to the Uni-versity
and the entire St. Louis community,” said University President
Lawrence Biondi, S.J. “Not only is Dr. Chaifetz respected around the
world for the success of ComPsych Corp., but we take special pride
because he is an extremely successful alumnus who cares deeply about
his alma mater and future generations of SLU students.”
“I am proud to have the University name this arena in my honor,”
Chaifetz said. “My education at Saint Louis University has had a tre-mendous
impact upon my life, both personally and in business. As
an avid sports fan, I have fond memories of the many sporting events
I attended while an undergraduate at SLU. Having the arena in my
name is especially meaningful.”
Chaifetz is a native of New York, and in 1971 he turned down an
appointment to the U.S. Military Academy at West Point to attend
SLU on the advice of his high school dean and mentor. He credits for-mer
University President Paul Reinert, S.J., with helping him remain
at SLU when financial issues threatened his ability to stay in school.
“Father Reinert told me he believed in me and allowed me to stay
at SLU at a time in my life when I didn’t have the financial resources
to pay for my tuition,” Chaifetz said. “I promised him not only would
I pay my tuition, but that I would pay back the University in an even
bigger way in the future. Now, this is an opportunity for me to give
back to the University for all the support and guidance I received as
an undergraduate here. It is my hope that Chaifetz Arena will en-hance
the on-campus experience for every future Saint Louis Univer-sity
student, as well as the city of St. Louis.”
Chaifetz has been named to the Who’s Who list of Crain’s Chi-cago
Business for three consecutive years — 2004, 2005 and 2006.
He serves on the board of directors of several corporations, as well
as nonprofit organizations. Chaifetz received his Psy.D. from the Il-linois
School of Professional Psychology. He is married and has two
children. — Jeff Fowler
At the construction site of
the new Chaifetz Arena
SLU lauded in
recent rankings
Two publications,
St. Louis Maga-zine
and the St.
Louis Business Journal,
have recognized Saint
Louis University as one
of the area’s best places
to work. St. Louis Magazine named the
region’s “45 companies that know how
to keep their employees happy.” SLU
was highlighted for its award-winning
retirement plan.
In addition, for the second straight
year, the St. Louis Regional Chamber
and Growth Association named SLU
to its list of “Greater St. Louis Top 50
Businesses Shaping Our Future.” The
50 companies recognized in 2006 were
selected for their contributions to the St.
Louis region and future impact on the
business community.
more than 300 Philosophy professors worldwide name
saint louis University programs among the best
Top philosophers from around the world gave high marks to philosophy pro-grams
at Saint Louis University. The Philosophical Gourmet Report ranked
SLU’s medieval philosophy program the best in the United States and rated
the philosophy of religion program behind only those at Notre Dame and Oxford
universities. SLU also earned a special mention in epistemology, the philosophy of
knowledge.
More than 300 philosophy professors worldwide completed online surveys about
philosophy departments in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and
New Zealand.
SLU welcomes noted speakers
The former prime minister of Israel,
Ehud Barak, visited Saint Louis
University earlier this year and dis-cussed
“Blueprint for Global Relations: A
Macro Analysis of How National Politics,
International Events, Terror and the Econ-omy
All Influence National and Interna-tional
Relations.” Prime minister of Israel
from 1999 to 2001, Barak led the country
out of prolonged recession and into an eco-nomic
boom.
In February, famed
filmmaker Spike Lee
was the keynote speak-er
for SLU’s celebra-tion
of Black History
Month. He is known
for such films as Do
the Right Thing and
When the Levees Broke,
a documentary focus-ing
on the plight of Americans stranded in
New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. Lee
delivered a presentation titled “The Media’s
Affect on Black America.”
The spring 1982 edition of Universitas featured the
cover story “Portrait of the Class Clown” describing
a student’s effort to become a professional clown.
He said running away to the circus is not as easy as it sounds.
Don Ganz (A&S ’78, Grad Cook ’83) shared his experience at
Barnum & Bailey Clown College and how that opportunity made
him more marketable. After his three-month adventure at clown
college, Ganz returned to SLU to complete his MBA.
The magazine also included an article, remembering Joseph
“Buck” Davis, S.J. The story reflected his many contributions to
the University in his years of service. The founder of what is
now the John Cook School of Business, Davis used
his self-taught business skills to recruit nearly the entire
staff for the school. Businessman Martin Shaughnessy, a close friend of Davis’,
donated 750,000 for construction of a home for the school, which was named
Davis-Shaughnessy Hall for their efforts.
Also, in this issue, University President Thomas Fitzgerald, S.J., discussed
changes in national legislation for financial aid. Fitzgerald focused on SLU’s
dedication and commitment to its students. He said the administration
was working on ways for students to afford a SLU education, in light of
the financial aid cuts proposed by President Ronald Reagan.
Lee
Sign
of the
Times
Sister Mary Terese
Donze (A&S ’44), a
resident of DeMattias
Hall, shared one of
her many inventions
— a gadget that rewound
adding machine paper
so it could be used four
times instead of just
once.
– from the story titled
“Nun Has 2nd Career
as Inventor/
Author”
Quotable UTAS
“Thomas Aquinas long ago pointed
out that learning takes place only if
the learner does something. One cannot
pour knowledge into the head or heart of
a student as one pours wine into a glass.”
— Dr. Francis L. Gross Jr. (A&S ’55, Grad ’56, ’64), an author speaking about his book Passages
in Teaching: Predictable Crises in the Teaching of Adolescents and Young Adults. Gross taught in the
theology department from 1966 to 1969.
Arena named for alumnus
Richard Chaifetz
Make a gift and follow the construction of Chaifetz Arena at arena.slu.edu.
Photos by Kevin Lowder
above LEFT: Chaifetz (far right) and his family look over a 1975 SLU yearbook with Mary Bruemmer (second from left), former dean of women and University volunteer.
Center: The Chaifetz family (from left), Jessica, Ross, Richard and Jill with a rendering of Chaifetz Arena. right: Biondi (left) presents Chaifetz with a Billiken basketball jersey.
Biondi (left) and Chaifetz at the news conference announcing the new name.
U N I V E R S I T A S w w w . s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I T A S S P R I N G 2 0 0 7
Photo by Jim Visser
News Briefs
Drs. Paul J. Shore, Todd Swanstrom
and Stephen Paul Wernet received
Fulbright Scholar grants this school
year. Shore, a professor of educa-tional
studies, is at the Collegium
Budapest in Hungary. Wernet, a pro-fessor
of social work, is at Ostrava
University in the Czech Republic. And
Swanstrom, a professor of public
policy studies, is at the University of
Amsterdam in the Netherlands.
Dr. Charlotte Royeen, dean of the
Doisy College of Health Sciences, won
the National Jesuit Book Award for
2006. Royeen is co-editor of Educat-ing
for Moral Action: A Sourcebook for
Health and Rehabilitation Ethics.
Darius U. Dunn is the general
manager of the new Chaifetz Arena.
Dunn previously served as associate
director of the Stephen O’Connell
Center at the University of Florida.
Dr. Brian D. Till, chairman of the mar-keting
department at the John Cook
School of Business, was appointed
to the Clarence and Helen Steber En-dowed
Professorship in Marketing. The
endowed professorship was created in
1971 to recognize a scholar in the field
of marketing for teaching, scholarly
work and work with the business com-munity.
At the construction site of
the new Chaifetz Arena 430,000 Hours of work that will be spent on the 18-month project 75,000 Cubic yards of dirt that will be moved during construction — about 375,000 full wheelbarrow loads 191 Drilled piers in the foundation, each approximately 30 feet tall
campus enthusiastically embraces RecREATION Center expansion
The University recently completed a 40,000-square-foot expansion of the Simon Rec-reation
Center, paid for by students who voted to assess themselves a fee to fund the
project.
The new space includes more than 150 new pieces of fitness equipment, a juice bar and
lounge, additional locker rooms, several multipurpose rooms, wellness suite, traversing wall
and gaming area.
Students so enthusiastically embraced the expansion that less than a month after it opened,
the Rec Center expanded its hours to meet demand.
Additional improvements are planned for this school year. The second phase of the project
includes renovations to the main level and the second floor. The lobby, locker rooms, elevated
track and special event rooms will be updated. An elevator also will be installed.
DEAN OF THE SCHOOL OF MEDICINE ANNOUNCES HER RETIREMENT
Dr. Patricia L. Monteleone (Med ’61, Pub Hlth ’91, Grad Cook
’91) one of the first women appointed to lead a U.S. medical
school when she was named the 11th dean of Saint Louis Uni-versity
School of Medicine in 1994, announced her intention to retire in
March. With 13 years of service, she is the longest continuously serving
woman dean in the history of U.S. medical schools.
Monteleone, a pediatrician with an expertise in medical genetics,
has presided over the school during a time of rapid change in American
medicine. She has overseen a restructuring of the school’s medical cur-riculum;
an expansion in the amount of research funding at the school
from both governmental and private industry sources; and the creation of the University
Medical Group (SLUCare), the clinical practice of the faculty at SLU School of Medicine.
Monteleone will continue to serve as dean until a new dean is identified.
Endowed chairs honor
donors, slu scholars
Thanks to generous donations,
SLU added two endowed chairs
during the last year.
The James B. and Joan C. Peter Endowed
Chair in Biochemistry and Molecular Biol-ogy
was made possible by a donation of 2
million from Dr. James and Joan Peter. The
Hubert Mäder Endowed Chair in Health
Care Ethics was made possible through a
$1.5 million donation from the Geschwister
Mader Foundation in Zurich, Switzerland.
Dr. James B. Peter (Med ’58) has had a
distinguished career in academic medicine
and business. He is founder and former
chief executive officer of Specialty Labo-ratories,
a leading hospital-focused clinical
reference laboratory. He and his wife, Joan,
generously supported research and educa-tion
at SLU for many years. Dr. William S.
Sly (Med ’57) is the inaugural chair holder.
Huber Mäder, a surgeon and philanthro-pist,
created his foundation to demonstrate
his lifelong passion for the ethical practice
of medicine. Dr. James M. DuBois is the
inaugural chair holder.
Annual service hours soar to nearly 780,000, survey says
Members of the Saint Louis University community certainly know how to give back.
In 2006, SLU students, faculty and staff contributed 779,776 hours of commu-nity
service and outreach, according to the report, “Beyond the Classroom.”
That’s more than in 2005 (753,806) and up significantly from five years ago, when the
reported number of service hours was approximately 490,000.
SLU’s academic courses and programs provide great opportunities for service. According to
the new report, SLU students spent more than 80,000 hours helping the community through
class and program-sponsored activities.
virtual tour of italian church
possible via new technology
Using technology typically associ-ated
with video games, two SLU
theologians created an interac-tive,
3-D tour of one of Europe’s most im-portant
churches.
Theology professors Drs. Jay Ham-mond
(A&S ’93, Grad ’94, ’98) and James
Ginther spent more than a year building
the virtual version of Italy’s landmark Ba-silica
of Saint Francis of Assisi.
Their 3-D model allows virtual tour-goers
to walk nearly everywhere in the upper basil-ica
and fly close to the church’s famed paint-ings
and stained-glass windows. Most virtual
tours of historic buildings rely on 360-degree
panoramas and offer limited interactivity.
Other virtual tour projects have been equally
advanced, but the SLU professors’ tour is one
of the first able to run on a PC.
Ignatian retiree group looking for new volunteers
The Ignatian Volunteer Corps is searching for retirees to help with the good work its
chapters are doing across the county.
The IVC is an organization that combines service to the poor with a unique process
of spiritual reflection. Established in 1995 by Jesuit priests Jim Conroy, S.J., and Charlie
Costello, S.J., the program is for retired women
and men, age 50 and older. To learn more about
the IVC or to sign u
Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University
Fall 2006 issue of Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis UniversityCatching up with SLU’s
Madrid Campus page 8
Not Your Typical College Cafeteria page 14 Shimmy Gray-Miller: Off Court, On the Record page 18
E d i t o r
Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92)
C o n t r i b u t o r s
Jeff Fowler
Nancy Solomon
“ O n C a m p u s ” n e w s s t o r i e s
University Communications
Medical Center Media Relations
Billiken Media Relations
De s i g n
Art Direction: Matthew Krob
Universitas is published by Saint Louis University. Opin-ions
expressed in Universitas are those of the individual
authors and not necessarily those of the University admin-istration.
Unsolicited manuscripts and photographs are
welcome but will be returned only if accompanied by a
stamped, self-addressed envelope. Letters to the editor
must be signed, and letters not intended for publication
should indicate that fact. The editor reserves the right to
edit all items. Address all mail to Universitas, DuBourg Hall
39, 221 N. Grand, St. Louis, Mo. 63103. We accept e-mail
at [email protected] and fax submissions at (314) 977-2249.
Address fax submissions to Editor, Universitas.
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Universitas is printed by Universal Printing Co.
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Worldwide circulation: 111,720
© 2006, Saint Louis University
All rights reserved.
Volume 3 3 , I ssue 1
I was having dinner in Beirut with the presi-dent
of Notre Dame University of Lebanon
on July 12 when he got the call: Hezbollah
militants had just abducted two Israeli soldiers.
At that point, I had no idea just how harrowing
the next week would be.
When I left for Lebanon just two days ear-lier
to deliver Notre Dame’s commencement ad-dress,
I had no indication a crisis was brewing.
But by July 13 all hell broke loose. From my
hotel in northern Beirut, I heard Israeli jets at-tacking
the Hezbollah section of the city. From
my balcony I could see clouds of black smoke
rise into the air, and at night I could see fires on
the horizon. When the airport and major roads
were bombed, I began to wonder when — if
— I would get back to St. Louis.
For the most part, I felt safe. Because the ho-tel
was in the so-called Christian area of greater
Beirut, we were told it was unlikely to be a tar-get.
Even so, the fighting grew more intense ev-ery
day. Occasional black-outs
and media warnings
to stay in the hotel kept
me on edge. Even more
unnerving, days passed
with no word from the
staff at the U.S. embassy,
even though I had taken
care to register my pres-ence
with them several
times. Literally waiting
by the phone in my hotel
room, I began to feel like
a hostage.
Finally — at 3 a.m.
on July 19 — Saint Louis
University’s general counsel called to say he had
received word from the State Department that
I would be leaving on the cruise ship the Orient
Queen that day and would be permitted only
one 30-pound bag.
I rounded up my essential documents, left
my other luggage behind and headed to the des-ignated
staging area. Waiting in line, I heard
bombs exploding, sounding like thunderclaps
reverberating in every direction.
After showing my passport to the embassy
staff, I boarded a bus to the Beirut seaport. I
joined about 200 men, women and children
gathered there, all of us anxious to be cleared
to board ship. Bombs were dropping just a few
miles away; it was the closest I had been to the
fighting.
We finally left port at 4 p.m. with an Ameri-can
warship, the U.S.S. Gonzalez, following us
in a corridor only half a mile wide. The Gonza-lez
accompanied us all the way to Cyprus. We
arrived just after midnight, but a ship bearing
French national evacuees from Beirut had ar-rived
before us, so we had to stay on the Orient
Queen for three more hours.
Tension was high. Everyone was anxious to
get off the ship, find a place to stay and begin
making their necessary travel arrangements.
Some people fainted; some got angry. There was
some pushing and shoving and even a fistfight.
When more than 1,000 of us were told we could
disembark, the exodus process became chaotic.
Eventually, I got off the ship and to a taxi
that took me to a hotel about 50 miles away.
I was able to catch a chartered plane the next
evening, and I finally arrived in St. Louis at 1
p.m. July 21. It had taken me about 12 hours to
get from the United States to Lebanon by plane.
It took me nearly 52 hours — by bus, ship, taxi
and plane — to get home.
Although I was relieved to be out of war-torn
Lebanon, I must
confess that my experi-ences
there were among
the most memorable of
my life. I’m not saying I’d
willingly do it again, but
I am genuinely grateful
that I had an opportunity
to get to know and appre-ciate
the Lebanese people
and see how resiliently
they handled this crisis.
I also am genuinely
grateful for the sober-ing
moments I spent in
my hotel room thinking
about my life, my relationships and my work at
SLU. I know I have a reputation for being some-what
tough and business-minded at times. But I
came to realize how fortunate I am — with the
help of my God — that so many people were
thinking of and praying for me.
Even several months later, I continue to re-flect
on my life-changing experiences in Leba-non.
I am not a politician, but I know that
what’s most important is to settle this conflict
for the long term. If not, the Lebanese and Is-raeli
people — especially the children — will
continue to suffer. And unlike me, they won’t
get a call at three in the morning to board the
Orient Queen and get out.
— Lawrence Biondi, S.J.
A version of this essay appeared July 30 on the Com-mentary
page of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
President’s Message
photo by Jim Visser
U N I V E R S I T A S F A L L 2 0 0 6
F E AT U R E S
Universidad
de San Luis
SLU’s Madrid campus
offers students the world.
By Laura Geiser
A landmark campus gateway framed by fall foliage.
Photo by Kevin Lowder
DE PA R TMEN T S
2 On Campus
Arena groundbreaking Update on
SLU’s national rankings Lincoln
exhibit brings visitors to campus
6 Billiken News
Soccer stadium readies for the College
Cup Forward pass marks its 100th
7 Campaign Update
Campaign already exceeds 80.5 million
multipurpose Arena Aug. 28 at the Arena site near Compton
and Laclede avenues. University officials, coaches and student
athletes as well as St. Louis dignitaries were in attendance to celebrate
the new facility, which includes a 10,600-seat Arena, a practice facil-ity,
athletics offices, locker rooms and training facilities.
“It has taken us a long time to get here,” said University President
Lawrence Biondi, S.J. “While I am not known as the most patient
man in St. Louis, I never lost faith that we would get to this day. And,
thankfully, there were many others who believed as I did.”
The new Arena will be home to Billikens men’s and women’s bas-ketball
and will host a variety of other events such as concerts, confer-ences,
trade shows and commencements. It is expected to bring more
than 400,000 people to Midtown St. Louis each year. St. Louis-based
Clayco will build the Arena, with an expected opening in March
2008.
“There are few institutions in St. Louis that have done more to
enhance life in the city than Saint Louis University,” said Barry H.
Beracha, chairman of the SLU board of trustees. “I ask our friends
from throughout the region to help us complete the fundraising for
this wonderful facility.”
Arena donors were recognized at the event, which also brought out
hundreds of faculty, staff, students and Billiken fans to witness the
beginning of the long-awaited project.
“This is one of the greatest days in Billiken
athletics history, and I’m overjoyed to be here
and be part of it,” said director of athletics
Cheryl L. Levick. “This building is a product
of a tremendous grass roots fundraising effort
because this is a privately funded facility that
did not tap into student fees or tuition dol-lars.
No matter the size of the gift, everyone
involved in contributing to this building has
the right to be extremely proud today.”
“I want to thank Father Biondi and the
board of trustees for giving our program the
opportunity to compete on a national level,”
said men’s basketball head coach Brad Soder-berg.
“When we bring recruits to campus, they now will know that we
are serious about competing with the best programs in the country.”
“The University administration has done its job in bringing this
building to life,” said women’s basketball head coach Shimmy Gray-
Miller. “Now I promise that I will do my job, my staff will do its job, and
our student-athletes will do their job to produce winning basketball.”
The Arena complex will be built on University-owned property
on the eastern end of campus and will be visible from Interstate 64/
Highway 40. It will be funded through fundraising, 1 million for the Arena, moving the University
closer to the project fundraising goal.
For others who would like to make a gift, there still is time to be
part of the Arena project. To make a donation online, go to arena.slu.
edu or call (314) 977-2499. — JF
Arena construction under way;
opening planned for March 2008
Top: The official groundbreakers: (from left) Dan Mitchell, partner, Mackey Mitchell
Associates; L.B. Eckelkamp, SLU trustee; Joe Imbs, president, St. Louis market, U.S.
Bank; Thomas Brouster Sr., SLU trustee; Soderberg; Levick; Dr. Joe Weixlmann, SLU
provost; Biondi; St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay; Kathleen Brady, SLU vice president for
facilities management and civic affairs; Gray-Miller; 19th Ward Alderman Michael
McMillan; Beracha, Vince Schoemehl, president, Grand Center; Bob Clark, Clayco
chairman and chief executive officer; and Evan Krauss, president, SLU Student
Government Association. Middle: St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay (Law ’80) addresses
the crowd. Above: Gray-Miller, Biondi, Soderberg and Levick throw the dirt.
U.S.News keeps SLU
on its ‘Best Buy’ list
For the ninth consecutive year, U.S.News & World
Report has recognized Saint Louis University as one
of the nation’s best values in higher education. In
its special “America’s Best Colleges” issue, U.S.
News lists SLU among the top 50 national, doctoral
universities on its coveted “Great Schools, Great
Prices” list. SLU joins Georgetown and Boston College
among the Catholic institutions on the best values list.
In addition, SLU climbed to No. 77 on U.S. News’ rankings of the
nearly 250 national universities in the country — a list topped by
Princeton and Harvard. It’s the third straight year that SLU has risen in
these rankings. Once again, SLU ranked among the top five Catholic
institutions in the country on this overall list.
Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology’s aerospace
engineering program was ranked No. 5, and undergraduate engineering
programs overall were ranked 29th among engineering schools whose
highest degree is a master’s.
SLU’s undergraduate business programs in the John Cook School of
Business again were ranked among the top 100 of the nation.
Princeton Review
also honors SLU
The Princeton Review has named Saint Louis University one of the top
institutions in the country for undergraduate education. SLU also was
listed as one of the best universities in the Midwest in the 2007 edition
of Princeton Review’s annual book, The Best 361 Colleges. Only about
15 percent of four-year colleges in America and two Canadian colleges
made the publication. The book does not rank the colleges 1 to 361 in
any single category.
The book’s rankings are based on a survey
of 110,000 students attending the
colleges in the book. In the survey,
SLU students spoke highly of the
University’s business, pre-med and
pre-law programs as well as unique
programs in aviation and nutrition.
Survey respondents also noted that
SLU students are friendly and that
the University offers a great library.
Doisy College of health
sciences adds new programs
Already experiencing an enroll-ment
boom, Saint Louis Uni-versity’s
Edward and Margaret
Doisy College of Health Sciences an-ticipates
even more growth in the future
as it prepares to assume responsibility
for three programs that will be discon-tinued
at the Barnes-Jewish College of
Nursing and Allied Health in St. Louis
next year.
Dr. Charlotte Royeen, dean of Doisy
College, said next fall SLU plans to offer
the following new options for SLU stu-dents,
pending approval by the board of
trustees: A new bachelor of science pro-gram
in radiation therapy; a new bache-lor
of science program in cytotechnology;
and a proposed expansion of the graduate
program in the department of nutrition
and dietetics.
SLU and Barnes-Jewish officials are
working to make sure that the transition
for both students and employees goes
smoothly. Some faculty at Barnes-Jew-ish
College will join the faculty of SLU’s
Doisy College, and students enrolled in
SLU programs still will have the option
of participating in clinical training on-site
at Barnes-Jewish Hospital.
SLU honors Maronite patriarch
Saint Louis University bestowed its highest honor, the Sword of Ignatius Loyola, on
the patriarch of the Maronite Catholic Church June 30. His Beatitude and Eminence
Nasrallah Peter Cardinal Sfeir, Patriarch of Antioch and All the East, visited St. Louis
as part of a pastoral visit to America. He was the most significant religious figure to visit St.
Louis since Pope John Paul II in 1999, and his visit marked only the fourth time a Maronite
patriarch has journeyed to the United States. Sfeir also received an honorary doctorate of laws
from Saint Louis University.
En route to the award ceremony, University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J., (right) shares a light moment with Maronite
Bishop Robert J. Shaheen (far left) and Cardinal Sfeir (second from left).
Photos by Steve Dolan
Photo by Kevin Lowder
U N I V E R S I T A S w w w . s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I T A S F A L L 2 0 0 6
Gilsinan
to accept
professorship,
step down
as dean
Saint Louis University’s College of
Public Service has reached a new
milestone: the establishment of its
first named professorship. Civic leader E.
Desmond “Des” Lee provided funding to
support the E. Desmond Lee Professor-ship
in Collaborative Regional Education.
Dr. James Gilsinan, dean of the Col-lege
of Public Service, has been named
the first holder of the professorship. Be-cause
the professorship requires teaching,
research and service, Gilsinan will step
down as dean and rejoin the faculty on
a full-time basis at the end of December.
The honor recognizes Gilsinan’s decades
of service to St. Louis area schools, local
governments and non-profit organiza-tions.
As a Des Lee Professor, Gilsinan
will join scholars from Washington Uni-versity
in St. Louis and the University of
Missouri-St. Louis in researching ways to
help schools and communities improve
the lives of young people.
Michael Frayn wins Literary Award
The Saint Louis University Library Associates will pres-ent
the Saint Louis Literary Award to Tony Award-winning
playwright, novelist and translator Michael
Frayn at 5:30 p.m. Friday, Nov. 10, in the Anheuser-Busch
Auditorium of SLU’s John and Lucy Cook Hall. The pro-gram
is free and open to the public.
Frayn is the author of several plays, including Noises Off,
Democracy and Copenhagen, which won the 2000 Tony Award
for Best Play. He has written several novels including The Tin
Men, The Russian Interpreter and Spies. He also has translated
several plays by Chekov and Tolstoy from Russian.
In receiving the award, Frayn joins a select group of previous
recipients, including Robert Penn Warren, Arthur Miller and
Tom Wolfe. The award has been presented annually since 1967.
Researchers tackle
mold removal
Armed with a $408,000 grant from
the Department of Housing and
Urban Development, a team from
Saint Louis University School of Public
Health hopes to create universal stan-dards
for getting rid of mold in homes and
buildings. Dr. Anu Dixit, assistant profes-sor
of environmental and occupational
health and principal investigator, said that
the team will review existing, inconsistent
guidelines for mold removal from homes
and buildings by surveying about 400
mold assessment and remediation profes-sionals.
The team will then use the re-sponses
to develop a single comprehensive,
scientifically sound plan for homeowners
and mold remediation experts to follow.
“The timing couldn’t be better for Hur-ricane
Katrina and Rita victims, some of
whom are still battling mold problems in
their homes and businesses,” Dixit said.
News Briefs
Saint Louis University has appointed Karla Gable director of undergraduate admission. She
most recently was assistant vice president of business development at the Missouri Higher
Education Loan Authority (MOHELA), where she oversaw all marketing and public relations
efforts. Prior to joining MOHELA in 2000, Gable was associate dean of enrollment and director
of financial aid at Westminster College in Fulton, Mo.
Dr. Neil Seitz has stepped down as interim dean of Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and
Technology. Dr. Manoj Patankar (Parks ’92), associate professor and chairman of aviation
science, has been named interim dean. A committee has been formed to begin the search for a
new dean for Parks.
Covering more than three-dozen specialties, 112 SLUCare doctors have been selected for
St. Louis Magazine’s 2006 “Best Doctors” list. The list is based on the annual “Best Doctors
in America” database, which considers more than one million peer evaluations to create a
directory of approximately 30,000 doctors. A total of 104 SLUCare physicians were chosen for
last year’s list.
Dr. Teri Murray (Nurs ’79, Grad ’93, ’97) has been named the new director of the School of
Nursing in the Doisy College of Health Sciences. Murray, previously the associate director,
succeeds interim director Dr. Margie Edel. Murray, also an associate professor of nursing,
recently was named to the prestigious 2006 Robert Wood Johnson Executive Nurse Fellows
Program, which provides individual leadership development for nurses who aspire to lead
and shape the U.S. health care system. She is also the president of the Missouri State Board
of Nursing.
Dr. Jennifer Kohler (A&S ’93, Grad ’97, ’99) is the new director of the School for Professional
Studies. She is the first director of the school in a new position created as a result of the recent
merger with the College of Public Service. Kohler previously served as director of organizational
studies, interim associate dean and associate dean in the School for Professional Studies.
The National Defense Transportation Association has named Saint Louis University’s Dr. Ik-
Whan Kwon (Grad ’90), professor of decision sciences and management information systems,
as the 2006 recipient of the NDTA Educator Distinguished Service Award. Kwon is recognized
internationally for his specialization in supply chain design and management and is director of
the Consortium for Supply Chain Management Studies at the John Cook School of Business.
Campus goes wireless
This summer, Saint Louis Uni-versity’s
information technology
staffers and subcontractors pulled
150,000 feet of wire throughout campus
to make SLU completely wireless. Now
the University’s wireless network includes
the entire campus — including residence
halls and academic buildings.
Campus Kitchen marks its fifth
anniversary and serves its 125,000th meal
In September, Saint Louis University’s Campus Kitchen cel-ebrated
its fifth anniversary and served its 125,000th meal. In
2001, SLU served as the pilot school for the Campus Kitchens
Project, a growing network of Campus Kitchens that are hosted by
universities across the country.
Each Campus Kitchen shares dining hall kitchen space with
host universities; partners with campus dining to recycle safe, us-able
food that would normally go to waste; and mobilizes college
students and community volunteers to make and deliver meals to
the community.
Each month, SLU Campus Kitchen volunteers deliver more
than 2,000 meals and snacks to local residents, community cen-ters
and after-school programs. Volunteers prepare meals in an on-campus
cafeteria and then deliver them to individual families and
group service centers.
SLU’s success has paved the way for the Campus Kitchens Proj-ect
to schedule three new site openings this fall, bringing the net-work
to 10 Campus Kitchens nationwide.
Sobrino returns to
SLU after 15 years
One of Saint Louis University’s
most famous alumni was back
on campus in September for
the first time in 15 years. SLU’s Great Is-sues
Committee welcomed Jon Sobrino,
S.J. (A&S ’62, Grad ’65), who discussed
“Being Christian in a World of Poor
and Victims.” Sobrino’s contributions to
theology have been recognized with nu-merous
awards, includin
Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University
Fall 2007 issue of Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University. This is a special issue on Fr. Biondi's 20th anniversary as University President.Inside
A DuBourg
Hall Makeover
{ page 14 }
Library Treasures
{ page 16 }
Student on a Mission
{ page 20 }
Celebrating
Father
Biondi’s
Anniversary
{ page 8 }
U NI V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I T A S F A L L 2 0 0 7 1
Fall leaves frame O’Donnell Hall, home of the Saint Louis University Museum of Art.
Photo by Kevin Lowder
20 Years and
Counting
A Q&A with University
President Lawrence
Biondi, S.J., as he
marks a milestone
anniversary at SLU.
By Laura Geiser
Photo by James Visser
Volume 34, Issue 1
E d i t o r
Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92)
C o n t r i b u t o r s
Allison Babka
Marie Dilg (SW ’94)
Lauren Olson (Intern)
Nick Sargent
“ O n C a m p u s ” n e w s s t o r i e s
University Communications
Medical Center Communications
Billiken Media Relations
De s i g n
Art Direction: Matthew Krob
Universitas is published by Saint Louis University. Opin-ions
expressed in Universitas are those of the individual
authors and not necessarily those of the University ad-ministration.
Unsolicited manuscripts and photographs
are welcome but will be returned only if accompanied
by a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Letters to the
editor must be signed, and letters not intended for pub-lication
should indicate that fact. The editor reserves the
right to edit all items. Address all mail to Universitas,
DuBourg Hall 39, 221 N. Grand, St. Louis, Mo. 63103.
We accept e-mail at [email protected] and fax submissions
at (314) 977-2249. Address fax submissions to Editor,
Universitas.
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Universitas is printed by Universal Printing Co.
and mailed by Specialty Mailing.
Worldwide circulation: 121,408
© 2007, Saint Louis University
All rights reserved.
Cover photo by James Visser
Because University President
Lawrence Biondi, S.J., is
sharing his thoughts in a
Q&A that appears on pages
8-13 of this issue, he begged
off his usual president’s
message and asked me to write
an editor’s message instead.
From 1900-1908 Saint Louis University
was led by William Banks Rogers, S.J., a
visionary who is said to have transformed
SLU. In just eight years as president, he Ameri-canized
and modernized SLU’s academic struc-ture,
re-established the School of Medicine, ex-panded
the campus, rebuilt the athletic program
and made plans to open a School of Law.
Rogers had a brief but groundbreaking ten-ure
marked by his prophetic grasp of future
trends, including his early understanding of
the importance of public relations, his em-phasis
on alumni development
and his commitment to the St.
Louis community.
In Better the Dream, a history
of Saint Louis University by
William Barnaby Faherty, S.J.,
Rogers is dubbed the “Second
Founder of Saint Louis Univer-sity.”
Clearly he was a fascinat-ing,
driven man.
I have been intrigued by
Rogers’ story since stumbling
across his achievements many
years ago. But there are prob-ably
very few other people on campus (except
maybe our archivists) who even know his name.
You see, his legacy is not widely known at SLU
today. Yes, SLU once had a Rogers Hall, but
that building is now known as Jesuit Hall. And,
yes, Rogers’ portrait does hang on the second
floor of DuBourg Hall, but it is just one of 30
paintings of past SLU presidents that adorns
the long hallway.
Someday a portrait of our current president,
Lawrence Biondi, S.J., will hang there, too
— his legacy for time and history to decide.
Perhaps one day, Biondi will be known as the
“Founder of the Modern Saint Louis Univer-sity.”
It’s certainly possible.
Like Rogers before him, Biondi has done his
share of transforming Saint Louis University
during his 20 years here. Of course, his ef-forts
to improve SLU’s physical campus come
to mind first. But there’s more to his tenure
than that. Just as Rogers did, Biondi has em-phasized
academics, established new schools,
re-energized the athletic program and made
SLU a force in the community. (Read about
his reflections on his years at SLU beginning
on page 8.)
Of course, Biondi would be quick to tell you
that he didn’t do it alone. And as I speculate
Rogers would agree, Biondi knows his legacy
is not about him — it is about leaving an out-standing
university for his successor to lead.
The concept of “legacies” brings to mind a
story I heard from Father Biondi’s former as-sistant,
Mike Isaacson (A&S ’86, Grad Cook
’96), a Broadway producer whom I interviewed
for the summer issue of Universitas.
“You know, the interesting thing about work-ing
for a university is that universities are liv-ing
in a weird world,” Isaacson said. “They’re
about today, and they’re about 200 years from
today at the same time. And, when you think
about the legions of people who have worked
for Saint Louis U., and you
walk through those halls, you
can kind of feel history.
“I remember once, early on
with Biondi, we were leaving a
meeting, and it had gone hor-ribly.
He was so frustrated.
“We were quietly walking
in DuBourg Hall through the
second-floor hallway that has
all the paintings of past SLU
presidents. We get two-thirds
down the hall, and Biondi just
stops, and he points at one of
them and says, ‘Who’s that?’
And I say, ‘I don’t know.’ And he says, ‘My
point exactly, so let’s just keep going.’
“It was that sense of even though you may
be heading an institution, the institution is far
bigger than you will ever be, and time leaves
your name in the dust. Your obligation to here
and now is to leave the lights on when your
time is through.”
Maybe that portrait they stopped at was of
Father Rogers; maybe it wasn’t. In any case, I
do know the lights are on at Saint Louis Uni-versity
— both literally and figuratively — il-luminating
the good works, scholarly achieve-ments
and personal successes of our 12,309
students, our 5,436 faculty and staff members
and our 108,110 alumni around the world. For
that light, we can thank Biondi, Rogers and 29
other Jesuits who have served as SLU presidents
and understood the real meaning of legacy.
– Laura Geiser, Editor
EDITOR’ s Message FE ATURES
DEPA RTMENTS
2 On Campus
Sword of Loyola honors artist Grant explores
children’s health New blogs offer inside
view of SLU New mall at Medical Center
Portrait of DuBourg Kranz back on campus
6 Billiken News
Billiken broadcasts online Basketball
schedules Billiken mascot ranked No. 1
7 Campaign Update
A conversation with David Nolda,
director of annual giving programs
22 Off the Shelf
Eight books from the SLU community
23 Class Notes
Catch up with classmates
29 In Memoriam
Remembering those members of the SLU
community who recently died
30 Alumni Events
Find SLU alumni activities wherever you live
32 Perspective
A SLU soccer player learns a lot
from those she is teaching
33 The Last Word
Letters to the editor
14
Grand Once More
DuBourg Hall’s fourth
floor is restored to its
turn-of-the-century glory.
By Allison Babka
16
Treasures to Behold
… and to Be Held
A look inside the
University’s rare book and
manuscript collection.
By Marie Dilg
20
A Woman for Others
Student Rachel
McCullagh is living
SLU’s Jesuit mission.
By Lauren Olson William banks rogers, S.J.
2 U NI V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I T A S F A L L 2 0 0 7 3
Of Father Biondi’s 20 62 SLU-owned buildings in 1987; 127 in 2007 0 Annual full scholarships awarded in 1987; 30 in 2007 113 SLU-owned acres in Midtown St. Louis in 1987; 234 in 2007 »
years as SLU president
TA SLU makes
two national
rankings
Saint Louis University is one of the
top schools in the country for under-graduate
education, say two of the
nation’s leading college guides. In August,
SLU received honors from both U.S.News &
World Report and The Princeton Review.
The 2008 edition of U.S. News’ “America’s
Best Colleges” ranked SLU No. 82 among
262 national universities. According to the
magazine, SLU is ranked as one of the top
five Jesuit universities in the United States.
U.S. News ranked SLU’s undergraduate
engineering programs No. 31 and under-graduate
business programs in the top 100.
The undergraduate entrepreneurship pro-gram
ranked No. 21.
In addition, SLU was listed in the 2008
edition of The Princeton Review’s “Best 366
Colleges” guidebook, published by Random
House. Only about 15 percent of the four-year
colleges in America and two Canadian
colleges were chosen for the book. SLU also
was named to The Princeton Review’s “Best
in the Midwest” list.
Sword of Ignatius awarded
to Project Compassion artist
Saint Louis University presented its highest honor – the
Sword of Ignatius Loyola – to Kaziah Hancock, founding artist and
president of Project Compassion, at the DuBourg Society dinner,
Nov. 3. During the last four years, Hancock has painted hundreds
of portraits of American servicemen and servicewomen who have
been killed in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The paintings
are given to the families of the fallen soldiers free of charge. To
date, Hancock and four other Project Compassion artists have
completed more than 750 paintings.
The Sword of Ignatius Loyola is named for the founder of
the Society of Jesus, Inigo Lopez de Loyola. Symbolic of
the Ignatian vision of service, the sword is awarded to
those who have given themselves to humankind for the
greater glory of God.
Past recipients include Harry Truman,
Jacques Cousteau and Jackie Joyner-
Kersee.
Major grant will improve children’s health
The National Institutes of Health selected the city of St. Louis and Macoupin County, Ill.,
as sites for the National Children’s Study, the largest study of child and human health ever
conducted in the United States. The extensive population-based study looks at the health
and development of children by following them from before birth to adulthood.
Saint Louis University School of Public Health is partner-ing
on the project with Saint Louis University School
of Medicine, Southern Illinois University Edwards-ville
School of Nursing, Southern Illinois Univer-sity
School of Medicine in Springfield, Washing-ton
University School of Medicine in St. Louis
and St. Louis Battelle Memorial Institute.
As the lead institution, SLU School of
Public Health has received a $26 million,
five-year contract from the National Institute
of Child Health and Human Development
and a consortium of federal agencies includ-ing
the National Institute of Environmen-tal
Health Sciences, the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention and the U.S. Envi-ronmental
Protection Agency.
Saint Louis University is one of 22
new study centers added to the Na-tional
Children’s Study, which will
follow a representative sample of
100,000 children from before birth
to age 21. The study seeks informa-tion
to prevent and treat some of
the nation’s most pressing health
problems, including autism, birth
defects, diabetes, heart disease and
obesity.
Check out ‘True SLU’
via new blogs
Want the true story about Saint Louis
University? Read the True SLU blogs.
Blogger Alyssa, a sophomore studying
abroad at SLU’s Madrid campus, will tell you
her story. So will Jennifer, a nutrition and di-etetics
instructor who bikes 6 miles to work
every day, and Jared, a member of Legion
1818 who paints his face and puts on a kilt
to support the men’s soccer team (when
he’s not reading history books or playing
trumpet in the pep band).
The blogs are just one part of the Univer-sity’s
comprehensive student recruitment
effort. Aimed at prospective undergraduates
and their parents, the True SLU blogs give an
accurate, authentic depiction of what life is
like for Saint Louis University students, fac-ulty
and staff.
Each blogger posts at least once a week,
and new bloggers will join them during the
year. To read the blogs, visit www.slu.edu
and click the “True SLU Blogs” box in the
lower left-hand corner.
During the summer, the College of
Public Service was restructured in
an effort to lead to new efficiencies
and synergies. Educational studies, educa-tional
leadership and higher education, so-cial
work, counseling and family therapy,
and public policy studies have joined to cre-ate
a new academic unit: the College of Edu-cation
and Public Service.
Formerly independent units, RegionWise,
the Stupp Geographic Information Systems
Laboratory and Center for Organizational
Leadership and Renewal are now part of the
public policy studies department and remain
in the college. The Counseling and Family
Therapy Clinic also remains with the college,
and University officials hope to create more
collaborations between the clinic’s research-ers
and social work faculty.
Dr. Marla Berg-Weger, senior associate
provost for academic affairs, continues to
serve as interim dean of the college as a na-tional
search is conducted for a permanent
replacement.
The communication sciences and disor-ders
department and its associated clinics
have moved into the College of Arts and Sci-ences.
Research methodology is now part of
the Graduate School.
The School for Professional Studies, which
joined the college in 2004, has again become
a separate unit under the leadership of Berg-
Weger. She will continue to direct the school
long term.
College of Public Service reconfigured, renamed
SLU scientists conduct
groundbreaking
research — literally
This summer, a Saint Louis University
team was part of a group of scientists
drilling deep into the San Andreas
Fault in California to better understand
what causes earthquakes. It’s research that
could have implications back at SLU, which
is near the New Madrid Fault.
As part of the project known as San Andreas
Fault Observatory at Depth (SAFOD), a team
of scientists has drilled a 3-kilometer, or nearly
2-mile, hole directly into the fault midway be-tween
San Francisco and Los Angeles.
SLU geology professor Dr. David Kirsch-ner,
senior Tim Keenan and recent graduate
Eric Sandusky (Pub Ser, A&S ’07) were part
of a scientific team that studied the unearthed
rock material as part of the SAFOD project.
Kirschner has been involved in the massive
undertaking for several years and has received
three grants from the National Science Foun-dation
for research related to the project.
Portrait of
DuBourg
returns home
In June, Saint Louis
University welcomed
William Page Dame III
and his wife, Beverly,
to campus to mark
the Dames’ gift of
a portrait of Bishop
Louis-Guilliame-
Valentine DuBourg,
founder of SLU.
The portrait was
painted not long after DuBourg was consecrated a
bishop. The oil painting is thought to date to 1815
and is believed to have been painted in Rome,
where DuBourg had journeyed to be consecrated
by Pope Pius VII as the Bishop of Louisiana and
the Floridas.
In 1817, Bishop DuBourg moved to St. Louis. He
established the St. Louis Latin Academy (now
Saint Louis University) in 1818, initially run by
the diocese. In 1826, DuBourg invited the Jesuits
who resided in Florissant, Mo., to take over the
administration of the college. In 1829, Peter
Verhaegen, S.J., became the first Jesuit president
of St. Louis College. In 1832, the college received
its charter from the state of Missouri.
The portrait has been installed in the Père
Marquette Gallery of DuBourg Hall.
SLU alert system in place
Saint Louis University now has a new
emergency communication tool
designed to quickly alert the entire
SLU community about an imminent public
danger, campus disaster or other major crisis.
SLU recently signed an agreement with St.
Louis-based GroupCast to provide a mes-sage
broadcast system that can notify all
students, faculty and staff by office, home
and cell phones within minutes of an emer-gency
situation. It also sends text messages.
Co-founded by a SLU alumnus and located
in Fenton, Mo., GroupCast provides similar
services to other colleges and universities.
4 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I T A S F A L L 2 0 0 7 5
Of Father Biondi’s 20 9 University-sponsored sports teams in 1987; 18 in 2007 0 Faculty/staff mission-related programs in 1987; 24 in 2007 53 SLU public safety officers in 1987; 103 in 2007 94 Doctorates awarded in 1987; 157 in 2007
years as SLU president
The deputy surgeon general of the U.S.
Air Force hosted guests from England’s
Royal Air Force at Saint Louis Univer-sity’s
Center for Sustainment of Trauma and
Readiness Skills (C-STARS) on Oct. 6.
During the visit, dignitaries had the opportu-nity
to observe a simulation, in which students
treated an artificial, computerized patient in a
lab designed to look like a real field hospital.
The two-week C-STARS program at Saint
Louis University is one of only three of its kind
in the country that provides Air Force medical
personnel with real-life, hands-on trauma ex-perience.
Through clinical rotations with SLU
trauma doctors and nurses and weekly simula-tion
exercises, students have the opportunity
to sharpen and refresh their trauma care skills
prior to deployment.
Former NASA mission control commander
Gene Kranz (Parks ’54) returned to SLU for a special
ribbon-cutting ceremony at McDonnell Douglas
Hall during Homecoming Weekend in September.
Kranz was on hand as officials unveiled a wall
display honoring the 80th anniversary of SLU’s Parks
College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology.
Divided into three sections, the colorful, three-dimensional,
illustrated timeline of Parks’ history
runs the full length of McDonnell Douglas Hall’s
main corridor. Stretching 370 feet wide and
towering 11 feet high, the display features a
stainless steel timeline that connects all three
sections.
Black and white photographs and other images
representing the key people, news and technology
from Parks’ history are displayed above the timeline.
Below, aerial shots fade into each other, illustrating
the changes to Parks’ former campus in Cahokia,
leading to the SLU campus, where Parks has been
located since 1997.
Gass receives
Literary Award
The Saint Louis University Library Associates presented the
2007 Saint Louis Literary Award to noted writer, critic and
philosophy professor William H. Gass on Oct. 24.
Gass joined an impressive list of writers who have been recognized
for their legendary contributions as novelists, essayists, poets and
playwrights. Recipients of the Saint Louis Literary Award include
Saul Bellow, Eudora Welty, John Updike and Joan Didion.
During a writing career that spans nearly five decades, Gass has
been recognized for his works of fiction and nonfiction as well as sto-ries
and essays. He has received many awards and honors, including
the American Book Award, the National Book Critics Circle Award
for Criticism and the Mark Twain Award for Distinguished Contribu-tions
to Literature in the Midwest. As the David May Distinguished
Professor in Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis, he
taught philosophy for more than 30 years and founded the univer-sity’s
International Writers Center.
More than 1,000 students, faculty, family and friends
gathered at the Medical Center on Oct. 12 to remember and
give thanks to the several hundred individuals who donated their
bodies this year to Saint Louis University School of Medicine’s Gift
Body Program.
First-year medical students planned the memorial service, which
included reflections, prayers, songs and words of appreciation to
the donors’ family members and friends in attendance.
“The ceremony is a sign of our thanks for those who have donated
their bodies so we could learn. It also provides an opportunity for
their family and friends to understand why they made this decision,”
said Tom Heffner, a first-year medical student. “For me personally,
the ceremony is an opportunity to give thanks to my first patient for
the opportunity to work on him and learn from him.”
Body donors
remembered at service
New mall enhances Medical Center
Saint Louis University has increased the beauty, safety and accessibility of
the Medical Center with a new pedestrian mall.
The area along Vista Avenue between Grand Boulevard and Carr Lane Avenue
has been transformed into an urban oasis that mimics green space near the
Doisy College of Health Sciences building as well as parts of campus north of
I-64/Hwy. 40. The section is bordered by the School of Medicine complex on
the north and the building that now houses the department of neurology and
psychiatry on the south.
Pedestrians are welcomed to the mall by one of SLU’s signature red
brick monuments, and landscaping, trees and flowers provide a parklike
atmosphere. Safety also has been enhanced, as city streetlights were replaced
by upgraded lighting that shines brightly on the mall.
News Briefs
Dr. Boyd A. Bradshaw (Grad ’05) was
recently hired as SLU’s vice provost for
enrollment management. He oversees
undergraduate admission, student financial
services, the registrar’s office, student
academic services and the international
center. From 1997 to 1999 Bradshaw was
program coordinator and assistant director
of admissions at SLU. Most recently he was
assistant university provost for enrollment
management at the University of Louisville.
Dr. Raul Artal, chairman of obstetrics,
gynecology and women’s health at the
School of Medicine, has received a
“Preggie” award for his pioneering work that
supports exercise for pregnant women. The
award, given by FitPregnancy magazine,
recognizes those who have improved the
welfare of pregnant women, new mothers
and young children.
Dr. Govindaswamy Chinnadurai, professor
at SLU’s Institute of Molecular Virology, has
been as selected as a member of a study
section of the Center for Scientific Review,
which reviews applications for grants from
the National Institutes of Health.
In October, Dr. Patricia Monteleone (Med
’61, Pub Hlth, Grad Cook ’91), dean of the
School of Medicine, received an
Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University
Spring 2012 issue of Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis Universitybehind the scenes at a Billiken game /// page 17
Sustainability at SLU /// Page 8
Sunday Night Mass /// Page 12
Also inside: 2011 President’s Report
spr ing 2 012
features
8
Sustainability
SLU’s efforts to
go green extend
from classrooms to
construction zones.
— By Anne Marie
Apollo-Noel
12
Mass Appeal
The 9 p.m. Sunday
Mass draws hundreds
of students to College
Church each week.
— By Ashley Pitlyk
17
All-Acces Pas
Go behind-the-scenes
for one men’s Billiken
basketball victory.
— Photos by
Kevin Lowder and
Mike Speckhard
depar tments
{ contents }
2 | On Campus
Law school to move downtown
• New chair honors Kimmey •
Library renovations • Immigration
conference planned • Arts at SLU
6 | Billiken News
New women’s soccer coach •
Alumni soccer in Europe
7 | Advancement News
A Q&A with Tony Minor,
associate director for development
marketing and stewardship
24 | Class Notes
Catch up with classmates
28 | In Memoriam
Remembering those members of
the SLU community who recently
died
30 | Alumni Events
SLU alumni activities across the
country
32 | Perspective
An alumnus’ efforts to save an
endangered species
33 | the last word
Letters to the editor
12 8
17
ALSO IN THIS ISSUE
T H E 2 0 1 1 p r e s i d e n t ’ s r e p o r t
Volume 38, Issue 2
Editor
Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92)
Contributors
Anne Marie Apollo-Noel
Marie Dilg (Grad SW ’94)
Ashley Pitlyk (A&S, Cook ’10)
“On Campus” news stories
University Communications
Medical Center Communications
Billiken Media Relations
ON THE Cover
The SLU Billikens vs. Dayton Flyers
game on Feb. 4.
Photo by Kevin Lowder
Design
Art Direction: Matt Krob
Universitas is published by Saint Louis University.
Opinions expressed in Universitas are those of the
individual authors and not necessarily those of the
University administration. Unsolicited manuscripts and
photographs are welcome but will be returned only if
accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
Letters to the editor must be signed, and letters not
intended for publication should indicate that fact. The
editor reserves the right to edit all items. Address all
mail to Universitas, DuBourg Hall 39, One N. Grand
Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. 63103. We accept email at
[email protected] and fax submissions at (314) 977-
2249. Address fax submissions to Editor, Universitas.
Postmaster: Send address changes to
Universitas, Saint Louis University,
One N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63103.
World Wide Web address:
universitas.slu.edu
Universitas is printed by Universal Printing Co.
Worldwide circulation: 118,040
© 2012, Saint Louis University
All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without
permission is prohibited.
FA L L 2 0 0 4 W I N T E R 2 0 0 5
The mission of Saint Louis University is the
pursuit of truth for the greater glory of God
and for the service of humanity. The University
seeks excellence in the fulfillment of its
corporate purposes of teaching, research,
health care and service to the community. It
is dedicated to leadership in the continuing
quest for understanding of God’s creation
and for the discovery, dissemination and
integration of the values, knowledge and
skills required to transform society in the
spirit of the Gospels. As a Catholic, Jesuit
university, this pursuit is motivated by the
inspiration and values of the Judeo-Christian
tradition and is guided by the spiritual and
intellectual ideals of the Society of Jesus.
S a i n t Lo u i s U n i v e r s i t y
Mi si o n S tat eme n t
To read a message from University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J., please
see the President’s Report insert at the center of this issue of Universitas.
2 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u s p r i n g ’ 1 2 U N I V E R S I T A S 3
In January, Saint Louis University announced that it will move its School
of Law into a donated building located in downtown St. Louis.
With the law school’s more than 1,100 students, faculty and staff, the
move will make SLU the largest educational institution located in down-town.
It also represents another major economic investment in the City of
St. Louis by Saint Louis University.
“Nearly half of the practicing attorneys in St. Louis are alumni of our
School of Law,” said University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J. “This
historic move will strengthen our ability to educate the next generation of
legal leaders in St. Louis and beyond.”
The building, located at 100 N. Tucker Blvd., was donated by St. Louis
businessman Joe H. Scott Sr., founder and owner of Scott Properties,
which owns and manages more than 2 million square feet of office, medical,
retail and warehouse space in the St. Louis region.
In recognition of the Scotts’ gift to the University, SLU will name the
building the Joe and Loretta Scott Law Center.
The building is located next door to the
Civil Courts and within walking distance of
the Thomas F. Eagleton U.S. Courthouse and
many of the region’s most prestigious law firms.
“I am extremely excited that our new home will be in the heart of where
law is practiced in our great city,” said Annette E. Clark, dean of the
School of Law. “This move will strengthen our ties with St. Louis’ legal
community and will offer our students new opportunities to enhance their
educational experience.”
The 11-story, 260,000-square-foot building features a main lobby,
ground-floor auditorium, a secured, enclosed, three-story parking garage
and seven large, occupiable floors.
The University has engaged the design services of the Lawrence Group
Architects and construction services of Clayco Inc. for the project. Reno-vations
are scheduled to be completed during the summer of 2013.
The model of off-campus law schools is found at many of the nation’s
finest universities, including Boston College, Fordham University, George-town
University, Loyola Marymount University and Loyola University
Chicago.
School of Law headed downtown
photo by kevin lowder
News Briefs
Dr. William S. Sly, professor of biochemistry
and molecular biology, received the Associa-tion
of American Medical Colleges’ 2011 Award
for Distinguished Research in the Biomedical
Sciences, which recognizes outstanding clini-cal
or laboratory research by a medical school
faculty member related to health and disease.
Dr. Ruben Rosario Rodriguez, associate
professor of theological studies, received a
2011 Alpha Sigma Nu Book Award for his book
Racism and God-Talk: A Latino/a Perspective.
This year’s competition attracted 98 entries
from 20 Jesuit colleges and universities.
Dr. Betsy Tuttle-Newhall, professor of
surgery and division chief of abdominal
transplant surgery at the School of Medicine,
is the president of the Association of Women
Surgeons. With more than 1,700 members, the
association is one of the largest organizations
committed to supporting the professional and
personal needs of female surgeons.
Dr. James M. DuBois, director of the Bander
Center for Medical Business Ethics, is co-editor
of a new medical journal titled Narrative
Inquiry in Bioethics. The first of its kind, the
journal explores issues in bioethics through
personal stories or narratives, case studies
and qualitative research studies.
Dr. Angelyn Dries, professor emerita in the
department of theological studies, received
the 2012 Distinguished Teaching Award from
the American Catholic Historical Association in
January. The award is presented each year to a
professor who has shown a high commitment
to teaching and promotes Catholic studies.
Seeing STARS
SLU has earned a bronze rating
from the national Association
for the Advancement of Sustain-ability
in Higher Education for its
efforts to foster a green campus. This
marks SLU’s first year of membership
in AASHE. The rating is from the organi-zation’s
Sustainability Tracking, Assessment and
Rating System program, which helps schools gauge
their progress toward sustainability in education
and research; operations; and planning, administra-tion
and engagement. STARS gave SLU high marks
for its sustainability policies in human resources,
diversity and affordability, dining services, water
management, public engagement and innovation.
To learn more about SLU’s sustainability efforts,
see the story on page 8.
ambulatory Care Center planned
for SLU’s physician Practice
Saint Louis University is moving forward with plans to construct a new
state-of-the-art facility for SLUCare, the University’s physician practice, in
Midtown St. Louis.
SLU’s new outpatient Ambulatory Care Center will be located on the site of
the former Pevely Dairy industrial complex at Grand Boulevard and Chouteau
Avenue, across the street from the University’s Doisy Research Center. SLU pur-chased
the site last year.
The modern facility will provide a wide variety of medical services and outpa-tient
procedures to hundreds of thousands of patients — both adults and children
— each year. Once completed, it will be one of only two high-level, cutting-edge
medical centers in the city of St. Louis.
“This important project will strengthen our ability to deliver top-notch health
care in the heart of the city, including to those in need,” said University President
Lawrence Biondi, S.J.
The estimated cost of the project is 80 million. After some demolition
work on the site is completed, the University expects to begin construction of the
new facility this fall, with an anticipated opening date in late fall 2013.
Kimmey hon ored with
endowed chair
SLU’s first endowed chair in the School of Public
Health has been named after Dr. James R. Kim-mey,
the past president and chief executive officer at
Missouri Foundation for Health and a former dean and
vice president at SLU. A gift to SLU from MFH helped
establish the James R. Kimmey Endowed Chair in Public Health.
Kimmey, who spent 14 years at SLU, was the founding dean of SLU’s School
of Public Health and served as the University’s executive vice president and vice
president for health sciences. He left SLU in 2001 to lead the newly formed MFH,
becoming its first president and chief executive officer. The surprise announce-ment
about the endowed chair was made on Nov. 17, as business associates, friends
and family gathered to honor Kimmey and celebrate his retirement from MFH.
Kimmey joins Ron Levy, former director of Missouri’s Department of Social
Services and a past president of SSM St. Louis, as an executive-in-residence in the
School of Public Health.
Immigrant and Refugee conferenc e
to be held on campus in May
On May 21 and 22, Saint Louis University will host “Immigrants
and Refugees: Social, Political, Legal, and Ethical Problems and
Solutions,” a conference that will explore solutions to questions regarding
human rights, immigration and peaceful coexistence.
Among the keynote speakers will be The Patriarch of Antioch, the leader of
the Maronite Catholic Church, His Beatitude Bechara Peter Rai, a proponent of
peace in the Middle East. He will address the question of refugees in the context
of Lebanon and will discuss the need for an inter-religious dialogue to spread the
spirit of freedom, democracy and human rights in the region.
Other topics will include: the experience of immigrants from Asia and Latin
America; reasons for undocumented immigration; practical problems immigrants
face, such as health care and education; and the ethical questions regarding the
treatment of refugees and immigrants.
For more information, visit immigration.slu.edu or call 314-977-3277.
photo by steve dolan
{ on campus }
BY THE NUMBERS:
with SLU’s Presidential Scholars
4 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u s p r i n g ’ 1 2 U N I V E R S I T A S 5
LOVE FOR HOTEL IGNACIO: About.com has named Hotel Ignacio one
of the best new hotels for romance in their online honeymoon planning guide.
Hotel Ignacio was listed as a “smart and modern” choice for Midwestern
couples looking for a “hotel that attracts the coolest people between two
coasts.” The guide also highlighted the hotel’s proximity to the University and
the Grand Center arts district; its luxury amenities, such as Tempur-Pedic
beds, flat-screen TVs and Avaya media hubs; and its restaurant, Café Pintxos.
Photo by steve dolan Photo by steve dolan
HOUSE OF HEALTH: Casa de Salud, a SLU-sponsored clinic near the
Medical Center that provides low-cost, episodic care for patients with little or
no health insurance, has added 4,000 square feet, including five new exam
rooms, three mental health counseling rooms and a multipurpose room for
community events. During 2011, Casa welcomed approximately 2,000 patients,
a 43 percent increase over 2010. Casa had 3,618 patient visits last year.
Madrid Campus celebrates
Operación Inglés anniversary
Saint Louis University-Madrid is celebrating the 10th anniversary of
Operación Inglés, a three-week summer language camp for young people
ages 12 to 17. From July 1-20, 20 non-Spaniards who want to learn Spanish will
spend the summer with 100 local youths who want to learn English. Oper-ación
Inglés offers language classes, as well as daily sports activities, a variety of
workshops, weekends canoeing or playing paintball, and other typical camp
activities. It’s held at the boarding school setting of Colegio San José in Vil-lafranca
de los Barros in the province of Badajoz.
The regular price is approximately 10. The front of each card features an image of a window, and the back
contains information about the life of the Jesuit saint depicted on the window.
The inside of each card is blank. For more information or to order, call Mary
Beth Erickson at 314-977-7304 or email [email protected].
SLU tweets
Did you know that Saint Louis
University is on Twitter?
Follow @SLU_Official for the latest University
headlines, breaking news and links to other University
Twitter accounts. Keep up with campus conversations by
searching for #SLU.
Photo by ángEl garcía lopez
1,045 Students who
applied for
the full-tuition
scholarship
465 Students who
came to campus
in February to
interview for the
scholarship
30 Scholarships
awarded
4,926
miles traveled
by a Presidential
Scholar
candidate
from Hawaii to
interview for the
award
t h e A R T S a t S L U
Relay recog n ition
SLU’s Relay For Life received the “Thanks A
Million” Award from the American Cancer
Society. This award, given for the first time this year,
honors Relay For Life events in the High Plains
Division that have raised 1.25 million. The funds go to the
American Cancer Society of Eastern Missouri.
The University’s 2011 event was recognized as the
third largest collegiate relay in the nation per capita
by the American Cancer Society. The event, which
was held in April, had more than 1,800 participants
and raised 2,500 or more. We also will
offer recent alumni — those who have com-pleted
their undergraduate studies within the
last decade — an introductory membership with
a gift of $1,000 or more. Contributions made by
our annual leadership donors can be directed to
any school or program within the University.
How will the President’s Circle affect the
DuBourg Society?
The DuBourg Society will remain a cumula-tive
giving recognition society. It will honor the
University’s past and present major contributors
by publicly acknowledging their lifelong commit-ment
of generosity to SLU. The tradition of the
Order of the Crown also will continue. DuBourg
Society members will continue to receive
crowns and medallions in recognition of reach-ing
significant lifetime giving milestones.
The recognition of our annual leadership donors
will take place solely within the President’s
Circle.
What is the difference between lifetime and
annual giving?
These are the two fundamental terms for all
giving programs.
Annual giving refers to those individuals who
support Saint Louis University on a yearly basis.
It is the primary way for alumni, parents and
friends to help sustain SLU, and one of the most
important areas in any organization’s fundrais-ing
efforts.
Lifetime giving — also referred to as cumulative
giving — is the total gifts an individual makes to
SLU throughout his or her life. It includes annual,
major, capital and planned gifts, as well as gifts
in kind.
How did the President’s Circle come about?
The concept behind the President’s Circle is
something that we’ve been working on for more
than a year. It was developed as a response
of two significant giving trends that we knew
had to be reversed. These trends showed
a decrease in the number of annual leader-ship
gifts being made to the University, and a
consistent lack of young alumni involvement in
the DuBourg Society. To ensure SLU has the re-sources
to continue providing the highest quality
Catholic, Jesuit education to its students, it was
clear that steps had to be taken to reinvigorate
Saint Louis University’s upper-level annual giv-ing
program. It seemed only appropriate to call
this group the President’s Circle because of the
leadership its members’ support provides.
How did the University go about
developing the President’s
Circle?
We began the process by
asking ourselves, “How can
Saint Louis University better
recognize our alumni, parents
and friends for supporting the
University on a yearly basis?”
We looked for our answer by
researching fellow Jesuit institu-tions
and local non-profit organiza-tions,
and by going straight to the
people this affects — our donors.
Beginning last summer, we held focus groups
with our young alumni,
Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University
Summer 2008 issue of Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University. This is a special issue on new construction on campus, including the Chaifetz Arena and Doisy Research Center.Also inside:
Student callers
Health care
mission trips
The renovated
Rec Center
A professor’s
Irish discoveries
Fold out for a view of the Edward A. Doisy Research Center and the President’s Message »
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St. Louis, MO 63103
ADDRESS SERVICE
REQUESTED
Saint L o u is Universi t y
Volume 34, Issue 2
E d i t o r
Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92)
C o n t r i b u t o r s
Clayton Berry
Marie Dilg (SW ’94)
Nick Sargent
Nancy Solomon
Alyssa Stahr (A&S ’04)
“ O n C a m p u s ” n e w s s t o r i e s
University Communications
Medical Center Communications
Billiken Media Relations
De s i g n
Art Direction: Matthew Krob
Universitas is published by Saint Louis University. Opin-ions
expressed in Universitas are those of the individual
authors and not necessarily those of the University ad-ministration.
Unsolicited manuscripts and photographs
are welcome but will be returned only if accompanied
by a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Letters to the
editor must be signed, and letters not intended for pub-lication
should indicate that fact. The editor reserves the
right to edit all items. Address all mail to Universitas,
DuBourg Hall 39, 221 N. Grand, St. Louis, Mo. 63103.
We accept e-mail at [email protected] and fax submissions
at (314) 977-2249. Address fax submissions to Editor,
Universitas.
Postmaster: Send address changes to
Universitas, Saint Louis University,
221 N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63103.
World Wide Web address:
www.slu.edu/pr/universitas.html
Universitas is printed by Universal Printing Co.
and mailed by Specialty Mailing.
Worldwide circulation: 121,844
© 2008, Saint Louis University
All rights reserved.
Cover photo by James Visser
Inside front cover photo by Steve Dolan
FALL 2004 WINTER 2005
Welcome to a special issue of Universitas.
And welcome to outstanding views of our
two newest campus landmarks.
Although Saint Louis University is ever changing,
rarely does so much happen here during a six-month
period. In December we dedicated our new Edward
A. Doisy Research Center, and in April we opened
Chaifetz Arena — the two largest building projects
in our 190 years. (Read in-depth stories on both
buildings in this issue.)
When you add in our Simon Recreation Center ren-ovations,
our first on-campus commencement in 60
years and the record service hours accrued by members
of the SLU community, it’s hard not to feel a sense of
history in the making on Grand Boulevard these days.
Indeed, in a few years when we look back on the
openings of these unprecedented buildings, I’m cer-tain
that we will see them as clear turning points
— moments when Saint Louis University’s place in
the city, nation and world changed forever.
And although it’s easy to get caught up in what
these facilities will mean to our history, I think it’s
most important to keep our focus on the future.
In other words: We’ve built the structures; now
we’ve got to make sure they fulfill their promise. That
means new scientific discoveries, lifesaving treatments
and cures for disease at the Doisy Research Center.
It also means re-energized student life, tournament-winning
basketball and an even stronger presence in
SLU’s Midtown neighborhood at Chaifetz Arena.
In some ways, this next key step is more challenging
than constructing both buildings at the same time.
That’s because ensuring the promise of these stunning
facilities is the responsibility of everyone in the SLU
community — students, faculty, staff and alumni.
Sure, some will play bigger roles. I cannot, for exam-ple,
treat liver disease. Nor am I much of a free-throw
shooter. But I can be a supporter of the work, efforts
and energy that make these buildings so special.
I’m sure you can be, too.
You may not know how to operate a microscope, but
that doesn’t mean you can’t participate in the clinical
trials or help fund the innovative discoveries at the Do-isy
Research Center. And, even if you’ve never dribbled
a basketball in your life, you can come down to Chaifetz
Arena to catch a Billiken game or enjoy a concert.
Your days on campus may be over, but please know
that these are still your buildings. So I hope you’ll
make a point of coming down to visit them to see
how they have changed the landscape here at SLU.
Besides, the photos in this issue of Universitas are
good, but they can’t beat the real thing.
Hope to see you on campus soon.
Lawrence Biondi, S.J.,
President
President ’ s
Mes sage
U N I V E R S I T A S S U M M E R 2 0 0 8 1
The dolphin pond near Ritter Hall.
Photo by Kevin Lowder
Building for
the Future
A first look at the
new Edward A.
Doisy Research
Center.
By Nancy Solomon
At
Last
An insider view of
Chaifetz Arena,
which opened in
April.
Photo by Steve Dolan Photo by Jim Visser
CONTENTS
DEPA RTMENTS
2 On Campus
Commencement at Chaifetz Service sets
records New medical school dean One
new ad campaign Ignatian Spirituality
Conference 50 years ago in Universitas
8 Billiken News
New athletic director Farewell to West
Pine Billikens meet the Cardinals
9 Advancement News
A conversation with Meg Connolly,
associate vice president for alumni relations.
39 Class Notes
Catch up with classmates.
44 In Memoriam
Remembering those members of the
SLU community who recently died.
46 Alumni Events
Find SLU alumni activities
wherever you live.
48 Perspective
The face of the MBA ads speaks out.
49 The Last Word
Letters to the editor
17
Callers I.D.’d
Meet the student
phoners who reach
out to alumni
every night.
By Laura Geiser
28
Higher Learning
SLU students
take their mission
of better health
around the world.
By Marie Dilg
32
Recreation
Destination
Simon Recreation
Center has been
expanded and
transformed.
By Alyssa Stahr
36
Dr. Thomas
Finan and the
Search for
the Medieval
Church
A SLU professor
digs into Ireland.
By Nick Sargent
35 Average miles per day registered on each of the center’s treadmills 42 Stationary bicycles in the center 1,500 Average number of patrons each day 534 Lockers in the center »
2 U NI V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I T A S S U M M E R 2 0 0 8 3
At the expanded and
renovated Simon
Recreation Center
Students initiated into the Catholic faith
On April 20, the Saint Louis University community came together to welcome students
embracing the Catholic faith. University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J., led the celebration,
known as the Sacraments of Initiation, during SLU’s 10 p.m. Sunday Mass.
The University usually initiates students once a year during the Easter season. This year, 11 SLU
students were initiated. Students had studied the Catholic faith in a program known as the Rite
of Christian Initiation of Adults since last fall. During their study, students learned about the
fundamentals of the Catholic faith and then made the decision to join the Church.
“This is one of the most rewarding spiritual exercises I am happy to do as a Jesuit priest,” Biondi said.
“As president of SLU, it’s gratifying to celebrate our students making a commitment to embrace the
Catholic faith by seeking voluntarily the sacraments of baptism, confirmation and first Eucharist.”
Earthquake Center draws
congressional attention
With members of the local media in tow,
U.S. Rep. Russ Carnahan toured the
Saint Louis University Earthquake
Center in May. He met with SLU researchers
to discuss recent seismic activity in the Midwest.
A member of the U.S. House of Representatives
Science Committee, Carnahan also was inter-ested
in learning what Congress can do to ad-vance
earthquake research and reporting.
The center’s director Dr. Robert Herrmann
discussed SLU’s cutting-edge research, which is
furthering the understanding of the seismic
hazards facing the region. He also explained
SLU’s network of earthquake monitoring
devices and showed the congressman several
new machines that will be deployed into the
field after testing. The center keeps an eye on
the New Madrid Fault and seismic hot spots
in the central United States.
During his tour, Carnahan also saw the Uni-versity’s
very first earthquake monitoring de-vice,
originally installed in DuBourg Hall in
1909. SLU’s Earthquake Center was one of the
nation’s first and remains a leader in the field.
SLU community
gives back in big way
In 2007, more than 19,000 members of the Saint
Louis University community completed 836,550
service and volunteer hours. It’s the first time ser-vice
hours have surpassed the 800,000-hour mark.
Student service accounted for about 90 percent of last year’s hours. Nearly 10,000 students
contributed service through programs run by the office of community outreach, Alpha Phi
Omega service fraternity and other Greek organizations. Students also complete service projects
through their classes and internships as well as through spring break mission trips in the United
States and abroad. Faculty and staff completed nearly 100,000 hours, and more than 1,100
organizations were helped last year.
And this service work has not gone unnoticed. In February, SLU received national recogni-tion
for its outreach efforts when it was named to the President’s Higher Education Community
Service Honor Roll for exemplary service efforts and service to disadvantaged youth. The award
is the highest federal recognition a school can achieve for its commitment to service-learning
and civic engagement.
Honorees for the award were chosen based on several factors, including innovativeness of
service projects and the percentage of student participation in service. At SLU, 96 percent of
students engage in some form of service during their time at the University.
U.S. News gives high marks
to SLU’s graduate programs
Saint Louis University’s health law program was ranked
No. 1 for the fifth consecutive year in U.S. News & World Report’s
“Best Graduate Schools 2009” issue, which hit stands in March.
The geriatrics program ranked No. 14, part-time MBA program
No. 16, occupational therapy No. 33, physical therapy No. 41,
social work No. 42, medicine No. 54, speech-language pathology
No. 60 and clinical psychology No. 92.
SLU Celebrates 2008 Commencement at Chaifetz Arena
Nearly 6,500 family and friends filled Saint Louis
University’s Chaifetz Arena May 17 to witness the
first class to celebrate commencement on campus
in 60 years.
SLU’s commencement outgrew on-campus venues in 1949,
when the event moved from West Pine Gym to Kiel Audito-rium,
where it remained for 30 years. Commencements then were held
in the Checkerdome and more recently at Scottrade Center.
University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J., said he hoped that the
graduates would return to the new arena to attend basketball games,
homecoming events and even the graduations of their children.
“Regardless of when and why you return, class of 2008, I hope you
come back to Chaifetz Arena and remember it fondly as the place
where you ended one great journey and began another,” Biondi said.
FOX television network play-by-play announcer Joe Buck delivered
this year’s commencement address.
“What a thrill this is for me, a lifelong St. Louisan, to participate
in the first graduation ceremony in this beautiful new jewel, Chaifetz
Arena,” Buck said.
Before he offered the graduates some advice, Buck dedicated his com-mencement
address to Ryan Green, a physics major, who was sporting
a large mohawk. (Buck had spotted him before taking to the stage.)
The quip drew big laughs and applause from the capacity crowd.
The laughter kept coming as Buck declared that the honorary doc-torate
he was about to receive would allow him to perform routine
medical procedures.
“I am scheduled to handle my first angioplasty this afternoon,” he
said. “I’m restructuring (injured Cardinals pitcher) Mark Mulder’s
shoulder tomorrow morning and (struggling Cardinals reliever) Jason
Isringhausen’s psyche tomorrow night.”
Buck then got serious, sharing
his own success story. Family con-nections,
he said, gave him access
to the broadcasting booth — his
late father Jack Buck was a Hall-of-
Fame broadcaster and former voice
of the Cardinals. His father also delivered SLU’s commencement ad-dress
back in 1995. “I admit that I got in the door because of my last
name, but after I got rolling, either I was going to be good enough or
I wasn’t,” Buck told the graduates. “Either I could handle the pressure
or it would handle me.”
Ultimately Buck handled the pressure and went on to become one
of the most respected names in sports broadcasting. During his career,
he has called some of the most memorable moments in recent sports
history. Hard work and relentless preparation propelled him to the
pinnacle of his profession, he said.
Buck also reminded the graduates that the real world is very dif-ferent
from college life. “Successful people don’t earn Bs. They don’t
get extensions for work assignments. And they can’t just turn off the
alarm because they don’t feel like going in.
“Do your best,” Buck said. “Have a plan and find out how great you
can be. I’m counting on you. This world needs you. Believe me.”
After the speech, Biondi conferred honorary degrees upon Buck,
Charles and Shirley Drury of Drury Inns Inc., and Build-A-Bear
Workshop founder Maxine Clark.
As the ceremony closed, Timothy McMahon, S.J., provincial of the
Missouri Province of the Society of Jesus, offered an invocation, call-ing
upon God to bless the graduates.
“Fill their minds with your love of knowledge, so that they will
be wise and prudent,” he prayed. “Touch their hearts, so that they
will overflow with compassion and love. Open their eyes, so that
they will recognize those who are lost and lonely. And keep them
close to you, so that one day they might share in your eternal life.”
— Clayton Berry
Buck delivers the commencement address.
Parks graduate Green.
Biondi baptizes freshman Brandon Murray.
Herrmann (left) and Carnahan.
Photos by Steve Dolan
Photo by Matt Schlanger, St. Louis Photo Group
Photo by Alyssa Stahr
Ads offer one view of SLU
In December, Saint Louis University unveiled a new marketing campaign
highlighting what makes the University unique and exceptional — teaching,
service and commitment to community. Designed to enhance SLU’s local
and regional image, the campaign informs people about what Saint Louis
University means to St. Louis. Through billboards, newspaper print ads, theater
program placements and radio spots, the ads reiterate the idea that “Saint
Louis University is the one.” Messages include:
Millions of lives changed. One Jesuit mission.
15 million addition
of the John and Lucy Cook Hall. In the fall of 2002 he returned to the
classroom. The award is named for the University’s first dean of women.
Dr. Rick Chaney, Madrid Campus vice provost and dean, has completed
his service there and will be returning to the faculty of the John Cook
School of Business, after taking a sabbatical in the fall semester. During
his 16-year tenure, Chaney helped increase enrollment, build a strong
academic foundation and create a complete campus environment for
students. Currently, SLU Madrid enrolls approximately 650 students each
semester — the maximum capacity for the campus. Frank Reale, S.J., vice
president for mission and ministry, is serving as interim vice provost while
a search is initiated for Chaney’s replacement.
More than 20 members of the SLU community will travel to Sydney
this summer to participate in World Youth Days, a week for the world’s
Catholic youth to come together to form friendships and gain a better
understanding of other countries, cultures and the Catholic faith. The
group will visit Australia July 10-26, and members will be posting their
experiences online as “virtual pilgrims” at worldyouthday.slu.edu.
Dr. James DuBois, director of SLU’s Center for Health Care Ethics, has
been elected as a representative on the United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops’ National Advisory Council. DuBois, who is the Mäder
Professor of Health Care Ethics, will serve a four-year term representing
Eastern Catholic Churches from Region 15.
Michael Lauer is SLU’s new director of public safety. Prior to arriving
at SLU, Lauer spent 20 years with the St. Louis Metropolitan Police
Department. Lauer reports to Sam Simon, the former director of public
safety for the City of St. Louis and a 22-year veteran of the St. Louis
police department. This fall, Simon filled a new role at the University:
director of emergency preparedness. Combined, the pair boasts nearly
50 years of experience in the field. They once worked together in the
police department and are both graduates of the FBI National Academy.
Dr. John Watzke, chairman of the department of educational studies,
is the new interim dean of the College of Education and Public Service.
Watzke came to SLU last year from the Institute for Educational Initiatives
at the University of Notre Dame.
Marking a trend in nursing education that responds to the need for
nurses to know more, Saint Louis University School of Nursing is
launching a new online doctoral program for advance practice nurses.
Nurse practitioners who have their master’s degrees may apply for the
online doctor of nursing practice, which begins this fall. SLU’s program is
the only one in the St. Louis area and one of two in Missouri.
4 U NI V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u U N I V E R S I T A S S U M M E R 2 0 0 8 5
At the expanded and
renovated Simon
Recreation center
Fair unites schools
in honoring King
Student leaders from Saint Louis
University and Harris-Stowe State
University organized a fair honoring
the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
in April. The Dream Keepers’ Fair was held
along Compton Avenue between the two
universities and commemorated the 40th
anniversary of King’s assassination.
The student governments of Harris-Stowe
and SLU formed the Dream Keepers Part-nership
last April to raise $10,000 for the Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial
Project in Washington, D.C. Since then, stu-dent
governments from every college and uni-versity
in the St. Louis metropolitan area, as
well as a couple of young professional associa-tions,
have joined the effort. Collectively, they
call themselves the St. Louis Dream Keepers.
Medical professors named
to endowed positions
Two professors at the Saint Louis Univer-sity
School of Medicine recently have
added new titles to their credentials.
Dr. Mark Varvares (Med ’86), chairman of
the department of otolaryngology –
head and
neck surgery, is the inaugural holder of the
Donald and Marlene Jerome Endowed Chair
in Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery.
The chair is named for Dr. Donald Lee Jerome,
(Med ’61) of Swansea, Ill., and his wife, Marlene. Jerome, a strong supporter of the School of
Medicine, was in private practice as an otolaryngologist in Belleville for 33 years before retir-ing.
Varvares also is director of the Saint Louis University Cancer Center and is conducting
research on head and neck surgical oncology.
Dr. Arthur Labovitz, director of the division of cardiology, is the inaugural Jack Ford Shelby
Endowed Professor in Cardiology. The professorship is named for Jack Ford Shelby, chairman
emeritus of Camie-Campbell Inc., former chairman of the board of the St. Louis Heart As-sociation
and a longtime benefactor of the School of Medicine. Labovitz is director of SLU’s
cardiac imaging laboratory and participates in many research studies that are supported by
the National Institutes of Health and private industry. Over the years, he has made significant
contributions to the diagnosis and management of cardiac disease.
Varvares Labovitz
Doctorow to receive Literary Award
The Saint Louis University Library Associates have selected author E.L. Doctorow as the
recipient of the 2008 Saint Louis Literary Award. A recognized novelist, playwright,
lecturer and essayist, Doctorow’s works include Welcome to Hard Times, The Book of
Daniel, Ragtime, Billy Bathgate, The Waterworks and City of God.
In a career that spans more than three decades, Doctorow’s honors include a National Book
Award, three National Book Critics Circle Awards, two PEN/Faulkner Awards and the presiden-tially
conferred National Humanities Medal.
Now in its 41st year, the Saint Louis Literary Award has been presented to a distinguished list
of literary figures, including Joyce Carol Oates, Saul Bellow, Arthur Miller and John Updike.
The award will be presented Thursday, Oct. 23, in the Anheuser-Busch Auditorium of John and
Lucy Cook Hall. This event is free and open to the public.
New School of Medicine dean named
On April 1, Dr. Philip O. Alderson took the reins as dean of Saint Louis
University School of Medicine. Alderson most recently was the chairman of
the department of radiology at Columbia University and director of radiology
service at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia. He also was the James
Picker Professor of Radiology at the
Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University
Spring 2010 issue of Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University. This is a special issue on SLU's public service and volunteering projects.SPR ING 2 010
2 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u s p r i n g ’ 1 0 U N I V E R S I T A S 1
features depa r tment s
{ contents }
2 | On Campus
Outreach to Haiti
• Casa de Salud •
Research funding • Elie
Wiesel visits • New art
exhibits open • Students
march for life, peace
5 | Billiken News
Fall NCAA Tournament
appearances • Soccer
player drafted
28 | In Memoriam
Remembering those
members of the SLU
community who
recently died
30 | alumni events
Find SLU alumni activities
wherever you live.
32 | Perspective
A faculty member
shares his experiences
teaching prisoners.
33 | the last word
Letters to the editor
SAINT LOUIS UNIVERSITY
PRESIDENT’S REPORT
2009
6
President’s Message
University President
Lawrence Biondi, S.J.,
discusses what service means
at Saint Louis University.
8
Health Resource
Center
A St. Louis clinic allows
SLU medical students
to serve and to learn.
By Marie Dilg
Photos by Steve Dolan
10
Project Citizen
Law and prelaw students
teach high schoolers the
power of the legal system.
By Marie Dilg
Photos by Steve Dolan
12
Crossroads
Honors students tutor
at Loyola Academy and
contemplate social justice.
By Nick Sargent
Photos by James Visser
15
English as a Second
Language in Madrid
U.S. students share their
skills with Madrid residents.
By Laura Geiser
Photos by Ángel Garcia
16
Make a Difference Day
For the 12th year, the SLU
community shows what a
difference a day makes.
By Nick Sargent
Photos by Steve Dolan
20
Inclusive Garden
The nutrition and dietetics
department makes
gardening accessible to all.
Photos and story
by Sara Savat
24
Micah Program
This innovative first-year
program combines living,
learning and serving.
By Laura Geiser
Photos by Chad Williams
26
2009 Facts and
finances
A snapshot of SLU’s
enrollment and finances.
2 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u
Volume 3 6, Issue 2
Edi tor
Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92)
Contributors
Marie Dilg (Grad SW ’94)
Nick Sargent
Sara Savat (Grad ’04)
“On Campus” news storie s
University Communications
Medical Center Communications
Billiken Media Relations
Cov er Photo
Steve Dolan
De sign
Art Direction: Matt Krob
Universitas is published by Saint Louis University.
Opinions expressed in Universitas are those of the
individual authors and not necessarily those of the
University administration. Unsolicited manuscripts and
photographs are welcome but will be returned only if
accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
Letters to the editor must be signed, and letters not
intended for publication should indicate that fact. The
editor reserves the right to edit all items. Address all
mail to Universitas, DuBourg Hall 39, One Grand Blvd.,
St. Louis, Mo. 63103. We accept e-mail at utas@
slu.edu and fax submissions at (314) 977-2249.
Address fax submissions to Editor, Universitas.
Postmaster: Send address changes to
Universitas, Saint Louis University,
One Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63103.
World Wide Web address:
www.slu.edu/pr/universitas.html
Universitas is printed by Universal Printing Co.
Worldwide circulation: 109,000
© 2010, Saint Louis University
All rights reserved.
FA L L 2 0 0 4 WINT E R 2 0 0 5
The mission of Saint Louis University
is the pursuit of truth for the
greater glory of God and for the service of
humanity. The University seeks excellence
in the fulfillment of its corporate purposes
of teaching, research, health care and
service to the community. It is dedicated
to leadership in the continuing quest for
understanding of God’s creation and
for the discovery, dissemination and
integration of the values, knowledge
and skills required to transform society
in the spirit of the Gospels. As a
Catholic, Jesuit university, this pursuit
is motivated by the inspiration and
values of the Judeo-Christian tradition
and is guided by the spiritual and
intellectual ideals of the Society of Jesus.
— Saint Louis University Mission Statement
2 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u s p r i n g ’ 1 0 U N I V E R S I T A S 3
News Briefs
Dr. Jennifer Giancola (A&S ’93, Grad ’97, ’99)
is the interim dean of the School for Profession-al
Studies. She replaced Dr. Marla Berg-Weger,
who is stepping down to return to the faculty
of the School of Social Work after a sabbatical
this semester. Giancola joined SLU in 2001. She
has served as associate dean of the School for
Professional Studies since 2006.
Dr. Raul Artal, chairman of the department of
obstetrics, gynecology and women’s health,
has been selected to serve on a World Health
Organization panel that recommends ways to
make pregnancy safer for women around the
world. He is one of four medical experts from
the United States to serve on the 93-person
WHO panel that will review and update the
standards of pregnancy care worldwide.
Martin Brief, an assistant professor in fine
and performing arts, was one of three award
recipients of the Contemporary Art Museum St.
Louis’ “Great Rivers Biennial 2010,” receiving
a 5,000
in proceeds was donated to Haitian relief.
Collections to raise funds for Haiti also have been held at the Madrid
Campus, during Mass at St. Francis Xavier College Church and at Billiken
basketball games.
SLU is a good neighbor
Saying that Saint Louis University reflects the best of the Jesuit
devotion to the inner city poor, a national survey has ranked SLU
among the top 25 urban colleges and universities considered “good
neighbors.” Saviors of Our Cities: A Survey of Best College and Uni-versity
Civic Partnerships was released during the Coalition of Urban
and Metropolitan Universities conference last fall.
Saviors of Our Cities highlights SLU’s involvement in the Center of
Research Technology and Entrepreneurial Exchange, better known as
CORTEX. The science and technology corridor is establishing St. Louis
as a hub for biotech research and development. The rankings also single
out the University’s nationally recognized Micah Program, a faith-based
living and learning initiative, as well as SLU’s Doerr Center for Social
Justice Education and Research, which provides funds for research and
student engagement projects that largely focus on the urban poor.
SLU funded for prevention research
Anew Saint Louis University-Washington University in St. Louis
initiative that studies innovative ways to prevent chronic disease
and improve health has received a five-year, $8 million grant from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Prevention Research Center in St. Louis, one of 35 programs at
academic institutions in 25 states, examines how people and their com-munities
can avoid or counter the risks of chronic illnesses such as heart
disease, asthma and diabetes. The collaboration between Saint Louis
University School of Public Health and Washington University Schools
of Medicine and Social Work is Missouri’s only CDC-funded Prevention
Research Center. This is the 15th year the SLU School of Public Health
has been involved in the CDC’s Prevention Research Centers Program.
The center has established partnerships with community-based coali-tions,
the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services, and a
variety of academic collaborators to reduce obesity and prevent chronic
diseases in low-income, rural parts of the state.
Tait named VP of research
Dr. Raymond Tait, professor of neurology
and psychiatry, was promoted to vice presi-dent
of research in February. In this new role, he
works with administrators, faculty and staff in
promoting Saint Louis University research. He
also seeks to further enhance SLU’s research pro-grams
by working closely with private industry
and governmental agencies, as well as other educa-tional
and research institutions. Tait joined the
SLU faculty in 1982 as an assistant professor of psychiatry and human
behavior. In 1995, he left the full-time faculty to become director of
functional rehabilitation service at the SSM Rehabilitation Institute.
During this time, he continued to teach at SLU as an associate clinical
professor in psychiatry. He returned to the full-time faculty in 1998.
He also holds an adjunct appointment in SLU’s Gnaegi Center for
Health Care Ethics.
MI CASA ES SU CASA: Casa de Salud, a new wellness clinic for the
underserved Hispanic community in St. Louis supported by Saint Louis University, began seeing
patients Jan. 18. Located at the corner of Compton and Chouteau avenues, the clinic engages
volunteers to provide basic health and wellness care for its clients. Casa de Salud, which means
“House of Health,” offers service opportunities to family doctors, internal medicine physicians,
emergency medicine doctors and nurse practitioners, among others.
STANDING FOR LIFE: During its annual trip to the national
March for Life in Washington D.C., SLU’s Students for Life group (profiled in
the fall issue of Universitas) received the 2009 Community Outreach award
from Students for Life of America. About 50 SLU students traveled to the na-tion’s
capital in January for the march.
19
Student organizations
on campus dedicated
solely to service and
issues of justice
411
Agencies where SLU
students volunteer
on a regular basis
317
SLU students who
are mentors with the
Big Brothers, Big
Sisters program
311
Members of the
SLU chapter of the
national service
fraternity Alpha Phi
Omega, making it
the largest in the
nation, per capita
672
Children from low-income
families
who had school
supplies provided
last fall through the
annual SLU school
supply drive
5,264
Hours spent each
year cooking and
delivering meals to
low-income people
through SLU’s
Campus Kitchen
BY THE NUMBERS: With SLU’s Center for Service and Community Engagement
Photo by Chad Williams
Submitted photo
Elie Wiesel speaks to
record crowd
Elie Wiesel, an internationally recognized
human rights advocate and Holocaust sur-vivor,
told an audience of 2,800 people gathered
to hear him speak at Saint Louis University Dec.
1, about the power of empathy. “We cannot
allow ourselves not to feel the pain of others,”
Wiesel said. “We can’t give in to indifference.”
Wiesel, who received the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1986 for his fight against global oppression, told stories and gave fatherly advice as
he encouraged the crowd to find strength together, as part of a larger community. He
described his goal as being a matchmaker who brings people together to spark meaning-ful
relationships.
“Whatever you do in life,” he said, “always think higher. Feel deeper. Be sensitive. Be
sensitive to each other — to each other’s pain, to each other’s joys and each other’s fears.”
The event was sponsored by the Great Issues Committee.
Photo by Taylor Spaulding
Haiti benefit concert
4 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u s p r i n g ’ 1 0 U N I V E R S I T A S 5
Men’s soccer captures A-10 title,
goes to NCAA Tournament
Capping off its 50-year anniversary season, the Billiken men’s soccer team made its fourth
straight and unprecedented 46th appearance overall in the NCAA Tournament. The
team earned an automatic berth into the tournament by claiming the Atlantic 10 Confer-ence
Championship Nov. 15 with a victory against Dayton. It was the first A-10 Tournament
championship for the Billikens since joining the league in 2005. Since 1991, the Billikens have
captured nine conference championship titles.
The team opened the 2009 NCAA Men’s Soccer Tournament in November with a 2-1 vic-tory
over Missouri State at Hermann Stadium. It was the second year in a row SLU earned a
victory in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
However, the Billikens lost in overtime to No. 8
seed Tulsa in the second round of the tournament.
Despite the loss, it was a successful season for the
team, with six Billikens earning All-Conference
honors. Senior Tim Ream was voted Defensive Player
of the Year and named to the A-10’s first team, while
freshman Alex Sweetin earned Rookie of the Year
honors. Sophomore Mike Roach was named second-team
All-Conference, while senior Josh Aranda
earned honorable-mention recognition. Aranda also
joined Roach and Ream on the A-10 All-Champion-ship
team. Freshman Benny Estes and Sweetin were
voted to the All-Rookie team, while keeper Ross
Kaufman earned a spot on the All-Academic team.
Volleyball makes third NCAA
Tournament appearance
The SLU volleyball team finished its 2009
campaign with a 24-8 record and made its third
NCAA Tournament appearance in the last four years.
SLU entered the tournament ranked 22nd in the
nation and had the 18th-best hitting percentage in the
NCAA. But the Billikens lost to Wichita State in the
opening round. It was the team’s first NCAA Tourna-ment
at-large bid, after earning automatic bids in 2006
and 2008 by winning the Atlantic 10 Championship.
The 2009 Billiken volleyball season will be remem-bered
in the record books.
{ billiken news }
BILLIKEN BEAT
In January,
Billiken men’s
soccer senior
defender Tim
Ream was
drafted by
the New York
Red Bulls
in the MLS
SuperDraft. He
was the 18th
player selected
overall and the
second player
taken in the
second round.
In December, Ream was named
a National Soccer Coaches As-sociation
of America third-team
All-American. His All-American
honor is the 75th in SLU men’s
soccer history. Ream played in
all but one game during his four-year
Billiken career.
SLU head volleyball coach Anne Kordes re-ceived
the 2009 Carl O. Bauer Award presented
by the Missouri Athletic Club. The award, which
was established in 1978, is presented annually
to the top amateur sports figure in the St. Louis
area. Kordes has guided the SLU volleyball pro-gram
to three NCAA Tournament appearances
and Atlantic 10 regular-season titles in the last
four seasons. She has been named A-10 Coach
of the Year three times.
Dan Donigan has resigned as SLU’s head
men’s soccer coach. He has accepted the
same position at Rutgers University in his native
New Jersey. Donigan came to SLU in 1997 and
served as an assistant for four seasons under
former coach Bob Warming. He was named
head coach at SLU in 2001 after serving four
seasons as an assistant. During his nine-year
head coaching tenure, the Billikens posted
a 118-42-23 record and made seven NCAA
Tournament appearances. A national search for
a new soccer coach is under way.
The 2009 Billiken softball squad was recog-nized
as a National Fastpitch Coaches Associa-tion
Division I “girls got game” All-Academic
team. SLU came in at No. 37 with a 3.292 GPA
to lead all Atlantic 10 Conference schools.
The Billikens swept Atlantic 10 Coach,
Player and Setter honors for the second
straight season. McCloud merited
Co-Player of the Year recognition, and
Roth captured an unprecedented third
A-10 Setter of the Year award. Head
coach Anne Kordes was voted Coach of
the Year. Fonke landed on the A-10 first
team for the second straight season,
while junior Megan Boken picked up
second-team plaudits. Senior Whitney
Behrens achieved honorable mention
status. Behrens and Roth also were
named to the All-Academic squad.
The team had three
players achieve All-America
status. Seniors Bridget
Fonke, Sammi McCloud
and Whitney Roth picked
up AVCA All-America
honorable mention honors.
It is the second straight
season that the trio
received the distinction.
SLU’s five seniors
leave as the third-winningest
class in
program history.
SLU put together
four straight 20-win
campaigns for just the
second time.
Photo by Bill Barrett
Photo by Bill Barrett
Photo by Gary Clarke
{ on campus } t h e A R T S a t S L U
SLUMA
presents
‘Crossing
the Divide’
Through June 20, the
Saint Louis University
Museum of Art is show-ing
“Crossing the Divide:
Jesuits on the American
Frontier.” The exhibition
features documentation
of the new world a group of Jesuit missionaries
entered in 1823 as they crossed cultural, linguistic
and religious divides. It also displays dictionar-ies
of Native-American languages, as well as
extremely accurate maps and detailed journals.
SLUMA’s hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednes-day
through Sunday. For more information, visit
sluma.slu.edu.
‘Poetic
Palette’
opens at
SLUMA
The Saint Louis Univer-sity
Museum of Art is
presenting “Poetic Pal-ette:
Paintings by Ann
Brown” through June
20. The paintings, a series of interior landscapes,
evoke organic forms suggestive of plant life and
natural materials. Brown uses watercolor as the
primary medium of her work but often includes
handmade paper, inks and clay. SLUMA’s hours
are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Sun-day.
For more information, visit sluma.slu.edu.
‘Good
Friday’
exhibition
at MOCRA
SLU’s Museum of Con-temporary
Religious
Art is presenting “Good
Friday: The Suffering
Christ in Contempo-rary
Art” through April
25. Drawing on the
MOCRA collection and works on long-term loan,
“Good Friday” considers the ways artists have
explored the events of the day of Jesus’ death.
It was originally presented last spring and was
one of MOCRA’s most popular exhibitions ever.
Museum hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday
through Sunday. For more information, call (314)
977-7170 or visit mocra.slu.edu.
“Storm Cloud
Rising,” 2009, mixed
media on paper.
“Sister Helen
David Brancato,
Crucifixion - Haiti,”
1997. Mixed media.
MOCRA Collection.
Pierre De Smet, S.J.’s
coat, ca. 1840, tanned
leather, wool and silk.
PEACEFUL PROTEST: In November more than 70 Saint Louis University students,
faculty and staff traveled to Columbus, Ga., to participate in a peaceful vigil at the gates of Fort Benning.
The participants were calling for the closing of the School of the Americas, now called the Western
Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation. Since 1946, the school has trained Latin American mili-tary
personnel, many of whom have subsequently committed serious human rights abuses. Pictured are
(from left): Melody Lee, Joe Ahlers, Owen Griffith, Dan Finucane, Jennifer Petruso, Carley Kirsch, Julia
Chick, Elise Kaminski and Rachel Dratnol.
Submitted photo
MBA program gets another top ranking
Saint Louis University’s part-time MBA program has earned another national honor. Business
Week magazine recently named SLU’s innovative program No. 10 in the Midwest. The rank-ing
comes on the heels of U.S. News & World Report placing the program at No. 14 on its national
rankings earlier in 2009. Both magazines rated SLU’s part-time program the best in Missouri.
Faculty named to endowed positions
This fall seven Saint Louis University faculty members were appointed to already existing
endowed chairs and professorships. The University has 62 endowed chairs and professor-ships.
“These enable us to attract some of the finest experts in their respective fields and help
us retain the best and brightest of our SLU community,” said University President Lawrence
Biondi, S.J. “Their impressive scholarship not only brings the University international prestige,
it is helping shape the fields in which they study for many years to come.” The newest endowed
chairs and professors are:
Dr. Lorri M. Glover
John Francis Bannon, S.J., Chair in History
Dr. John Greco
Leonard and Elizabeth Eslick
Chair in Philosophy
Dr. Jonathan Sawday
Walter J. Ong, S.J., Chair in the Humanities
Dr. Ruth Evans
Dorothy McBride Orthwein
Professorship in English
Dr. Shelley Minteer
College of Arts and Sciences Professorship
Dr. Eustáquio Araújo
Pete Sotiropoulos Endowed
Professorship in Orthodontics
Dr. Enrico Di Cera
Edward A. Doisy Professorship
Dr. Adrian Di Bisceglie
Badeeh A. and Katherine V. Bander
Chair in Medicine
6 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u s p r i n g ’ 1 0 U N I V E R S I T A S 7
we ask them to reflect on those efforts and
Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis University
Fall 2011 issue of Universitas: the magazine of Saint Louis UniversityLongtime faculty
Reflections
Page 8
new medical center
projects
Page 14
alumnus comic book
crusader
Page 22
SLU’s
ambassadors
show off
campus / Page 18
fa l l 2 011
features
8
Institutional
Knowledge
Ten longtime faculty members
share their life lessons.
— By Elizabeth
Harris Krasnoff
14
Collaboration and
Recreation
Two new Medical Center
facilities encourage
student interaction.
— By Marie Dilg
18
Walk This Way
SLU’s ambassadors show
prospective students a
personal side of campus.
— By Marie Dilg
22
Crusader With a Pen
Alumnus Denny O’Neil has
been the force behind many
comic superheroes.
— By Amy Garland
depar tments
{ contents }
2 | On Campus
Make a Difference Day • Record enrollment • Professor honored
in Ireland • SLU histories online • Expansion in Madrid • World
record set
6 | Billiken News
Academic honors • Basketball schedules
7 | Advancement News
A Q&A with Heather Rich, director of corporate and foundation
relations
25 | Class Notes
Catch up with classmates.
29 | In Memoriam
Remember those members of the SLU community who
recently died.
30 | Alumni Events
Find SLU alumni activities wherever you live.
32 | Perspective
A professor with SLU’s Legal Clinics reflects on his experiences.
33 | the last word
Letters to the editor
18
8
22
14
Volume 38, Issue 1
Editor
Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92)
Contributors
Marie Dilg (Grad SW ’94)
Amy Garland (A&S ’97)
Elizabeth Harris Krasnoff
“On Campus” news stories
University Communications
Medical Center Communications
Billiken Media Relations
ON THE Cover
SLU ambassadors
Back row (from left): Mary Michael Daunhauer,
Matt Satcher, Dani Trout
and Steve Siemborski
Middle row (from left): Alyssa Hermann
and Grant Podolski
Front row (from left): Leila Houshmand,
Nikki Pain and Jon Schwendeman
Photo by Steve Dolan
Design
Art Direction: Matt Krob
Universitas is published by Saint Louis University.
Opinions expressed in Universitas are those of the
individual authors and not necessarily those of the
University administration. Unsolicited manuscripts and
photographs are welcome but will be returned only if
accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope.
Letters to the editor must be signed, and letters not
intended for publication should indicate that fact. The
editor reserves the right to edit all items. Address all
mail to Universitas, DuBourg Hall 39, One N. Grand
Blvd., St. Louis, Mo. 63103. We accept email at
[email protected] and fax submissions at (314) 977-
2249. Address fax submissions to Editor, Universitas.
Postmaster: Send address changes to
Universitas, Saint Louis University,
One N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63103.
World Wide Web address:
www.slu.edu/pr/universitas.html
Universitas is printed by Universal Printing Co.
Worldwide circulation: 115,100
© 2011, Saint Louis University
All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without
permission is prohibited.
F A L L 2 0 0 4 W I N T E R 2 0 0 5
Being held back does not have to hold you back.
(My first grade teacher failed me for not knowing
English. Today, I have a master’s degree in linguis-tics
and a Ph.D. in sociolinguistics.)
Never back away from a challenge when the best
interests of the University are at stake.
Everyone deserves to be treated with respect and
dignity. No matter who they are, what they do for
a living, where they come
from, what language they
speak or how you may
have encountered them.
When SLU students tell
you that they want to
change the world after they
graduate, believe them.
Illumination can
happen during your
lowest moments. Just ask
Saint Ignatius.
Committees, commis-sions
and blue ribbon pan-els
are fine, but taking action is what really matters.
Always be open to new ideas from unexpected
places.
Loyalty is a very, very important quality.
It is important to cherish every day. Life has so
much to offer; there are so many people to meet, so
many places to go and so many things to learn.
For any community to succeed, education, gov-ernment
and business must work together.
It’s OK to dream. I have been accused of dream-ing
big, and I think it has paid off.
A college or university is only as good as the
graduates it produces. That’s why SLU is great. (I
am not biased, of course.)
The Billikens are the best student-athletes in col-lege
sports. (Again, no bias.)
Trust is a renewable resource, but it must be
renewed. It must be earned and then cultivated. It
is not a “one and done” commodity.
When it comes to health, there is nothing like
having good genes. (Both my Mamma and Papa
lived to be 98.)
The transformative power of a Jesuit education is
often realized later in one’s life.
Sometimes, you can make sweeping changes that
almost no one comments on, but raise parking
fees, and you won’t hear the end of it.
Too many peaceful people get caught up in the
evils of war — something I saw firsthand in Beirut
during the 2006 Israel-Hezbollah War.
Faith with an open and honest heart can bring
people together. It can foster hope, understanding
and peace.
We are all different, but we are also more alike
than we might like to admit.
True friends not only push you forward, they keep
you grounded in reality.
There is nothing quite like the unconditional love
of a dog, particularly after a long day at work.
Lawrence Biondi, S.J.
President
{ president’s message }
On page 8 of this issue of Universitas, you will find some of our wise and experienced faculty
members offering their insights about what they have learned during their tenure at Saint
Louis University. And while I know I have not been here as long as some of them, I do think
my 24 years have offered opportunities for growth and better understanding.
So, here’s my take on what I’ve learned.
2 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u f a l l ’ 1 1 U N I V E R S I T A S 3
{ on campus }
photo by chad williams
photo by kevin lowder
MAKING A
DIFFERENCE
Senior nursing student Linda
Trinh paints at Gateway Middle
School during Make A Difference
Day on Oct. 29. More than 3,000
students, faculty and staff partici-pated
in SLU’s 2011 Make A Dif-ference
Day. This record number of
volunteers served at more than 130
area schools, non-profit organiza-tions,
churches, individual homes
and community facilities, spending
the day painting, planting and
cleaning up, as well as providing
activities at some locations.
HOMECOMING FUN: Alumni
and their families enjoy the
Billiken Tailgate during Saint
Louis University’s Homecoming
Weekend, Sept. 23-25. More
than 3,000 people attended
this year’s Homecoming. The
weekend also included campus
tram tours, faculty lectures, the
50-year Golden Billiken reunion,
a soccer game and fireworks.
Next year’s Homecoming
Weekend will be Sept. 28-30.
To view more photos from
the 2011 Homecoming, visit
the Saint Louis University
Alumni Page on Facebook.
t h e A R T S a t S L U
Quilt exhibition
unfolds at SLUMA
The Saint Louis University Museum of Art is
presenting “Threads of Tradition II: St. Louis
Quilters” through Dec. 23. The exhibit displays
the work of local quilters. More than 40 quilts,
featuring various patterns and quilting tech-niques,
showcase the talents involved in the art
of quilting. Quilt styles include the charm, the
“crazy” and the memory quilt. SLUMA’s hours
are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Sun-day.
For more information, visit sluma.slu.edu.
St. Francis screen, Adrian Kellard, 1985. Latex
on wood with hinges. Collection of Antonia
Lasicki and William Devia, Niskayuna, N.Y.
Bali High, pieced by Pamela Nihiser,
quilted by Cheri Vollmer, 2010.
MOCRA shows
work of Kellard
The Museum of Contemporary Religious Art’s
latest exhibition is “Adrian Kellard: The Learned
Art of Compassion,” on display through
Dec. 11. Kellard had six solo shows and was
included in more than 25 group exhibitions
at the time of his death in 1991. His work has
been featured in exhibitions at the Isabella
Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston and the
Center on Contemporary Art in Seattle, among
others. MOCRA’s hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Tuesday through Sunday. For more information,
visit mocra.slu.edu.
SLU ranks high on several lists
U.S.News & World Report once again has recognized
Saint Louis University as one of the top 100
universities in the country. In the 2012 edition of “America’s
Best Colleges,” SLU ranked 90th among the more than
280 national universities in the country — a list topped by
Harvard, Princeton and Yale. The ranking placed SLU among
the top five U.S. Jesuit universities for the ninth year in a
row. U.S. News also gave high marks to the undergraduate
programs in entrepreneurship (No. 13) and international
business (No. 16).
Additionally, SLU has earned national recognition for
community service by Washington Monthly. In its recent
“2011 College Rankings” issue, the magazine named SLU No.
2 on its list of universities that participate in the most com-munity
service. Overall, the University was listed 94th out of
258 colleges making a “contribution to the public good.” The
Washington Monthly rankings followed the announcement
that SLU made the President’s Higher Education Commu-nity
Service Honor Roll, the highest federal recognition a
school can achieve for its commitment to service-learning and
civic engagement.
New students
boost
enrollmentS
aint Louis University has
enrolled one of the largest
classes in its history, welcoming
1,707 freshmen and 401 trans-fer
students to SLU this fall.
SLU’s total enrollment is now
14,073, an all-time record.
The freshmen also are among
SLU’s brightest ever. The mean
grade point average of the
class is 3.77, and the average
ACT score is 27. The class also
includes 246 honor students.
The class of 2015 was cel-ebrated
during SLU’s annual
new student convocation in Au-gust
at Chaifetz Arena. Univer-sity
President Lawrence Biondi,
S.J., was on hand to address the
more than 2,700 people in at-tendance
and welcome the new
students to SLU.
Hotel Ignacio garners awards
The Landmarks Association of St. Louis has selected
Hotel Ignacio as one of the year’s “Most Enhanced
Buildings.” The hotel also was named a “Development of the
Year” by the City of St. Louis and the St. Louis Development
Corp. SLU was one of only five projects chosen by city of-ficials
as top developments “that most dramatically convert a
catalytic vision for the city into bricks and mortar.”
SLU and the Lawrence Group spent nearly a year trans-forming
the 100-year-old structure into a boutique hotel.
The major rehabilitation project, which began in June 2010,
employed four architects, 10 interior designers and 65 differ-ent
subcontractors.
New students listen to a speaker
during convocation.
Photo by Jeffrey Vaughn
Photo by steve dolan
KEY INITIATIVE: In August, SLU officials
signed an “All Steinway School Initiative.”
The designation recognizes an institution’s
commitment to excellence. On hand for
the signing in College Church were (from
left): Michael Barber, S.J., dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences; Dr. Manoj
Patankar, vice president for academic
affairs; Gerry Malzone, vice president,
Steinway; Susan Lutz, institutional sales
director of Steinway and Sons; Dr. Pamela
Youngdahl Dees, associate professor of fine
and performing arts-music (seated); David
Slan, Steinway Piano Gallery president;
and Robert L. Hughes, associate professor
of fine and performing arts-music.
KITCHEN RENOVATION:
This summer, SLU’s Campus
Kitchen moved to a new
location in Reinert Hall. The
Kitchen was previously
located in DeMattias Hall.
The new location provides
additional space as well
as modern equipment that
students and volunteers use
to prepare the more than
2,500 meals delivered to
those in need each month.
4 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u f a l l ’ 1 1 U N I V E R S I T A S 5
11 acres of sod planted in
the stadium
68 tons of structural and
miscellaneous steel
used to support the
Education Union
1,100 linear feet of copper
lines to distribute
water throughout the
Education Union
1,800 cubic yards of concrete
used to construct the
Education Union
13,025
tons of materials
recycled or reused
during construction of
the Education Union
and stadium
27,000 cubic yards of fill
used to construct the
stadium
SPAIN
EXPANSION:
The University has
purchased a building
in Madrid located at
Amapolas 3, a half-block
from SLU’s
Padre Rubio Hall.
The new building,
named San Ignacio
Hall, was acquired
this summer from the
Marist Fathers and is
undergoing interior
demolition. It should
be completed in July.
STREET LIGHTS:
New blue lights
glow along Olive
and Locust streets,
signaling to visitors
that they have arrived
in the SLU-Midtown
neighborhood. In
partnership with
area businesses,
the energy-efficient
LED lights have
been installed on
Hotel Ignacio, the
West Locust Lofts,
Triumph Grill, the
Moto Museum, the
Drake Apartments,
the Field House and
other buildings.
News Briefs
Spanning more than three dozen specialties, 157 doctors from SLUCare were
selected for St. Louis Magazine’s 2011 “Best Doctors” list. The list is based on the
annual “Best Doctors in America” database, which considers more than one million
peer evaluations to create a directory of approximately 30,000 doctors.
Dr. Teri Murray (Nurs ’79, Grad ’93, ’97), dean of the School of Nursing, was inducted
as a fellow in the American Academy of Nursing, the highest recognition one can
achieve in nursing. The induction took place on Oct. 15 in Washington, D.C. Of nearly
3 million U.S. nurses, only 1,600 are fellows in the American Academy of Nursing.
For the third consecutive year, Saint Louis University was selected for G.I. Jobs’ list of
“Military Friendly Schools.” The publication’s 2012 list honors the top 15 percent of
colleges, universities and trade schools that are doing the most to embrace America’s
veterans and students.
Saint Louis University received the Storm Ready University Award from the National
Weather Service. SLU is the first school in the metropolitan area to have success-fully
completed the program. During the past year several faculty, staff and students
became official storm spotters.
{ on campus }
Banpu leaders establish
endowe d chair
SLU has received a 300,000, most of
which went directly into the local economy
for services such as student housing, food
and transportation. The Kilteasheen project
excavated more than 150 skeletons out of a
medieval cemetery of nearly 3,000 graves.
Center for Intercultural
Studies unveiled
SLU has established a new Center for Intercultural
Studies and named associate professor of history
Dr. Michal Rozbicki its first director. The center’s mission
is three-fold: to foster comprehensive, interpretive research
on the interactions among distinct cultures; to provide
training in intercultural leadership; and to promote the
building of bridges among the various cultures of the
world. The center aims to become an interdisciplinary
degree-granting entity by 2016.
BY THE NUMBERS: at the Health Sciences Education Union and the Medical Center Stadium
Libra r ies launch
digital SLU histo r ies
The Saint Louis University Libraries’
newest digital collection, “Saint Louis
University Histories,” is now online. The
catalog contains six volumes — some long
out of print — from the libraries’ Special
Collections. Each volume is online in its
entirety and full-text searchable.
The University histories in the collec-tion
feature three works by the late SLU historian William B. Faherty,
S.J., including Better the Dream: Saint Louis University and Community
1818–1968; Parks College: Legacy of an Aviation Pioneer; and Men to
Remember: Jesuit Teachers at Saint Louis University. The collection also
includes the titles Saint Louis University: 150 Years by Rita Adams;
Historical Sketch of the Saint Louis University by Walter Hill, S.J.; and
Memorial Volume of the Diamond Jubilee of St. Louis University, which is
a short history of SLU written in 1904 for the St. Louis World’s Fair.
Visit the online collection at libraries.slu.edu.
SLU helps St. Louis’ sustainability
Thanks in large part to support from SLU’s Center for Sustainability,
the City of St. Louis was chosen as one of only 10 cities nationally to
participate in the development of the STAR Community Index software
platform, a tool that local governments across the globe will use to help
create the sustainable cities of the future.
The developing organization, the International Council for Local En-vironmental
Initiatives, was founded in 1990 at the United Nations’ first
“World Congress of Local Governments for a Sustainable Future.” Since
then, ICLEI has grown to represent more than 1,200 local governments
across 70 countries in sustainable development initiatives, such as the
creation of the STAR Community Index software.
The software will help St. Louis’ sustainability efforts by measuring
and tracking local sustainability assets and barriers, with the goal of
integrating the data into a
long-term sustainable develop-ment
plan for the region.
World record set at SLU
More than 425 players, parents and fans kicked their way to a Guinness World Record in
September. The Great St. Louis Soccer Dribble at Saint Louis University’s Hermann
Stadium officially recorded 428 participants and had them dribbling for six minutes — set-ting
the world record for the most people dribbling a soccer ball at once.
The event was organized by the non-profit America SCORES St. Louis, a program that
uses soccer, poetry and service learning to aid urban youth. The University, along with several
corporate sponsors and volunteers, provided the resources necessary to shuffle kids and their
parents around the SLU field. St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay (Law ’80) was on hand to help
count down the six minutes of dribbling required to secure the record. All funds raised from
the event benefited America SCORES St. Louis’ youth programs.
submitted Photo
Photo by kevin lowder
Photo by dan donovan
Photo by ángel garcía lópez
Photo by chad williams
Photo by chad williams
6 U N I V E R S I T A S w w w. s l u . e d u f a l l ’ 1 1 U N I V E R S I T A S 7
What is corporate and foundation relations?
Our office works closely with corporate lead-ers
to determine the best available resources
to meet the needs of their businesses and
industries, whether through recruitment, re-search,
education and training, and/or service
opportunities. Simply put, we help organiza-tions
make the right connections on campus.
Our primary focus is identifying and securing
support for SLU initiatives. On the front end,
we research the funding guidelines and
priorities of the funders and build relation-ships
prior to submitting requests for funding.
We understand that making an investment
in the University is an important decision for
our partners. Therefore, we strive to provide
the great stewardship to ensure long-lasting,
mutually beneficial relationships.
Why is it important for corporations and
foundations to support SLU?
The days of academic research and scholar-ships
fully funded by federal sources are over.
This makes support from private funders very
important to the University. Faculty research-ers
look to corporations and foundations
as investors and collaborators to continue
advancing knowledge and research in fields
such as medicine, engineering, business,
theology and many others.
Today, corporations look to universities to
recruit the best talent for their organiza-tions.
A SLU education is unique because
students not only receive instruction from
skilled faculty, but they also are challenged
to become servant-leaders. This preparation
offers companies high-potential talent with an
ethical foundation.
In addition, the University has facilities and
equipment that are beneficial to corporations.
For instance, Busch Student Center, Chafeitz
Arena and the Saint Louis University Museum
of Art are great places to host clients and
employees.
What services and incentives can SLU
offer corporations?
Our office provides a single access point to
all areas of the University. We communicate
frequently with the other University offices,
such as career services, research develop-ment
and services, procurement, and event
services. We work closely with deans and ad-ministrators
throughout campus. We have a
vast knowledge of current research projects,
alumni act
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