36212 Voices Cover:36212 Voices Cover
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36212 Voices Cover:36212 Voices Cover
St. Benedict’s Rule for Monks begins with a powerful imperative: Listen. And at Benedictine University, we believe in the importance of listening to one another. We therefore have named our magazine Benedictine Voices. We pledge that within these pages, members of the Benedictine community will speak with candor about issues facing our University and our world. We cordially invite you to enter into dialogue with us. Benedictine The News From Benedictine University Winter 2008 | Volume 37 | Number 2 Executive Director of Marketing and Communications Mercy Robb, M.B.A.’02 Editor Linda A. Hale Contents Vision Writers Phil Brozynski William J. Carroll Rita A. Dougherty “Your vision will become clear only when you can look into your own heart. Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakens.” — CARL JUNG 1 • William J. Carroll, President The Passing of a Modern Day Founder 2 • Monastic Perspective Looking at the Genealogy of the Masters Values “Great things are not done on impulse, but by a series of small things brought together.” — VINCENT philanthropy VAN GOGH 9 • Donations In Action 4 • Educare Ball Raises More Than $150,000 for Student Scholarships 6 • President’s Associates Recognized for Commitment to University • Ancient Triptych Artwork Donated to Fund Campus Art Gallery 7 • Scholarship Donors, Recipients Honored During Annual Recognition Dinner • Phonathon 10 • Homecoming 2007 • Wireless Hotspots Now On Campus 17 • Buddhist Temple Bells Ring Out as a New Country Emerges 18 • Catholic Perspectives On Women • New Box Broadcasts Energy Produced by Birck Hall Solar Panel • External Review Gives Kudos to O.D. Program 20 • Reflections by Fr. James Flint, O.S.B.: A Procopian Pioneer 21 • Freshmen Ready to Embrace Challenge • University’s Enrollment Increase Shatters National Projections 22 • Change for the Sake of No Change • Team Benedictine annual report 2006-2007 Photographers Krystal Barrett Stephan Bates Phil Brozynski Nadia Darwish, C07 Jeff Knox Julie Nelligan, M.S.M.O.B.’06 Mercy Robb, M.B.A.’02 Debbie Smith 12 • Alumni Briefs 14 • Alma Matters: Robert Koller • Giving Back: Bill Carroll educate a menace to society.” 16 • Coal Ben is New Center of Campus Social Activity Allan Gozum Douglas Hoffman, C79 Rachel Huska, C08 Virginia McCarthy Julie Nelligan, M.S.M.O.B.’06 Debbie Smith Denise West Art Director Mary Kay Wolf, Wolf Design 11 • Upcoming Events “To educate a man in mind and not in morals is to university news Contributors Pina Arnone Krystal Barrett Dave Beyer Brad Carlson Nadia Darwish, C07 Fr. James Flint, O.S.B. Irene Gendel alumni news 8 • Gift of Stocks Benefits University and Donor Vitality Linda A. Hale Fr. David Turner, O.S.B. — OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES 24 • Asking the Experts: What Changes Need to Occur in Higher Education in the Next Five Years? 25 • Fast Facts: Benedictine Partners with COD to Offer New Academic Program in Fine Arts 26 • Families With Loved Ones In Iraq Offered the Use of Video Conferencing class/faculty notes 26 • Class Notes 28 • Faculty Notes • A Look at the Past • Ostrow’s Book Explores Russia’s Path to Dictatorship Under Putin eaglescenter 31 • Excellence in the Classroom and on the Playing Field • Time Out: Sports Highlights Address Corrections: For address corrections, please contact Advancement Services at (630) 829-6099. Benedictine Voices is published three times a year by the Office of Marketing and Communications. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. Distributed free to alumni, students and friends of the University. Opinions expressed in Benedictine Voices are not necessarily those of Benedictine University, its administrators, faculty or students. Letters to the Editor must be signed, and letters not intended for publication should be so indicated. Please address all mail to: Benedictine Voices Benedictine University 5700 College Road Lisle, IL 60532 b e n e d i c t i n e Vision Vision “Your vision will become clear only when you can look into your own heart. Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakens.” — CARL JUNG by William J. Carroll, President The Passing of a Modern Day Founder Joseph Kindlon 1925-2007: A Prince Among Men In past columns I have written about the modern day founders of Benedictine University. Institutions like Benedictine were founded by great individuals with high energy, vision and a passion for what might be. However, for an institution to become the best it can be, the “founding” is not a one time event but rather an on-going process whereby the modern day founders are needed as much as the original ones. Today, I write this column amidst joy and sadness — the joy being the resumption of a school that has produced more Benedictine students than ever before — the sadness being to report the death of one of the 21st century founders, Joseph Kindlon. J oe’s death I find particularly hard because he was Board Chairman upon my selection as president, and he was my friend and mentor. As I think about Joe, I am well aware that we seldom meet a man like him. He was a long-time friend of Benedictine University. His interest in higher education began in 1976 when he served on the President’s Advisory Council. He became a Trustee in 1978 and continued in that role until his death on August 9, 2007, after a long illness. Whether engaged at a University Board meeting, playing golf or fishing in Florida, he was an exceptional man. He lived by his motto — “When you have a lot as I do, you have to give something back.” Joe supported many educational and health enterprises as past Chairman of the Benedictine University Board of Trustees. As past Chairman of the Marianjoy Rehabilitation Center, he directed their fundraising drive from 1981 to 1983, which doubled the size of the institution. He was a Board Member of the First DuPage Bank, served on the DuPage Council of the Boy Scouts of America and the Board of Central DuPage Hospital. He was on the Boards of the DuPage Historical Society, the Humane Society and the DuPage Community Foundation. Because of his gregarious nature, Joe had many connections with politicians, CEOs and people from all walks of life. He would think nothing of meeting a person for the first time and after a bit of conversation, saying “You are just the person I need for such and such a project,” and most often that person joined Joe in his project. Joe and his wife (of almost 65 years), Bess, worked together for many years, promoting each other’s charities and encouraging friends to become active in charity work. The Kindlons have been very generous to Benedictine and gave a lasting gift in the Joseph F. and Bess Kindlon Hall of Learning. The building houses five floors of the library, numerous classrooms and labs, as well as University offices. It is the tallest building on campus and anchors the campus quadrangle. Joe received an honorary doctorate degree from Illinois Benedictine College (now Benedictine University) in 1986, and Bess received an honorary doctorate from Benedictine in 1999. Born the son of an Irish immigrant in the hotel business, Joe never graduated from college, but he certainly became a good businessman. He ➤ Winter 2008 1 worked his way from Albany, N.Y., to an assignment as a regional director for Continental Can Company in Chicago. While there, he became interested in boxes and founded the corrugated shipping container company, Commander Packaging Inc. in Lisle. He moved the company to Bedford Park in 1965. He turned Commander into a national conglomerate and later founded Kindlon Partners, an investment and finance firm. Joe, Bess and their sons established a racing stable, the Dundalk 5, a name taken from his father’s ancestral home in Ireland, as well as the reason he wanted to race horses. He delighted in naming his horses after family members and friends and watching them compete at Arlington Park. I recently spoke with Doug Kindlon, Joe and Bess’s youngest son, who described his Dad as a caring and giving man — also a disciplinarian. Even though Joe was financially successful, he encouraged his three sons to earn their way in the world and to have a good work ethic. Joe loved his family and as their family grew with grandchildren and great-grandchildren, he was always happy to have them around. This past September 29 would have been his 82nd birthday. Doug said that his mother threw a surprise 80th birthday party for Joe with the entire family present. Each of the grandchildren stood up and told Joe what he meant to them. It was an emotional time for Joe. Those same grandchildren and great-grandchildren stood with their parents in the receiving line at their grandfather’s wake, greeting people who came to pay their respects to their grandfather. Abbot Hugh Anderson, O.S.B., Chancellor of the University during most of Joe’s years on the Board, described him as a “man without guile, always interested in you, not in himself.” Abbot Hugh had the pleasure of fishing with Joe in Florida and said that he was the consummate host, also insuring that you were having a good time. But why do I call Joe a modern day founder of Benedictine University? I started this essay being happy with the largest enrollment in the history of the University. But things were not always this bright. For instance, 1997 was a particularly bleak year. The enrollment was not good, the campus was in desperate need of new buildings and there seemed nowhere to turn. I took two proposals to the Board for action: one to close the place with honor, the second to vote on its future and to move ahead with a dramatic building campaign. Joe Kindlon had the energy, the passion and the vision to see then what we so clearly see now. He moved to vote on the institution’s future and backed that motion with his own very generous gift that made The Kindlon Hall of Learning possible. Because of Joe’s courage, vision and support the University is what it is today; he truly is a “founder” of Benedictine University. Joe, thank you for your support, friendship and the inspiration for us to be all we can be. ✝ 2 Benedictine Voices monastic Looking at the Genealogy of the Masters by Fr. David Turner, O.S.B., Ph.D., Assistant to the Provost for Institutional Mission I n the mid 1990s, a number of American Benedictine monks were approached by the Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers in Chicago relative to their plan to issue a two-volume work, The Encyclopedia of Monasticism, during the year 2000. The purpose of this work was to examine a variety of topics related to monasticism, whether Christian, Buddhist or any other expression within the field of world religions. One of the areas the general editor hoped to examine was the matter of “Benedictine Schools and Universities.” The problem was that the editor hoped that the subject could be covered “briefly.” Naturally, the question rose in my mind, “How does one cover some 1,500 years “briefly?” In thinking back over my own lifetime, I recalled that some 55 years ago I bade farewell to a high school teacher who was assigned by his religious congregation to the “Generalate” office located in Rome, Italy. Here he would have the archives collected from the very beginning days of that community’s founders and would easily be able to put together various historical descriptions of the work done b e n e d i c t i n e Vision Ceremony of Light. This is the Benedictine tradition of celebrating the new school year by “Passing The Light” from one generation to the next. perspective by those members. It made so much sense when one could find all the needed details in one place. The matter of a search also made me think back relative to the work done by our Fr. James Flint, O.S.B., who was able to find the appropriate materials related to a historical question: most of what he needed was in the Vatican or the British archives. The problem with Benedictines is that we have never been a religious group with a central government. We have no “Generalate.” There is no central archival office. The various independent monasteries have arisen and fallen over the ages. Libraries and archives have been destroyed by a variety of groups and situations: Saracens, Lombards, political groups, earthquakes, and, yes, even Allied bombs. In the early years of the 18th century, Fr. Magnoald Ziegelbauer, a scholarly European monk who ended his days in 1750, began collecting what data he could and eventually it found its way into a four-volume work published posthumously by his associate Fr. Oliver Legipont (Historia Rei Lierariae Ordinis Sancti Benedicti). Our late Fr. Vitus Buresh, O.S.B., kept his eyes open some years ago and managed to secure a copy of the original four-volume work in its very elegant white leather binding. The work rests now in our own abbey archives. Fr. Magnoald attempted to identify what he could of the various Benedictine monastics who did scholarly work in scripture, patristics, theology, canon law, history, genetics, physics and medicine. One of the articles in The Encyclopedia of Monasticism by Fr. Ambrose G. Wathen, O.S.B., attempts to identify some of the scholars responsible for significant work done over the ages. While the past may be important, I began wondering what we might do relative to our present. One of our alumni had a great idea a few years ago and had T-shirts made that said, “St. Procopius College, Illinois Benedictine College, Benedictine University: Three Names, One Tradition!” That expression got me thinking: “What might we do to fill in our own blanks? What model from the past might we find that would preserve at least our history?” It is true that most of us will not be able to cover the lengthy past, but we perhaps can find a model that may help us share the wonderful past with our contemporary students. The idea I propose is to use a model that was discussed in old manuscripts by Patricia A. Quinn, Ph.D. (now with the University of Wisconsin at Eau Claire). During her research on the education of the boy oblates in Benedictine monasteries between the sixth and 12th centuries, she discovered the development of “The Genealogy of the Masters.” This was a process where individual monastic schools would make lists of the “masters,” in other words, who was it who taught whom. Over the years we have tried to have Virus Buresh, Maur Dlouhy, Brendan McGrath and so many others. Beginning with the 1950s, we, of course, would begin with the lists of the lay professors and non-Benedictine clergy who played a part in our programs. If each of us were to start our own genealogical ladder, whose names would we include? It may be a good time to start thinking on this topic. Naming our “masters” will also help us in our desire to express our gratitude and may open the doors for the students of the future. our University magazine, Voices, Perhaps we will need to look at the contain reflections from alumni. This Ceremony of Light we celebrated as annual report issue shows the many we opened the school year. Each who have offered their support which entering new student was given a has made it possible for Benedictine small candle by the relatives of some University to be what it is today. of our deceased donors as they However, it may also be the time walked down the aisles of the abbey for us to begin “listing” the masters church passing on the light. President so that we might have a true Bill Carroll stressed in his remarks “genealogy” that would show who that we always must remember those gave life to whom. who made it possible for us to be who We can truly look back to Fr. Cosmas Vesely, O.S.B., who began stressing education in the sciences and led to all the scientific work of Frs. Hilary and Edmund, Frs. William and Richard and Rose Carney, Fr. Luke Ouska, Leo Vancura, Adolph Hrdlicka, we are, to know what we know, and to experience the successes we have. The “masters” — many though they be — will always be an important part of our lives. ✝ Winter 2008 3 Values “Great things are not done by impulse, but by a series of small things brought together.” — VINCENT VAN GOGH Educare Ball Raises More Than $150,000 for Student Scholarships “Firesid Safari — to the y in d e lk ey, the sts wa t their journ re e u g s A e tar An Education that w e” to s Reserv eted by lions ature N re were g to the Jurica e cocktail d Expedition was t th donate . Throughou ative m wed n u Muse ests vie of the u g , n s io the theme for recept om the tribe nd Zulu. a fr masks ongye, Woyo ed lud ,S c the 42nd in s r Pende e appetiz bster Exotic ch, an lo ic fr A er ostri h Annual Educare Sout i pepp ndori il h c , g a n t dumpli amosa and ed zi s provid Scholarship Ball s t mibaa u h i g ik T in . t s kabob se wan for tho have r e lt e held on campus this sh nd own a to sit d tions with a s y. conver journe past November. It was on the others a jungle out there — from the Fireside Lounge, to the elevator, to the cafeteria — the Krasa Center was transformed into a safari expedition. e 4 Benedictine Voices Upon entering the second floor, guests exp erienced a tropical ra native flora in forest al l arrangem ong with ents. Dick University and Sue La Trustee an mb, d chaircou greeted ev ple (picture eryone and d above), sent them journey. Kal safely on th eeya Furlow eir safari , C08, sang while food a variety o was being f songs se The menu rved by th e Sodexho consisted of a salad team. roasted co of shrimp, rn, d plantains an ates, d currants . The entrée was aprico t and couscous st uffed guin ea hen along with tender loin of beef. Th e dessert co nsisted of tear dro p chocolate and fresh berri es. p h i l a n t h r o p y Values The Office of Alumni Affairs would like to thank the underwriting sponsors who made this fundraising event possible: James and Ann Beatty Benedictine University Alumni Association Brookfield Zoo Calamos Investments William and Marietta Carroll DLR Group Financial Strategies & Solutions Group First DuPage Bank Paul and Helen Gauvreau Duane and Lisa Gengler Willis and Dayle Gillett Dan and Carol Goodwin HRMS, LLC Ice Miller, LLP King Family Foundation Richard and Sue Lamb Paul, M.B.A. ‘78 and Coleen Lehman Dorcas Pearcy and Robert Marschalk, C73 The silent au ction was ve ry active until cl osing time at which point Donna Hrozencik, M .D., C82, offe red a short presentation crediting Bene dictine Unive and its supp rsity orters for he r success as physician. Sh a e then oversa w a quick liv auction aski e ng everyone to contribute to the schola directly rship fund w hi ch than $27,000 raised more . New this ye ar was a raffl offering thre e e trips: The w inner of “The Tanzania” — a private tour of Brookfield was Michael Zoo — Birck; the win ner of “Hakun Matata” — a a trip to New Yo rk to see the King on Broa Lion dway — was Emily King; an winner of “T d the he Serenget i” — a five-da to Disney’s A y trip nimal Kingdo m — was Catherine Arn old, C84. Kevin and Marilou McGirr Minuteman Press Moser Adult Accelerated Programs The Naperville Sun National City Bank National Van Lines NICOR Reed IL Dan and Cindy Romano Sodexho Campus Services Sodexho Food Services Tellabs Pete and Judy Whinfrey to ey came The journ h dancing wit a close nt rtainme te n e d an e th by provided nte Band. Ve ll a h rs a M eding those ne And for ce to a p quiet s a more joy n e d n a e convers ors, f all flav coffee o le” g n u J a the “Jav ith ilable w was ava t n e m in enterta y by facult provided r Craig membe Ph.D. ✝ r, e d e ro B See more photos of this event online at ben.edu/alumni. Special thanks to Decorative Accents for providing the accessories for this exciting safari adventure. Without all of these generous contributors, it would not have been possible to raise more than $150,000 for student scholarships. Please join us in November 2008 for the 43rd Annual Educare Scholarship Ball. ✝ Winter 2008 5 President’s Associates Recognized for Commitment to University B enedictine University honored members of the President’s Associates Society during the third annual appreciation event on August 3. Society members have committed themselves to the betterment of the University by contributing at least $1,000 during the previous academic year. These donations are essential to the University. The 85 donors in attendance were treated to a live performance by Irish singer Gavin Coyle. Coyle’s talents were exhibited through his performance with music ranging from Irish folk songs to more contemporary ballads. Benefits to being a President’s Associate include: preferred parking and seating at University special events; invitations to special President’s Associates receptions; prominent listing in the University Annual Report and all other donor recognition publications; involvement and access to the leadership of the University and the President’s Associates Council; use of University Library; discounts at University Book Store; Liberty Mutual Group Savings Plus (group discounts on auto, home and tenant insurance) and special pricing and benefits on moves with National Van Lines. A commitment to this society has a tremendous impact on Benedictine by helping the University not only reach its goals, but in providing the necessities required to operate a school of higher education. For more information on the President’s Associates Society, please contact Denise West at (630) 829-6027 or [email protected]. ✝ Ancient Triptych Artwork Donated to Fund Campus Art Gallery Fr. Michael Komechak, O.S.B., curator of the Benedictine University art collection, has received many gifts from former students, friends and corporate donors since he began collecting art in 1951. These wonderful pieces of art are displayed throughout campus. But the recent gift of a triptych he received from Gail Donovan and her late husband, Paul, is unique in that it was not meant to be displayed on campus, but rather to be auctioned off for the development of an art gallery at Benedictine. The triptych, a three-paneled piece, featuring the Madonna and Child with Saint John the Baptist and Saint Peter, with depictions of the Crucifixion and the Virgin Annunciate, had an estimated value of up to $500,000. The piece, a work by Florentine artist Niccolo Di Tommaso (c. 1343- c. 1376), is one of a group of devotional works produced by the artist in Italy. Classrooms: Donations Matter 6 The rooms donated by the Piazza family (Birck Hall Lecture room 218) and the class of 1965 (Kindlon lobby and study area) were sponsored to support student learning and teacher innovations. Donations for classrooms matter. Benedictine Voices Per the donor’s request, the proceeds from the auction will fund the establishment of a permanent art gallery on campus. Paul Donovan was a former student of Fr. Michael’s at Benet Academy. The two always maintained a close friendship. “Before he died, Paul told his wife, Gail, that he would like to give something to me,” said Fr. Michael, who has spent many years acquiring and hanging the Benedictine art collection throughout campus. “The proceeds will go toward establishing an art gallery at the University.” The 650-year-old piece of art was sold this past November by Christie’s of New York to a private collector for $300,000. “I am absolutely delighted,” Fr. Michael said. “We will be able to honor Paul’s wishes and create a place to display more of the artwork from our collection.” ✝ p h i l a n t h r o p y Values Scholarship Donors, Recipients Honored During Annual Recognition Dinner M ore than 80 scholarship donors, recipients and their families were honored at the annual Benedictine University Scholarship Donor Dinner held October 19 in the Krasa Center dining room. This was a wonderful time for the students who have been able to pursue their dreams to meet the people who made it possible. This event can be life-changing for both the donors, who see firsthand how their generosity has helped another person’s life, and the recipients, as they see how having someone care about your well-being makes all the difference in the world. Trustee Will Gillett (right) and August Kapellas, who flew in from Arizona to attend and meet his scholarship recipient. The guests were greeted by William Carroll, president of Benedictine University, and Willis M. Gillett, chairman of the Board of Trustees at Benedictine. Carroll recognized the level of academic achievement attained by the scholarship recipients and thanked the donors for making it possible for the students to achieve their dreams. “The generosity of these donors lifts a financial burden from these students and their families and allows the students to focus on what college should be…the pursuit of academic excellence, a time of personal growth and preparation for a future of service to the community,” Carroll said. This year’s participants were as follows: Sheryl Christy of Naperville and Atif Ahmed Jagirdar of Elmhurst, recipients of the Edward Hospital Physician’s Scholarship and the Edward Hospital Medical Staff Pre-Med Endowed Scholarship. Johanna Dara Felde, recipient of The Margaret M. Gillett Memorial Scholarship in Education, as well as the Dr. Luz and Malcom Berd Endowed Scholarship, and scholarship donors Willis M. Gillett and Dr. Luz Berd. Scholarship, and donors Richard Lanser and Tony, C72, and Monica, C78, LaScala. Linda and Primo Riva on behalf of the Molex Endowed Scholarship for International Business, and recipient Anne Elisabeth Perkins of New Lenox. Aheed Siddiqi, M.D., C98, and Omer Sultan, C97, founders of The Muslim Alumni Endowed Scholarship, and scholarship recipient Amina Waheed of Lisle. Sara Ann Sanchez of Lisle, recipient of the National City Bank Endowed Scholarship for Business Majors, and National City Bank representative Thomas Harazim. Miriam Medhkour of Sylvania, Ohio, recipient of The Mtanis and Ajia Haddad Memorial Scholarship in the Natural Sciences, and scholarship donor Donna Haddad. Courtney Ann Mikesh of Brookfield, recipient of the President’s Scholarship, and Dr. James Baker, representing the Estate of Bernice Kolak. Scholarship donor August Kapellas, for the Kapellas Entrepreneurial Scholarship in International Business and Economics, and recipient Christine Hyun Ahn of Hinsdale. Cheryl B. Richardson, Ph.D., ’01, donor of the Dr. Cheryl B. Richardson Scholarship Award, and recipients Sharena Sanchelle Sigmon of Chicago and Cora Denise Sigmon of Chicago. Angela Vitto of Muskegon, Mich., recipient of the Bernardine M. Lanser Memorial Scholarship for Teachers, as well as the Anthony L. LaScala Leadership Endowed Gabrielle E. Tufano of Glen Ellyn and Cynthia Lovel of West Chicago, recipients of the Scarlato Family Scholarship Award for Young Artists, and scholarship founder Alicia Cordoba Tait (Front) Aheed Siddiqi, M.D., C98; Omer Sultan, C97, and his wife, Shazia; (back) student Amina Waheed, and her parents Mohammed and Rafath Waheed; and University Dean Marie de la Cámera, Ph.D. and supplemented by William Scarlato. Robert and Pam Cebrzynski for the Cynthia Cebrzynski Memorial Scholarship, and recipient Jillian Renea Kaskavage of Oregon, Ill. Jeremy Brooks of Naperville, recipient of the Albert R. and Mary Rita Brusek Memorial Scholarship for Freshmen Students of Recognized Potential, donated by James M. Brusek, C69, and June Macchiaverna. Ed and Mary Ann Allen Memorial Scholarship representatives Tom, C91, and Beth Allen, and recipients Steve Montalto of Lisle and Pam Montalto of Westchester. John Locher Memorial Scholarship donors Richard and Mary Locher. If you are interested in establishing a scholarship and changing the life of a student, contact Denise West, executive director of University Relations, at (630) 829-6027 or [email protected]. ✝ Winter 2008 7 Gift of Stocks Benefits University and Donor B enedictine University needs people like John Spelman, C60, Mathematics, in order to stay vital, up-to-date and influential for generations to come. Spelman’s consistent generosity toward the school and its students has had a lasting impact over the years, and the method in which he donates has benefits for him as well. He makes his unrestricted gifts by means of electronic transfer of stock. His gifts, made consistently for the past 14 years and for a total of more than 30 years, have enabled Benedictine University to provide additional scholarships for students and support non-budgeted projects as well. When asked why he chooses to make his gifts in this manner, Spelman said, “It’s simple mathematics. There are additional tax benefits by giving appreciated stock instead of cash. I am able to give the stock, claim the full market value for the tax deduction, plus I avoid the capital gains taxes that I would otherwise have to pay when selling the stock, while the recipient receives full face value of the stock.” Spelman gives to Benedictine because he feels the school impacted his life and he wants to make sure other students have the chance to experience it as well. “The school gave me my future. I am happy to give something back in return. My fondest memories are of Rose Carney (a math professor who recently passed away). She had a lot to do with shaping my thinking,” said Spelman. After a three-year stint in the Army, 18th Airborne Corps, Spelman started on his degree at Benedictine in January of 1956. He met his wife, Jacqueline (Jackie), that 8 Benedictine Voices Baltimore where he and his family currently reside. One of Bendix’s military programs was to develop technology to detect the presence of chemical warfare agents. The developed technology, Ion Mobility Spectroscopy (IMS), is now also found at major airports to detect explosives. d o n o r f o c u s John Spelman, C60 spring and they were married in August of 1957, in the middle of his sophomore year. Being a married man did not leave much time for campus activities, but he did finish his second year on the football team before entirely acquiescing as a full-time married man and father of two prior to graduation. But, as he fondly remembers, it is the only time that he is aware of when the school won two football games within the same week. In addition to giving back financially to the community, the Spelmans feel volunteer work is very important. For the last eight years, Spelman has served as Chairman of the Board of Directors of Prologue, a not-for-profit organization serving the mentally ill and homeless. He is grateful and proud that Prologue recently completed a successful $5 million building campaign. His wife is a volunteer with Our Daily Bread which is an organization supported by their parish. It provides meals for more than 900 people daily. The couple has three daughters and seven grandchildren. Lisa is the eldest and has two boys and lives in the Baltimore area. Lori, their middle daughter, was diagnosed with schizophrenia in 1980 upon her return from her sophomore year of college. She is successfully dealing with her illness and strongly influenced Spellman’s involvement in Prologue. Terri, the youngest, proved to surprise the family by having five children. Spelman’s career included 20 years with the Bendix Corporation as president and general manager of their instrumentation business, which was headquartered in In 1996, Spelman purchased the commercial rights to this technology from Bendix and formed his own company, Molecular Analytics LLC. The instrument developed by Spelman’s company found a key market niche in the manufacturing of computer chips. The presence of ammonia, a ubiquitous compound, at the low parts per billion level, has an adverse affect upon chip manufacturing. Chip manufacturers needed an alarm to determine when the ammonia level within the manufacturing area exceeded seven parts per billion. It would then require a filter change. The IMS instrument could do this. Since a filter for this process cost in excess of $250,000, changing it too soon was expensive, changing it too late resulted in costly rejects. The instrument presented real added value to the manufacturing process. Now, all major producers of computer chips in the world rely upon this instrument to assure quality control at their manufacturing facilities. The company was sold in 2002. Today, in addition to his volunteer work, Spelman engages in furniture woodworking as well as enjoying golf. ✝ To learn more about how stock donations can help the University and your bottom line, please contact Denise West at (630) 829-6027 or [email protected]. p h i l a n t h r o p y Donations In Action: Unrestricted Gifts Most of the unrestricted gifts go to support students through the General Scholarship Fund. This fund is essential in helping students, who might not otherwise be able to afford an education, receive all the same opportunities as others. However, a substantial amount of these donations goes to help the students in other ways that might not be as apparent. For instance, although most students have their own computers, the University does not require students to do so. Some students who use campus computers cannot afford their own and would have no other means to do research and school work. Other students may have computers at home, but find it convenient to stay on campus and utilize the computers for their school needs. In 2006-07, unrestricted gifts enabled Benedictine to spend more than $240,000 on new computers for student use. The computers were placed in the atrium at Kindlon Hall, the main floor of the Krasa Center and in computer labs in Kindlon and Scholl Hall. Many of the new computers replaced old ones, while others were added where needed. Unrestricted gifts to the University made this project possible. Another example of donor contributions in action is the new safety alarm and card entry access system, costing about $15,000, which was purchased for use at the Moser Center in Naperville. This off-site building now offers the security students need in our modern world. These are just two examples of the many ways donations matter to the University, its students, staff and faculty. To learn more about putting your unrestricted gifts to work, contact Denise West at [email protected] or (630) 829-6027. ✝ Scholl Courtyard: Donations Matter Benedictine University thanks the hundreds of people who give unrestricted gifts annually. These gifts are essential to the University, but many times donors will ask, “Where does the money go?” Online Giving Now Available Values The courtyard in Scholl Hall has been beautifully transformed into a reflective thinking space for students, faculty, staff and visitors. The courtyard is filled with beautiful landscaping, benches and a lovely fountain. Donations for campus beautification matter. WE ARE THE STUDENTS WHO WORK AT THE BENEDICTINE UNIVERSITY PHONATHON. We will be calling alumni and asking if you can contribute to the scholarship fund at the University. Many students, including all of us, benefit from the generosity of Phonathon donors like you. Let us know how a Benedictine education made a difference for you by sharing your story with us. From left: BERNARDINA MORENO, freshman from Chicago; KIAYONDA LOVE, sophomore from Justice, Ill.; and CLAIRE MCCARTHY, Freshman from Bartlett, Ill. Please support Benedictine University and its students by answering our call. www.ben.edu/giving Support Benedictine University’s Annual Fund by giving online. Easy. Quick. Appreciated. Winter 2008 9 Fun for all ages . HOMECOMING 2007 Go Eagles! Friday, September 28 — Alumni gathered for a fun “after-hours” at Quigley’s in downtown Naperville to kick off the Homecoming weekend. Alumni from many different class years joined in the fun to talk about everything from how the campus had changed to their former roommates. A lot of laughs were shared by all. Afterward, alumni headed back to campus to join students for the bonfire. One alumnus quipped, “While it wasn’t to the same standard as OUR bonfires, it was a lot of fun getting acquainted with the students and enjoying a beautiful night.” Saturday, September 29 — what a beautiful fall day to “Paint the Campus Red!” The sun was bright in the sky and the temperature was hovering in the 70s. The Krasa parking lot was filled with tailgaters, all of whom were alumni families and friends. At 1:00 p.m. the group witnessed the kickoff of the football game between the Benedictine Eagles and the Lakeland College Muskies. It was a “nail-biter” to the end, but the Muskies overran the Eagles by a score of 21–7. After the game, alumni gathered for their class reunions in the Krasa Center. The classes of 1967, 1972, 1977, 1982, 1987 and 1992 gathered for food and great stories. Other activities for the day included an alumni baseball game where alumni played other alumni from men’s soccer, women’s soccer and women’s volleyball. All in all, it was a great weekend of activities enjoyed by alumni, students and friends. Mark your calendars for Homecoming 2008 which is scheduled for October 17 and 18. ✝ 10 Benedictine Voices a l u m n i n e w s Values Welcome Back Alumni! Stay Connected Upcoming University Events JANUARY 26 Men’s and Women’s Swim and Dive Reunion FEBRUARY 2 Sweetheart Club Dinner/Dance f 1982 o s s a l n—C o i n u e rR 25 Yea FEBRUARY 16 Men’s and Women’s Basketball Reunion FEBRUARY 19 Alumni Board Meeting MARCH 12 Fitz’s Pub Alumni “After-hours” MARCH 29 Volleyball Alumni Reunion APRIL 6 Men’s Baseball Alumni Event APRIL 16 Downtown Loop Alumni “After-hours” APRIL 18 College of Science Alumni Reunion APRIL 25 History, Philosophy and Religious Studies Awards Dinner/Reunion APRIL 27 Men’s and Women’s Alumni Tennis Round Robin Reunion Football Alumni MAY 3 Department of Music Awards Dinner/Reunion MAY 18 Commencement and Golden Eagles Reunion MAY 20 Alumni Board Meeting See more photos of this event Please refer to www.ben.edu/ alumni for additional details and events. Julie Nelligan (630) 829-6077 1965 Class of Debbie Smith (630) 829-6080 online at ben.edu/alumni. Winter 2008 11 Reunion Fun: Left: Jason Ward, C03, Torian Richardson, C99 and Darryl Hobson, C91. Center: Tony Ryan, C65, Rich Brusko, C65, Tom Brophy, C65, John Zigmond, C65 and Terry Burns, C65. Right: Coach Bill Barz, Coach Tony LaScala, C72, Coach Tom Beck and Coach Jon Cooper. First Football Reunion a Success A rainy Saturday afternoon ushered in the First Football Alumni Reunion on August 18. The Benedictine University Eagles scrimmaged, despite the weather, to give the alumni a sneak preview of the upcoming season. A reception was held in the newly renovated Krasa Center cafeteria for the nearly 70 attendees including a l u m n i former Eagles coaches Bill Barz, Tom Beck and Tony LaScala. Coach Jon Cooper spoke to the group recounting the successes they have had in recruiting players and his vision for the upcoming season. Cooper said he looks forward to building the team and encouraged the alumni to come out and support them. There was a lot of catching up and glory day stories at this event. Look for another Football Alumni Reunion in August 2008. ✝ Swanson Retirement Party and Scholarship On September 8, alumni, colleagues, family and friends gathered in the Krasa Center to celebrate Jon Colby Swanson’s 20 years of teaching at Benedictine University. The retirement celebration was organized by Alan Gorr, Ph.D. and the Master of Public Health (M.P.H.) Leadership Committee chaired by Taniya Henry. Evening highlights included a slide show highlighting Swanson’s teaching career and family, a song about him sung to Bob Hope’s “Thanks for the Memories” written by alumnus Cathy Gavin, and favorite stories b r i e f s shared by several alumni. The evening was capped off with the presentation of the “Jon Colby Swanson Endowed Scholarship for Master of Public Health.” www.ben.edu/alumni The Scholarship will be awarded to a student pursuing a M.P.H. degree, who has completed a minimum of six credit hours in the program, has a minimum G.P.A. of 3.0 and who has demonstrated financial need. Liberty Mutual Helps New Graduates Obtain Renters Insurance: Alumni Offered Additional Savings Liberty Mutual has unveiled a new Web site, youcovered.com, which offers a quick and easy way to find out more about renters insurance. Without even giving their name, renters can use an estimator tool to determine how much their belongings are worth and how much it would cost to cover these possessions with a policy. Recent graduates may be surprised to learn that they can buy a policy for as low as $10 per month — the cost of a pizza or 10 music downloads. Even better, Benedictine alumni are eligible for Group Savings Plus ®, which gives an additional discount. To learn more about this great way to protect your assets, visit youcovered.com. ✝ 12 Benedictine Voices Jon Colby Swanson It was no surprise that more than 100 people attended the farewell dinner. Swanson has been amongst the most popular professors at the University. Apart from his academic interests, he is noted for his expertise in chess, wines, Sherlock Holmes and classical Latin texts. He is known across the campus for his keen wit, caring nature and photographic memory. To donate to the scholarship, please contact Judi Gavlin at (630) 829-6072. To learn more about the M.P.H. Leadership Committee please e-mail [email protected]. ✝ a l u m n i n e w s Values Help “Carry the Light” to the next generation. Gift of time or talent? Contact Julie Nelligan at (630) 829-6077. Gift of treasure? Contact Denise West at (630) 829-6027. Alumni Affairs/Career Development Workshop Class of 1962 - 45th Reunion Weekend “What happened to my resume after I hit send?” was the theme of this very informative workshop. A collaborative effort between the Offices of Career Development and Alumni Affairs, this workshop was offered to alumni, students and the community for anyone seeking a job or in job transition. Two panels were created, one of job seekers and one of human resource professionals, to assist people on how to network, market themselves, be proactive in their job search strategies, research, how to make connections in their potential job field and write a more effective resume. Forty five years ago, 72 men graduated from St. Procopius College. On Friday, October 12 and Saturday, October 13, 20 of them gathered to celebrate their 45th reunion with various activities. On Friday, some played golf while others went to lunch and did some sightseeing. On Saturday, tailgating began at 11:00 a.m. in the Krasa Center parking lot followed by a football game between the Benedictine University Eagles and the Aurora University Spartans. The classmates witnessed a doubleovertime win by the Eagles 20-17. Afterward, everyone gathered for dinner in the Krasa Center and shared pictures and stories from the past 45 years. It was a great time with this group of fun-spirited men. When asked, C62 “What would you like to do for your 50th reunion?” the reply was “be alive!” ✝ Job seeker panelists included: Patrice Kucia, C91, M.B.A. ’96, auditor for the U.S. Department of Treasury; Jane Abe, vice president of business development, Downers Grove Chamber of Commerce; and Susan Ross, C79, assistant to the president at Morton Arboretum. Human resource panelists included: Thelma Welton, M.S.M.O.B.’04, owner of the consulting firm Welton Technologies; Jennifer Struif, C98, manager of human resources-corporate support for OfficeMax; and Shaira DeLeon, M.S.M.O.B.’06, human resources manager for Sears Holdings Management Corporation. More than 25 participants attended this event and all walked away with several great ideas on how to better present themselves in a competitive marketplace. They also met and networked with fellow job seekers and many stories were shared along with contact information. We thank our panelists for a job well-done. ✝ Class Notes Winners from Fall 2007 Make u sure yo your send in otes! class n Christopher Comes, C94 Suzanne Gallo, C01 If your name is listed here, then you have won a prize from the Office of Alumni Affairs. Congratulations! In upcoming issues of Voices, three people who appear in the Class Notes section of the magazine will be randomly chosen to win an alumni prize. (One win per person during duration of promotion.) Michael Gallagher, C72 If you are one of these lucky winners, please contact Julie Nelligan BEFORE February 20 to collect your prize. Good luck and keep sending in those class notes! ✝ Winter 2008 13 a l m a m a t t e r s Robert Koller, C50, Philosophy Robert Koller is one of Benedictine University’s best-known graduates. He has been the owner of Koller Dodge in Naperville for more than 30 years. Koller is known around campus because of his continued involvement in fundraising activities and his undying support of his alma mater. K oller is frequently seen at University activities, particularly at the Annual President’s Invitational Golf Outing and at the Educare Scholarship Ball. His name is visible on campus in the form of a plaque honoring his contribution to the Benedictine 2000 capital campaign, which provided support for the archives room in the library. Koller was raised in Downers Grove, and in high school he worked part-time at a local Chrysler-Plymouth dealership. After graduation, he enlisted in the Air Force during World War II and was assigned to airplane maintenance and repair. When he returned from the war, he enrolled at St. Procopius College (now Benedictine University). Koller’s fondest memories of the University include the priests. He feels they were crucial in helping to shape his values and his view on life, especially Fr. Luke, Abbot Kucera and the Jurica brothers. “The school formed the direction of my life,” said Koller. The Alma Matters feature highlights alumni who have chosen to donate their time, talents and/or finances to Benedictine in order to support the school’s goals and needs. 14 Benedictine Voices While at the University, he became president of the DuPage Catholic Youth Federation. This was a social group that organized youth activities on a rotating basis at various west suburban parishes. He continued his membership and involvement after graduation and met Jane Case, who became his wife in 1952. When Koller arrived at Benedictine, he thought seriously about becoming a dentist. However, the owner of the car dealership where he worked persuaded him to go into car sales. This shaped his future as a business owner. Koller was exposed to all aspects of running a dealership. In 1963, a very small Dodge dealership became available for sale and he bought it. He built that tiny dealership into the very successful Koller Dodge of the western suburbs. In the 1980s and 1990s, Koller was an active member of the President’s Associates Council and attended many campus events. He keeps abreast of changes at the University and he is impressed with how much Bill Carroll has accomplished during his time as president. Koller leads an active life and doesn’t let being in his 80s stop him from golfing and riding his motorcycle. He is now a widower, but family life is very important to him. He has three daughters, Mary, Margaret and Bernadette, and two sons, Robert Jr. and David, C75, as well as 17 grandchildren. Benedictine University appreciates Robert Koller’s continued involvement and support. ✝ Does your Alma Matter? If so, let us know how and why you support the continuing efforts of the University. Contact Linda Hale at [email protected] or (630) 829-6092. lumnus Bill Carroll has stayed connected to Benedictine University since his graduation not only by being involved in alumni affairs and fundraising efforts, but by living a life in balance — a life that reflects the idea of the Benedictine Pedagogy. Here he answers some questions about his life and why giving back is important to him. A What are you currently doing in your career? I have owned Blue Island Travel Services since 1977. We specialize in cruises, destination weddings, group trips and family travel. I am also the president and CEO of C&H Development, an industrial real estate and development company in Orland Park. With what charitable organizations are you involved? I am currently the Southwest Regional Board Chair for Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Chicago. I have been a board member since 2001 and chair since 2003. The southwest area takes in 50 parishes in the territory. As a board member, our responsibilities vary based on the needs of Charities clients. In 2002 the board made a commitment to host a weekly supper for those in need in the southwest area. A supper is provided every Wednesday at St. Blasé parish in Summit for anyone who would like a hot meal. The board members work to underwrite each weekly supper. Each board member hosts a supper yearly, many do as many as one per month. We are currently looking at other locations on the southwest side to fill the need of a weekly hot supper. Last year, Catholic Charities served 1.1 million individual clients a l u m n i g i v i n g n e w s Values b a c k Bill Carroll, Political Science, C73; M.B.A.’80 Living the Benedictine Pedagogy with 165 different programs. Also there is a full-time staff at St. Blasé that administers a food pantry, early childhood development program, various nutrition programs and a health fair. As a not-for-profit organization, we are responsible for raising funds to help pay for these programs. When my family moved to Orland Park in 1995, I became involved at St. Francis of Assisi, which was a new parish at the time. There were many opportunities to assist in the growth of the church. I began as a member of the liturgy commission, moving on to the committee to establish a parish council. I also helped to raise funds for new parish buildings. I believe it is important for church members to become active participants in their parishes. It serves a need in the community and in oneself. I was also a longtime member of the Kiwanis Club of Blue Island. I currently sit on the board of directors for the Blue Island Chamber of Commerce. Why have you decided to give back to others? I cannot think of any one time where I decided to give back to others. It is not like there was some great revelation one day that I should do it, but rather an opportunity to assist someone who had a need — whether it be one individual or working on behalf of one million people through Catholic Charities — I felt that as long as I have been blessed with good health and good fortune why shouldn’t I help someone in need? It is interesting that your request for an interview came so soon after Dr. Carroll’s article in Voices regarding the Benedictine University Pedagogy. Several of the seven My wife Ann (Norton), C74, assists me in many of these projects by both participating in them and understanding the time I devote to them. One of our Catholic Charities board members once said at our fundraiser that we are all only one catastrophe away from being on the receiving end instead of the giving end. That statement has stuck with me for all these years. I use it often to very succinctly sum up why I do what I do. I don’t look for any acknowledgement or recognition for what I do, I simply feel good about it and go on from there. After each accomplishment you look for the next need or opportunity. Benedictine values he speaks of summarize my charitable work. A TRADITION OF HOSPITALITY; welcoming the stranger is what I do through my efforts. The stranger is God among us. My charity work is amongst strangers; charity for all regardless of race, origin or religious belief. While Dr. Carroll speaks of an appreciation of working and living in community on the collegiate level, I, and many others, carry this value with us each and every day throughout our daily lives. When there is a need you respond. THE CONCERN FOR THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE PERSON; I try to work to improve the lives of others through example, giving of time, talent and treasure. STEWARDSHIP OF THE EARTH; we are Did your experience at Benedictine help you decide to do charitable work? working to bring completeness to an My experiences at Benedictine did help me to decide to give back. I was involved in many activities which were what I will call “for the betterment of the community.” I received the Service Award in 1973 for service to the college community, an award while appreciated, was not necessary. I took away far more from the Benedictine tradition than I ever felt I contributed. I take with me every day the relationships that were built and stood the test of time. Those years were indeed special and I would not trade them for anything. who will follow. A LIFE LIVED IN BALANCE; individual, but more importantly that they pass on this completeness to others for myself, personally, I cannot ask for or want anything else. I am truly blessed with the materials and the time to share. But more importantly, I have a very satisfying inner peace and contentment of the human spirit. Carroll has supported the University as a member of the Alumni Board since 1988, as well as through financial contributions including donating funds for a room in Kindlon Hall. He and his wife, Ann, have been married for 28 years. Their son, John, graduated from Benedictine in 2003 with a degree in Psychology. Their daughter, Caitlin, graduated from Marquette University in 2005 with a degree in Exercise Science and is currently pursuing her doctorate to be a physical therapist. Carroll attributes his family’s support of his charitable work and their willingness to participate in his efforts as the reason he has been able to do so much to give back to others. ✝ If you know someone who has given of him or herself to help others in the Benedictine spirit of giving back, please e-mail [email protected]. Through these stories we hope to encourage others to give back as well. Winter 2008 15 “To educate a man in mind and not in morals is to Vitality educate a menace to society.” — OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES Wireless HotSpots Now On Campus Benedictine University Wireless HotSpots are available in a number of campus locations. Wherever you see signs with “Spot,” the Wi-Fi mascot, you can be sure there is a wireless signal available. The Office of Information Technology (I.T.) installed dozens of wireless access points across campus. COAL BEN is New Center of Campus Social Activity Access to these HotSpots is free to anyone with a Benedictine University network logon account. For more information, please visit the I.T. web page at www.ben.edu/it/wifi/asp. ✝ During the early days of St. Procopius College, the coal-fired boilers housed in the old powerhouse heated the campus. Coal was stored in an adjacent coal bin. As the University became less reliant on coal, the red-brick structure was increasingly used to store furnishings from Benedictine’s beginnings. Among those furnishings were remnants of the “Pub,” a wildly-popular gathering spot housed in the late Benedictine Hall. The new “Coal Ben” taps into Benedictine University’s history while providing a place for today’s students to gather, eat, drink and socialize. The “Coal Ben” was unveiled following a ribboncutting ceremony on November 14. Housed in the old coal bin next to the Krasa Student Center in the heart of campus, the “Coal Ben” features food, plasma TVs, Wi-Fi, an outdoor patio and a venue for dances, movies and live entertainment. At the “Coal Ben,” students can relax in a casual, rustic atmosphere while studying or working on class projects. “We are excited about providing our students with a place where they can socialize with other students, eat, study or just kick back between classes,” said Marco Masini, associate vice president of Student Life at Benedictine. ✝ 16 Benedictine Voices Homecom in Spread the g Red Lunch campus u n i v e r s i t y Buddhist Temple Bells Ring Out as a New Country Emerges by Rita A. Dougherty The sound of temple bells surprised me. No, I wasn’t in China. But University President William Carroll was there September 18 to September 28, and captured the sound of the temple bells on his cell phone. The peaceful sound is reminiscent of the pagodas and serenity we associate with China. However, that serenity is usually only felt in outlying areas. China’s cities are bustling, noisy places where huge cranes crowd the streets constructing skyscrapers, apartment houses and subways. Those cities are beginning to look like Chicago or New York. Luxury cars, bicycles and people navigate the streets at the same time with no stop signs or stop lights. Carroll says that China is experiencing an economic explosion that may well surpass many developed countries in the near future. Why was President Carroll in China? When Benedictine University entered the 21st century, it became very clear that globalization would mark this journey. The puzzle was how could a medium-sized university in the Midwest wrap its arms around the world and do a good job? There are not sufficient resources for a single institution to be all things to all people. So, Benedictine decided to focus on a single country and put its globalization resources into a single enterprise. Thus, Benedictine’s China Institute was born. This unique Institute seeks to advance relations between China and the United States through education and business, so that the political, economic, cultural, business and ideological forces that shape our relationship become transparent. To maximize the usefulness to both countries, the Institute sponsors lectures, seminars, workshops, language and cultural institutes. The first step of the partnership was to partner with two Chinese universities to offer Benedictine degrees in China and to facilitate business and student exchanges between the two countries. Elsie Yuan (second from left in photo), director of the China Institute, said that the first Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) class began at Shenyang University of Technology in northeast China in 2004, two classes began in 2005, one in 2006 and two new classes in 2007. Benedictine’s Master of Science in Management Information Systems (M.S.M.I.S.) is taught at Shenyang Jianzhu University in northeast China with five classes thus far, and two classes graduated in 2007. n e w s Vitality not only cultivated the relationship, but also discovered more opportunities toward new cooperation during every discussion. Most important is that we sincerely appreciate the partnership.” “Our programs are fully visible in China,” said Carroll. Benedictine’s Master of Public Health (M.P.H.) has been approved but the site has not been finalized. And the Benedictine M.B.A. program began in November 2007 in the Business School of Hohai University in Nanjing, a city west of Shanghai and south of Beijing. It is one of the four great ancient capitals of China. Three M.B.A. classes will begin there each year beginning in 2008. Lee Lu, Ph.D.’05, recruits students in China to attend Benedictine’s programs there, but he has also recruited 10 Chinese students who are now on Benedictine’s campus in Lisle. Six more will begin classes in January, and he is hoping for 40 students to come to Benedictine during 2008. Lu teaches some of the M.B.A. classes in China, and gives seminars in different universities and cities in China to acquaint the Chinese with Benedictine University. The president of Shenyang University of Technology, Rongde Li, recently wrote to Yuan and told her, “Indeed, through recent contacts and deeper discussions, we have further understanding between each other. I hope more cooperation will be carried out through both side’s efforts.” Will Gillett, chairman of Benedictine’s Board of Trustees (center, in photo above), who accompanied Carroll on this trip, said that he was in China in 1996-97 when he was a supplier for the McDonald Corp., and it is now an entirely different place. “There is vitality among the people, and the growth there is unbelievable. We have a fabulous partnership with China.” Yuan continued the thought, “I believe that the face-toface interaction has truly brought us closer. Our visits to our China partners have Carroll calls China an amazing country. “You feel the tremendous sense of history. I walked on the Wall of China, and then walked the streets of Benedictine China Institute several noisy, modern cities. A new China is springing from an insular and traditional past. China’s farmers are flocking to the cities, for you go where the jobs are, as evidenced in our own 1931-1939 ‘Dust Bowl’ when the drought brought many American farmers into cities for jobs. It’s a kind of intellectual investigation taking place, for people are preparing for jobs that are now available, and future jobs when they become available. Benedictine University can help them do that. China is a country born anew before our eyes.” ✝ OD Summit Conference: Live! from Birck Hall to China In September, Therese Yaeger, Ph.D., and Peter Sorensen, Ph.D., Organization Development (O.D.), presented the first O.D. Summit Conference to students and colleagues in Shenyang, China live from the Birck Hall’s Tellabs Lecture Hall. Keynote speakers and participants included College of Business faculty Sandra Gill, Ram Tenkasi and James Ludema. Technology for this special event was orchestrated by Rudy Dardy from the Office of Information Technology. ✝ Winter 2008 17 catholic Perspectives on Women by Rachel Huska, C08 B visiting scholar In catholic on Women catholicPerspectives thought series enedictine students, professors, religious leaders and community members gathered this past October in Scholl Hall for the latest speaker in the Visiting Scholar in Catholic Thought Lecture Series. 18 Benedictine This semester’s presenter was Melanie M. Morey, Ed.D. Morey is the senior developer of research at NarrowGate Consulting, a division of the Catholic Education Institution in the Bronx, N.Y. Her presentation was titled, “Catholic Perspectives on Women.” Her topics included “Women Religious and American Catholic Culture: Leadership and Legacy” and “Women Religious and Cultural Change: A Cautionary Tale.” Discussions included the roles of women in the Catholic Church and tradition, with emphasis on the roles of sisters in their parishes, and how their role has evolved. Morey explained that sisters are a crucial part of the Catholic faith as not only a symbol of the religion, but also as community leaders. According to Morey, the sisters may be decreasing in numbers, but their importance in the church grows more and more every day. She believes this issue affects Catholics of all ages. She explained that without their habits, they may be less identifiable as a religious symbol, but they are still running Catholic schools and churches. It is more work for the sisters now because their numbers are less and there are not many young people waiting to take their place. As the church changes and more college-aged students call themselves “spiritual” rather than “religious,” the sisters’ responsibilities to be a visible symbol grows even more. Morey spoke about how sisters taught American Catholics how to be Catholic. She noted these hard-working nuns have been a Voices driving force in the Catholic Church, even though they may not have been given the credit for it. She spoke of the resistance to women in the Catholic Church, and how many sisters and women parishioners may always remain bitter because of this. She hopes now that Pope Benedict put the first woman ever in a leadership role, that soon all Catholic women will be able to have equal roles in the church. Many Benedictine students attended these sessions. When asked why he attended the evening and afternoon sessions of this event, sophomore Marcus Pass stated, “This is an important issue because women should be treated as equally as men, especially in the church.” Morey also discussed how important it is for a university like Benedictine to acknowledge and further its Catholic identity and culture. “Catholic and non-Catholic students can both benefit from these presentations, because they have the ability to create enriched conversation and increase knowledge and understanding of one another,” she said. Network Box Broadcasts Energy Produced by Birck Hall Solar Panel T hree years ago, Benedictine University received a grant from the Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation, Commonwealth Edison, the Foundation for Environmental Education and the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity to install a 5 feet by 15 feet solar panel next to the Birck Hall of Science. External Review Gives Kudos to O.D. Program She encouraged students to get together and create their own community. “They need to actively know that the future of the church and the world is in their hands,” she said. “My time at Benedictine has been absolutely wonderful. I have never met a group of students who were more respectful, attentive and generous.” The Ph.D. in Organization The next Visiting Scholar will be Sister Eva Mary Hooker with her presentation of “Literature and the Catholic Imagination” on February 20 and 21. For more information, contact Maria de la Camara at [email protected]. ✝ was completed in Summer 2007 Development (O.D.) at Benedictine University has received many accolades over the years and this latest one proves it has not lost its edge. An external program review and here are some of the quotes from the review. u n i v e r s i t y The system provides only a modest amount of electricity, but it signaled the University’s commitment toward exploring more environmentally friendly ways to meet the nation’s energy needs. The Illinois Clean Energy Foundation recently provided funds to install a network box on the unit. The box broadcasts the amount of energy being produced by the panel. The Foundation hopes to monitor all the energy being produced by the solar panels it has funded to monitor the effect of its investment. “Now we have a way to view the output of the panel any time we want,” said John Mickus, Ph.D., professor of Biology. Benedictine University pursued the initial grant to use the solar panel to teach the concepts of renewable energy in some of its general physics courses, and as part of its science education program so that teachers could learn about renewable energy. Compared to depletable energy sources such as coal, oil and nuclear, solar energy offers a clean renewable form of energy. Solar cells convert sunlight directly into electricity (photovoltaic system) through the use of semiconductors such as silicon. When sunlight strikes these semiconductors, the solar energy knocks electrons loose from their atoms allowing the electrons to flow through the material to produce electricity. Quality of faculty “Benedictine University has an outstanding faculty and a superb group of core visiting scholars. In addition, its distinguished visiting scholars provide exposure to the best in the field coming from many different perspectives. This mix of talents offers the students the broadest platform for learning O.D. and stimulates a broad range of contributions to the field. The faculty model is a distinguishing feature of Benedictine’s program and has allowed the University to leverage its full-time faculty beyond what could normally be achieved at most universities.” Appropriateness of curriculum “The curriculum and course syllabi are very thorough and impressive. The course coverage is up-to-date and representative of the field. The curriculum is also n e w s However, many obstacles remain to widespread use of solar energy. While a 5 kilowatt system employing a 17-by-17 solar panel can meet all the needs of a typical American home, the cost of the panel, the hardware needed to convert the electricity generated by the panel into useful power and installation can cost more than $30,000. “The unit does produce energy even when it’s dark by absorbing light from stars, but it’s just a trickle,” Mickus said. Vitality The output of the solar panel at Benedictine University can be viewed at the following link: http://view2.fatspaniel.net/ Sunair/benedictine/AdminView. Even staunch supporters of renewable energy recognize that more research and development is necessary before coal, oil and nuclear power can be replaced as primary sources of energy. “Currently, solar panels are between 12.5 and 15 percent efficient,” Mickus said. “Once we improve on that and make solar energy more cost effective, we can start replacing fossil fuels as an energy source. And if we can replace fossil fuels, we should be able to replace nuclear energy. I think we have an obligation to invest in the use of renewable energy.” ✝ appropriately weighted with inquiry, research and methods courses preparing students for their contribution to knowledge roles. It is clear from the syllabi that the faculty are demanding in terms of the amount of material they require and the intellectual rigor they expect — they make it clear the program is both demanding and fast paced.” students have been more active and visible in presenting and publishing their work than any other executive O.D. doctoral program to our knowledge.” Contributions to the field “The program’s faculty and students have unquestionably contributed to the field in both research and service. Its students have also contributed enormously to the organizations they work for, or consult to, as able practitioners. The program’s faculty have been highly visible contributors and/or leading many initiatives within the field, professional organizations, O.D. conferences and key publications. The program’s Program Overview Comparison/evaluation with other doctoral programs in O.D. “Benedictine has been and remains a leader in executive doctoral programs in O.D.” T he Ph.D. Program in O.D. has achieved its goal of becoming a stellar program in the field. While doing this, it has remained consistent with the mission and values of Benedictine University. In 1996, the Benedictine University Ph.D. program started with 15 students. The program now has more than 100 alumni and students including O.D. executives in major Fortune 500 corporations and leading not-for-profit organizations. Alumni include executives from Hewlett Packard, the American Cancer Society, CNN-Turner Broadcasting, Johnson-Diversey, the University of Chicago Hospitals and the first non-Polish president of a leading Polish university. The Benedictine University list of Distinguished Visiting Scholars includes more than 70 leading scholars in the O.D. field including four presidents of the Academy of Management, top five national and international scholars in O.D. including Peter Senge, Geert Hofstede, Flemming Poulfelt, Chris Argyris, Edgar Schein and Chris Worley, among others. To learn more about this stellar program, contact Phyllis Meyers at [email protected]. ✝ Winter 2008 19 Reflections by Fr. James Flint, O.S.B. A Procopian Pioneer L ast February, the Benedictine University community mourned the death of Rose Carney, Ph.D., our first full-time female faculty member. About a decade before her death, Rose met with Wayne Wesolowski, Ph.D., who at that time was with the Department of Chemistry, to discuss her career here, on tape. She first encountered St. Procopius College (SPC) through Francis Shonka, Ph.D., of the Physics Department, when both were working on the Manhattan Project at the University of Chicago during World War II. Rose also served as an instructor at DePaul University, and there she met Frank Shonka’s two brothers, Fr. William and Fr. Richard, who were teaching at DePaul due to the lack of students on the Lisle campus during the war years. In 1948, Fr. William offered Rose a position at St. Procopius as a teacher of mathematics and physics. “The goal of Fr. William and myself,” she recalled in 1996, “was to enable young men to prepare for a career in science by studying in a Catholic environment.” As the only woman faculty member during her early years on campus, Rose was “tested,” as she put it, but in time accepted as “one of the boys.” To the point that when the school moved to become coeducational in the late 1960s, students “complained so much to me, about how we would be going down the tubes, especially science was going to be ruined, when the college took in girls. And it never, never dawned on them that they were insulting me!” over the years, Rose admitted some concern that the distractions available had changed the students’ approach. It used to be that while she and Fr. William were setting up labs for the week on Sunday afternoons, they would be swamped by students asking for extra help. That “problem” had gone away, she was sorry to say. Rose could laugh both about that and her membership on the faculty hockey team that used to compete with student teams on the slough: “I was goalie. I couldn’t skate, and Fr. William said, ‘Well, you’ll make a perfect goalie. All you have to do is fall down when you see the puck coming!’” One faculty role that Rose took on willingly was to travel with Fr. William and selected students to Illinois and Indiana Catholic high schools to attract recruits for the math and physics programs. Often, while the two professors would talk with the priests or sisters running the school, the students they had brought along would do the real recruiting, telling the high school seniors about St. Procopius. Still, Rose took a justified pride in the success of so many of the students, men and women alike, she taught over better than four decades. She cited some notable examples “of what we were trying to accomplish: putting a Catholic person in a leadership role in science,” she said. After retirement in 1990, Rose remained in the Lisle area and interested in the development of Benedictine University. She continued to manifest the concern that comes across in an anecdote from Wesolowski’s own time as a St. Procopius student during the 1960s. Benedictine Voices “I was studying like crazy for a math final in one of the little research labs in the old science hall,” Wesolowski remembered. “There was a gentle rap at the glass window in the door. It was Rose. ‘Are you planning to take the final?’ she asked me in that sweet but firm tone. ‘Yes, of course,’ I replied. And then I looked at my watch. I had studied right through the first twenty minutes of the test — and she had come looking for me. That was SPC and Rose Carney.” ✝ While admiring all the technological progress the school had made campus Move in . day: before 20 Fr. William Shonka, O.S.B., and Rose Carney, Ph.D., with an X-Ray machine that was set up in the northeast corner of the Radiation Lab, a separate 24' x 24' building at the northwest corner of Procopius Hall (the old science hall, torn down c. 1987). Move in day: after. campu us u n i v e r s i t y n e w s Vitality Smarter, Faster, Brighter Freshmen Ready to Embrace Challenge Benedictine University’s Fall 2007 freshman class is not only the largest in the school’s 120-year history, it ranks among the most scholarly. Four hundred three freshmen began fall classes at the University, compared to 383 who started the fall term one year ago. Forty-five percent of this year’s freshmen ranked in the top third of their high school graduating classes, their average GPA was 3.3 (on a 4-point scale) and their mean ACT test score was 23. “It is exciting to welcome such a quality freshman class to campus,” said Kari Gibbons, associate vice president of enrollment management. “These students reflect the type of academic reputation Benedictine University enjoys, the opportunity for admission to graduate school we create and the foundation for professional success we provide.” University’s Enrollment Increase Shatters National Projections Although Benedictine’s overall student body is more than 57 percent female, 53 percent of the freshmen enrolled were male. Thirty-two percent of the freshmen are minorities with Asians comprising the largest group at 18 percent. Most are from the suburbs of Chicago and attended public school (both 78 percent). Forty-three percent of the freshmen who responded to a survey of the field of interest indicated science as their No. 1 choice. ✝ 4,573 total enrollment More than 4,500 students enrolled in undergraduate and graduate programs at Benedictine for the Fall 2007 term. The total enrollment of 4,573 students represents a more than 16 percent increase over the Fall 2006 enrollment of 3,924. National projections were set at 11 percent. Benedictine has 1,958 full-time undergraduate students (compared to 1,692 in 2006) and 1,035 part-time undergraduate students (compared to 965 one year ago) for a total undergraduate enrollment of 2,993 students. The University also has 511 full-time graduate students (compared to 275 one year ago) and 1,069 part-time graduate students (compared to 968 a year ago) for a total graduate enrollment of 1,580 students. (The figures do not include students enrolled in Benedictine University’s Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) and Master of Science in Management Information Systems (M.S.M.I.S.) programs in China.) 403 freshmen “I believe our enrollment increase mirrors our efforts to improve and broaden our academic offerings and our overall effort to improve and upgrade what we can offer students in terms of facilities, amenities and support services,” said Charles Gregory, executive vice president at Benedictine. Benedictine also remains one of the most diverse campuses in the Midwest with nearly 30 percent of the students of either Asian, African or Hispanic descent. Forty-three percent of new students at Benedictine choose science as a major, but a growing number can be found in business, psychology and elementary education. The University added two new majors this fall — global studies and bilingual journalism — and partners with College of DuPage and Triton College to offer a Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree completion program for registered nurses. The University also has satellite locations in Springfield and Naperville, the latter where Benedictine’s Moser College of Adult and Professional Studies serves a growing adult student population. 16% enrollment increase Additionally, the three-year-old Village of Lisle-Benedictine University Sports Complex contributed to a 21 percent increase in the number of student-athletes. The challenge for Benedictine and other private colleges is maintaining enrollment in the face of dire predictions for the number of students who will graduate from high school in Illinois and throughout the Midwest through 2018. According to the Chronicle of Higher Education, Illinois will experience a 2 percent annual decrease among high school graduates over the next 10 years. Neighboring states like Michigan (9 percent decrease), Iowa and Wisconsin (6 percent decrease) are also expected to see a dip in the pool of potential college students. “We must continue to provide quality academic programs, first-rate athletic programs and diverse student activities to attract new students to campus,” Gregory said. “We must also reach out to new markets and continue to grow while maintaining the community feeling that makes Benedictine unique.” ✝ Winter 2008 21 M CHANGE FOR THE SAKE OF NO CHANGE Douglas R. Hoffman, University Trustee, C79 Memories are strange things. They often offer seemingly disjointed glimpses of one’s personal history. Some memories are like a fine wine that often improves with age; while others are more like photos whose details fade with time. Yet, others are elusive. They get stored away in the attic of the mind and are forgotten. Sometime later, we rediscover them. Opinions About Change O ne memory that fits into the latter category is about change. It is not about experiencing change but rather thinking about change and forming an opinion of it. This occurred while I was serving a funeral Mass. It was just after Mass had changed from Latin to English. So many of us, including I suspect many priests, were getting fresh insights on what was happening in the liturgy. During the Mass, the priest read something to the effect that “with death, life is changed not ended.” Upon hearing these words, I glanced in the direction of the new widow, draped in black. It was clear, even to a kid, that she would rather be doing anything other than having to say farewell to her best friend and life partner of more than 50 years. As she wiped tears from her eyes, I concluded that if death is merely change, then I do not care for change. My opinion of change has not changed very much over the years. I generally do not like it. A survey of my barber, tailor and mechanic would confirm this to be true. In fact, about the only time that I like change is on those rare occasions when I am the author and chief proponent of it. At other times, I am at best skeptical of it. There are even times when I am openly hostile to change. An example of this, for me at least, occurred not so long ago when the Chicago aldermen assembled to enact a ban on the sale of foie gras in restaurants. I happen to like foie gras — a lot. So, banning the sale of it in my hometown did not please me at all. My hostility to the ban caused me to formulate constitutional arguments as to why the aldermen had no “legitimate interest” in adopting the ordinance; and thus, it had to be void. I wondered what would possess our elected officials to waste time with foie gras, when there are hungry Team Benedictine In an ongoing effort to keep campus beautiful, Team Benedictine (made up of faculty, staff and students) spent a day this fall planting bulbs and cleaning up planting beds. The University-wide effort brings the Benedictine community together while working on a project that benefits everyone. 22 Benedictine Voices people in Chicago who have no place to live, or who have no real future due to failure of the city’s educational system. I prayed, yes prayed, that God would inspire voters to rise up during the recent aldermanic run-off elections and throw out the author of this law because it reduced Chicago to a laughing stock among the gustatory capitals of the world. I suspect that you are like me. You probably do not get worked up as much as I do over fat and cholesterol. However, there is no doubt that some things work you up. Most likely these things involve change; particularly, change affecting things for which you have a great deal of fondness — like your alma mater. In less than 40 years, your alma mater has changed its name — twice! It has admitted women and more than a few nonCatholics as students. It has torn down a beloved building and replaced it with others that have reshaped the campus. And while the place for almost five decades had Benedictine priests as presidents, it has had two lay presidents and it seems inevitable that the trend will continue. My classmates and I came to the school not long after the first of the big changes; namely, admitting women students and changing the name of the college to something almost secular sounding — Illinois Benedictine College or IBC. In those days, the school newspaper was called The Flux because the world, certainly IBC’s world, was in flux. We were aware of these changes but were too busy creating our own universe to be bothered with what appeared to us as trivial matters. The universe we created was on a scruffy campus where we attended meat and potatoes classes taught by abbey monks and a dedicated lay faculty. We ate in a dingy basement cafeteria located in Benedictine Hall. Conversations tended to be frank and somewhat earthy. Those of us who lived on campus resided in spartan dorms. Basically, it was a no nonsense place for no nonsense people, and we loved it! We earned our no-nonsense bachelor’s degrees, the only type of degree awarded by the college at that time. Then we left to make our way in the world, confident that our college education and memories would sustain us for many years to come. b e n e d i c t i n e It all worked for a while. Then certain memories began to fade and life began to demand more of our attention. It became easier to forget about good old IBC and it was convenient to do that as well. The place seemed to be changing from the way we remembered it. Rather than learning what the changes were really about, it was a lot easier to put fond memories, particularly those that had gotten better with age, into storage where we would not deal with them. That’s what I did anyway. So, I became a lapsed alumnus. From Lapsed Alumnus to University Trustee T his all changed over a three hour lunch with Dr. William J. Carroll, the president of the University. Somehow, and I’m not certain how, I was pulled back into the middle of things. Three plus years have passed since then and I have just completed my first term as a trustee of the University and I have signed up for another three years. As a trustee, I have critically examined the changes that have occurred at the University over the last few decades and it has afforded me the opportunity to reconcile them with my memories. Unfortunately, not all alumni will have the opportunity I had, but perhaps sharing some of what I have learned may be a good substitute. Often, when I speak of Benedictine with fellow alumni, I hear some form of, “The place has changed and I don’t know it anymore.” There is no doubt that the place has changed. Any institution of higher learning that has not radically changed both its curriculum and its teaching methods in the last 15 years (while simultaneously sprucing up its campus and adding creature comforts) will not be around for the next 15. This is a result largely of our own making, for we have raised our children to be savvy buyers of educational services. They are demanding more from institutions of higher learning, and the institutions that want to survive are changing to meet those demands. The University is doing better than holding its own in this area. It is definitely stronger from an academic viewpoint, than it was when I was a student. It has become an innovator and a leader. Consequently, it is the envy of many colleges and universities both large and small, both Catholic and non-Catholic. Priceless Assets: Identity and Heritage S urprisingly, the areas where Benedictine is often accused of changing the most, in reality, have changed the least. These areas are the school’s Catholic identity and its Benedictine heritage. Both of these hallmarks are precious. They are among the greatest assets of Benedictine because they are the very essence of the place. We, as alumni, understand this because we are the beneficiaries of this treasure. Until recently, it was my belief that the school was at risk of losing these priceless assets due to the declining number of abbey monks. However, the University identified the risk and has affirmatively chosen to do something to maintain its treasure. This decision was made by the Board of Trustees and senior administration. I am pleased to report that it also has been embraced by faculty, students and staff. As an example, Pope John Paul II issued an apostolic constitution, called Ex Corde Ecclesiae, which established norms for Catholic universities and colleges throughout the world. Ex Corde has been extensively studied and discussed throughout this university community. There is a faculty task force charged with its application, and a committee of the Board of Trustees is charged with oversight responsibilities to ensure compliance. I have personally had conversations with trustees of larger and, in some ways, better known Catholic universities and have found that their institutions are either not involving the trustees or are not as aggressive as Benedictine University regarding the application of Ex Corde. Furthermore, the University has a well established program for hosting visiting Catholic theologians. While hardly a unique concept at many Catholic universities, it is nonetheless a change from when I was enrolled as a student at IBC for no such program existed then. Back then, in the “good old days,” Mass was celebrated on campus every Sunday and on weekdays during the school year. A handful of people, many of them faculty members, attended regularly. Today, Mass is offered on campus every Sunday and on weekdays during the school year, and attendance is about the same as it was 30 years ago. The campus ministry program is still directed by an abbey monk, and today the program is very robust. In addition to liturgies, campus ministry organizes speakers, community service projects and other programs such as Koinonia, which was reinstated this past year. If anything, campus ministry is more active today than when I was an IBC student. Given the status of the various programs and the Vitality changes that have been consciously made there is no doubt in my mind that the University takes its “Catholicity” much more seriously today than it did when I was a student 30 years ago. Progress toward the maintenance of the University’s Benedictine heritage is equally impressive. Steps have been taken to understand what makes the University’s heritage its heritage. Accordingly, the concept of Benedictine pedagogy is now discussed with regularity. In fact, the University has again taken the lead by calling a meeting of all (U.S.) Benedictine institutions of higher learning to discuss and understand the essence of Benedictine pedagogy. Through a thorough analysis of the subject, the University will be able to preserve its treasure. None of these changes came about by accident. They are the result of a careful, conscious decision to discover what Benedictine University is, and an unswerving commitment to maintain and enhance those things that are important. It gives me great comfort to see woven into the very fabric of the institution, the threads that will preserve what we have, not only for ourselves, but for future generations of students and for the community at large. Change to Remain the Same B enedictine has changed largely due to external demands and pressures. If you, like me, are skeptical of change or just plain don’t like it, comfort yourself with the knowledge that your alma mater, whether you know it as St. Procopius College, Illinois Benedictine College (IBC) or Benedictine University, has changed — so that it can remain the same. ✝ Winter 2008 23 Asking the Experts: What changes need to occur in higher education in the next five years? John Zigmond, Ed.D. Director of the Alternative Certification Program, Moser College of Adult and Professional Studies. (This program prepares adults changing careers from engineering, math and science to teaching math or science at the secondary school level.) aving worked in the School of Education at Benedictine for the past six years following 35 years at the high school level, I feel there are at least three major challenges that the next generation of teachers will face, and a fourth one specifically for Benedictine school educators. All these areas can and should be addressed by higher education. H First of all, we at the University level need to better serve students challenged by language deficiencies as well as intellectual and emotional disabilities. For example, several DuPage County schools in particular now serve an increasing percentage of Latino students whose first language is not English. Secondly, we need to model “student-centered” classes, which practice a constructivist approach with “hands-on” activities, as opposed to “teacher-centered” classes featuring lectures. We know that many novice teachers imitate their college professors. So as to ensure more student involvement, we need to “show them the way” in their college courses. While still presenting lectures in certain instances, instructors can “build on” students’ knowledge base and “construct” learning. Thirdly, we need to resist the grade inflation trend and not enable young adults with our own form of “Social Promotions.” Outstanding work and participation merit 24 Benedictine Voices the top grade; anything less than that deserves a lesser grade. While students are often overly-concerned about their grades along with their transcripts and resumes, our mission is still about educating, learning and growing. We need to objectively assess the work students produce and issue the respective grade(s) they rightfully earn. Finally, as Benedictine educators and administrators, we are entrusted daily to model the peaceful and reflective Benedictine spirit, and eventually lay a solid foundation for students of today’s harried and sometimes unfocused world. ✝ Julie M. Moreschi, M.S., R.D., L.D.N. Dietetic Internship Director, Department of Nutrition n the field of food and nutrition, things are always changing, which makes the profession very enjoyable. There are several major trends that will affect this area over the next five years and beyond. They include: I • Concerns over escalating obesity rates in the United States and globally. • The safety of food supply — relative to foodborne illness and related to how food production takes place. • The health care needs of the “baby boomer” generation as they get older. • Many registered dietitians are pursuing master’s level education and this may also become a requirement for nutrition professionals from the American Dietetic Association. • Continued concerns about health care costs, with a continued expansion on prevention. • Increased use of alternative therapies by the general public. • Movement of the provision of nutrition care from the acute care setting to outpatient and community venues. • Creation of long distance nutrition intervention utilizing technology. Higher education will be challenged to keep pace with the rapidly changing health care environment. Professors would be well-served to collaborate with colleagues from a variety of work settings, to gather input into enhancements to curriculums. As many nutrition Alice Sima, M.S.N., M.B.A., R.N. Director of the Pre-Professional Health Programs, College of Science n advising the pre-professional students and handling all of the practica, I can say there is definitely a continued interest in medicine and an increase of interest in dental and pharmacy. In order to succeed in the fast-growing fields of optometry, physician’s assistant, physical therapy, occupational therapy, podiatry and chiropractic, there is a need for a degree which is strong in the sciences, as well as in having a well-rounded education. As competition in these fields increase, it is imperative for students to stand out. The professional schools are also looking for a strong background in volunteering through the I university, home and community — and not just in the student’s career choice — but for the human community that we live in everyday. There is always an interest to help people, but now students understand the need for more doctors in rural and urban areas. Under my department are the allied health programs, including Clinical Laboratory Science, Diagnostic Medical Sonography (18 months), Nuclear Medicine Technology and Radiation Therapy. These programs provide the student a career to begin once they complete their three years at Benedictine University: one year of education; clinicals (at the hospitals); and graduation with their bachelor’s degree. This encourages students to go into these fields. There is also the large increase of the aging population/ “baby boomers” that is contributing to the growth of these fields, not just because they require more health care as they age, but because they are looking to retire soon and will leave large gaps in the workplace. These gaps need to be filled quickly so there is no decrease in available medical assistance. People are also living longer, and this dictates the need for more health professionals. f a s t professionals pursue advanced degrees, this gives universities the opportunity to recruit and expand enrollment into master’s level programs. Also, many health professions will continue to seek specialization into areas that will enhance their ability to assist their clients, and this could be a great opportunity for academic institutions to offer a variety of certificate programs. Finally, with expansion of community programming focused on nutrition and wellness, faculty members will be provided with opportunities to collaborate with these programs and to assist them in obtaining grant funding to support program implementation and research related to program effectiveness. ✝ BENEDICTINE PARTNERS WITH COD TO OFFER NEW ACADEMIC PROGRAM IN FINE ARTS f a s t t Vitality facts hrough a partnership with the College of DuPage (COD), Benedictine University offers a Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) in Fine Arts which provides a visual arts education rooted in the liberal arts with an emphasis on the Benedictine values of a balanced life, the stewardship of intellectual and artistic gifts, and an appreciation for the artist’s role in society. although several of the required upper level Benedictine courses will be completed on the COD campus. “The program utilizes the assets of both Benedictine The program allows students to engage in the intellectual and spiritual discovery of the self through a chosen medium and benefit from the knowledge and experiences of both Benedictine University and College of DuPage faculty. University and College of DuPage to provide a seamless educational experience for developing artists,” said Higher education needs to provide these students with job security. They need to know they will have a job once they graduate. Students need to be made aware of their commitment to this long process of education and to the fact that they will likely be in debt up to $200,000. They need to know they can provide for a life after their education is complete. It is very true these professionals do look at what their income will be once out in practice, but they also chose these professions because they care for the well-being of society. We need to continue to encourage and support them in taking on these roles of great respect and responsibility. ✝ f a c t s William Scarlato, M.F.A., professor of Fine Arts at Benedictine University. “The program combines the professional training of the visual arts with a rigorous liberal arts curriculum.” The program is designed for students who have completed two years of study and earned an Associate of Fine Arts (A.F.A.) degree at COD. Upon completion of their A.F.A. requirements, students will then have the opportunity to attain a Bachelor of Fine Arts through the completion of an additional two years of study at Benedictine University. Students will complete some humanities, math and sciences courses along with Art History and Studio courses at the College of DuPage. Students will complete core courses and advanced art courses at Benedictine, Students must complete three courses from sculpture, painting, ceramics, jewelry, printmaking, photography and graphic design as part of their A.F.A. requirements, then complete three courses from the remaining four areas to earn their B.F.A. The faculty in the Department of Communication at Benedictine University is comprised of some of the finest teachers and artists in the metropolitan area. A student who graduates with a degree in Fine Arts can pursue a career in studio art, advertising, graphic arts and many more arts-related fields. “The program will be taught from a variety of philosophical and stylistic approaches to contemporary art,” Scarlato said. “Students will be prepared for either continued study in a Master of Fine Arts program of their choosing or an exhibition career and the life of an artist.” For more information about the Bachelor of Fine Arts in Fine Arts program, contact the College of Liberal Arts at (630) 829-6247. ✝ Winter 2008 25 n Class of 1950 Martin A. Skelly, M.D., Pre-Medicine, and his wife, Yvonne, retired in 2000 and have moved to a retirement center in Strasburg, CO. Illinois Benedictine College Alumni Class of 1976 Don Pope-Davis, Psychology, has been appointed by the University of Notre Dame Board of Trustees as vice president and associate provost. He is a professor of psychology at the university and had been serving as the dean of the graduate school. Pope-Davis is the co-author of three books, “Multicultural Counseling Competencies: Assessment, Education, and Supervision,” “The Intersections of Race, Class, and Gender in Multicultural Counseling,” and, most recently, “Handbook of Multicultural Competencies in Counseling and Psychology.” Spirit Bill Lisowski, Literature and Communications, M.B.A.’83, announces the publishing of the first book in his three book Success Series. The book is titled “Positioning Success: Key Questions for Managing and Growing Your Business” and co-authored by John Mengelson. Class of 1979 Timothy J. Healy, Physical Education, has been named Special Agent in Charge of the Intelligence Division of the FBI’s Washington Field Office. Class of 1991 Irene Strejc, Nursing, M.P.H., has joined Galesburg Cottage Hospital as chief nursing officer. She is responsible for the delivery of patient care services throughout the hospital. Strejc formerly served as vice president of nursing services and chief nurse executive for the Rockford Health System. Leroy (Lea) Stahr, M.S.M.I.S., was elected to the Shorewood Village Board in March 2007. He was also promoted to corporate system integrator for worldwide Linux systems in January. What was your favorite Benedictine University activity while on campus? Tell us about a favorite memory of your time at Benedictine. E-mail [email protected]. Benedictine Voices e Class of 1978 opening a clinic providing individual, couples and group counseling. campus One l oo 1950 O ne St. Procopius Alumni Tim O’Donohue, M.C.P., is 26 1940 class notes Class of 1995 Resident Life Day. 1930 ition The program in which Benedictine participated is part of the Freedom Calls Foundation’s “Operation Hometown Link,” in which universities, hospitals and corporations around the country make their video conferencing facilities available to military families closer to their homes. ✝ 1920 ad The University offered free, half-hour video conferences to families whose loved ones were stationed at any of five camps in Iraq — Camp Taji, Al Asad Air Base, Camp Fallujah, Camp Victory (Baghdad) and Camp Taqaddum. St. Procopius 1887-1971 1910 Tr Benedictine University teamed up with the Freedom Calls Foundation in December to put the families of servicemen stationed in Iraq in touch with their loved ones during the holiday season. 1900 O Families With Loved Ones in Iraq Offered the Use of Video Conferencing 1890 Sch 1880 Benedictine University Alumni Class of 1996 Linda Ohringer, M.B.A., M.S.M.O.B.’98, M.P.H.’98, has been added to the executive team as a health care solutions specialist with Integrated Project Management Company, Inc. (IPM). Prior to joining IPM, Ohringer spent 15 years with Insight Health Services Corporation, where she was director of professional services/managed care for the company’s magnetic resonance center in Berwyn. She is a member of the American College of Healthcare Executives and the Healthcare Financial Management Association’s Managed Care Committee. Class of 1997 Joe Capesius, Finance, has created a Web portal, SalonSensation.com, where Web surfers can find their own salon or spa, select a package of gift-card services and write reviews of their visits to the salon. Class of 2006 Ryan Lemberg, M.Ed., has been selected as assistant principal at Nelson Prairie and Nelson Ridge schools, New Lenox, for the 2007-08 school year. As a teacher in Plainfield, Lemberg played an integral role in the district’s balanced literacy initiative and the implementation of Everyday Mathematics — a comprehensive pre-kindergarten through sixth-grade mathematics curriculum which New Lenox implemented this past fall. 1960 1970 1980 1990 Illinois Benedictine College 1971-1996 ✻ 2000 2010 Benedictine University 1996-present James Kuefler, SPA C44, births SPC C51, passed away in August 2007. Benedictine University Alumni Education C98, and her husband, Roger A. Perry, SPA C50, Philosophy C54, passed away in June 2007. Steve Hecker, Finance C88, Rev. Anthony Tuma, Philosophy announce the birth of their daughter, Bridget Faith, on July 23, 2007. The family currently resides in Bartlett. C27, passed away in November 2006. Julie (Payton) Hecker, Special Benedictine University Alumni Noreen Maher, Special Education ✝ C96, passed away in March 2007. in memory n o t e s Vitality class notes Matter Do you remember your graduating class? Well, they are wondering what you’ve been up to! Patrick M. Mulcahy, Religious Studies C86, passed away in May 2007. St. Procopius Alumni William P. Bowman, English C68, passed away in June 2007. Dolores Newsham, Religious Studies C83, passed away in August 2007. Jack Figel, C57, passed away in August 2007. Robert S. Hanke, IFM Certificate C70, passed away in April 2006. Donald R. Hudson, C65, passed away on September 16, 2007. c l a s s New at Ben.edu The Endowed Scholarship page at ben.edu/endowmentgiving. The Class of 1962 page at ben.edu/alumni/classes/1962. Everyone loves reading class notes, so let us know where you are, where you have been and where you are going. Are you busy in your career? Busy at home with your children? Earning another degree? Getting a great new job? Starting a new business venture? Met that person of your dreams? Finally retired? What are you doing with your time? Send in your class notes today and keep your fellow classmates informed on all the happenings in your life. Even after you graduate, you are still connected here. we want your class notes Tell my classmates that . . . What’s new in your life? A marriage or a child? A new job or promotion? Have you been published or honored? Let us know! First Name Middle/Maiden Address Last Name Major Class Year City State Zip Home Phone E-mail Address Your Title/Company Name Work Phone Job Description Please clip and mail to: Benedictine University Debbie Smith/Alumni Association 5700 College Road, Lisle, Illinois 60532 or e-mail news to: [email protected] ❏ Check here if you are interested in mentoring students or helping fellow alumni through Spouse’s Name Major Class Year the AlumNet program. Winter 2008 27 faculty/staff notes Attention Alumni: Refer a Student If you know someone who would make a good addition to the Benedictine student community, help them complete the alumnireferred prospect student form online at www.ben.edu/referral and their application fee will be waived. For more information, contact the Enrollment Center at (630) 829-6300 or [email protected]. ✝ Bonnie Jean Adams (Communication Arts) participated in a panel at the Engineers Without Borders Great Lakes Conference and Workshop at the University of Illinois at Chicago in September. Adams spoke about the challenges of communicating with another culture with particular focus on initiating contact and keeping the channels of communication open. Adams also presented her paper, “First, Be Uncomfortable — Facing the Challenge of Action Research in the Classroom. Why is it especially important for freshmen to learn?” in November at the Fall 2007 conference of The Society for the Philosophical Study of Education in Chicago. Barbara Alagna and Eileen Kivlin (College of Science) attended the October workshop sponsored by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency and School and Community Assistance for Recycling and Composting Education (SCARCE) titled “Safe Chemicals in Education.” SCARCE is a local team whose mission is to inspire people through education and to care for and preserve the Earth’s natural resources while working to build sustainable communities. Edna Bautista (Communication Arts) coordinated the media pedagogical competition Great Ideas For Teachers program at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication conference in August in Washington, D.C. Bautista also was nominated for a Hall of Fame award for her service as a convention program chair and editor of The Community College Journalist quarterly publication. Sharon Borowicz (M.B.A.), Kevin Doyle (M.B.A.), Ralph Meeker (Computer Science and Information Systems), Jeremy Nadolski (Mathematics), Lee Ann Smith (Biology) and Jim Pelech (Teacher Education) participated in the Fourth Annual Associated Colleges of the Chicago Area Scholarship of Pedagogy Symposium at Lewis University in October. Smith presented “Encouraging Investigative Learning and Writing in a 300-level Neurobiology Course.” Doyle and Meeker presented “Team Projects and Peer Evaluations.” Nadolski presented “Teaching 300-level Probability and Statistics: A Practical Approach.” Craig Broeder (M.S.C.E.P.) began his tenure as President of American College of Sports Medicine’s Midwest Chapter (MWACSM), which services Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio and Indiana, in October. Broeder also gave the keynote address on “The Effects of Calcium Supplementation for Promoting Weight Loss” at the annual MWACSM conference in October at Ohio State University in Columbus. Benedictine University will also host the first MWACSM video conference in which Broeder will be speaking on “The Benefits of Fitness in an Aging Population.” Peter Charcut (Campus Services) was selected as the Spirit of Sodexho Education Facilities Division winner for the category of Customer Satisfaction and Client Retention. He attended the Sodexho Education Market Awards Dinner to receive his award in October in Orlando, Fla. Timothy Comar (Mathematics) organized and presented at a minisymposium, “Preparation and Engagement of Undergraduates in Biomathematics Research,” at the annual meeting of the Society of Mathematical Biology. He was also elected to the organization’s Education Committee. Comar also organized an 18-page, Contributed Paper Session “Biomathematics in the First Two Years” at the 2007 MathFest in San Jose, Calif. in August. MathFest is the Ostrow’s Book Explores Russia’s Path to Dictatorship Under Putin Joel Ostrow’s book would never see the light of day in Russia. Ostrow, chair of the Political Science Department has co-authored a book titled, “The Consolidation of Dictatorship in Russia: An Inside View of the Demise of Democracy.” The book seeks to explain how Russia has moved away from the path of democratization when hopes for democracy were so great. 28 Benedictine Voices “Many people are under the misguided notion that Russia is a democracy, or at least that it remains in the process of democratization,” Ostrow said. “That is simply not true. Unfortunately, when someone speaks out against the government, they are either murdered or they disappear.” Nearly 100 investigative journalists, an average of two per month since Putin rose to power, have been murdered. No one has been charged or convicted of any of those crimes. Journalist Anna Politkovskaya, an outspoken critic of the Putin regime, was found shot to death in the elevator of her apartment block in central Moscow. Former Federal Security Service officer and Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko accused Putin of personally ordering the assassination of Politkovskaya. Litvinenko died in London of acute radiation poisoning shortly after meeting with two former KGB agents. f a c u l t y / s t a f f n o t e s Vitality Voluntary Subscriptions to Voices annual summer meeting of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA). His talk during this session was titled, “Biocalculus and Beyond at Benedictine University and College of DuPage: Reaching Biology Students.” Comar was also the research advisor for Joy Holowicki and Hunan Chaudhry, sophomore students in the 2007 Summer Research Program in the College of Science. Holowick and Chaudhry presented papers based on their research during the student paper sessions at MathFest. Chaudhry’s paper is titled “Regular Stick Numbers of (2n,2)-Torus Links.” Holowicki’s paper, “Impulsive Two-Prey, One-Predator Model Dynamics,” won an MAA student speaker award. Andrea R. DiOrio (Music) won a one-year position for Utility Clarinet (bass clarinet/Eb clarinet) with the Quad City Symphony Orchestra and will be the second offstage clarinet for all performances of “La Traviata” during the 2007-2008 season at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. Mardelle Fortier (English) published a short story, “Sunday,” in the summer issue of Bibliphilos, a literary journal in West Virginia. In “Sunday,” an English professor struggles to maintain the loving memory of her mother despite the parent’s changes of personality due to medication and Alzheimer’s. The editor of Bibliphilos has referred to Fortier as “our resident reviewer of poetry chapbooks.” Fortier also published a poem in the Summer 2007 issue of “Rambunctious Review” titled “Multiple Mirrors.” Fortier received three prizes in the 2007 Chicagoland Poets and Patrons contest. She received first prize in formal verse for a sonnet, “Cinderella on Ice,” second prize in experimental verse for a villanelle, “Gifts of Ice,” and honorable mention in religious verse. Fortier attended “The Consolidation of Dictatorship in Russia” seeks to explain not merely what Russia did and the consequences of those decisions, but also why Russia’s leaders made the choices that undermined democratic political development. The book is co-authored by Ostrow and Russian political veterans Georgiy A. Satarov and Irina M. Khakamada. Satarov and Khakamada are among Russia’s most an awards banquet and ceremony at the Harold Washington Library in Chicago in October. Sandra Gill (Dean, College of Business) has been named one of 22 “Influential Women in Business” for 2007 by The Business Ledger. The honorees were feted at an awards luncheon in October in Glen Ellyn. Gill joined Benedictine in 2001 as chair of the Master of Business Administration program following 30 years in leadership roles in education and health care. She was named dean of the College of Business in 2005. Under Gill’s direction, courses offered by the College of Business annually exceed national benchmarks for teaching excellence, achieving course objectives, course excellence and enthusiasm. College of Business programs are offered in traditional classroom settings, online and through partnerships with universities in China. Charles Gregory (Executive Vice President) was interviewed for the “Leaders Think Out Loud” segment of the July/August 2007 edition of Business Officer. Gregory was interviewed while participating in the WACUBO Winter Management and Leadership Institute and NACUBO Endowment Management Forum. Laura Tobias Gruss (Biology) had an article, “Limb length and locomotor biomechanics in the genus Homo: An experimental study,” published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology: Volume 134, Issue 1, 2007, Pages: 106-116. For an abstract, visit www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgibin/abstract/ 114278644/ABSTRACT. Beth House (Communication Arts) attended the International Association of Master Penmen, ➤ prominent democratic activists and were participants in the events that led Russia away from the path of democratization. They share a unique perspective and knowledge of what happened and why. “Conventional Western wisdom assumed that democracy was inevitable in Russia,” Ostrow said. “Instead, Russia has moved from one dictatorship to another.” ✝ You can help supplement the cost of publishing and mailing Benedictine Voices, the alumni magazine. Your tax-deductible gift of $15 helps defray these mounting costs of production. This is strictly voluntarily. You can enclose your donation in the attached contribution envelope. ✝ 2008 Distinguished Alumni Recognition Awards Nominees Needed: The Alumni Association is accepting nominations for the 2008 Distinguished Alumni Recognition Awards: ■ ■ ■ distinguished alumni award alumni service award benedictine spirit award Submit nominations to the Office of Alumni Affairs, Benedictine University, 5700 College Rd. Lisle, IL 60532 or at www.ben.edu/ alumni/awards. a look at the past let us know If these gals look familiar to you, let us know! Contact us at [email protected]. 29 ben.bkstore.com Engrossers and Teachers of Handwriting 58th Conference in July in Kansas City, Mo. Besides the formal penmen’s script, “Copperplate,” House studied “Spencerian Script” taught by White House calligrapher Pat Blair, “Engrosser’s Script,” “Painting Techniques for Calligraphers,” “Etiquette” taught by White House calligrapher Rick Muffler and “The Business of Calligraphy.” A new handwriting style popular with home schoolers, “American Cursive,” was introduced by its designer, Michael Sull. Get Your Alumni Gear Theodore J. Hogan (Master of Public Health) was elected to serve as Director-At-Large on the ACGIH® Board of Directors. He began his three-year term on January 1, 2008. Hogan has been an ACGIH® member since 1998. ACGIH® is a member-based organization that advances occupational and environmental Select Benedictine health. Hogan was also among the speakers at the 19th Annual alumni items are Chicagoland Safety and Health Conference in September in available on the Naperville. Hogan presented “Understanding Chemical Hazards: bookstore Web site From Drain Cleaners to Nanoparticles.” His speech at ben.bkstore.com. addressed how chemicals get into the body and what happens when For a greater selection they do. He discussed what makes one chemical more hazardous than another. The presentation covered visit the store in the the basics of industrial toxicology, using example chemicals everyone is Krasa Student Center. familiar with (such as drain cleaners). It also introduced the subtle hazards of advanced materials becoming common in every workplace such as epoxy resins, isocyanates and nanoparticles. Luis Loubriel (Music) performed with members of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass Section, Millar Brass and Lyric Opera of Chicago Brass at the “Vincent Cichowicz Memorial” service held at Northwestern University’s Pick Staiger Hall. Besides researching 19th century brass treatises at the Bodleian Library in Oxford, England, Loubriel attended the International Trumpet Guild Conference at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. Tim Marin (Chemistry) was notified by the American Chemical Society (ACS) Committee on Education that the Benedictine University chapter was awarded a Certificate of Achievement for its activities during the 20062007 academic year. The Benedictine chapter was noted for the size of its chapter relative to the number of chemistry majors, its work in assisting the Science Olympiad, its representation at the national ACS meeting, and its efforts to coordinate field trips and outside speakers. Ralph Meeker and Dan Nohl (Computer Science and Information Systems) collaborated on and presented a paper titled “Using a Practicum Experience in Your Database Course” at the 14th Annual Consortium for Computing Sciences in Colleges (CCSC) Midwestern Conference in September at Miami University (Ohio), Hamilton Campus. The paper was published in the October 2007 issue of “The Journal of Computing Sciences in 30 Benedictine Voices Colleges.” Nohl authored the six computer problems used in the 2007 CCSC Programming Competition that took place September 29. Nohl also delivered a presentation on “Using OTTER, an Automated Reasoning Program, to Connect Logic Topics in Discrete Mathematics to Computer Science” at the 17th Annual Kansas City Regional Mathematics Technology Expo at Rockhurst University, Kansas City, Mo., in October. Jeremy Nadolski (Mathematics) gave a contributed poster at the 2007 Joint Statistical Meetings in July in Salt Lake City, Utah. His research involved work from a student researcher and collaboration with Lee Ann Smith (Biology) titled “Stalactite Plot for Outlier Detection in the Presence of a Computationally Singular Covariance Matrix.” This research was the result of the Benedictine University’s Natural Science Summer Research program. Christine M. Palumbo (Nutrition) was named the recipient of the 2007 Outstanding Nutrition Entrepreneur Award by the Nutrition Entrepreneur Dietetic Practice Group. Palumbo was honored in October at the annual American Dietetic Association Food and Nutrition Conference and Expo in Philadelphia, Pa. Palumbo has appeared as a nutrition expert for various forms of media including the “Oprah” show and writes a nutrition column for Allure magazine. She is a past Chair of the Nutrition Entrepreneurs Dietetic Practice Group and currently serves on the board of directors of the American Dietetic Association. James Pelech (School of Education) spoke at the Constructivist Conference of the Learner Centered Resource Collaborative in July. His presentation, “Using Problem-Based Learning to Deliver Constructivism,” focused on using ill-defined authentic problems to deliver instruction. Pelech will also have his review of the book, “Current Practices in Quantitative Literacy,” published in the September issue of the Mathematics Teacher. Mercy Robb (Marketing and Communications) was invited to participate as a mentor in Women Unlimited, an organization of leading men and women who serve as mentors to others. Robb was a panelist on the topic of “The Fine Art of Managing Teams” at the organization’s December meeting in Oak Brook. Niina Ronkainen-Matsuno (Chemistry) participated as an evaluator and rapporteur for water monitoring and infrastructure proposals in Security and Defense Security Research and Development’s call for funding by the European Commission. The evaluation process and consensus meetings took place in Brussels, Belgium in July. Alicia Cordoba Tait (Music) performed as Principal Oboe in the world premiere of Roberto Sierra’s “Variations on a Souvenir” for piano and orchestra in October with the Sinfonia da Camera in the Great Hall of the Krannert Center for the Performing Arts in Urbana. The orchestra also performed the piece as well as other works by Sierra at the Carlsen Center for the Performing Arts in Overland Park, Kansas. Tait (oboe), Andrea DiOrio (clarinet) and Anne Kreft (flute) of the Benedictine University Faculty Woodwind Quintet performed with Amy Rhodes (bassoon) and Daniel Fackler (horn) in the 2007 Tuba Bach Chamber Music Concert Series in October in Big Rapids, Mich. Ram Tenkasi (Organization Development) was invited to serve as a Program Review Member of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO), Social Sciences Research Council. The aim of the NWO Social Research program is to encourage high quality and innovative research proposals in the Social Sciences in the Netherlands. As program review member, Tenkasi is part of a panel that reviews funding requests from the NWO Social Science Research Council. A number of faculty from Benedictine University played a major role at the 2007 Annual Meeting of the National Academy of Management. Tenkasi completed his tenure as chair of the Organization Development and Change Division. Jim Ludema (Organization Development) chaired a session on the history of Appreciative Inquiry and its contribution to the field. Members of the symposium included a number of major contributors to Appreciative Inquiry. Therese Yaeger (Master of Science in Management and Organizational Behavior) chaired a session on the 50th anniversary of the work of Douglas McGregor. Members of the symposium included some e a g l e s c e n t e r of the top contributors to the field including Edgar Schein (MIT), Warner Burke (Columbia), Peter Sorensen (Organization Development), Tim Goodly (CNN-Turner Broadcasting) and Philip Anderson (Abbott Laboratories). Benedictine faculty also made contributions through panels, presentations and symposia. In September, Yaeger and Sorensen also presented the first Organization Development Summit Conference to students and colleagues in Shenyang, China live from the Birck Hall Tellabs Lecture Hall. Other keynote speakers and participants included College of Business faculty Sandra Gill, Tenkasi and Ludema. Excellence in the Classroom and on the Playing Field Fall sports athletes Danielle Mikos (volleyball, pictured left) and Kiera Vizza (women’s soccer, pictured right) were both elected to the ESPN The Magazine Academic All-District team for their respective sports. The award is selected by the College Sports Information directors of America and recognizes excellence in both the classroom and in athletics. Thomas Wangler (Mathematics) announced that student Debra Witczak was selected as one of the Illinois Council of Teachers of Mathematics Scholarship recipients for the 2007-2008 school year. The scholarship award was presented to her at the ICTM Annual Meeting in Peoria in October. This scholarship is made available to students in colleges and universities of Illinois who are pursuing a mathematics major and an education minor. by Dave Beyer Randy Williams (Information Technology) presented a paper at the Association for Computing Machinery Special Interest Group on University and College Computing Services Fall Conference in October in Orlando, Fla. The title of his paper was, “What Happens at the End of the Outsourcing Contract?” It is the story of Benedictine University’s insourcing experience and recommendations on what to do when you plan to outsource. Williams cited some reasons for outsourcing and some of the reasons for why it does not live up to its expectations. He looked at the history of one institution that decided to abandon its outsourcing decision, and examined the consequences of the decision to move from an outsourced information technology provider to an in-house staff. ✝ Vitality Men’s Golf Women’s Soccer The Eagles finished second in the Northern Athletics Conference (NAC) championships, just seven strokes away from the team title, with a roster that returns intact for next season. Andrew Delaney placed tied for third and R.J. Schwalbach was ninth place, as both earned all-conference status. Head coach Frank Janczak’s team was predicted to finish fifth in the NAC pre-season coach’s poll. ✝ The Benedictine women’s soccer team enjoyed one of the most successful seasons in the program’s history by finishing the year with a 10-5-1 mark under head coach Robyn Serge. The Eagles, after starting the year 1-4, went on a 10-match unbeaten streak before losing in the first round of the NAC tournament. Men’s golfer Andrew Delaney earned a third-place finish overall at the 2007 Northern Athletics Conference championships and All-NAC status for his finish. Benedictine placed fourth in the regular season for the 13-team NAC schedule. Women’s Tennis Playing with just one returning player from the previous season, the women’s tennis team completed its season by finishing 8th in the Northern Athletics Conference. Freshman Andrea Oliva finished 4th at No. 4 singles. Under the guidance of first-year head coach – and former Benedictine standout studentathlete – Mandy Semenik in 2007, the Eagles’ team showed individual competitiveness against a top-flight schedule. With no seniors and five freshmen among the roster players, Semenik has laid the foundation for a bright future for the program. ✝ Cross Country At the NAC championships, head coach Jon Wolcott’s Eagles women’s team placed fifth and the men’s team eighth. Junior Hannah Miller earned all-conference honorable mention status with her 21st place finish in the six-kilometer women’s race, as did Jennifer Murray with her 26th place finish. ✝ The Benedictine team has made great strides during the two seasons of Serge’s guidance, going from not winning a game the year before she arrived to the 10 wins this year. Additionally, the women’s program had not just improved numbers on its roster, but improved quality as well. Since the 2006 season, the Eagles more than doubled their number of goals scored (24 to 50) and lowered their goals against average by nearly three-quarters of a goal per match in 2007. ✝ Winter 2008 31 Football Benedictine’s football team finished the year with a .500 record (5-5) for the first time since the 2001 season. The Eagles placed third in the Illini-Badger Football Conference (IBFC). It was also the third consecutive year – all since the arrival of Jon Cooper as head coach – that the team has enjoyed an improved won-lost record. Sophomore tailback Ryan Schwartz had the best season by an Eagles’ running back in a decade as he rushed for 898 yards and scored seven touchdowns on the ground. One of the highlights of the 2007 football season came when freshman placekicker Brian Goff (81, above) drilled a 38-yard field goal in the second overtime to defeat archrival Aurora University, 20-17. The kick did more than just get a win for the Eagles; it erased a 14-year victory drought versus the Spartans. It was also the longest field goal by a Benedictine player in Sports Complex history. Eagles Volleyball The Benedictine University volleyball team finished the 2007 season with an overall record of 27-7, the best record in head coach Jennifer Wildes’ three seasons at the helm. The Eagles placed third in the Northern Athletics Conference (NAC) regular season and were second in the NAC’s post-season tournament. Benedictine’s players were rewarded handsomely for their outstanding season on the NAC volleyball post-season awards list. Three Eagles – freshman Kayla Leyden, senior Danielle Mikos and senior Angela Vitto – were all named to the AllNAC First Team. Additionally, Leyden (one of just two freshmen on the first team list) was named to the NAC’s All-Rookie Team 32 Benedictine Voices and cited as the “Rookie of the Year,” as well as earning All-Midwest Region honorable mention from the American Volleyball Coaches Association. Leyden had an amazing inaugural collegiate season. She averaged 4.3 kills, 5.1 digs and 0.56 aces per game, playing in 110 of a possible 119 games. Her attack percentage was .248 and she averaged 0.37 blocks per game. She was the MVP of the Aurora Invitational. It was the third all-conference honor for Mikos, who had a career season in 2007. The 5’11 middle hitter averaged 3.36 kills and 0.94 blocks per game, while sporting a team-leading attack percentage of .349. Vitto, a setter, was a repeat member of the NAC first team all-conference list after Offensively, sophomore tailback Ryan Schwartz rushed for 898 yards despite battling nagging injuries along the way. On defense, sophomore linebacker Devin Montgomery was far and away the team’s leader in tackles with 93 “stops.” Fellow sophomore linebacker Alex Dewey had 63 tackles and senior defensive back Anthony Borsellino closed out his career with 63 tackles. The Eagles’ “Bob” tandem – McLearen and Corey – at defensive end accounted for the bulk of the squad’s sacks total. McLearen had a team-high 7 ½ quarterback sacks, while Corey booked 4 ½ sacks. averaging a sterling 11.09 assists per game as well as 2.95 digs per game. Junior Sarah Flores was tabbed on the NAC honorable mention list. Flores averaged a team-high 6.39 digs per game and 0.28 service aces per game. ✝ Freshman phenom Kayla Leyden had one of the most outstanding inaugural college seasons in Benedictine history in 2007. Leyden earned several all-tournament awards — including MVP at the Aurora University Invitational — and was also selected All-NAC first team, NAC All-Rookie Team, NAC “Rookie of the Year” and AVCA All-Midwest Region honorable mention. The football program also enjoyed its largest roster with 115 players turning out on opening day. Benedictine players were also rewarded for their fine 2007 season with post-season honors from the IBFC, the final such rewards from the league as it will disband and the bulk of the teams begin play in the Northern Athletics Conference in 2008 (of which most of the schools were already members in other sports). ✝ Men’s Soccer Although head coach Rob Kettle came on board just prior to the season to fill the coaching vacancy for the program, he attacked the season with energy and a positive attitude that will make the Eagles’ men’s soccer program better each year. Kettle inherited a depleted roster, yet still had his team competing in most every match. The squad said good-bye to two seniors – Jason Maestas and Scott Hall – from this year’s team, leaving much promising young talent around which Kettle can build for the future. ✝ The Top 10 Reasons Benedictine University Deserves Your Support 10 IRanking Benedictine University is consistently ranked among the top colleges and universities in the country by U.S. News & World Report ®. 8 ICommunity Involvement 9 ISuccess Our undergraduate business students participate in a number of service projects including the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program, which provides free income tax assistance to senior citizens and the poor. More than 98 percent of undergraduates have obtained a full-time position or are enrolled in graduate school within a year after graduating from Benedictine University. 7 INew Programs Preparing students to succeed in an increasingly global society, Benedictine University now offers undergraduate programs in bilingual journalism and global studies. 5 IEnrollment Benedictine University had a record number of freshmen enrolled for the third consecutive year in Fall 2007. 6 IAthletics Two Benedictine students were named conference “Athletes of the Year” in their respective sports and the women’s volleyball team won the inaugural Northern Athletics Conference tournament championship. 4 IWorld Mission The Benedictine community responds whenever there is a need — whether it is taking in students displaced by Hurricane Katrina, sending student missionaries to work with the poor in Bolivia, or students helping to rebuild New Orleans by providing manpower and other aid. 3 IAwards The Center for Educational Policy Research (CEPR) named two chemistry classes as “exemplary” and The College of Business was recognized for achievement, growth and community involvement with an Annual Award for Business Excellence by The Business Ledger. and, the number 1 reason is our Students. 2 ILegacy Your gift creates a personal legacy of philanthropy that has made it possible for past and present graduates to earn a Benedictine University degree. To make a contribution to the 2008 General Scholarship Fund, please contact the Office of Annual Giving at (630) 829-6366 or e-mail Jill Poskin at [email protected]. * Remember you can answer student Phonathon calls to make your contribution as well. Upcoming Events – 2008 Join us at these upcoming alumni events. January 26 Men’s and Women’s Swim and Dive Reunion February 2 Sweetheart Club Dinner/Dance February 16 Men’s and Women’s Basketball Reunion February 19 Alumni Board Meeting March 12 Fitz’s Pub Alumni “After-hours” March 29 Volleyball Alumni Reunion April 6 Men’s Baseball Alumni Event April 12 Downtown Loop Alumni “After-hours” April 18 College of Science Alumni Reunion April 25 History, Philosophy and Religious Studies Awards Dinner/ Reunion Receiving Duplicate Issues of Voices Magazine? If you are receiving more than one issue of Voices per mailing, please let us know so we can reduce the cost of our mailings as well as to eliminate any inconvenience to you. Please take a moment and call (630) 829-6099. April 27 Men’s and Women’s Alumni Tennis Round Robin Reunion May 3 Department of Music Awards Dinner/Reunion May 18 Commencement and Golden Eagles Reunion May 20 Alumni Board Meeting June 29 2008 Alumni Picnic July 21 14th Annual President’s Invitational Golf Outing Stay Connected. For more information about these and other University events, visit our awardwinning Web site — www.ben.edu. Thank you for helping us to be more efficient and economical! Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Lisle, IL 5700 College Road Lisle, Illinois 60532 (630) 829-6000 Permit No. 18 Change Service Requested
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