Summer - Saint Louis University
Transcription
Summer - Saint Louis University
page 8 Inside: C ampus up close page 14 and An alum on Broadway and Centers of Excellence page 21 page 18 Ê Ó ä ä { Ê Ê Ê 7 /,ÊÓääx F EAT U RES Pre si den t ’ s M e s sage DE P ART M ENTS Vo lume 3 3 , I s s ue 3 2 On Campus Yogi Berra honored at commencement Two new deans named SLU honors Va. Tech Alumni online community Ed i t o r Laura Geiser (A&S ’90, Grad ’92) 6 Billiken News Contributors Clayton Berry Jeff Fowler Colleen Kiphart (Intern) Nick Sargent Nancy Solomon “O n Ca m p u s” n e w s s t o r i e s University Communications Medical Center Media Relations Billiken Media Relations Des i g n Art Direction: Matthew 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, 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. w w w. s lu .e du Major Move Photo by Jim Visser W hen I walked by Samuel Cupples House the other day, I realized the building was smirking at me. There, carved into the bottom of a column along the wall, is a round face, glancing to the side, lips pressed together and turned up at the corner of the mouth. It is as if the face has something important to say, but knows no one will stop and notice it sitting there. In this issue, you will find a series of close-up pictures of architectural details around the Saint Louis University campus. (The face I discoverd is pictured here.) Even as these buildings and statues surrounded you during your years on campus, you likely breezed by them, as I had. I enjoyed discovering the stone carving after all these years as well as the new perspectives offered by the pictures in this issue of Universitas. They not only make me appreciate the beauty of the SLU campus, but they serve as important reminders to take a closer look at the details in life. I encourage you to have fun with the quiz feature included with the photos and let the memories of your time at SLU wash over you. My “a-ha” moment near Cupples House got me thinking about some of the changes being made on campus that we can’t illustrate in photos, but likely will have a significant impact on future graduates. The faculty and staff at SLU are asked to closely examine what they do everyday to find new and better ways to deliver the University’s renowned, top-notch education. That’s why it’s so encouraging for me to read the words of our new men’s basketball coach, Rick Majerus (page 8). Since he agreed to join SLU in April, he’s made clear that his commitment to winning is second to his commitment to his team’s education. I know Rick joins all of us at the University as we strive to discover how we can do our jobs better and achieve our shared vision that SLU be recognized as the finest Catholic university in the United States. We are no doubt proud of all that we’ve accomplished — U.S. News & World Report placed SLU among the top five Catholic universities in the country in its most recent ranking — but we are not content to rest on our laurels. A best practices initiative has led to changes in more than 15 ways the University operates to better support activity in the classrooms, clinics and labs on campus. SLU staff members are asked to take a closer look at what’s going on in their departments and make suggestions on what we can improve. To achieve our goal of becoming the finest Catholic university in the United States we know we must strive to make continuous improvements. The way the education can be delivered and administered is changing quickly, and those changes are only coming faster every year. We must keep pace with those changes. We want to provide the same excellent education you received to the newest sons and daughters of Saint Louis University. What are you breezing by in your life? And what details are looking down at you with that ever-knowing smirk? I hope this issue of Universitas inspires you to slow down and appreciate the details around you, as my recent discovery has inspired me. A Q&A with Coach Rick Majerus, the new face of Billiken men’s basketball. By Nick Sargent 7 Campaign Update A conversation with Kent LeVan, senior director of planned giving 26 Class Notes Catch up with classmates 32 In Memoriam Remembering those members of the SLU community who recently died Photo by Jim Visser 14 18 21 24 All the Small Things On Broadway Centered on Excellence One Voice for One World SLU is investing $1 million in areas that will bolster the University’s reputation. By Clayton Berry and Nancy Solomon New SLU alumnus Jesse Sullivan is determined to change the world. By Nick Sargent Test your knowledge of SLU with a close-up quiz of some SLU campus landmarks. Photos by Jim Visser Meet alumnus Mike Isaacson, a producer behind Legally Blonde: The Musical. By Laura Geiser 33 Off the Shelf Six books from the SLU community 34 Alumni Events Find SLU alumni activities wherever you live 36 Perspective An alumnus shares his experience as a pediatrician fighting AIDS in Africa 37 The Last Word Letters to the editor A statue of St. John Berchmans, S.J.. outside of John and Lucy Cook Hall. Photo by Kevin Lowder U NI V ER SITA S Chaifetz Arena update Soccer schedules Softball sets school record U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 1 berra shares wit and wisdom with class of 2007 Photos by Kevin Lowder Berra (left) addressing the graduates. Below right: Charles Flint, a graduate of the Doisy College of Health Sciences. Below center: A view of the stage. A standing ovation greeted baseball legend and St. Louisan Yogi Berra during Saint Louis University’s 2007 commencement May 19 at Scottrade Center. More than 1,400 students graduated from SLU in May. Berra was one of the greatest catchers and clutch hitters in the history of professional baseball. A 15-time All-Star catcher for the New York Yankees, Berra won the American League MVP award three times. After leaving the game as a player, Berra had a successful career as a manager with both the New York Yankees and Mets. He was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 1972. Baseball’s unofficial ambassador started things off on a light note by talking about what it felt like to be back home in St. Louis (“Feels like déjà vu all over again!”) and about whether he’d had a chance to visit The Hill, the St. Louis neighborhood where he was born. (“Nobody goes there anymore. It’s too crowded.”) Then Berra, who turned 82 on May 12, revealed the wisdom behind many of his most famous “Yogi-isms,” the classic quotes and quips that propelled him to pop culture icon status and made him one of the most quoted sports figures in history. “Dear graduates, when you come to a fork in the road, take it,” Berra said. “In life, the only poor decisions are the ones you don’t follow through on. When you leave here today you will have more choices than you ever thought possible. But when you have to make a choice, make it because you believe in it. Then stick to your guns.” Then he addressed one of the quotes that people most often ask him about: “If the world was perfect, it wouldn’t be.” “People always tell me that quote I said doesn’t make much sense. But all of you under- 1,419 Degrees awarded to May graduates At SLU’s May 19 commencement 2 U NI V ER SITA S stand what I’m saying, right?” he asked the estimated 10,000 graduates, family members and friends in the crowd. “I know you got a good education at SLU. And I’m sure it’s opened your eyes to the people in the world who need your help. But most important, your SLU education has prepared you to give that help. “True. The world isn’t perfect. It can be better. And you can make it that way.” In the end, Berra shared the words of another Hall-of-Famer, Joe DiMaggio, who said he looked forward to opening day like a child looks forward to a birthday party, expecting something wonderful to happen. “I say to you, class of 2007: Go out and live your life like every day is opening day,” Berra said. During the commencement ceremony University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J., conferred honorary degrees upon Berra and four other individuals: • Joseph and Rosemary Shaughnessy (A&S ’57) met at SLU 50 years ago. Joseph (IT ’57) co-founded BSI Constructors, which has helped shape SLU’s campus and nearby Grand Center through major building and renovation projects. The Shaughnessys are noted for their commitment to the community and to the Catholic Church. • Chang-Soo Huh (Grad Cook ’77) is chairman and chief executive officer of GS Holdings Group, one of the largest corporations in Korea. Conscientious about the social responsibilities of corporations, he created a foundation that has contributed more than $20 million to support health care and educational efforts in Korea. • Dr. Benjamin Carson, director of pediatric neurosurgery at Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, was the first physician to successfully separate Siamese twins born joined at the back of the head. Carson also is dedicated to sharing the joy of reading with economically disadvantaged children, and he worked with SLU to establish special reading rooms in local public schools. — Clayton Berry w w w. s lu .e du Prayer service at College church honors Virginia Tech shooting victims Saint Louis University opened its doors April 18 to the St. Louis-area alumni of Virginia Tech for a special memorial service in St. Francis Xavier College Church. The prayer service aimed to give comfort to those mourning the loss of 32 students and faculty in an April 16 campus shooting rampage. About 600 people filled the church to listen to inspiring prayers, reflections and music. It was clear by the sea of orange and maroon — Virginia Tech’s school colors — that Photos by Kevin Lowder many VT alumni were present. There also were many members of the SLU community, including students, on hand to show their support. The president of the local Virginia Tech alumni association asked SLU to host a memorial service on campus. Saint Louis University quickly agreed, and SLU’s campus ministry department helped plan and coordinate the service. New deans are familiar faces Dr. Manoj Patankar is the new dean of Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology. He had been serving as interim dean since August 2006. Patankar first came to Parks as a student — he earned his bachelor’s degree in aeronautics in 1992. Ten years later he returned to SLU as coordinator of the aviation safety management graduate program. In 2004, he became chairman of the aviation science department. During his tenure as interim dean, Patankar secured funding for additional faculty positions, launched new degree programs and garnered greater support from alumni and other stakeholders. The college also has embarked on an extensive marketing campaign to increase undergraduate enrollment and is working with the U.S. Army to provide students with additional internship and research opportunities. Dr. Donald Brennan, dean of the Graduate School for the past 19 years, now also is dean of the College of Arts and Sciences — a position he held on an interim basis since July 2006. Brennan (A&S ’67, Grad ’69) joined the faculty at SLU in 1975 with a joint appointment as an assistant professor in the department of communication disorders and as a staff speech-language pathologist at SLU’s Medical Center. In 1981 he became communication disorders’ departmental chairman and served in that role until 1988, when he became dean of the Graduate School. In his dual capacity, Brennan will create partnerships between the two schools. For example, the Graduate School and the College of Arts and Sciences share many faculty, who now will be able to communicate needs and ideas to one dean. ENTREPRENEURIAL ALUMNI HALL OF FAME DEBUTS T o celebrate the 20th anniversary of the Smurfit-Stone Center for Entrepreneurship, the John Cook School is launching a University-wide “Entrepreneurial Alumni Hall of Fame.” The inaugural inductees have been chosen in five categories: corporate, high-tech, large enterprise, small business and social/civic venture. But voting is still open to choose the “Saint Louis University Entrepreneurial Alumni of the Year.” Go to eweb.slu.edu to view a list of inductees and cast your ballot for the overall winner. The five inductees will be honored, and the Entrepreneurial Alumni of the Year will be announced, at an event during Homecoming weekend, 3:30-5 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 29. More details are available at eweb.slu.edu. 593 Undergraduate graduates from Missouri; 167 undergraduates were from Illinois; 2 were from Hawaii 37 States represented by all graduates » U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 3 News Briefs public service receives first named professorship; gilsinan takes post T he College of Public Service has reached a new milestone: the establishment of its first named professorship. Dr. Jim Gilsinan, professor of public policy studies, is the first E. Desmond Lee Professor in Collaborative Regional Education. Civic leader E. Desmond “Des” Lee provided funding to support the professorship. The honor recognizes Gilsinan’s decades of service to St. Louis-area schools, local governments and nonprofit organizations. Because the professorship requires teaching, research and service, Gilsinan stepped down in December as dean of the College of Public Service to rejoin the faculty on a full-time basis. As a Des Lee Professor, Gilsinan will join scholars from Washington University in St. Louis and the University of Missouri-St. Louis researching ways to help schools and communities improve the lives of young people. U.S. News ranks grad programs high For the fourth consecutive year, U.S.News & World Report named Saint Louis University’s health law program the best in the nation. A number of SLU health specialties also ranked among the best, including four other disciplines in the top 25. U.S. News issued the rankings in its “Best Graduate Schools 2008” issue. The SLU Medical Center programs that made the top 25 were: S LU’s School of Public Health is ranked No. 21 overall. G eriatrics at SLU School of Medicine is ranked No. 12. T he master’s degree in health administration at the SLU School of Public Health has been climbing in reputation in recent years, and is ranked No. 12 this year. P hysician assistant education at Doisy College of Health Sciences is No. 17 on the list. In addition, the part-time MBA program in SLU’s John Cook School of Business ranked No. 26 in the country. The business school’s entrepreneurship graduate program ranked No. 27. At SLU’s May 19 commencement 4 U NI V ER SITA S SLU PLATE SPECIAL Dr. Martin J. Wieland (Dent ’53) from Sarasota, Fla., wrote to us about the Billiken license plate on his car (below). He wondered if other alumni across the country have SLU-inspired license plates. We wonder, too. Do you have Billiken or SLU-related plates? Send us a photo (addresses on page 37), and we’ll run them in a future Universitas. Developer chosen for Grand and Lindell site; input needed In April, Dr. Thomas F. Madden, professor, former chairman of the department of history and director of SLU’s Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, received the Medieval Academy of America’s highest honor, the Charles Homer Haskins Medal. He is the first SLU medievalist to receive this top honor. Julius Hunter, SLU vice president for community relations, has retired. Hunter held the VP position for more than four years after spending more than 33 years in local broadcast news. During his tenure at SLU, Hunter used his connections in the local community to assist the University in helping others, including outreach to the St. Louis Public Schools. Students at Saint Louis University and Harris-Stowe State University are building a dream together. The schools’ Student Government Associations announced in April their partnership in raising $10,000 for the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Project in Washington, D.C. Through this commitment, SLU and Harris-Stowe join 165 other colleges and universities recognized as “Dream Keepers.” This is the first time two universities have partnered for this project. In May, Dr. Ronald E. Modras, professor of theological studies, received the 42nd annual Nancy McNeir Ring Outstanding Faculty Award from Alpha Sigma Nu, the Jesuit honor society. Modras has been a member of the University faculty since 1979. He has written numerous scholarly articles and seven books, including Ignatian Humanism: A Dynamic Spirituality for the 21st Century. Chair in pediatric medicine established Dr. Kenneth O. Schowengerdt Jr. (Med ’84) was installed as the WieckSullivan Endowed Chair in Pediatric Medicine at a ceremony March 23. Schowengerdt also is director of the division of pediatric cardiology at Saint Louis University and Cardinal Glennon Children’s Medical Center. His clinical and research interests relate to cardiac transplantation in children and adults, and he is nationally recognized in this area. The chair was established through a gift from Cardinal Glennon Children’s Foundation. A rendering of the view from the ground floor of the new development. Online alumni community to BE UNVEILED soon T he Saint Louis University online alumni community is coming, and all alumni are invited to be a part of it. This site will be available exclusively to University alumni. The site’s features, which are specially tailored for the SLU audience, include: An online, searchable alumni directory — where alumni can choose how much or how little information they would like to share with other alumni. An online photo gallery that allows alumni to share their favorite photos with their fellow Billikens. The ability to update alumni contact information online and to send achievements and announcements to Universitas “Class Notes.” Searchable EBSCO research databases. Online event registration. And many other ways to stay connected to SLU and to fellow alumni. Be on the lookout for more information about the community in the near future at alumni.slu.edu. If you have any questions, or want to stay more connected electronically, please send your name and e-mail address to [email protected]. Saint Louis University is pleased to announce a new development plan that will further enhance and invigorate the campus with the possibility of new residential, retail and commercial development. SLU recently requested proposals from development firms for a more than 4-acre site the University owns on the northeast corner of SLU’s campus at the intersection of Grand and Lindell boulevards. Near St. Francis Xavier College Church and with views of the campus, downtown and the Arch, this site is at the entrance of the Grand Center arts and entertainment district, which includes the Fox Theatre, Powell Symphony Hall and the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis. It is ideally located for new housing, office, entertainment and retail development. SLU has selected local developer McCormack Baron Salazar and its partner, U3 Ventures, to create a dynamic and interactive mixed-use center that will appeal to and attract students, staff, alumni and community residents alike. With the project still in the planning stage, Saint Louis University has created a survey to gauge the interest level of SLU stakeholders in the uses planned for the site — the residential component in particular. Your input is critical in helping planners create a development that will enhance the experience of everyone who comes to Saint Louis University. Please offer your feedback at www.slu.edu/survey. Your input is appreciated. the ARTS at SLU Detail of Ben Hur film poster. Detail of Cairo (Illinois), 2001. MOCRA welcomes ‘Celluloid Bible’ exhibit SLUMA shows ‘Elusive Light’ into December In September, visitors to SLU’s Museum of Contemporary Religious Art can view the exhibition “The Celluloid Bible: Marketing Films Inspired by Scripture,” which examines how the Bible has been represented on film by bringing together more than 60 vintage movie posters that survey films from 1898 to the present. The posters are aesthetic objects that indicate changing trends in the film industry’s approach to the Bible. The museum is open 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. For more information call (314) 977-7170 or visit mocra.slu.edu. The Saint Louis University Museum of Art has extended its current exhibit, “Elusive Light Michael Eastman Retrospective,” through mid-December. The exhibition, which opened in February, is the first retrospective of renowned photographer Eastman and features photography drawn from his archive. A self-taught artist and St. Louis native, Eastman’s work has been featured on the cover of Time magazine four times, and his book Horses printed its fourth edition in 2003. SLUMA’s hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., Wednesday through Sunday. For more, visit sluma.slu.edu. 25 Graduates named Michael; 21 were named Matthew 23 Graduates named Jennifer; 21 were named Elizabeth 2 Graduates celebrated birthdays on the day of commencement; 50 graduates celebrated birthdays during the month of May w w w. s lu .e du U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 5 One of the first things University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J., did when he brought new men’s head basketball coach Rick Majerus to campus was take him inside Chaifetz Arena — Majerus was able to see the new home for the Billikens himself. On that Friday afternoon, with construction work going on around them, Biondi and Majerus stood at what will be center court, looked upward at the risers that will hold the 10,600 seats, and Biondi described what the Arena will look like when completed next spring. Photo by Dave Preston Chaifetz Arena update Much has taken place at Chaifetz Arena during the last few months. At the site, work on the structure for both the event and concourse levels is nearing completion. The suite level is beginning. Inside the building, crews are busy with electrical, plumbing and mechanical work. Structural work on the practice facility and athletic offices also has begun. Masons have started work on the bastion walls on the southwest and southeast corners of the building. Everything remains on target for a March 2008 opening. T Within the last few months, vendors have been chosen for the audio-video system and the scoreboards. To enhance the experience for all basketball fans, Chaifetz Arena will have four corner scoreboards; each approximately 42 feet wide by 14 feet tall, with a video screen on each scoreboard. A 360-degree LED ribbon board will circle the arena bowl, and each side of the court will have state-of-the-art LED floor tables. “The experience inside Chaifetz Arena is going to be second to none in the Midwest,” said Darius Dunn, general manager of Chaifetz Arena. “We are beginning the process of booking events for next spring, and we are excited about opening the doors for the first time.” It’s not too late to be a part of the project. Those contributing $500 or more will be recognized with a Billiken Brick at the entrance to Chaifetz Arena. To contribute or to view the construction progress, go to the Chaifetz Arena Web site at chaifetzarena.slu.edu. —Jeff Fowler SEPTEMBER 2006 NOVEMBER 2006 Do any other gifts provide payments in return? Senior outfielder Jill Pursell Softball team finishes season with school win record JANUARY 2007 U MAY 2007 NOV. 6 at Evansville (Exh) MISSOURI (Exh) at Penn Evansville, Ind. St. Louis Philadelphia 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 6 p.m. Sunday Friday Sunday 2 7 9 at Ohio State SMU at Missouri State Columbus, Ohio St. Louis Springfield, Mo. 4:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m. Toys for Tots Tournament Friday 14 Sunday 16 Army vs. Air Force SEMO Air Force vs. SEMO ARMY St. Louis St. Louis St. Louis St. Louis 5 p.m. 7 p.m. 11 a.m. 1 p.m. Friday Friday Sunday 21 28 30 at Nebraska at La Salle* ST. BONAVENTURE* Lincoln, Neb. Philadelphia St. Louis 5 p.m. 6 p.m. 1 p.m. Friday Sunday Friday Sunday Friday Sunday Friday Sunday 5 7 12 14 19 21 26 28 at Temple* at Saint Joseph’s* RICHMOND* GEORGE WASHINGTON* at Dayton* at Xavier* RHODE ISLAND* MASSACHUSETTS * Philadelphia Philadelphia St. Louis St. Louis Dayton, Ohio Cincinnati St. Louis St. Louis 2 p.m. Noon 7 p.m. 1 p.m. 6:30 p.m. Noon 7 p.m. 1 p.m. Saturday Thu.-Sun. 3 CHARLOTTE* 8-11 Atlantic 10 Tournament St. Louis Charlotte, N.C. 1 p.m. TBA U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du (Homecoming)) DayDateOpponentLocationTime AUGust 18 24 31 Tuesday Saturday Friday 21 25 31 at South Florida (Exh) Northwestern (Exh) at Southern Methodist Duke/Adidas Soccer Classic Friday Sunday SEPTEMBEr Saturday Friday Friday 2007 MEN’S SOCCER SCHEDULE OCTOBER OCTOBER SEPTEMBEr AUGust DayDateOpponentLocationTime NOVember 2007 WOMEN’S SOCCER SCHEDULE nder first-year head coach John Conway, the Saint Louis University softball team enjoyed the best season in program history in 2007. The Billikens established a school record in wins with a 29-33 slate and set team records in runs, hits, doubles and home runs. As the No. 3 seed in May’s Atlantic 10 Championship, the Billikens advanced through the field to the title game before losing to host and top-seeded Massachusetts. JUNE 2007 *Denotes Atlantic 10 Matches | HOME GAMES played at Robert R. Hermann Stadium All times are Central and subject to change | Go to slubillikens.com for most current schedules MARCH 2007 7 9 at NC State at Duke Saint Louis/NIKE Soccer Classic here are many ways to make a gift to Saint Louis University — for example, cash, stock and real estate — but you may not know that some gifts give back to the donor as well. Kent LeVan (Cook ’87, Grad Cook ’97), senior director of planned giving, explains those opportunities and answers questions about long-term gifts to SLU. Tampa St. Louis Dallas 6:30 p.m. 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Raleigh, N.C. Raleigh, N.C. 4 p.m. 6:30 p.m. Thursday 13 Saturday 15 Creighton vs. Indiana Loyola Marymount Creighton vs. LMU Indiana St. Louis St. Louis St. Louis St. Louis 5 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Noon 7 p.m. Saturday Saturday 22 29 at Bradley Central Florida Peoria, Ill. St. Louis 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Saturday Friday Sunday Friday Sunday Friday Sunday 6 12 14 19 21 26 28 Buffalo at St. Bonaventure* at Duquesne* UMass* Rhode Island* at Richmond* at George Washington* St. Louis St. Bonaventure, N.Y. Pittsburgh St. Louis St. Louis Richmond, Va. Washington, D.C. 7 p.m. TBA 11 a.m. 7 p.m. 1 p.m. 6:30 p.m. TBA Friday Sunday Saturday 2 4 10 SAINT Joseph’s* Temple* Charlotte* St. Louis St. Louis St. Louis 7 p.m. 1 p.m. 7 p.m. Thu.-Sun. 15-18 Atlantic 10 Tournament Dayton, Ohio TBA (Homecoming) What is planned giving? Planned giving encompasses a variety of charitable giving opportunities that individuals may incorporate into their overall financial and estate planning. It includes gifts that can be made during a donor’s lifetime or upon death. Some gifts even provide payments back to the donor or to another individual. You can make a gift to SLU and receive payments in return from it? The charitable remainder trust provides payments that can be for a fixed or variable amount. In addition, the trust can be structured to benefit one, two or a number of beneficiaries. One particular type of charitable remainder trust, the unitrust, is well-suited for individuals who are considering a gift of real estate and would like payments from their gift. You described some gift arrangements that provide income. What other gift options are available? That’s correct. Our most popular life income gift is the charitable gift annuity. In return for a transfer of cash or appreciated stock to the University, SLU will pay a fixed amount to one or two individuals named by the donors for life. In addition, some of the payment is tax-free, and the donor receives a charitable deduction for a portion of the value transferred. Upon termination of the annuity, the remaining funds support SLU. The gift annuity works best for an individual who is nearing retirement or has already retired. A variety of testamentary gifts are available. The most common is a bequest provision for SLU that an individual incorporates into his or her will or revocable living trust. Another testamentary gift technique is to designate SLU as the beneficiary of a bank account, retirement account or life insurance policy. The financial institution or insurance company can assist with naming or changing the beneficiary of the asset. What is a typical scenario for a charitable gift annuity? Both gift types can reduce the size of an individual’s estate and possible estate taxes associated with it. A lifetime gift may produce income-tax savings and possibly provide income to the donor or the donor’s beneficiary. The primary advantage of a testamentary gift is that a donor retains control over the assets throughout his or her lifetime. If the assets are needed for living expenses, they are always available for that purpose. If they are not needed, the testamentary gift is then completed upon the death of the donor, and it is used to support SLU. A typical scenario might involve a 75-year-old individual who establishes a gift annuity with a transfer of $10,000. In return, the individual receives $710 annually for life and an initial income tax charitable deduction of $4,626. In the case of an annuity for two lives where both individuals are 75, the annual payment is $630, and the charitable deduction is $3,920. These amounts are based on assumptions that are currently in effect. How does a testamentary gift compare with a lifetime gift? How much flexibility exists with designating how a planned gift may be used at SLU? My office works with alumni and friends to create gifts that achieve the donors’ philanthropic objectives. This involves discussing the appropriate type of gift as well as the area at SLU that the donor hopes to support at the gift’s maturity. Donors have a broad range of areas they may support. For example, they may designate their gifts for scholarships, a specific program, a school or college, the general endowment or even the greatest need as identified by SLU. What are the latest developments in the area of planned giving? Last summer, the Pension Protection Act of 2006 was signed into law. One provision of the act allows for individuals to make direct transfers from their Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) to qualified charitable organizations like SLU. An individual may transfer up to $100,000 before the end of 2007, and the transfer counts toward the minimum required distribution. The transfer does not generate taxable income to the donor or a charitable deduction for the donor. With the stock market doing well this year, gifts of publicly traded stock owned for more than one year also deserve special attention. They provide an income-tax charitable deduction for the fair market value of the stock, and neither the donor nor SLU pay any capital gains tax on the sale of the donated stock. For more information about planned giving, call (314) 977-2357 or (800) 758-3678, e-mail [email protected] or visit plannedgiving.slu.edu. U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 7 SLU hits it big: coach rick Majerus is committed to basketball and academic excellence e’s been a Saint Louis University employee for only a few days, but you wouldn’t guess it from the reaction he’s receiving on this uncommonly hot day in May. Taking a break from the stifling air of his Bauman-Eberhardt Center office, Rick Majerus — who agreed to a six-year contract to be the Billikens men’s basketball coach on April 27 — smiles and acknowledges each student who walks past and gives him a surprised “Hi, Coach!” as he speaks with Universitas. From his own Jesuit experiences to his expectations for his team next year, Majerus covered a wide range of topics. But maybe what offered the most insight on the famously verbose coach came toward the end of the interview, when a young female student walked by in a University of Missouri shirt, which caught the eye of Majerus. “Mizzou?” he exclaimed as the student walked into BaumanEberhardt Center. “You’ve got to get a Saint Louis shirt. You don’t have one? I’ll give you one,” he said with a laugh. It’s not really a surprising reaction from a man who joked about how much he looks like the Billiken and challenged SLU President Lawrence Biondi, S.J. to a sumo-wrestling match during his introductory press conference (a battle Biondi jokingly — and quickly — conceded to the new coach). And though he may enjoy a quick quip, he’s very serious about the work at hand. During his first few weeks as a Billiken, Majerus said he’s as busy as he’s been in years, but he’s confident about the chances of success at SLU. Photos by Jim Visser 8 – By Nick Sargent U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 9 MAJERUS succeed and be happy at peril in expense of a “A basketball game. new chapter I want to win, and I wouldn’t be sitting here with you if I hadn’t won. But in Billiken I understand the prioritization of basketball begins with things, and I think that if you have a healthy outlook on it and look at the hiring of one of the it as an educational endeavor, then most successful coaches of you don’t have the frustrations. I’ll when I have a player all time. Rick is a coach who bemissfrustrated a lab. But then I have sent a lives and breathes basketball number of them on to become docand who sees the future of tors. Ideally I would like a tutor for every what we have at SLU.” student because of the rigors of travel UTAS: What sold you about SLU? And what made you want to coach here? Majerus: I’m Jesuit educated. I went to Marquette. I coached at Marquette. I understand the Jesuit mission of Saint Louis University, and respect it very much and am a product of it. There were many, many reasons, and that’s among the top. I also like Father Biondi. I understand him because in many ways, I might be like him. You mentioned how important your education was at Marquette High School (in Milwaukee) and Marquette University. What was it about the Jesuit experience that really spoke to you or formed you? Well, probably the introspection as well as the explorer that we all are with our own lives. I’ve gone out of the box and done things a lot of people wouldn’t have done and been places a lot people haven’t been. I’ve been to the Great Barrier Reef and walked the Great Wall of China. … And every time I think that there may not be something else to do, I run into a new experience. I have an education that has prepared me for that and one that has allowed me to enjoy it and feel as though I can complete or conquer the task at hand. — Lawrence Biondi, S.J., SLU president (and) class. And yet you want to make it fun for the guys — it’s a competitive world, but it’s also a world in which I want them to have a good team spirit as well as some memorable nights as a team at a movie, or a barbecue or exploring New York on their own. “I think he’s going to move the program in the right direction. He’s a big name, and his reputation precedes him.” year During your introductory press conference you mentioned how excited you are to be back in this college environment and may even sit in on a couple of classes. Are there any that are at the top of list? A friend of mine who came up from Milwaukee for the press conference met this professor. And he is an English teacher — he’s kind of a Mark The educational experience of being a Twain scholar, an aficionado, and I — Luke Meyer, Billiken student-athlete is obviously very imporam very much interested in that. forward tant to you. How do you balance that in to I’ve always enjoyed great law proday’s NCAA Division I athletics environment? fessors, listening to them lecture. I enjoy the You don’t balance it — you put an emphasis on it. The Socratic method. I asked Father Biondi about those needle points more toward the academics than it does toward basfaculty, and he said a guy named Vince Immel (School of Law, ketball, and if it doesn’t, you have chosen the wrong university, faculty emeritus) was among the best ever, so I might wander my or you have the wrong mission. I think you can do both, but way over there some day. you don’t want to put a kid’s academic growth or his ability to I am not going to be wandering anywhere in the next year, record 1983-84 post season 17-13 NIT Second Round 10 U NI V ER SITA S 1984-85 20-11 NIT Third Round w w w. s lu .e du 1985-86 19-11 NIT Second Round 1987-88 14-14 1988-89 29-3 NCAA Second Round though, except hopefully into recruits’ homes and our own practice facility because we are fully a year behind as we speak here. It’s important we catch up. We’re doing this interview in early May, we have six games to schedule, three scholarships to fill. We have a junior class that we have not made a contact with because we have not been here, not to mention the sophomore class. So we are playing catch-up and have to put that as a priority on our time right now. This is probably the longest period in the last eight, nine years of my life that I haven’t even begun to read a book, go to a movie or attend a play — because there is no time. Does the blueprint for success extend past the players, the coaches and those directly involved with the program? Does it include the fans? What’s the formula for success? I am trying to meet as many as fans as I can. Today I am going to a SLU golf outing. I will meet every foursome that stays for dinner and meet them individually. I met a number of people in various parts of the community already. I want to engender good school spirit and get over to the students in the fall. I want them to be part of our success, be responsible in part for our success, share in our success because the players are genuinely classmates. I want the students to provide a nice vibe for us here, and I want them to come over to the games on campus. “Majerus’ hiring is a home run for the school” Knowing that you have those constraints because of when you joined SLU, what’s the definition of success next season? I don’t know that. I go on an incremental basis through practice. The practice at hand — if that’s a success, cumulatively together there will be game success, and a game success doesn’t always translate into wins. But eventually we’ll turn a corner and have a chance to remain consistently good. Whether that happens Day 1, Day 151 or Day 1,000, I don’t know. Everyone wants to get there, but each team, each program’s timetable is subject to the vagaries of things somewhat beyond your control. — ESPN commentator Andy Katz Based on your experience at Utah, where there was an on-campus arena, what type of impact do you think Chaifetz Arena will have here? It facilitates the student population enjoying and sharing as a team. It gives the alumni a reason to come back to campus, which they appreciate. It brings people to the campus who may be part of the community, and it generates a call for new students to come on board as well. It’s a tremendous gathering place. It’ll be a focal point for students — it’ll be where they graduate, it’ll be where they matriculate. It’ll be where they have had nice nights out where they come as a sorority or a fraternity or as a student group. And it’ll offer a shared experience for the eclectic communities that comprise the University. “This is something different. You’ve got a guy who’s been around a long time, who’s been with ESPN, a headline guy. But he doesn’t act like a big-time guy around us, which is really nice.” What is your long-term goal for the program? I want to make sure we have a program that’s in consort with the vision of the University, one where we provide a quality educaWhen was the first time you started tion culminating with graduation to fall in love with basketball? — Kevin Lisch, and where we have a winning venue, In the fifth grade. We had a little team — Billiken guard providing entertaining and wonderthey gave us uniforms, and we would wear ful nights in the new wonderful Chaifetz the satin shorts. I only wish I would have been Arena that’s going up on campus. That’s what I better at it. I tried hard. I practiced. I just wasn’t would want — that’s what every coach would want. very good. 1989-90 4-2* *Coached the first six games before undergoing heart surgery 1990-91 30-4 Final National Ranking 1991-92 #10 NCAA Sweet 16 24-11 NIT Semifinals 1992-93 24-7 Final National Ranking 1993-94 #16 14-14 NCAA Second Round U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 11 MAJERUS Having that experience, what made you want to stay a part of the game? I would rather be a player. If I could play today on some team where I could have a modicum of success and make a living, I would play. But I can’t. I wasn’t good enough. So I took the next best route. There’s the adage that applies to all teachers, “Those who can, do. Those who can’t, teach.” There are terrific litigators, where other guys are able to teach litigation. Some guys may be wonderful surgeons, but they may not be able to convey those attributes to others, you know. I vicariously live my life through my players in many cases. What’s your favorite play in basketball? When you’re coaching, what is the thing you most like watching or get the most enjoyment out of? The defensive rotation to a charge, probably. Defense is probably the most team-oriented aspect of the game. If you have better talent, you can obviously defend someone on a oneon-one basis, but it’s harder to do it that way. When you don’t have better talent, you can mitigate your weakness, your lack of athleticism, the fact you’re small or whatever it may be, by playing well together as a team defensively. And I enjoy the well-timed play. The preciseness of ball and player movement of a well-timed play: That would be No. 2. “Go ahead and dream as big as you want. If you want to fantasize about a string of endless Atlantic 10 titles flowing out of here, or serial trips deep into the March Madness postseason, go ahead and do it. Don’t hold back.” You had a close relationship with Al McGuire (coach at MarDo you have a favorite game or a — St. Louis Postquette University from 1964 to favorite moment in your coaching caDispatch columnist Bryan 1977). Was there a particular piece reer? Burwell on the of advice he gave you about coachWell my favorite moment came when we majerus hire ing or life in general that has stuck with (Utah) beat Arizona in ’98 to go to the Final you? Four because that is a significant accomplishment. Probably live the day, the moment. Try to smell the So many great coaches like Norm Stewart at roses. He had a hard time doing it — all coaches do. Mizzou, Jack Hartman at K-State, Gene Coaching gives you a high and a low unlike Keady at Purdue — there’s a litany of any other. When you win it’s like you’re on guys who never made the Final Four the moon. And the communal handclasp who were great coaches. in the locker room, saying “Team!” to It was such a team accomgether after you have a victory, there’s plishment. It was such a good nothing like that in the business world. group of guys. Everyone on that I’ve been fortunate to make a number team graduated, three with of deals and been involved in a number honors. That team produced of businesses. But the thrill of a success three Academic All-Americans in business pales in comparison to a big — (Hanno) Mottola, (Michael) win on the road. Doleac and (Drew) Hansen — And then conversely, when you lose and an All-American in Andre there’s no low like it as well. You can alMiller. It was like everything most play handball against a curb you’re came together. We lost the cham— Marquette University down so low. If you have the resiliency to pionship game (to the University of men’s basketball coach come back after a loss, it speaks to what life is Kentucky). We were beaten by the Tom Crean all about: staying power. There are many paralbetter team in the last five minutes and lels in sports that are transcendent to life. played extremely well. year “The coaching profession is a much better place today because Rick Majerus is back in it. Rick has proven time and time again what it takes to win.” record 1994-95 post season 28-6 Final National Ranking 1995-96 #22 27-7 NCAA Second Round 12 U NI V ER SITA S Final National Ranking 1996-97 #12 29-4 NCAA Sweet 16 w w w. s lu .e du Final National Ranking 1997-98 #6 NCAA Elite Eight 30-4 Final National Ranking 1998-99 #2 NCAA Runner-up 28-5 Final National Ranking #10 NCAA Second Round Majerus and the Billiken Playing for you what does a player need to succeed? Passion, effort, selflessness, commitment. The will to want to become better individually and collectively. Ultimately it’s all collective. That’s on the basketball side. On the academic side here’s the thing I expect out of all my players: I don’t expect an ‘A’; I expect an ‘A’ effort — in the classroom, on the court, in their conduct toward others. We just want an ‘A’ effort. What are your first impressions of the guys on the team who are coming back for next season? They’re high-character guys. They are student-athletes. They seem to want to really be better individually and as a team. They seem unselfish — Tommie Liddell seems like he might be a little too unselfish, which might be a good attribute to have. They seem like they have a genuine respect for each other’s space, game and lifestyle. That’s good. There wasn’t an NIT or NCAA Tournament appearance for the Billikens last season, but the team did win 20 games. Does it help to have that kind of success to build on? You always want to be building on the prior season. I’ve had 30-win seasons in my career, and you want to build on them. It’s hard to build on them. But you always want the arrow to be pointing upward. Is there anything that you want to tell SLU alumni? We together are lucky recipients of a great education. I know you’re appreciative of that opportunity, and I am as well. Come on back and support the guys. Give us your support, and we’ll reciprocate in kind with effort. Let us know if you run into a young man you think would be a good prospect for us — gives us a call, drop us a line. Do it when he is a freshman or sophomore. And buy a brick for the new building. I’m going to buy a couple, probably more than a couple. And I hope you will, too. 1999-00 2000-01 2001-02 2002-03 2003-04 23-9 1-0** 21-9 25-8 15-5*** NCAA First Round NCAA Second Round *** Coached the first 20 games before retiring due to health concerns NCAA Second Round ** Coached the first game before taking a personal leave of absence U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 13 During your years at you had your eyes on the big prize: graduation, a job and success. But do you remember: T here is so much beauty on the Saint Louis University campus that it can be easy to miss some of the smaller details. In the next few pages we will quiz you on some of the little nooks, crannies and other gems that you might have missed during your stay on campus. We’ll test your memory skills with an oldschool matching quiz. Look at the pictures on the following pages and try to match them with their buildings. There are seven pictures, and seven possible buildings. You can find the answer key on page 17. The pictures might leave you scratching your head. But there are no tricks. Every picture is from a University-owned building located on the St. Louis campus. There are no pictures from the Madrid campus, we promise. Whatever the memory, we want to hear them. In 250 words or less, tell us your story and send it via e-mail to utas@ slu.edu or via fax to 314-977-2249. Send mail submissions to Universitas, DuBourg Hall 39, 221 N. Grand Blvd., St. Louis MO 63103. 14 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du s wa ing ns, uild tio s b tra . thi egis nces 926 y r da n 1 an nd ilt i o m s a Bu me t ation A. o h du gra We hope that the pictures bring back fond memories for you — and if they do, we would like to hear them. In an upcoming edition of Universitas, we are planning to run short summaries of our readers’ favorite places on campus. Is there a building where you finally felt like SLU was home? Will you always have warm memories of the place where you first laid eyes on your husband or wife? Or is there a statue on campus that reminds you of some hilarious things your roommate did? B. This w ate same yea r fall was installe student a r its nearby build d in 20 0 3, the expandedctivit y) was reno ing (a hub of vate by 51,0 0 0 square fe d and et. st We 00 n o 0,0 in tle cas st $ 50 egan “ e co n b th d as uilding tructio e b i s b r esc this con . C. D Pine,” when 1890 U N I V E R S I T A S written by Nick Sargent photography by Jim Visser SUMMER 2007 15 G. Dedica te is an exced in 1898, this buil 19 th Centullent example of ding architectu ry English Gothic re. g is 1948, this buildin E. Completed ina famous dean of the named after here. college housed How well do you know your campus? ans th we e rs ! D. The fo rm Salvationer home of the building isArmy, this eral Colle home to sevScience ge of Arts and departme nts. A B C Bauman-Eberhardt Center s thi ry, ung ntu yo uis ce d Lo th use t. 20 ho to S es. the lly e om of igina cam te h urn or ho iva e t ing w pr t th uild omen rk in b w wo to ta uil F. B 16 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du D Landscaping outside Busch Student Center Samuel Cupples House F G E Humanities Building Schwitalla Hall Queen’s Daughters Hall St. Francis Xavier College Church U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 17 Nineteen years ago Mike Isaacson was the assistant editor of this magazine. For the summer 1988 issue of Universitas, he wrote a story about Saint Louis University alumnus David Merrick (Law ’37), a legendary theater producer. Back then, Isaacson described Merrick as “the man who owned Broadway.” Nearly 20 years later, the same thing might soon be said about Isaacson. Broadway Bound. Mike Isaacson (A&S ’86, Grad – By Laura Geiser Photo by Bruce Gilbert 18 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du Cook ’96) worked at Saint Louis University for eight years before making the leap to Broadway producer. During his SLU career, he wrote news releases, served as the president’s assistant and was the vice president for institutional advancement. He’d always been interested in theater, but he didn’t necessarily plan a career in it. However, in fall 1996 Isaacson landed at the Fabulous Fox Theatre in St. Louis to book the season of touring shows and help bring a musical, Jekyll & Hyde, to Broadway. Under the auspices of Fox Theatricals, he and his producing partner, Kristin Caskey, have produced several commercial and critical hits since then. They include Tony Award winners Thoroughly Modern Millie and the revivals of Death of a Salesman and One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, as well as Caroline, or Change, the 1999 production of You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown, and the brand new Legally Blonde: The Musical, among others. Like Merrick before him, Isaacson’s journey to Broadway began at SLU. During his freshman orientation, he learned that the Fox Theatre was seeking volunteer ushers. Isaacson, who came to St. Louis from Milwaukee, promptly left his Oriflamme group and walked two blocks to the Fox to sign up. Later at SLU, he co-founded a theater company to bring popular musicals to campus. Isaacson never acted in the shows, but he loved putting all the pieces together. “We literally built the sets, sold the tickets and got friends to sew the costumes,” Isaacson said. “We did Godspell in Xavier Hall, and we completely sold out. Then the next year we did Grease, and that was a whomping smash hit. “It was also fun, genuinely fun, helping people express themselves.” But after college, Isaacson entered the real world and relegated his interest in theater to hobby status. Still, perhaps even unbeknownst to him, he was preparing to be a Broadway producer. In particular, his job as assistant to University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J., taught him many lessons he uses today. “Working with Father Biondi, I learned that just because nobody believes what you’re saying is no excuse not to keep going,” Isaacson said. “And also to build it right, and they’ll come. If you go back and read what Father was saying in his early speeches about what could happen to this institution, what could be, clearly articulating a vision, it’s almost all happened. And nobody would have believed it. “As a producer, the number one thing you have to have is faith in the show,” he continued. “Sometimes that leads you right into a brick wall. And you know what, you pick yourself up and keep going. You can’t be afraid of failure. “Working for Father Biondi, I sometimes had the experience that he was just walking by and shoving me into the deep end. I would say, ‘I can’t swim!’ He’d say, ‘Sure you can!’ And, boom, I learned, ‘Oh, OK, I can!’” Biondi recalled that Isaacson taught him a few things as well. “Mike has an eye for the big picture, for seeing how things work together,” Biondi said. “He helped me gain a broader perspective on many issues. Plus, as an alumnus, Mike knows what is special about SLU and worked hard to honor our history and our future. “I continue to trust Mike to rely on his good judgment. And I appreciate our friendship and mutual respect. “I’m not surprised he’s a big-time producer now,” Biondi continued. “In fact, I would be surprised if he hadn’t gone on to great things.” Going Blonde. Isaacson is standing in the middle of Times Square posing for a photo. He’d prefer to be doing almost anything else. He is clearly attracting attention, which is not much fun for someone who makes his living behind the scenes. (His philosophy: “At the end of the day, no one knows and no one cares who produced a show, nor should they. I like that fact that producing is about how you serve the show, the artists and most importantly, the audience.”) Some passers-by wonder if he is a celebrity. Some people just stare, perhaps resentful of the space he is occupying. Some pedestrians actually seem determined to disrupt the shot. Still, Isaacson is a trouper through it all, gamely posing as if hanging out at the world’s busiest intersection is part of his normal routine. It’s all in a day’s work for a Broadway producer with a new show to promote. For Isaacson, that show is Legally Blonde, a five-year labor of love that opened in April and garnered seven Tony nominations. Isaacson’s role as a producer can vary. Sometimes he and partners from theaters across the country team up to invest in shows, like they did with Spamalot and The Color Purple. Sometimes Isaacson has been brought in when there is already a script, and he helps assemble the rest of the players and investors, like he did with Thoroughly Modern Millie. And sometimes, he is there at the very beginning, when a show is just an idea. That was the case with Legally Blonde, the story of California sorority princess Elle Woods, who follows an exboyfriend to Harvard Law School. Fellow producer Hal Luftig, who collaborated with Isaacson and Caskey on Millie, originally believed the movie could make a good musical. “Hal kept saying, ‘Legally Blonde: The Musical. Legally Blonde: The Musical,’ and I was like, ‘Ew,’” Isaacson said, scrunching up his face. “I remembered the film as kind of pleasant, and funny, but I was not enthused.” U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 19 Luftig sent Isaacson a DVD of the movie and asked him to give it a chance. After resisting for weeks, Isaacson finally sat down to watch the movie and get Luftig off of his back. “So, I pop it in, and about 10 minutes into it, I hit the pause button,” Isaacson said. “I called Hal and said, ‘I’ve probably never been more wrong in my life. You’re absolutely right. There’s really something here.’” After discussing it with his colleagues, Isaacson knew that Legally Blonde could make a strong musical. “You had a main character whom everybody on stage was getting wrong, and we knew the audience was going to get Elle right,” he continued. “That’s a wonderful energy to have. “But what I really look for in any material is: What is the big idea? Certainly a lot of people tell me it’s about girl power and feminism, and I don’t want to belittle that. But we knew we had a show during the second scene of the musical, which is when Elle gets dumped by the man she thought she’d marry. Here you have a person who is going along in her life, sure and confident. Suddenly, the cannonball comes through the window, and it changes everything. “Everybody’s had that. If you’ve lived a life, you’ve had the cannonball.” Isaacson knew that everyone — not just sorority sisters, young girls or law students — could relate to Elle, even if her reaction to that cannonball is more extreme than most. So far, the show has met with success. Legally Blonde has been called “an Elle of a show” by Time magazine and “an awesome wattage of girl power” by the New York Post. And while Isaacson appreciates good reviews from the critics, he’s more concerned about what the audiences think. “There’s nothing harder to create than smart comedy and to feel an audience open up and enjoy it,” he said. “Life’s tough for everybody, so if you can give an audience two hours of joy, that’s really something. They just paid $100 for seat, and they’re walking out saying, ‘Thank you. Thank you.’ That’s gratifying.” Perhaps Isaacson knows what will make audiences happy because he’s such a fan himself. “Mike’s a successful producer because he loves his job,” Caskey said. “His profession is his passion. Ask him who won the Tony Award for Best Leading Actor in 1972 (Phil Silvers, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum), and he’ll know the answer. He respects the history and nuance of our profession. He works tirelessly to make sure that his shows are as good as they can be. He remains friends with all the creative artists he’s worked with because he respects the craft.” Striking a Balance. Though he spends lots of time in New York, Isaacson makes his home in St. Louis. And in between producing Broadway shows, he still serves as vice president for programming at the Fox, booking touring shows for the theater’s season. “I’m really lucky because I get to go into Manhattan and deal with what I want to deal with, be inspired in the way I want to be inspired and then get out and go home,” Isaacson said. “I love St. Louis.” 20 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du Producing partner Kristin Caskey thinks that his Midwest home offers Isaacson a unique perspective that very few Broadway producers have. “I think Mike realized that while Broadway is a New York destination, the majority of its audience isn’t based in New York,” she said. “Every Broadway show depends on tourists, more and more as the years go on, and eventually every Broadway show goes on the road. I believe one of the reasons the majority of our shows have been successful is because Mike has a temperature of the national audience through his interaction with his St. Louis audience.” He also remains committed to his role at the Fox, no matter how demanding both of his jobs can be. “Mike is one of the best things that has ever happened to the Fox,” said Mary Strauss, who led the renovation of the historic theater and now heads Fox Associates. “He’s amazing. I just respect him so much — his passion, his knowledge, his judgment.” That judgment requires that he use the business skills he honed while earning his SLU MBA to balance the theater’s financial side with its creative side. “In terms of how a creative art form makes money, you can’t know how the public is going to receive anything,” Isaacson said. “All you can do is do the best work you can. “Sure, I can assume certain things. I know that Legally Blonde: The Musical, if successfully done, has potentially a huge audience. But any bad musical has no audience. So, it really becomes about the work. “You have to be able to speak both languages,” he continued. “I know a lot about musicals — how they work and how to talk about them. But the way to a wonderful show is to let the artists — the writer, composer, lyricist, director and many others — find their own way and determine how they’re going to create. One of the best things I can do as a producer is give the creative team that freedom.” Although he’s only been in the theater producing business 11 years, Isaacson is already seeing the benefits of fostering that creative environment. He is proud that his 1920s-era flapper musical Thoroughly Modern Millie, which won the 2002 Tony Award for Best New Musical, is the nation’s top licensed show for high schools. “I think about all these kids out there who are bringing it to life in their own way,” he said. “And I had a part in creating it; I was a part of passing something on that is allowing young people to have fun, discover themselves and entertain.” In the end, it’s that feeling — not any Tony Award — that defines Isaacson’s success. “I never dreamed about winning awards as a kid,” he said. “Did I dream about standing at the back of a Broadway theater and listening to a thousand people go out of their minds with joy at something I had a hand in creating? Yes. That I will not deny. It is an unbelievable high. To experience that is such a gift.” hanks to a $1 million initiative, Saint Louis University is exploring three of the biggest issues facing the world in the 21st century — global warming, aging and the communication revolution. This innovative effort that encourages collaboration across the campus will establish new centers of excellence focused on those topics, among many others. Strengthening areas where SLU already has earned national prestige and recognition, this investment in three new centers and one existing center will take SLU’s research to greater heights. The endeavor also highlights the University’s emphasis on interdisciplinary research that is regional, national and international in scope. Dr. Mike Dockter, vice provost for research and chief research officer, said investment in these programs is expected to lead to funding from federal, state and private sources and will move SLU forward as a major research university. “These centers will produce research and scholarship that will be of great significance not only to the University, but also to the local and global communities that we serve,” Dockter said. – By Clayton Berry and Nancy Solomon C e n t e r f o r E n v i r o n m e n ta l S c i e n c e ith concerns growing over global warming, natural disasters and oil dependency, researchers with the Center for Environmental Science will advance understanding in the fields of climate change, natural hazards, sustainable development, biodiversity and other critical areas. The new center brings together top researchers from a number of disciplines, including geosciences, meteorology, biology, public health, political science and environmental law. The center also will partner with dozens of the world’s other leading educational and research institutions. “We must look beyond the boundaries of our own disciplines and even our own nations if we are to resolve the number of imminent and urgent environmental crises we are facing,” said Dr. Tim Kusky, the Paul C. Reinert Endowed Professor of Natural Sciences and director of the center. Kusky said the center also will address the underlying reasons why natural hazards, such as floods, earthquakes, tsunami and hurricanes, wreak such devastating havoc on the world’s population. “Natural hazards often become natural disasters only because people have moved into harm’s way,” said Kusky, who wrote Geological Hazards, a 2003 book that predicted the mass failure of levees in New Orleans. “Our goal is to educate the public about the dangers of developing high-risk areas and to find better ways to protect people who already live in the danger zones.” Another key research area will be water scarcity — an estimated 1.4 billion people lack access to clean drinking water, and nearly 450 million people in 29 countries face severe water shortages. “There is no doubt that freshwater ecosystems will become more important to humanity in the future than we could have ever imagined,” said Dr. Richard Mayden, an associate director of the center, William S. Barnickel Endowed Professor of Natural Sciences and the chairman of SLU’s biology department. U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 21 saint louis university Centers of excellence “ T hese centers w ill produce research and scholarship that w ill be of great significance not only to the Universit y, but also to the local and global communities that w e serve .” — Dr . Mik e Doc k ter In addition to the University’s investment, the new center also has received private funding, most notably a major gift from the Belt family to establish the Belt Laboratory for River Systems and Flood Hazards. The gift commemorates the pioneering contributions of the late SLU professor Dr. Charles Belt, who studied the hazards of constricting rivers by constructing levees. The center is a collaborative project among the SLU’s College of Arts and Sciences, School of Public Health, School of Law and College of Public Service. Principal investigators include Kusky and associate directors Mayden, Dr. Bill Dannevik (earth and atmospheric sciences), Dr. Steve Buckner (chemistry) and Dr. Wynne Moskop (political science). The Center for Environmental Science also will work with SLU’s Institute for Biosecurity to prepare the United States for nuclear, chemical and bioterrorism attacks. In addition, the center will reach out to the public through educational programs, including informational kiosks at zoos, science centers and botanical gardens across the nation. C e n t e r f o r A g i n g S u c c e s s f u l ly s the first wave of baby boomers turns 60, the Center for Aging Successfully will help them reach their goal of staying young. “Society’s growing older,” said Dr. John Morley, SLU’s director of geriatric medicine and coprincipal investigator of the new center. “We’re at the stage that the baby boomers are moving rapidly into the beginning of the ‘young’ old. They are eager to slow down the aging process and prevent health problems that rob them of their vitality. “We’re going to need better care — new and innovative approaches. This center gives SLU the opportunity to take the lead during the next century in developing the knowledge to provide the best possible care for the aged.” The study of growing old has already earned accolades for SLU. For the last 10 years, U.S. News & World Report consistently recognized 22 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du SLU’s geriatrics programs among the best in the country. Dr. Susan Tebb, director of the School of Social Work and co-principal investigator of the center, sees the designation as formal recognition of SLU’s track record in gerontology studies. “Our educators who are interested in aging issues from both sides of campus have been meeting informally for the last 30 years,” she said. “I’m delighted the University recognizes this is a need, and they’re allowing us to fulfill it.” Tebb said she hopes the new center will encourage students to consider working with the elderly as they plan their careers: “The need is tremendous, and it’s growing.” Dr. Nina Tumosa, professor of geriatrics and center co-principal investigator, said the center will make it easier for collaboration among faculty who work on aging issues. “We work as a team because we all bring critical components to the program,” she said. “Whatever we do with research and education, we want to translate to better patient care.” Faculty from the School of Medicine, Doisy College of Health Sciences, School of Public Health, College of Public Service, Graduate School and College of Arts and Sciences are part of the new center. A dedicated grant-writer will pursue funding opportunities to expand geriatrics research and education. In addition, the Center for Aging Successfully will provide education to the public through community programs, to SLU students at all degree levels, to health care providers working in local hospitals and to community health centers. Faculty could explore topics such as exercise and falls; Alzheimer’s disease; illness in certain population groups; nutrition; social problems; and emergency preparedness. Wa lt e r J. O n g , S . J. , C e n t e r f o r L a n g u a g e a n d C u lt u r e s e-mail, text messaging and blogging increasingly become part of everyday life, the Walter J. Ong, S.J., Center for Language and Culture will focus on the work of a scholar who predicted the rise of the Information Age. The new center honors the work of Ong (1912–2003), an internationally renowned scholar who spent his nearly 50-year career teaching and researching at SLU. Ong’s heralded and groundbreaking work focused on the transition from oral to written communication and the subsequent effect on society and culture. His work is presented alongside history’s most illustrious postmodern theorists, and entire college courses have been developed around his ideas. “The founding of this new center is especially important considering Ong’s pioneering theories of change in language and human communication, which have become more relevant today than ever before,” said Dr. Sara van den Berg, chairwoman of the English department and director of the center. “Technology is changing the way we communicate and relate to each other, and the center will give scholars a place to study this rapid revolution.” Ong (Grad ’41) was a prominent scholar of Renaissance literature and rhetoric before expanding his own work — and the field of literary studies — to cover culture, literacy and the impact of technology on human consciousness. His widely circulated book Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word has been translated into more than a dozen languages, and his scholarship has been cited in more than 2,000 works, making him one of the most frequently referenced Jesuit scholars ever. Located in Pius XII Memorial Library, the Ong Center is a collaborative project between the library’s department of special collections and the English department. The center will host a resident research scholar, an annual memorial lecture, fellowships, research seminars and conferences. In partnership with the Ong Center, the special collections department and its director, Dr. Gregory Pass, will make available to researchers Ong’s unpublished papers, manuscripts, lectures, correspondence, audio recordings and other materials, both on site and through the Internet. “This material forms a unique and invaluable resource for the study of Walter Ong’s thought and for the advancement of research in the fields he helped to develop,” Pass said. Prior to earning the rare appointment of University Professor — his scholarship was too broad and interdisciplinary to fit into any one category or department — Ong was a professor of English and a professor of humanities in psychiatry at the SLU School of Medicine. He was president of the Modern Language Association and served as a visiting lecturer at many of the world finest institutions. Ong also gave special talks all over the globe. The Ong Center is guided by a national advisory board of distinguished scholars and already has received support of $100,000 from the ICF Foundation. C e n t e r f o r M e d i e va l a n d R e n a i s s a n c e S t u d i e s reated 15 years ago, the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies has become one of the most respected centers of its kind in the United States. Funding from the $1 million initiative will be used to attract additional financial support from foundations, governmental programs and private individuals. The goal is to make the SLU center North America’s top site for Medieval and Renaissance scholarship. The center involves renowned faculty from multiple disciplines, including, history, theology, languages and the performing arts. This July, the center gets its first full-time director when Dr. Thomas Madden — a leading scholar on the Crusades — leaves his position as chairman of SLU’s history department to direct the center. The center also has a strong partnership with SLU’s illustrious Vatican Film Library, the world’s most extensive microfilm collection of manuscripts from the Vatican Library in Rome. U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 23 A recent graduate finds a way to share his passion for social justice. Photo by Kevin Lowder ong before Jesse Sullivan (A&S ’07) dreamed of dispensing social justice across the globe, he dreamed of dispensing a different brand of justice on the football field. As a teenager growing up in Petersburg, Ill. — population of about 2,300 — Sullivan set his sights on sports and expected to succeed. After all, it was the family tradition. His grandfather played baseball as a St. Louis Brown, his father and uncle are members of their respective college’s athletics halls of fame, and his siblings played sports at the collegiate level. 24 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du B – By Nick Sargent ut, as Sullivan tells it, God had a different plan. On the first day of contact during his high school football team’s grueling summer practices, one scary hit altered the then-junior’s plans. In a flash, Sullivan was injured in one of the worst possible ways. Doctors told him he had a cracked vertebra and would never play again. Looking at Sullivan, a tall, athletically built young man, you would never know he suffered such a serious injury or had his dream snatched away at such a young age. But in his affable and friendly way, Sullivan talks about his injury in a fortunate sense. Without that moment, he said he likely would not be heading to Oxford University on a scholarship earned through his accomplishments as a budding humanitarian. The seed planted D uring the fall of 2005, while a premed student at Saint Louis University, Sullivan studied abroad in El Salvador. Assisting doctors, he learned firsthand the difficult decisions facing many people in the world’s poorest economies. What he witnessed was startling: The medical care was bare bones. Patients had little financial means to pay for treatment they needed, Sullivan said. If he wanted to use rubber gloves, Sullivan was expected to bring them in himself. “There was a 14-year-old mom who brought in her 6-month-old little boy. He was emaciated and just covered in dirt. He was so skinny and looked about ready to die,” Sullivan said. “The doctor got really mad at the mom and yelled at her about taking care of her son. I thought, this girl is only 14, she lives in this little run-down shack across the street, it didn’t have real walls: How is that little girl going to take care of a kid?” He vividly recalls the difficult decisions facing patients like the mother of an epileptic baby boy. She couldn’t afford $12 a month for his medicine, so she had to “sit there and watch him” when he had seizures, Sullivan said. “You want to provide the money for them,” he said. “But then in the bed right next to them there’s a similar situation, and the one right next to that.” Before he stepped on the plane that would take him back to the creature comforts of home, Sullivan said he felt pangs of guilt. How could he return to a world of excesses when he was leaving behind thousands of people who didn’t have the basic necessities of life? Surely, if people back home knew the direness of the situation in El Salvador, To subscribe to OneWorld, send a request to: OneWorld Saint Louis University Busch Student Center 1200 20 N. Grand Blvd. St. Louis, MO 63103 he thought, they would be compelled to do something about it. The sad irony of the gap between Latin America and the United States struck him when he landed at the Miami airport. There, the important headline of the week shouted off the magazine covers: Nick Lachey and Jessica Simpson were getting divorced. Rather than feel defeated by the type of news occupying Americans, he found inspiration in it. When he returned to the University, he began talking with other students who had similar experiences on mission trips as well as to students enrolled at SLU from around the world. They shared a desire to shine a much brighter light on the social injustices they witnessed. So they created a new student group, OneWorld, as an umbrella organization to foster greater collaboration among social justice groups on campus. A key part of their efforts was producing a magazine about social justice, also called OneWorld. The OneWorld students are driven by a common motivator to get young people to wake up to the realities of their world and to their own capacity to create a better world. “Unless each person does that and takes the responsibility (to make the world better), we will never get there,” Sullivan said. “But OneWorld never would have come about with just me or my idea. So many people were willing to follow that passion.” Sullivan and the OneWorld staff have produced three editions of the magazine thus far and have served as a source of inspiration for other college students across the country. Word of mouth led six other universities to start OneWorld organizations last year, including Washington University in St. Louis; University of Illinois-Chicago; Santa Clara University; John Carroll University; Marquette University; and Boston College. “I’m not surprised. I’m really excited (that other universities would suppport OneWorld), but I didn’t doubt that would be the case. Just like at SLU, there are a lot of people ready for a change,” Sullivan said. “I believe in that deep-seated goodness in every single person. In us, we all have the desire to do something good with our talents. I think that message rang true with kids who want to see the world a better place and be a part of that.” a world citizen T he mission of OneWorld would be familiar to anyone who has spent more than an hour on SLU’s campus. Every article in the magazine evokes the Jesuit ideal of preparing men and women for others. “We try to find things to bring to light the idea that while we live in different worlds, we’re all connected,” Sullivan said. For example, while the most recent edition of the magazine includes articles by students reflecting on student mission trips and highlighting issues such as malaria, it also features stories on fair-trade fashion and the philanthropic works of St. Louis Cardinals slugger Albert Pujols. But more than informing college students about all of the injustices in the world, Sullivan hopes that the stories in OneWorld magazine will empower readers. Next step T hat line of thinking will serve Sullivan well this fall when he enters the global governance and diplomacy program at the University of Oxford in England on a Rotary International Scholarship. The program will allow him to study with some of the brightest and most promising international political minds. He said he isn’t sure what he will do when he finishes at Oxford. He has deferred his acceptance to SLU School of Medicine until next year and also is considering pursuing a career with the United Nations. Where his future takes him depends most on where he believes he can make the biggest difference in the world. He does know this: Those who believe the harsh realities of the post-university world will dull his youthful idealism don’t understand what he’s all about. A devout Catholic, he says he finds inspiration from a line in the Quran, the Muslim holy book: “To take one life is as if you take the life of all humanity, and to save one life is as if you save all humanity.” “You want to be able to save the world and really change things,” Sullivan said. “You really have to think about where passion lies and get involved with that. If we try to help out, we can.” U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 25 ’41 ’43 Dr. Alexander Horwitz (Med) is 92 years old and lives in Murfreesboro, Tenn. John Fish (Parks) has been traveling in the Caribbean, but he makes his home in Georgetown, Texas. Dr. John Jamieson (Med) assists at Sunday Mass and enjoys home and yard care. He lives in Fairfield Glade, Tenn. ’47 Dr. Carl Kisslinger (A&S ’47, Grad ’49, ’52) lives in Boulder, Colo., and is a professor emeritus of geological science at the University of Colorado. He is also a fellow emeritus environmental science. Joseph Navajovsky (Parks) retired after 47 years with General Motors Corp., and many years in the fine woodworking business. He lives in Grand Blanc, Mich. ’49 Betty (Hebrank) Evans (Pub Ser) is preparing to move from her home of 50 years in New Canaan, Conn., to Concord, Mass., to be closer to her daughters. Jo Ann Morici (Nurs) lives in Clifton, N.J,. and has been retired for 22 years. She visits the sick and stays involved with politics. Dr. Karl Walter (Med) is retired and lives on a 120-acre farm in Mondovi, Wis. He enjoys gardening and landscaping. ’51 Dr. Franklin Dailey (Med) is retired and lives in Reno, Nev. Donald Hilts (Parks) retired in 1990 after 37 years with Vought Aircraft. He lives in Arlington, Texas. Dr. James Kelly (Med) lives in Monroe, Wis. ’52 Dr. Robert Grossman (Med) lives in Newtown, Conn., and is retired from surgical practice. He is an assistant medical examiner for the State of Connecticut. Dr. William Meyer (Med) lives in Sylvania, Ohio, and has been retired from his obstetrics and gynecology practice for 13 years. 26 U NI V ER SITA S ’53 James Armstrong (IT) is retired from the U.S. Marine Corps and as the director of aviation at Texas Instruments. He lives on and operates a ranch in Van Alstyne, Texas. JoAnn Mahan (Grad ’53,’55) lives in Davis, Calif., and helps seniors find affordable housing. She is retired from 45 years of teaching, research and educational evaluation. Dr. Frank Ritter (Med) is retired in Ann Arbor, Mich. He and his wife have kept busy fundraising for their parish, St. Thomas the Apostle. ’54 Nicholas Bahn (SW) is a retired clinical therapist and lives in Tucson, Ariz. He works as a caretaker for several 95-year-olds and helps second graders learn to read. Dr. Delbert Harris (Med) retired in 1993 from a private family practice and in 2004 as the examining physician at the St. Louis Military Examination Processing Center for the U.S. Department of Defense. He lives in Lebanon, Ill. Charles Miller (A&S) lives in Lake Worth, Fla. After 45 years of private practice, he is now of counsel to the North Brunswick, N.J., law firm of Galex/Wolf. James Muenz (IT) has retired with his wife to Punta Gorda, Fla. He has five children and 10 grandchildren, enjoys golf, tennis and boating, and also teaches navigation for the Coast Guard Auxiliary. ’55 Renner Hofmann (IT) is a retired geophysicist. He lives in Fair Oaks, Calif., and spends time with his wife, Winifred, his children, Teresa, Deanna and William, and his four grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Jerry McKain (SW) is retired from military, state and private practices and lives in Steilacoom, Wash. He has six daughters, 12 grandchildren and has been married for 51 years. ’56 Richard Jasinski (Parks) is retired and lives in Potomac, Md., where he enjoys doing church work. Dr. Raymond Jorgensen (Med) has done medical missionary work in Vietnam and Cuba since retiring. He also is involved in Habitat for Humanity and is president of the Forest Ridge Home Owners Association. He lives in Anacortes, Wash. w w w. s lu .e du ’57 Lillian (Marsh) Daniels (Nurs) is retired and lives in Fort Madison, Iowa, where she participates in volunteer activities. Edward Moose (SW) lives in San Francisco and recently sold Moose’s Restaurant in the North Beach neighborhood. James Powers (Cook) lives with his wife in St. Louis. They have nine grandchildren; the oldest is a SLU student. Dr. Lawrence Wiegers (Dent) lives in O’Fallon, Ill., and has been retired for 18 years. His interests include gold, travel, and his children and grandchildren. ’58 Mary (Danis) Fellows (Nurs ’58, Grad ’73) has 10 grandchildren and is the parish nurse for two churches. She lives in Sturgeon Bay, Wis., and is an active member of the National Alliance for Mental Illness. John Gumersell (Law) lives in St. Louis and retired from a 45-year career as an attorney. Lee Hoff (Nurs) lives in Boston and is an international consultant, educator and writer on violence issues for health and social service professionals. John Van Zeyl (A&S) volunteers to teach English grammar to seventhgrade students at Sacred Heart School in Melrose Park, Ill. He is retired after 42 years of practicing law. He and his wife, Peggy, live in River Forest, Ill. ’59 Dorothy (Hertel) Bier (Doisy) lives in Cleveland Heights, Ohio, and retired in 2002 after 43 years as a physical therapist. Ruthann Burke (Pub Ser) handles surgery authorizations at a hospital. She also provides spiritual direction and lives in Aurora, Ill. Dr. Donald Butz (Dent) is retired and lives along the James River in Williamsburg, Va. He fills his time with his children and grandchildren, golf and traveling. Robert Crowe (Parks) lives in Glencoe, Mo., and is the president and owner of Dythonix Inc. Dr. Mary (Buser) Edgington (Grad ’59, ’61) teaches accelerated math to seventh- and eighth-graders at Blessed Sacrament School in Wichita, Kan. She retired from Wichita State University in 1992. Dr. Francis J. Miller (Dent) received the Greater St. Louis Dental Society’s top honor, the Gold Medal Award, in 2007. Since the early 1990s, he has administered dental and medical care on mission trips to the underprivileged in Venezuela, Belize, Honduras, Haiti, Peru, Kosovo, Cambodia, Mongolia and Nicaragua. ’60 John M. Bray (A&S ’60, Law ’62), senior partner of King & Spalding, is one of the top 100 lawyers in Washington, D.C., according to Super Lawyers Magazine. Dr. Leonard Hertko (Med) retired from his internal medicine practice after 40 years. He lives in Orland Park, Ill. Gail (Schexnayder) Vigil (A&S) is an organist and pianist at church. She lives in Memphis, Tenn. ’61 Dr. Karen (Keefe) Dooley (Grad ’61, ’65) retired from Schreiner University and was named professor emeritus of psychology in 2005. She lives in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she is active in liturgical ministries and nursing homes. Donald Sheppard (Cook) is a partner in the accounting firm Pasquesi, Sheppard LLC. He lives in Lake Forest, Ill. Charles Stein (A&S ’61, Grad ’68) retired after 37 years as an associate professor of English at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb. ’62 Margaret Clare “Peggy” Espinda (A&S) retired from a car insurance career in 2005. She now is involved with many organizations, including the board of the Ludwig Symphony Orchestra, the Center for Bioethical Reform and the Genocule Awareness Program. She lives in Dunwoody, Ga. Gerald J. Meyer (A&S) has had the paperback edition of his book A World Undone published. He lives in Goringon-Thames, England, and is under contract with Random House to write a book on the Tudor dynasty. Daniel T. Rabbitt (Cook ’62, Law ’64) received the 2007 Award of Honor from the Lawyers Association of St. Louis. He is a principal in the firm Rabbitt, Pitzer & Snodgrass, P.C., is a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers and is included in the 2007 Best Lawyers in America. Glenn Sartori (IT ’62, Grad ’69) has had his college textbooks Industrial Electronics and Programmable Logic Controllers published by Prentice Hall. He is the board president of HavenHouse St. Louis and lives with his wife, Rosanne, in Creve Coeur, Mo. Dr. Michael Steiner (Med) is retired and volunteers at a pediatric clinic for migrant children in West Palm Beach, Fla. Dr. Michael Suchenski (Med) is a pediatrician with Davien Pediatric Associates and lives in Stamford, Conn. ’63 Dr. Robert Balen (Med) is semiretired and lives in Lake Oswego, Ore. Loretto (Farley) Buttimer (A&S ’63, Grad SW ’65) is a hospice social worker at Heartland Hospice in Macon, Ga. She lives in Milledgeville. ’65 Dr. Peter Barcia (Med) and his wife, Julie, have lived in Kailua, Hawaii, since 1965. They have 10 children and 13 grandchildren. He retired from the Army in 1997 after 32 years and now works and teaches as a general surgeon. David J. Hensler (A&S ’65, Law ’67), senior partner of Hogan & Hartson, is one of the top 100 lawyers in Washington, D.C., according to Super Lawyers Magazine. Donald Holdener (IT ’65, Grad ’69) has two sons and two daughters. He lives in Florissant, Mo. Gail Sirna (A&S) published a book, In Praise of the Needlewoman: Embroiderers, Knitters, Lacemakers, and Weavers in Art with Merrell Publishers, and she freelances as an embroidery teacher and designer. She is also a translator and lives in Rochester, Mich. She recently visited her SLU roommate Marianne Tinnell-Faure (A&S) in Paris. Sandra Venegoni (Nurs) lives in Richmond, Va., and retired as a professor from the School of Nursing at the Medical College of Virginia. She is now does physical therapy work and travels. ’67 Dr. Gerald Dzurik (Med) has a private pediatrics practice in Shreveport, La. Jane (Huiskamp) Langford (A&S) is the owner and publisher of her hometown community newspaper in Nauvoo, Ill. Dr. Suzanne (O’Connell) Smeltzer (Nurs) received an award for faculty research in 2006 from Villanova University. She lives in Princeton, N.J. ’68 Dr. Eugene Galvin (Med) practices orthopedic surgery in San Francisco. His fourth child, Michael, is a senior at SLU. Michael Klestinski (SW) lives in Libertyville, Ill. Margaret (Trauten) Larsen (Doisy) is retired and volunteers in Racine, Wis. Eleanor (Lampe) Reichert (Pub Ser) lives in St. Charles, Mo. Susan Roche (A&S) is an assistant state public defender with the Ohio Public Defender’s Office and since 1998 has represented death row inmates in the appeal of their convictions and sentences. ’69 Pamela (McGrath) Colasurdo (Pub Ser) is a speech language specialist working in a learning center with special-needs people. She lives in New Milford, N.J. Margaret Dalton (Pub Ser) lives in Collinsville, Ill., and is a speech and language pathologist, travel agent and nutrition consultant. Jose M. Lopez (Parks) retired in January after 37 years in the aerospace industry. He has worked for U.S. Air Force, Hughes Aircraft Co., Raytheon Co., and Lockheed Martin Corp. He lives in Aurora, Colo. Ellen (Kemmeter) Meyer (SW) lives in Fort Collins, Colo., and retired from medical social work in 2004. She is a full-time caregiver and a flutist at church, an orchestra and a community concert band. George Sevick (Parks) is retired from the U.S. Air Force and then from The Boeing Co. after 28 years there. He lives in Wichita, Kan. ’70 James Carlson (Cook) lives in Lake St. Louis, Mo., and does life cycle cost analysis for The Boeing Co., in St. Louis. Al Marcus (A&S ’70, Grad ’72) is vice president of business development for Missouri Enterprise in St. Louis. Carol (Frankovich) Strader (A&S ’70, Grad ’72) is retired and is a trustee at the Cathedral of St. Mary in Cheyenne, Wyo. Ben Abell For a man who has spent more than 40 years teaching at Saint Louis University and serving as the voice of St. Louis weather, Ben Abell (A&S ’60, Grad ’65) is characteristically modest when describing his career. “It was just natural for me to come out here with the Jesuits and their teaching and just stay on,” he said. And though he has taught generations of SLU students, Abell, a professor of earth and atmospheric sciences at SLU, has a much wider audience thanks to his folksy style and honest weather reports on local radio. (The man actually says when he isn’t sure!) During the last several decades, he has appeared on stations KWMU-FM, the local National Public Radio affiliate; KMOX-AM; KFUO-AM; and a radio service used by the visually impaired. He is the only meteorologist in the St. Louis Radio Hall of Fame. In April, he retired from KWMU after 35 years of appearing on air 16 times a day, five days a week. Despite the hours and the fulltime commitment, Abell remains philosophical about his radio days. “I feel that I got more from the experience than I gave,” he said. At SLU, Abell has taught a variety of courses, from trigonometry to graduate-level seminars about hurricanes and typhoons. He has seen all the weather-predicting tools get more sophisticated during his time on campus. “I arrived at the same time as a new radar,” Abell said. And he has since seen it updated and replaced several times. As computer use and capabilities grew, Abell never backed down from learning new technology. Before his retirement from radio, Abell arrived on campus almost every day at 4:45 a.m. to begin preparing for his forecasts. His honest reports became his trademark and attracted many students to his classes. Once in the classroom, however, Abell’s students discovered a man as passionate about water current temperatures and extreme weather as he is about getting to know everyone on a first-name basis. In fact, as coordinator for the undergraduate meteorology program, Abell makes an effort to spend more than half an hour with every prospective student. He said he “loves gray areas” and enjoys the art of putting together an extended forecast that only time, experience and the gut can accomplish. Abell, a selfprofessed “weather nut,” has tried to share this art with his students as part of his holistic approach to education, an approach he modeled after the Jesuits who taught him at SLU. photo by Kevin Lowder ’39 Merle Williams (Parks) lives in Lynbrook, N.Y., with his wife, Paula. They are both retired and enjoy visiting their children. Dr. Charles Peterson (Med) is retired and lives in Osage Beach, Mo., where he is involved with the Boy Scouts, church and his family. In fact, SLU offered Abell two mentors. Joseph McCallin, S.J. (A&S ’34, Grad ’36, ’48), a historian and Constitutional law expert, showed Abell that a “lovable character” can inspire passion among his students, even when they aren’t majors in the subject. Dr. Ross Heinrich (Grad ’38, ’44), a geophysicist and meteorologist, had a teaching style that so impressed Abell that he still emulates it today. Abell said that his dual alumnus and instructor status has only made him more “solid for SLU.” Despite his retirement from the airwaves, Abell will continue to teach at the University full time. That means a forecast of sunshine and clear skies for students for years to come. — Colleen Kiphart U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 27 ’71 Father Robert Jovanovic (Pub Ser) is the pastor of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish in the St. Louis Archdiocese. Dr. Judith Pachciarz (Med) is a hospital pathologist and director of the blood transfusion service at Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science in Los Angeles. She was honored by the “Changing the Face of Medicine” Web site for her career as one of the first profoundly deaf women physicians in the United States. Connie (Collett) Robinette (Pub Ser ’71, Grad ’74) is a Web developer and graphic producer at South Carolina’s ETV. ’72 Dr. Kathleen (Thiel) LeVeck (Nurs ’72, Med ’80) lives in Mattoon, Ill., and is an obstetrician and gynecologist at the Carle Clinic. classnotes Dr. Edward O’Boyle (Cook) is retiring from Louisiana Tech University after 30 years. He held every office in the Association for Social Eco- nomics and received the association’s Thomas Divine Award for lifetime contributions. He was also a visiting professor at the Poznan (Poland) School of Management, the National University of Ireland in Galway, Santa Clara University and the University of Verona. James Palumbo (A&S) lives in St. Louis and is managing director for a marketing and advertising agency. He has two children, Michael and Lisa. Carol (Gariepy) Roble (A&S) lives in Farmington, Mich., and is a reading recovery teacher, literacy coach and test coordinator at Gill Elementary in the Farmington Public School System. ’73 Yolande Bourgeois (A&S ’73, Law ’78) is an associate judge for the Circuit Court of Cook County in Chicago. Joseph Funfar (A&S) is a substitute teacher for Olentandy Middle and High Schools. He lives in Columbus, Ohio. Notes on class notes Do you have some news to share with your fellow SLU alumni? Here’s a quick overview of our basic Class Notes guidelines. T he Class Notes section is one of the first items we finish for each issue because its length determines the page count for our feature stories. That means that we often stop compiling notes for an issue almost two months before you receive it. But we do include every note we get. So if you’ve sent us some news and don’t see it in the very next issue, don’t despair. We’re holding onto it and will run it next time. e do not run information about upcoming marriages, births W or other occasions. Because things don’t always work out as planned (and because we have such a long lag time between issues), we prefer to share your happy news after the event has occurred. nfortunately, we don’t have the space to run photos, so U please don’t send them. In general, we only run one Class Note per alum per year. Although it’s great to hear from you often, space constraints limit us to annual updates. e accept Class Notes only in written form (via mail, fax or W e-mail — see addresses on page 29). No items are accepted over the phone. As always, thanks for writing. We love hearing from you. 28 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du Dr. Leonard Rawson (Med) has an internal medicine practice in Downey, Calif., and lives in Huntington Beach, Calif. ’74 Terry Lueckenhoff (A&S) lives in St. Louis and has joined the litigation department of Blackwell Sanders Peper Martin LLP. Dr. Richard Kagan (Med) lives in Cincinnati and is the 40th president of the American Burn Association. Dr. Deborah (Lucas) McDermott (A&S ’74, Med ’78) is president of the St. Clair County Medical Society and lives in Belleville, Ill. Dorothy Stratman-Lucey (Nurs ’74, Grad ’77) received the Pain Management Clinical Nursing Practice Award from the American Society for Pain Management Nursing in March. She lives in St. Louis. ’75 Barbara (Feldman) Geffen (Law) lives in Tulsa, Okla., and has been the general counsel at the University of Tulsa since 1992. Roseann (Maloney) Hughes (Doisy) is a physical therapist at SSM Rehab in St. Louis. Her husband, Robert Hughes (Cook ’74) is a credit manager for VAS. They have three children: Tom (Cook ’01), Rosemary Sumpter and Maureen (Cook ’07), who played on SLU’s women’s soccer team. Melinda (Aromando) Impellizzeri (A&S) works in quality organization at General Electric in Louisville, Ky. Dr. James A. Junker (A&S ’75, Med ’79) is president and CEO of Scott Radiological Group in St. Louis. Cynthia (Pollard) Schmitz (A&S) lives in Arlington Heights, Ill. She is an award-winning quilter who lectures and teaches nationally. Dr. Stephen G. Slocum (Med) is the 2007 president of the St. Louis Metropolitan Medical Society. He is an ophthalmologist in private practice, with offices in Chesterfield, Richmond Heights and Wing Haven, Mo. A resident of Chesterfield, he is married and has three grown children. ’76 Gloria (Garza) Adamez (Pub Ser) retired after 40 years of teaching. She lives in Corpus Christi, Texas. Dr. Mark Fildes (Med) is an interventional cardiologist at the Heart Center of Northeastern Ohio in Boardman, Ohio. Mario Lustgarten (Parks) is a captain and chief engineer on a 747-400 in Israel. He is married with twin sons and a daughter. ’77 Debra Brown (SW ’77, Grad SW ’78) graduated from the Assemblies of God Theological Seminary in Zagreb/ Osijek, Croatia, with a doctor of ministry degree. Mike Doyle (A&S) is the regional technology director for the Americas in the integrated supply and trading group at BP North America. He and his wife live in a southern suburb of Chicago with their two sons. Shannon (Daly) McAninch (Nurs) has four children and lives in Sarasota, Fla. Alberta (Means) Hitchings (SW ’80, Grad SW ’84) is retired and does volunteer work. Previously, she was a social worker for Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis and served in the Peace Corps in Liberia and West Africa. Donald Russo (Law) is a shareholder with Schwabe, Williamson and Wyatt. He lives in Vancouver, Wash., and both of his children are college graduates. ’78 Dr. Stephen Crawford (Med) is the senior medical director of the CIGNA Lifesource Transplant Network. In 2001, he resigned from a professorship at University of California-San Diego to serve four years for the U.S. Navy in the North Arabian Gulf. He lives in Coronado, Calif. Michael A. Fahey (Law) was appointed to a first judicial district trial court bench vacancy by Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty. He serves in the city of Shakopee and lives in Carver, Minn., where he is also the Carver County attorney. James Nickols (A&S) is pastor of Reformation Lutheran Church and Childcare in Newport, Va. He also chairs the board of United Campus Ministries at Christopher Newport University and is on the board of the Peninsula Pastoral Counseling Center. ’79 David Blick (A&S) and his wife, Sarah, live in Prairie Village, Kan., where he is the director of the cardiac cath lab at Research Medical Center. Dr. Thomas J. Olsen (Med) is the acting director of SLU’s division of general internal medicine and received the 2006 Laureate Award from the Missouri Chapter of the American College of Physicians. Dr. Mark Terry (Med) lives in Portland, Ore. He developed a new form of surgery for corneal transplantation that allows patients to see improvement in a matter of weeks rather than years. He has taught this surgery around the world. ’80 Orrin Dayton (A&S) lives in Huntington, Ill., and has had a private physical therapy since practice 1982. He and his wife, Kathy, have five children. Katherine (Machowsky) Murray (Nurs) lives in Middletown, Md., where she is the nursing director for the women’s and children’s service line at Frederick Memorial Hospital. ’81 William Carrier (Parks) is a mechanical and structural engineer at The Boeing Co. in St. Louis. Julia Moskoff (Nurs) and her husband, Donald McDonald, have one daughter, Natalie. Julia works in the recovery room at SLU Hospital. Dr. James Ritterbusch (Med) is an orthopedic surgeon in private practice. He, his wife, Linda, and daughter, Erin, live in Lexington, Ky. Dr. Jeffrey Reese (Med) is a transplant surgeon at St. Luke’s Hospital in Kansas City, Mo. He has two daughters. Dr. James Rice (Med) is the commanding officer of the USNS Mercy (T-AH) hospital ship, which is home-ported in San Diego. Stephen Sikes (Parks) lives in Melbourne, Fla., with his wife, Colleen, and two children. He started a credit card comparison site, CreditCardRadio.com. ’84 Scott Dort (Parks) works at Piper Aircraft Inc. in Vero Beach, Fla. Gary Gnaedinger (Cook) is the Pacific Olefins business manager for the Dow Chemical Co. in Shanghai, China. ’85 Daniel Collins (A&S ’85, Grad ’93) lives in Ballwin, Mo., and is an accounting specialist and client relations representative for Citigroup. Lorie (Ballaban) MacDonald (Doisy) is the owner and operator of Ultimate Rehab Ltd. She lives in Cincinnati with her husband and three sons, the oldest of whom, Brian, is a SLU student. Kristi (Scaparro) Saunders (A&S) is a professor at the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine with special interests in global and menopausal medicine. She has two sons, Joffrey and Kellen. Dr. Paula (Marcheski) Termuhlen (A&S ’85, Med ’89) and her husband, David Termuhlen (A&S ’89) live in Dayton, Ohio. They have two children, Christopher and Anka, and are adopting a third, Siddharth, from India. Richard Walton (A&S ’81, Grad ’86) opened the Tulsa Center for Child Psychology on Jan. 1 in his hometown of Tulsa, Okla. ’86 ’82 Maureen Laflin (Law) lives in Moscow, Idaho. She is a professor and director of clinical programs at the University of Idaho’s College of Law. Andrew Brooks Piucci (Cook) lives with his wife, Michele, in Gainesville, Ga., where he is a business team leader with the Clorox Professional Products Division. He received the Clorox Sales Achievement Award. Andrew Rice (Cook) is a software engineer for Northrop Grumman Corp., and lives in San Diego. ’83 Janice (Dimitry) Doerr (SW, A&S) is a social worker at Delmar Gardens South Skilled Nursing and Rehab Center. She lives in St. Louis County with her husband, Gary, and their four children. Anne Stohr O’Brien (Nurs) is a lawyer with the Polsinelli Law Firm in Kansas City, Mo., where she practices health care law. Anne and her husband, Terry, have two children, Ellen and Michael. Timothy Blanchard (Law, Pub Hlth) practices health care law in Los Angeles. He was named a Los Angeles “Super Lawyer” and to the Chambers USA Best Lawyers in America. Katherine Krause (Pub Ser) is pursuing her master’s degree in early childhood education at the University of Missouri-St. Louis. Allison (Cummings) Swain (Pub Ser) is a career education manager at Lippincott Williams and Wilkins. She lives in Marietta, Ga., and has three children, Sydney, Eric and Nicholas. ’88 Maria (Dolan) Concannon (A&S, Cook) lives with her husband and children in Knoxville, Tenn. She sells commercial real estate for RM Moore Real Estate Co. Alison Madden (A&S) lives with her two sons in Redwood City, Calif., and is on the licensing council at a hightech company. Amy (Slaughter) Sullivan (Cook) is a senior district sales manager with Abbott Laboratories in Indianapolis. She and her husband, Kurt, have two children, Thomas and Susie. ’89 Josephine (McDonald) McCarthy (Doisy) lives with her husband, John, and their children, Maggie and Will, in St. Joseph, Mo. She is a physical therapist and works part-time for a home health agency. Erin Marie O’Loughlin-Brinkman (Nurs) is the diabetes educator at St. Anthony’s Medical Center and is working on a master’s degree in nursing at Webster University. She lives in Manchester, Mo., and has two children, Bridget and Thomas. Timothy Schellhardt (Cook ’89, Grad ’92) is the vice president and CFO at Royal Papers Inc. in St. Louis. ’90 Dr. Anne Coates-Conway (Grad) is a consultant and lives in Annadale, Va. In 2002, she retired as an associate professor of counselor education at Trinity University in Washington, D.C. Peggy Cotter (Doisy) lives in Belleville, Ill., and is a hematology specialist at St. Louis Children’s Hospital. ’92 Matthew Baute (A&S) is a full-time music missionary and travels the country playing prayer concerts and providing music for liturgies and healing retreats. His newest CD of contemporary Catholic music is Hold Me, Lord. Daniel J. Merlo (A&S) serves on the Midwest BankCentre South County Regional Board. He is responsible for the sales, leasing and marketing of industrial properties and land for the Sansone Group in St. Louis. Joe Naert (Cook) is president of Naert Cos. and was selected as one of the St. Louis Business Journal’s 13th annual “40 Under 40” class members. ’93 Cynthia Burke (A&S) is a licensed professional counselor in Missouri, Illinois and Georgia. She works on change management and process improvement strategies for United Healthcare in Atlanta. Candace Hill (Law) lives in Indianapolis and is the in-house counsel for the Steak ’n Shake Co. Christine De Anna (SW) is a community wellness coach for Mercy Home Care in Grayling, Mich. Matthew Nordmann (A&S ’90, Grad ’91, Law ‘94) works for the St. Louis Equity Fund. He and his wife, Mary, have welcomed their third child. Dr. Jacqueline Kovacs Serena (Med) is a commander in U.S. Navy and is stationed at the Naval Medical Center in San Diego in pediatric neurology. She is married to Gustavo Serena. Amy Sims (Nurs) lives in Atlanta and is a mother of two. She is an assistant nurse manager at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. Kathleen Tall (A&S) is the program director for a transitional residential program at Spring Grove Hospital Center in Catonsville, Md., and has been a staff psychologist at the hospital for 15 years. Dennis Weeks (A&S) is the dean of liberal arts for Harper College in Palatine, Ill. ’91 David Flassing (Cook) is a field attorney for the office of chief counsel for the Internal Revenue Service in Chicago. He and his wife, Trisha, welcomed their first child, Jesse Atticus. On a roll? TELL CLASS NOTES UNIVERSITAS Class Notes Saint Louis University DuBourg Hall 39 221 North Grand Blvd. St. Louis, MO 63103 fax: (314) 977-2249 e-mail: [email protected] David Martin (Cook) is dean of the College of Business at Bloomsburg University and lives in Elysburg, Pa. Michelle (Uber) Kletzli (Cook) is a workers compensation underwriter in Philadelphia. Dr. Richard Shaw (Med) lives in Calabasas, Calif., and is a member of a primary care practice in the Simi Valley. Kara (Dorrell) Koenig (A&S) and her husband, Michael, welcomed their first child, Luke, March 5. They live in U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 29 Fairlawn, Ohio, where Kara is the lead volunteer coordinator with the CASA/ GAL of Summit County. Rebecca (Sylvester) Kuehn (Doisy) is a physician assistant and has lived in Amana, Iowa, since 1997. Glen O’Connor (A&S) and Beth (English) O’Connor (Cook ’95) had their second child, Catherine, on Jan. 15, joining big brother, Thomas. Glen is the director of technology at the new Kansas City Cristo Rey High School, and Beth is a senior network consultant at Ingenix. Timothy Zoern (Parks) works for Pratt and Whitney in East Hartford, Conn. classnotes ’94 Chiarra-May (Elayda) Stratton (A&S) is a health care attorney in the Washington, D.C., office of Ober/Kaler. She and her husband, Grayson, welcomed their daughter, Jorja-Tei, in April 2006. They live in Alexandria, Va. Marilyn Norris (SW) lives in Laurel, Md., and is a mental health therapist and psycho-educator with the Senior Outreach Program in Montgomery County, Md. Dr. Thomas Zarka (Med) is an obstetrician and gynecologist in a private practice in Derry, N.H. He and his wife, Sheila, have four children, Grace, Eliza, Clare and Christian. ’96 Juan Pelaez Millas (Parks ’96, Grad ’98) and Jaime Sanchez Poxon (Parks) have started a company called SIMSPACE in Madrid. Juan also occasionally teaches at SLU’s Madrid campus. William Dulle (Cook) is a manager of portfolio management at Ameren Energy Marketing. He and his wife, Kelly, live in St. Charles, Mo. Dr. James Porter (Med) is the chief medical officer for Deaconess Health System in Evansville, Ind., where he lives with his wife, Kristy, and their three daughters. Michael Fell (A&S) is the general manager for NRF Media. He lives in Colby, Kan. Noel (Howard) Schiber (A&S), her husband, Dave, and daughter, M.J., welcomed baby Rachel Evelyn on March 17. They live in East Alton, Ill., and Noel is a senior writer for the BarnesJewish Hospital Foundation. Dr. Scott C. Jones (Pub Hlth) is medical director of BJC Corporate Health Services in St. Louis. Previously he was regional medical director of Union Pacific Railroad and medical director for SSM Corporate Health Services. Dr. Miguel A. Paniagua (A&S) moved back to St. Louis with his wife, Elizabeth, and sons Theodore, Jonah and Sam. He is an assistant professor in SLU’s department of internal medicine, division of gerontology and geriatric medicine. Diego Baeza Perez-Fontan (Parks ’94, Grad ’96) is an A330 MRTT controller and an earned value manager at EADS CASA. He lives in Derby, United Kingdom. David P. Stoeberl (A&S ’94, Law ’97) is a principal with Carmody MacDonald P.C. in St. Louis. Dan Wetzel (A&S) has joined the Dallas office of the Deloitte Financial Advisory Services LLP, where he specializes in dispute consulting and forensic investigations. ’95 Brian C. Behrens (Law) is a principal with Carmody MacDonald P.C. in St. Louis. David Hurley (A&S) is a high school teacher with the St. Louis Public Schools and lives in Dupo, Ill. Dr. Andrew Law (Med) is a clinical assistant professor at the University of Hong Kong. He received a doctorate in neuroscience from McGill Univer- 30 sity in 2002, had postgraduate training in psychiatry at the University of Toronto and held a fellowship from the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. He is married to Wing Sze. U NI V ER SITA S Wesley G. Weeks (Law) has joined law firm of Boult, Cummings, Conners & Berry. He lives in Nashville, Tenn. ’97 Allan Cacanindin (A&S) and Heather (Hales) Cacanindin (A&S) welcomed their son, Carter, on Christmas Eve. They live in Webster Groves, Mo. Ashley Frey (Cook) lives in Louisville, Ky., and has two children, Will and Maggie. She is a part-time CPA with Mountjoy and Bressler, LLP. Timothy Kessler (Cook) works in management and technology at CitiMortgage and lives in St. Louis. Daniel Knoll (A&S) and Linda (Thien) Knoll (Pub Ser ’96) welcomed their second son, Henry Denis, Feb. 6. They live in Webster Groves, Mo., with their other son, James. Lillian (O’Neal) Manning (A&S) is a coordinator at the graduate school at Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville. Peter Nicastro (A&S) was appointed by Gov. Matt Blunt to the Missouri Organ Donation Advisory Committee. He lives in Overland, Mo. Dr. Gregory Y. Ogata (Grad) has started his own practice, Orthodontics on the Plateau, in Sammamish, Wash. He is a board member for the Washington State Dental Association and for the Seattle-King County Dental Foundation. He has three children. w w w. s lu .e du ’98 Cynthia T. Curry-Daniel (A&S ’98, Grad Cook ’00) lives in St. Louis and has met the requirements to become a certified regulatory compliance manager. Class Notes Key Following each alumni name in the Class Notes section is an abbreviation of the college or school from which that alum graduated. Here’s a key to the abbreviations. A&S College of Arts and Sciences CookJohn Cook School of Business; includes alumni who graduated under the school’s previous names, the School of Commerce and Finance and the School of Business and Administration David Fernandez Gomez (Parks ’98, Grad ’00) lives in Madrid. He is a fatigue and damage tolerance engineer on the Euro fighter project at EADS. Alfonso Gonzalez Gozalbo (Parks) is an aerodynamicist at Airbus in Spain. Kara (Lampe) Lydon (Doisy ’98, Grad ’00) lives in Des Peres, Mo., with her husband Chris Lydon (Cook). She works for United Services for the Handicapped, and Chris works for PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP. Andrea Rice (A&S) a software engineer for Northrop Grumman lives in San Diego. ’99 Fernando Abilleira (Parks) works in the guidance, navigation and control section of the Inner Planet Mission Analysis Group at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He lives in Simi Valley, Calif. Kimberly Detjen (SW) is a social worker for children’s services in Reading, England. Salvatore “Sam” Garanzini (A&S) is on the faculty of the counseling psychology department at the University of San Francisco and has built one of the largest addiction recovery practices in the city. Amish Patel (A&S) is the assistant vice president of commercial banking at LaSalle Bank in West Palm Beach, Fla. Igor Alonso Portillo (Parks) is a manager in the aerodynamics area of Construcciones y Auxiliar de Ferrocarriles in Beasain, Spain, and a senior test engineer. He lives in Hyattsville, Md. Dent School of Dentistry DoisyDoisy College of Health Sciences; includes alumni who graduated from the School of Allied Health Professions GradGraduate School; also placed in front of other abbreviations to indicate a graduate degree IT Institute of Technology Law School of Law Med School of Medicine Nurs School of Nursing P&LCollege of Philosophy and Letters ParksParks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology PSSchool for Professional Studies Pub Hlth School of Public Health Pub Ser College of Public Service SWSchool of Social Work; includes alumni who graduated under the school’s previous name, the School of Social Service Isidro Papiol Rodriguez (Parks) is the district manager of the after-sales marketing and sales division in the automotive sector for General Motors Corp. in Madrid, where he lives with his wife, Maria. Sunita Shukla (A&S ’99, Pub Hlth ’01) is in her fifth year of a doctoral degree in human genetics at the University of Chicago. She will pursue a post-doctoral degree in chemical genomics at the National Institutes of Health. Lea Smith (Parks) and her husband, Jeff, welcomed their first child, Matthew Edward. They live in St. Charles, Mo. ’00 Amy Arns (Doisy) works at Mat-Su Regional Medical Center in Alaska. Will Haines (A&S) of GlaxoSmithKline, was selected one of the St. Louis Business Journal’s 13th annual “40 Under 40” class members. Cesar M. Keller (Cook) and his wife, Angela, welcomed their daughter, Audrey Marie, Feb. 22. They live in Maryland Heights, Mo. Brian Klein (Cook) and Katherine (Narloch) Klein (Doisy ’00, Grad ’02) live in Oak Park, Ill., and welcomed son Colin Alexander on May 16, 2006. Katie Koester (Doisy) married Ken Koester in Milwaukee on Aug. 19. Cheryl (Thorn) Linneman (Pub Ser) married David A. Linneman Oct. 27. Linda Meyers (SW ’00, Grad SW ’03) is a personal counselor at Maryville University in St. Louis. Patrick Powers (A&S) and his wife, Kelli, welcomed their first child, Maggie, on Jan. 14. They live in Shrewsbury, Mo. Antony Susainathan (Parks) is an aerospace engineer at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and lives in Dayton, Ohio. ’01 Derrick Cabrera (Parks) is a mechanical engineer for Universal Air Filter Co. in Cahokia, Ill. Jeffrey Frein (A&S) earned a doctorate in synthetic organic chemistry from Colorado State University. He has taken a Walther Cancer Research PostDoctoral Fellowship position at the University of Notre Dame and lives in South Bend, Ind. Manuel Lara Gallego (Parks ’01, Grad ’02) is a project manager at INDRA in Madrid. Jonathan Hendrickson (A&S) is a social studies teacher at Hazelwood Central High School in Florissant, Mo., where he also lives. Sara Landes (A&S) was accepted for a predoctoral internship position at the University of Washington School of Medicine. She is moving from Milwaukee to Seattle and at the end of the internship year will receive her doctorate in clinical psychology from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Benjamin LeGrand (Parks) works at the Center for Integrated Defense Simulation at The Boeing Co. in St. Louis. Kathleen (Gardiner) McMullen (A&S ’01, Pub Hlth ’03) is a consultant in hospital epidemiology at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis. Kenneth Robinson (Cook) was selected as Officer of the Month for March 2007 by the National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund. He investigates child abuse, sexual abuse and other juvenile offenses at the Overland (Mo.) Police Department. Brian Royer (Parks ’01, Grad ’07) is an integration engineer at The Boeing Co. in St. Louis. Christopher Snethen (Cook) and his wife, Jenn, welcomed a son, Aidan Christopher. They live in St. Louis. Evita Tolu (Law) is an attorney with the law firm of Stientjes & Pliske LLC. She lives in St. Louis. ’02 Rachel Kessler (Nurs) is on a break from her job at Cardinal Glennon Children’s Medical Center in St. Louis to have a baby and to raise her two other children, Andrew and Alicia. Mitesh Patel (Parks) is a lead engineer at the Center of Integrated Defense Simulation at The Boeing Co. in St. Louis. Josh J. Reinert (Law) has joined Carmody MacDonald P.C. in St. Louis as an associate. ’03 Richard Eckert (Parks) is a cruise missile test engineer for the U.S. Air Force in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Geralyn Frandsen (Pub Ser) lives in Fenton, Mo., and is an associate professor of nursing at Maryville University. She also serves on SLU’s College of Public Service alumni board. Christine Herrmann (Parks) works at W.L. Gore & Associates in Newark, Del. Kevin Komoroski (A&S) graduated with dual master’s degrees in international affairs and economics from Fordham University. He is beginning a critical language enhancement fellowship and a Fulbright Fellowship, both in China. Nathaniel Ledbetter (Parks) is a design engineer at The Boeing Co. in Seattle and is working on the 777 wing. Megan McCloud (Cook) is the marketing manager at the Norton Museum of Art in West Palm Beach, Fla. Dr. Melinda Moss (Grad) is a junior high school principal in Reeds Spring, Mo. ’04 Timothy Alford (Parks) and his wife, Emily, live in Chesterfield, Mo. Jeffrey Door (Parks) and his wife, Kathy, live in St. Louis. Katie Duda (Parks) is in the flight test and propulsion group for The Boeing Co. in Seattle. Timothy Foy (Parks) has entered the Archdiocese of St. Louis Seminary. Diana Harper (Parks) and her husband, Dave, live in Ballwin, Mo. Almudena Torrero Quicios (Parks) is a teaching assistant at SLU’s Parks College and is pursuing a master’s degree in aerospace engineering. Mulugeta Tekle (Grad) is a flight controls engineer at The Boeing Co. ’05 Amanda Bjorklund (Doisy) works in the nuclear medicine technology department at SLU Hospital. She and her husband, Sean, won a Mega Wedding contest in February from a St. Louis radio station. Carlos Cabezas (Parks) is a weight engineer on the 787 program at The Boeing Co. Michael Cunico (Parks) is an associate stress engineer in the stress department at Midcoast Aviation in Cahokia, Ill. Fernando Pedroza (Parks) is in the payloads and interior designs department on the 787 Dreamliner at The Boeing Co. in Seattle. Kyle Stange (Parks) is a teaching assistant at SLU’s Parks College and is pursuing a master’s degree in aerospace engineering. John Van Osch (Parks) is an avionics system engineer at CAE USA Inc. in Tampa, Fla. ’06 Beth Barrett (SW) is a patient services coordinator for the St. Louis Regional Chapter of the ALS Association. Joseph Blevins (Parks), Christopher Schulenberg (Parks) and Timothy Cassady (Parks) all work for The Boeing Co. in Seattle. Rosalie Bott (Parks) works for Raytheon Co. in Tempe, Ariz. Arturo Alfonso Domenech (Parks) and Enrique Olmedo (Parks) are both pursuing master’s degrees at Ensica in Toulose, France. Tatiana Vaquero Escribano (Parks) is pursuing a degree in physics at SLU. Abraham Grindle (Parks) is a volunteer in Montana. Michael Hinkebein (Parks) and Rachael Morelli (Parks) are both structural engineers at Piper Aircraft Inc. in Vero Beach, Fla. Jay Jefferson (Parks) is employed by Midcoast Aviation in Cahokia, Ill. Andrew Leader (Parks) is in the U.S. Air Force. He lives in Gladstone, Ore. Rachel Obeidzinski (Parks) is pursuing a degree in mechanical engineering at SLU’s Parks College. Ellen Gerweck (Cook) lives in Omaha, Neb., and is an auditor at KPMG International. Michelle Ott (Parks) works for The Boeing Co. in Houston. Rick Johnson (Cook) is president of creative communications for the Parish, an ecumenical publisher. He, his wife, Lydia, and three daughters live in Webster Groves, Mo. Joseph Renick (Parks) is enrolled in law school in Chicago. Rosemarie MacInnis (Nurs) is a gerontologic nurse practitioner with Evercare. She also cares for the frail elderly in nursing homes throughout the Cincinnati area. Juan Romero Martin (Parks) is pursuing a master of science degree in space mission analysis and design at Glasgow University in the United Kingdom. Olga Pushkareva (Parks) works at Marlo Coil and lives in St. Louis. Andrew Schaub (Parks) is a liaison engineer at Piper Aircraft Inc., in Vero Beach, Fla. Lucas Smith (Parks) works for Northrop Grumman Corp., in Los Angeles. He was a summer intern at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in 2006. David Steck (Parks) is a plant vehicle engineer for Chrysler in St. Louis. Toni Moreno (Parks) works for the United Space Alliance based in Houston. Charles Voissem (Parks) works for an aircraft company in Arkansas. Bethany Nguyen (Parks) works in liaison engineering and production support at New Piper Aircraft Inc. in Vero Beach, Fla. Christopher Wipke (A&S, Cook) is manager of programs and communications at Presidential Classroom. He lives in Ballwin, Mo. U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 31 Correction Mary Anne (Flynn) Auer (A&S ‘77, Nurs ’80) and Pat Hoey (Parks ’63), who were listed in the “In Memoriam” section of the last Universitas, both wrote to assure us that they are very much alive. Mary Anne lives in Richmond Heights, Mo., with her two children and is the CEO of Wexford Labs Inc., a chemical specialty manufacturing company. Pat is retired and lives in Sedalia, Mo. He and his wife and recently purchased a home in the Villages, Fla., and will move there soon. We are sorry for the errors and for any confusion they may have caused. Mr. Edward Krajca (Parks ’29) Sr. Mary Noble (A&S ’32) Miss Frances Deshler (Nurs ’34) Miss Jane Ratz (SW ’37) Dr. Harold McGirl (Dent ’39) Mr. Albert Griffith (Parks ’40) Mr. Richard Brooks (A&S ’41) Mr. Beryl Carlew (A&S ’41) Mrs. Jeanne (Danos) Dooley (Nurs ’41) Mr. Robert Manchesky (Parks ’41) Mr. Phillip May (Parks ’41) Mr. John Banks (Cook ’42) Mr. Morris Chapman (Law ’42) Mrs. Maria (Guerra) McGoey (Nurs ’42) Dr. Noel Tosseland (Med ’42) Rev. Roy Vollenweider (A&S ’42) Mr. Leonard Albers (Cook ’43) Dr. Harold Bilsky (Med ’43) Mr. Phil Gager (Parks ’43) Mr. Bernard Harrington (Cook ’43) Dr. Horace Lowe (Med ’43) Dr. Anthony Posteraro (Dent ’43) Mr. Gifford Smith (Parks ’43) Mr. George Sweeney (Cook ’43) Dr. Anthony Altiero (Dent ’44) Dr. Richard Benz (Med ’44) Dr. David Berchelmann (Med ’44) Mrs. Adlyn (Simon) Saffer (Doisy ’44) Rev. Frederick Schuller (A&S ’44) Dr. Angelo Colombo (Dent ’45) Dr. Ferdinand Mueller (Med ’45) Mrs. Grace (Vitt) Peters (Nurs ’45) Dr. Marion Schrum (Nurs ’45) Dr. William Stapleton (Med ’45) Dr. James Bauerle (Dent ’46) Mr. Patrick Dolan (Cook ’46) Dr. Donald Joseph (Med ’46) Mrs. Ernestine (Beffa) Nilges (A&S ’46) Mr. Frank Egglestone (Parks ’47) Mrs. Colette (Pflanz) Habenicht (SW ’47) Dr. George Moran (Med ’47) Mr. Norbert Behrman (Cook ’48) Mr. Lawrence Coles (Cook ’48) Mr. Kenneth Delaney (A&S ’48) Mr. Paul Desjardins (Parks ’48) Mr. Lafayette Foland (Cook ’48) Mr. Robert Godfrey (Law ’48) Dr. Federico Gonzales (A&S ’48) Mrs. Liberty (Volk) Istwan (Nurs ’48) Mr. Charles Kiely (A&S ’48) Dr. Thomas Nolan (Med ’48) Mr. George Bayer (Cook ’49) Mr. Edmund Cimino (Cook ’49) Dr. George Farres (Med ’49) Sr. St. Haen (Nurs ’49) Dr. Oliver E. Hall (Med ’49) Mr. Albert Hoemeke (Cook ’49) Mr. Hugh Mackay (Cook ’49) Sr. Eustacia Stansell, C.P.P.S. (A&S ’49) Mr. Elmer Wiltsch (Cook ’49) Mr. Thomas Kinnucan (Parks ’50) Mr. Frank Spasser (Cook ’50) Mr. William Suda (Cook ’50) Dr. Robert Van Norman (Med ’50) Mr. Harold Barlow (IT ’51) Dr. Philip Beglin (Med ’51) Dr. Edwin Benton (Pub Ser ’51) Mr. Albert Dillow (Cook ’51) Dr. Richard Fullam (Med ’51) Mr. Frank Hudak (Law ’51) Mr. Robert Lease (Parks ’51) Mr. Francis Rees (A&S ’51) Mr. Donald Schneider (Cook ’51) Dr. Jack Setzekorn (Dent ’51) Mr. George Shulman (Cook ’51) Mr. Arthur Cornell (Cook ’52) Dr. Jack Everett (Dent ’52) Rev. John Ganly (A&S ’52) Mr. Joseph McCabe (Cook ’52) Dr. Ralph Riley (Med ’52) Sr. M. Studer (Doisy ’52) Dr. Leo Trunko (Med ’52) Mr. Lee Young (Law ’52) Mr. Emery Dudinec (Parks ’53) Dr. Kenneth Martin (A&S ’53) Mr. William Barclay (Pub Hlth ’54) Mr. Eugene Brys (IT ’54) Mr. Ori Garbi (Parks ’54) Mr. Anthony Gromacki (Law ’55) Rev. George Steenken (Pub Ser ’55) Mr. Donald Dickerman (Parks ’56) Mr. George Kosta (Law ’56) Mr. James McDonald (A&S ’56) Mr. Edward Pahuski (Cook ’56) Mr. Charles Turner (A&S ’56) Dr. Paul Blessing (Dent ’57) Mr. Jerry Craige (A&S ’57) Mr. Arlen Jolly (A&S ’57) Sr. Mary McMahon (Pub Hlth ’57) Miss Jean Olivier (SW ’57) Miss Mary Squier (SW ’57) Dr. John Suelzer (Med ’57) Dr. John Cary (Med ’58) Mr. Thomas Hirlinger (Cook ’58) Mr. Henry Kessler (Cook ’58) Dr. Joseph Boveri (Med ’59) Dr. Peter Diemer (Med ’59) Mr. Roy Grantom (IT ’59) Miss Phoebe Mayfield (A&S ’59) Sr. Emily McIver (Pub Ser ’59) Sr. Mary Neumeyer (Pub Hlth ’59) Mr. George Witte (Cook ’59) Rev. William Wunderlich (A&S ’59) Mr. Donald Dohm (IT ’60) Sr. Dorothy Renckens (SW ’60) Mr. Leonard Betz (Cook ’61) Miss Patricia McLaughlin (A&S ’61) Mr. Vincent Hartl (Parks ’62) Mr. Kenneth Hawkinson (Parks ’62) Mr. Don Henry (Parks ’62) Bro. Robert Massa (Pub Ser ’62) Dr. Paul Crary (Med ’63) Mr. Kenneth Echterhoff (Cook ’63) Dr. Catherine (Mancino) Felton (IT ’63) Sr. Teresa Harris (Nurs ’63) Capt. Robert Hedrix (Parks ’63) Col. Charles Kaysing (Cook ’63) Mr. Thomas Sicking (A&S ’63) Mrs. Hattie Roggerson (Pub Ser ’64) Rev. Anthony Siebert (Pub Ser ’64) Ms. Essie Johnson (Pub Ser ’65) Mr. Paul Remus (Parks ’65) Mr. Marmaduke Smithson (Cook ’65) Sr. Vincetta Wethington (Pub Ser ’65) Mr. Gilbert Dieckmeyer (Parks ’66) Mr. John Eigel (A&S ’66) Mr. Edward Zurweller (A&S ’66) Mr. Richard Binder (IT ’67) Dr Bernard Podurgiel (Med ’67) Mr. Joel Schatzman (A&S ’67) Mr. Thomas Schmidt (Parks ’67) Dr. Dennis Christ (Dent ’68) Sr. Mary Sweeney (A&S ’68) Mr. Robert Echele (Pub Ser ’69) Mr. Thomas Kreis (A&S ’69) Mr. Robert Mays (Law ’69) Mr. James Vogelpohl (Cook ’69) Mrs. Patricia (Lyons) Wankum (Nurs ’69) Mr. John Andriola (Parks ’70) Mr. Gary Plummer (Cook ’70) Mr. Frederick Stein (A&S ’70) Mr. Robert Work (A&S ’70) Dr. Warren Bell (Pub Ser ’71) Sr. Mary Bolzenius (Pub Hlth ’71) Mr. Leonard Roberts (A&S ’71) Ms. Julia Lamy (Pub Ser ’72) Sen. Thomas Eagleton (Law ’73) Dr. William Knight (Med ’73) Dr. Daniel Mollitt (Med ’74) Miss Karen Maune (Doisy ’75) Mr. Robert Shive (Law ’75) Rev. Patrick Lewis (SW ’76) Ms. R. Maxine (Ferguson) Marberry (PS ’77) Mr. Charles Wiese (Cook ’77) Mrs. Dorothy (Lueckerath) O’Driscoll (Law ’79) Ms. Sheryl Johnson (Law ’80) Ms. Sharon (Baker) Richardson (Nurs ’80) Miss Mary Zellman (Cook ’81) Ms. Lena Edmonds (SW ’82) Mr. Patrick Heise (Pub Hlth ’82) Mrs. Kathy DusterbergRauschenbach (A&S ’85) Mr. James Farley (A&S ’85) Ms. Cindy Fife (Nurs ’89) Dr. Jo Daugherty (Med ’91) Mr. Richard Kindel (Cook ’91) Mr. Theodoro Everett (A&S ’93) Dr. Kenneth Kaufman (A&S ’96) Dr. Deborah (Kula) Swope (A&S ’97) Bernard Joseph “Joe” Kniest (Pub Ser ’50), a longtime scorer, manager and trainer for Billiken athletics, died April 18. He was 86. For 60 years, he played a variety of roles for SLU sports teams, including announcer, football and basketball equipment manager, trainer and statistician. He was the official scorer for Billiken men’s basketball from 1958-1993 and was inducted into the Biliken Hall of Fame in 1995. This list of deceased alumni was compiled by SLU’s office of research and development services. If you have a question or would like more information about an “In Memoriam” listing, please send an e-mail message to [email protected]. 32 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du Surviving Twilight Shane A. Bernskoetter (Grad Cook ’06) | BookSurge Publishing S ur viving Twilight is the author’s story of his deployment to Iraq as an Army Reserve soldier. This daily journal follows his journey from Fort Riley, Kan., to Log Base Seitz in Abu Ghraib, where he spent a year fixing weaponry at the most heavily mortared base in Iraq. Facing death daily, Bernskoetter shares his evolution from life in a cubicle to life in combat. The Sun Farmer Michael McCarthy (A&S ’84) | Ivan R. Dee W hen an explosion on his farm leaves Ted Fink with burns covering 93 percent of his body, his wife is forced to make difficult choices. While Ted is in a coma, she must decide whether to allow an experimental artificial skin to be used to grant him an uncertain future. In this nonfiction account, McCarthy shifts the story’s focus from the Finks to the MIT laboratories where the lifesaving skin was developed. Words at the Wedding William J. Byron, S.J. (A&S ’55, Grad ’59) | Paulist Press T his book is based on the premise “the stronger the promise, the stronger will be the society in which the marriage promise is made.” It offers “paragraphs to ponder” about the time leading up to a wedding as well as what it takes to build a successful marriage. Words at the Wedding is intended for married couples, those on their way to the altar and ministers. Bio Dr. Reilly Maginn (Med ’60) | Red Too Press I n this medical thriller set in the South Pacific, a volunteer doctor faces off against not just a deadly virus, but also the radical terrorists who developed it. It is the debut novel by Maginn, a surgeon who spent 15 years in the South Pacific. He has written numerous awardwinning short stories and teaches writing in Fairhope, Ala. Simply Mom Pamela Folli Scholl | P. Folli Publishing S imply Mom: Advice from Someone Who Loves You is a collection of tips for living that author Scholl shared with her daughters over the years. Scholl, a longtime School of Law staffer, offers stories and wisdom that aim to help readers enjoy life’s simplicities, weather the tough times and focus on the big picture. Advice ranges from “Travel abroad” to “Keep an umbrella in the car.” Andrew Jackson and the Politics of Martial Law Dr. Matthew Warshauer (Grad ’93, ’97) | The University of Tennessee Press I n this book, a revision of Warshauer’s SLU doctoral dissertation, the author examines the circumstances surrounding Andrew Jackson’s declaration of martial law during the Battle of New Orleans and the longterm political ramifications of that decision. Warshauer offers details that show the evolution of emergency powers in the government today. U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 33 Alumni Associations Billiken Travel Program 2007-08 Tours Being a Billiken traveler puts the world at your feet. This is your chance to see it all. Here is the schedule of trips for the remainder of 2007 and for all of 2008: JOHN COOK SCHOOL OF BUSINESS President: Todd Buss (’94, ’01) Cook Cup Classic Golf Tournament Monday, Sept. 10; Gateway National Golf Links in Madison, Ill. Join fellow business alumni for the seventh annual Cook Cup Classic golf tournament. The event includes a silent auction, plus golfing contests. alumni.slu.kintera.org/ccc07 2008 Tours 2007 Tours Aug. 2-12 SCHOOL OF DENTISTRY Club City News ATLANTA MILWAUKEE Cardinals vs. Braves Cardinals vs. Brewers Saturday, July 21; 5 p.m. pregame party; 6:05 p.m. first pitch; Turner Field Wednesday, Sept. 26; 6 p.m. pregame party; 7:05 p.m. first pitch; Miller Park The cost is $28 and includes the party and ticket. alumni.slu.kintera.org/braves07 The cost is $30 and includes the party and ticket. alumni.slu.kintera.org/brewers07 CHICAGO PHOENIX Cardinals vs. Cubs Cardinals vs. Diamondbacks Thursday, Aug. 17; 11 a.m. pregame party at Yakzies; 1:20 p.m. first pitch; Wrigley Field Saturday, Sept. 8; 5 p.m. pregame party; 6:40 p.m. first pitch; Chase Field The cost is $40 per person and includes the party and the game ticket. alumni.slu.kintera.org/chicagobaseball07 The cost is $30 per person and includes the party and ticket. alumni.slu.kintera.org/dbacks07 LOS ANGELES PHILADELPHIA SLU Alumni Night at the Hollywood Bowl Cardinals vs. Phillies Sunday, Aug. 5; Hollywood Bowl Friday, July 13; 5:30 p.m. pregame party; 7:05 p.m. first pitch; Citizen’s Bank Park Come join us for a picnic and concert at the celebrated Hollywood Bowl. The evening’s concert is South Pacific, featuring Brian Stokes Mitchell and Reba McEntire. The cost is $40 per person. alumni.slu.kintera.org/bowl07 The cost is $40 per person and includes the party and field-level seat. alumni.slu.kintera.org/phillies07 WASHINGTON, D.C. MIAMI Cardinals vs. Nationals Cardinals vs. Marlins Wednesday, July 18; 6 p.m. pregame party; 7:05 p.m. first pitch; Dolphin Stadium The cost is $30 per person and includes the pregame party and ticket. alumni.slu.kintera.org/marlins07 Saturday, Aug. 4; 4:30-6 p.m. pregame party; 6:05 p.m. first pitch; RFK Stadium The cost is $30 per person and includes the pregame barbecue and game ticket. alumni.slu.kintera.org/nationals07 Dental School Reunion Celebration Dinner Thursday, Sept. 6; 6 p.m. cocktail reception; 7 p.m. dinner and award presentation; St. Francis Xavier College Church Ballroom (lower level) Join fellow alumni for this special event celebrating all classes. The evening includes the presentation of the Dental School Alumni Merit Award. The cost is $35 per person. SCHOOL OF MEDICINE President: Dr. Thomas J. Olsen (’79) W hite Coat Ceremony and Reception Sunday, August 5; 1:30 p.m. ceremony, St. Francis Xavier College Church; reception to follow in Busch Student Center; free admission Help celebrate this special cloaking ceremony as first-year medical students embark on their medical careers. PARKS COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AVIATION AND TECHNOLOGY 80-YEAR ANNIVERSARY CELBRATION Celebrate 80 years of aviation and innovation with fellow alumni at these exclusive events during Homecoming Weekend, Sept. 28-30: Keynote speaker Gene Kranz (Parks ’54) of Apollo 13 fame Private reception at Missouri History Museum’s “Flight City” exhibit, featuring the restored Park P-1 bi-plane History of Parks and History of Institute of Technology archive photo presentations Videotape your Parks/IT stories and memories Parks Fly-In at Downtown St. Louis Airport For more information, call Susan Bloomfield at (314) 977-8431 or visit parks.slu.edu/parks80. 34 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du Feb. 21-28 Scandinavia Discovery Sept. 5-17China President: Dr. Eugene Hayes (Dent ’66, Grad ’79) Jan. 31-11 and the Yangtze River Discovery Panama Canal Cruise Alumni Campus Abroad: Peru Apr. 7-19Treasures of China and the Yangtze River Cruise Sept. 15-26Alumni Sept. 22-30 Campus Abroad: Sicily Apr. 17-26 Essence of India Enchanting Ireland May 4-12 Jewels of the Danube Oct. 13-21The Colors of Tuscany and Venetian Treasures and Fairy Tale Bavaria May 16-29Treasures of Southern Africa June 22-July 1Alumni Campus Abroad: Scotland Oct. 5-13Prague Campus Abroad: Yucatan July 7-19Passage of Peter the Great Oct. 27-Nov. 3Alumni For more details on these trips and how to reserve your space, visit the travel program Web site at www. slu.edu/alumni/travel. Or call (314) 977-2250 and ask to be placed on the travel mailing list. Sept. 12-20Spectacular Sept. 20-28 Atlanta Rob Sternowski (Cook ’95, Grad Cook ’98) (813) 728-4583 [email protected] Boston Chris Espelin (A&S ’91) (617) 484-3868 [email protected] Chicago Joe Havel (Cook ’91) (312) 397-4141 [email protected] Cincinnati John Lange IV (Cook ’93) (859) 341-9603 [email protected] Cleveland Mark Carrabine (Cook ’75) (404) 349-2925 [email protected] Dallas Jamar Johnson (Cook ’00) (214) 334-4904 [email protected] Denver David Sapienza (A&S ’96) (303) 683-5730 [email protected] Houston Josh Howard (Cook ’98) (281) 885-8677 [email protected] Kansas City To be announced Los Angeles Brian Merriman (A&S ’95) (310) 244-6761 [email protected] Louisville, KY. Lee Hyman (Pub Hlth ’95) (502) 459-4707 [email protected] Swiss Alps and Salzburg Milwaukee Enchanting Ireland Minneapolis / St. paul Oct. 3-13Alumni Campus Abroad: Greece To be announced Justin Fletcher (Cook ’00) (952) 949-1120 [email protected] Oct. 4-12Best New York John J. Shanahan Oct. 8-16Alumni Omaha, Neb. of Tuscany and the Italian Riviera Campus Abroad: Tuscany (Cook ’83, Law ’87, Grad Cook ’89) (212) 320-6985 [email protected] Brad Burwell (A&S ’72) (402) 896-1923 [email protected] Philadelphia School of Medicine Alumni Reunion Weekend Thursday-Saturday, Oct. 18-20; Saint Louis University campus Celebrating the classes of 2002, 1997, 1992, 1987, 1982, 1977, 1972, 1967, 1962, 1957, 1952 and earlier. Come for parties with your classmates, campus and neighborhood tours, visits with current students and a reunion celebration to remember. Want to hear SLU first? news Want first chance at hot tickets to alumni events? Want to stay connected to SLU and your fellow alumni? Be a Billiken in the know — subscribe to the Billiken e-Bulletin! Update your e-mail address with us — send your updated information to [email protected]. Donald Richardson (Grad ’76) (610) 539-9398 [email protected] San Francisco Mark Olson (A&S ’77) (925) 691-8628 [email protected] Seattle / Tacoma, Wash. Mark Flynn (A&S ’67, Grad ’72) (360) 439-7265 [email protected] Springfield / Decatur, Ill. Judy Redick (A&S ’62) (217) 622-5621 [email protected] Tampa / St. Petersburg, Fla. To be announced Washington, D.C. To be announced Taiwan Larry Chang (Pub Hlth ’88, Grad ’00) [email protected] Thailand Praemrudee Switachata (Grad ’75) [email protected] U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 35 A Story of Hope Memories of Father Mac — Dr. Tony Garcia-Prats (A&S ’98) 36 U NI V ER SITA S w w w. s lu .e du But this is not a story about sadness and suffering, it is a story of hope. To address the disparity between what was being done for HIV-infected children in the United States compared to children in the developing world, Dr. Mark Kline founded the Baylor International Pediatric AIDS Initiative (BIPAI) in the late 1990s at the Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston. BIPAI built stateof-the-art pediatric clinics in several developing countries, including Lesotho. It lobbied for improved access to pediatric formulations of the life-saving antiretroviral medications, developed a pediatric HIV curriculum and began training health professionals. One of the largest barriers to improving pediatric HIV/ AIDS care and treatment was the lack of pediatric health professionals. Here in Lesotho, before BIPAI’s arrival, there were only two practicing pediatricians in the country, serving a population of just over 2 million. In response, BIPAI developed and implemented the Pediatric AIDS Corps, hiring 52 physicians to commit a minimum of one year to working in these clinics. After completing a pediatric residency and a chief resident year at Baylor, my wife, Heather, and I joined BIPAI — she as a biostatistician and me as one of the physicians in the first class of the Pediatric AIDS Corps. In August 2006 we moved to Maseru, Lesotho, along with 10 other doctors and began working in BIPAI’s pediatric HIV/AIDS clinic here. This is how I came to meet Mantsane. In the less than one and a half years that the clinic has been open, close to 1,000 HIV-exposed and HIV-infected children have been enrolled, and more than 300 are receiving antiretroviral medications. Mantsane is just one example of the hope that medicines and physicians can bring. Soon after she came to the clinic, she was started on therapy and had a fantastic response. She has recovered almost all of the neurologic function damaged by her stroke. Caring for children like Mantsane has been an incredible experience. There is nothing quite like watching children literally transform before your eyes from deathly ill to full of life. It is a privilege to be a small part of the global response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic, and even more rewarding to be a large part of the solution for Mantsane and other children. Now Mantsane actually is the happy, smiling, healthy looking child you see in the picture. Though she still faces a difficult future, orphaned and infected with HIV, she now has a future. And — if her smile is any indication — it will be a bright one. Photo courtesy of Garcia-Prats M antsane doesn’t know that she’s different than other children I cared for when I completed my pediatric residency training in Houston — but she is. When I first met her six months ago after my arrival in Lesotho, a small country in sub-Saharan Africa, she wasn’t as happy as she looks in this picture. She was a very sick girl whose world was collapsing around her. Her father had died a few months earlier, leaving her mother to support Mantsane, her younger sister, teenage brother and 18-year-old pregnant sister on a factory job that pays the equivalent of about $125 a month. The first time I saw her at the clinic, she had just suffered a stroke — rare for normal children — that left her unable to swallow or speak. A few weeks later Mantsane became a double orphan when a neighbor found her mother dead on the floor of their tiny one-room house. Each of these circumstances makes Mantsane’s story uncommon in the United States, but what really makes her different is that she is HIV positive. HIV-infected children are a rarity in the United States and most developed countries. Children with HIV almost always acquire it from their infected mothers, either during pregnancy, delivery or through breastfeeding. Adults often remain relatively healthy for years after they become infected, but children’s immature immune systems often are overwhelmed by the virus. Without treatment, 25 to 40 percent of HIV-infected children will die before they are 2 years old. The advent of antiretroviral medications and therapy that fight HIV improved those chances for survival. HIV-infected children Garcia-Prats (left) and Mantsane in developed countries receive these life-saving medications, which almost instantly change their fate from certain death. Even more importantly, doctors discovered that in most cases it’s possible to prevent children from being infected by their mothers. In the United States in 2004, there were only 48 new cases of pediatric AIDS reported. Thankfully, there just aren’t very many children with Mantsane’s problems in the United States. Unfortunately, Mantsane’s story is all too common in Lesotho. Worldwide, there are an estimated 2.5 million children living with HIV. Two million of those children live in sub-Saharan Africa. And even though a child dies every minute from HIV somewhere in the world, fewer than 5 percent of infected children receive any treatment. Not all children are infected with HIV here in southern Africa, but almost all children here are affected by HIV. In Lesotho, where the HIV prevalence is close to 25 percent, many uninfected children have lost one or both of their parents to HIV. In fact, more than 15.2 million children worldwide have lost one or both of their parents to HIV/AIDS, with 12 million of those children living in sub-Saharan Africa. Dr. Tony Garcia-Prats lives in Maseru, Lesotho. You can reach him via e-mail at [email protected]. Even though I have not had the pleasure of meeting Clayton Berry and Nick Sargent, I feel that at the age of 63 I must be substantially older than they are, because I remember something very important that they do not even mention in their otherwise fitting tribute “Remembering Father Mac” (Spring 2007). I remember Father McNamee’s thought-provoking short book with a lengthy title, Honor and the Epic Hero: A Study of the Shifting Concept of Magnanimity in Philosophy and Epic Poetry. Today I might disagree respectfully with a number of points in it, but I am in a position to disagree with certain points only because I read it long ago and it got me thinking about important matters regarding human greatness or magnanimity. Despite whatever disagreements or reservations I might express today regarding certain points in McNamee’s book, I would still wholeheartedly recommend it to anyone who has not yet read it. DR. Thomas J. Farrell (A&S ’66, Grad ’68, ’74) Duluth, Minn. I was in Father Mac’s English honors program and also in his first art appreciation class. He made each of us feel special, but it was he who was special. Now buildings and grounds have made the University grand. Teachers like Father Mac make it great. Jim Tisserand (A&S ’55), Evansville, Ind. A riot with words I was not one of those students fortunate enough to take a class from Dr. [Albert] Montesi (“In Memoriam,” Spring 2007), as he was retired by the time I arrived on campus. But I had one memorable interaction with him that has reverberated throughout my writing career. I won the Albert J. Montesi Literary Award in 1993. I’d written an essay about the irony of growing up in the military and then taking an internship with Union of Concerned Scientists in which I campaigned against the Strategic Defense Initiative (a.k.a. “Star Wars”). We award-recipients read our work at a café in Lafayette Square. After I read my essay, “Enemies,” Dr. Montesi sauntered over to me and said, “Young lady, I thought you were going to cause a riot with your words.” He clearly meant it as a compliment. The Summer/Fall 1992 issue of Universitas celebrated the 175th anniversary of Saint Louis University. Featuring a holographic cover image of St. Francis Xavier College Church, the magazine chronicled how far the University had come and where it was headed in the future. “The Special Issue” highlighted archival items that helped tell SLU’s history, the 65th anniversary of Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology, and the 25th anniversary of the University’s lay board of trustees. The issue also included a story about the plans for “The Campaign for Saint Louis University: Our Promise for the Future in the Jesuit Tradition.” This ambitious fundraising effort sought to raise $200 million during the next five years. When the campaign concluded in 1997, it had raised $221 million. The “On Campus” section of Universitas included news about the acquisition of O’Brien Hall, named in honor of Dr. J.J. O’Brien, former professor of education; McGannon Hall, named in honor of J. Barry McGannon, S.J., former University chancellor; and O’Donnell Hall. Today O’Brien Hall is home the Center for Health Care Ethics, McGannon Hall houses many departments of the College of Public Service, and O’Donnell Hall is the location of the Saint Louis University Museum of Art. Other news items in the issue: The department of occupational therapy was established. The Simon Recreation Center was air conditioned. And the parking lots along Grand Boulevard near DuBourg and Walsh halls were converted to green space, featuring a fountain, benches and art. Quotable UTAS Sign of the Times “If I could access the library electronically, at any time of the day or night, it would be just great.” — Kris Gerhard (A&S ’93), then a student discussing “We can never say that our library upgrades in the relationship with the city and story, “A Promised Renewed” the world has been fulfilled. That relationship demands, as it has from the beginning, faith, trust and action.” — University President Lawrence Biondi, S.J., in the story, “A Promised Renewed” we want to hear from you 1 By standard mail: Universitas Saint Louis University 221 N. Grand Blvd. St. Louis, MO 63103 Please send us your letters, class notes and address changes. There are three easy ways to reach us. 2 3 By Fax: (314) 977-2249 By e-mail: [email protected] Lisa (Ives) Albers (A&S ’94), Seattle U NI V ER SITA S SUMMER 2007 37 Saint Louis University Homecoming 2007 Photo by Steve Dolan September 28-30, 2007 Come home to Saint Louis University! Reconnect with your classmates and enjoy these events at Homecoming 2007: 25- and 50-year class reunions | Campus tours | Outdoor concert | Billiken men’s soccer game | Fireworks | And much more For more information or to register online, visit www.slu.edu/alumni. Non-profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID St. Louis, MO Permit No. 134 221 N. Grand Blvd. St. Louis, MO 63103 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED