THE BOSS - Widener University
Transcription
THE BOSS - Widener University
NONPROFIT ORG US POSTAGE One Universit y Place Chester, PA 19013-5792 PA I D PITTSBURGH PA PERMIT NO. 5605 Address Service Requested WIDENER Widener Magazine Volume23 Number01 Spring ’13 Voic es of Leader ship 4 A Parade of President s 15 Sex Ed—for Senior s? 20 Widener Fund promising Futures All gifts to the Widener Fund are now designated to support financial aid, helping bring a Widener education within reach for our students and giving graduates the financial freedom to pursue their dreams. Andrea Stickley’s Promising Future Andrea Stickley ’14 has the kind of drive and passion that are so often the mark of a successful leader. This political science major with a minor in environmental studies has a deep commitment to increasing awareness of the responsibility we all have to sustain the planet. As a member of the inaugural class of Oskin Leaders in the Oskin Leadership Institute, Andrea has embarked on a project to study the feasibility, impact, and benefits of installing solar panels on select university buildings. Although only in her second year at Widener, she is on pace to graduate in 2014. Her Widener experiences will serve her well as she pursues her career goals of working on environmental issues in a federal agency and ultimately in legislative policy. When you give to the Widener Fund, you support the Promising Future of students like Andrea Stickley. i Andrea Stickley ‘14 Political Science All gifts to the Widener Fund are now designated to support financial aid, helping bring a Widener education within reach for our students and giving graduates the financial freedom to pursue their dreams. Find out more at give.widener.edu Daniel Hartney Business ’15 IKE THE BOSS TWO AMERICAN ICONS TWO GENERATIONS ONE UNIVERSITY’S HISTORY ii 10 AN AFTERNOON WITH IKE President Dwight D. Eisenhower visited Pennsylvania Military College on May 31, 1963, two days prior to commencement. He is standing on the field at the left end of the front row in a dark suit with his fedora over his chest. COVER STORY Memorable visits to the Main Campus in Chester by Eisenhower and Bruce Springsteen took place less than eleven years apart. Eisenhower visited in 1963, and Springsteen played one show in February 1974 and two in 1975. Daniel Upton ’75, a photographer for the Widener College yearbook, took the photo of Springsteen that appears on the cover. 15 16 20 WIDENER UNIVERSITY Widener University One University Place Chester, PA 19013 Phone: 1-888-WIDENER Website: www.widener.edu Published by the Office of University Relations CONTENTS 4 Voices of Leadership 6 On Campus 10 An Afternoon with Ike wight D. Eisenhower, the only man to serve as a five-star general D and two terms as president, visited Pennsylvania Military College on May 31, 1963, and left an impression that has lasted half a century. He is one of seven presidents who have visited campus or have been a guest of Widener or PMC since 1920. 16 Visits from the Boss Executive Editor: Lou Anne Bulik Editor: Sam Starnes Class Notes Editor: Patty Votta Contributing Writers: Kathleen Butler Derek Crudele Dan Hanson ’97 Autumn Heisler ’15 Maria Klecko ’15 Chara Kramer ’14 Tina Phillips ’82, ’98, ’03 Allyson Roberts PRESIDENT’S MESSAGE Before Bruce Springsteen became a rock’n’roll icon, he played three memorable shows at Widener College in the mid-seventies. One concert was surreptitiously videotaped and now exists as a famous documentation of his early performances. 20 Sex Ed—For Seniors? Widener’s Consortium on Sexuality and Aging is a one-of-akind program addressing issues such as sex education for seniors, fostering research in the field, and addressing intimacy in nursing homes. Photographers: Kathleen Butler Jennifer Dublisky ’11 Dave Jackson Daniel Upton ’75 Sarah Webb 24 Class and Alumni Chapter Notes 32 Campaign Update: Taking the Lead—The Campaign for Widener 36 The Back Page Magazine Advisory Board: Gerry Bloemker ’98 Lou Anne Bulik Kathleen Butler Denise Gifford Dan Hanson ’97 Tina Phillips ’82, ’98, ’03 Matthew Poslusny Meghan Radosh ’00, ’02 Sam Starnes Brigitte Valesey Stephen Wilhite The Currie family tree has deep roots to Widener and PMC—a lineage that dates back four generations. Visit Our Blog— widenermagazine.com Please join the conversation by posting your comments and letters to the editor online. Find us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ wideneruniversity. 2 As the two images on the cover of this magazine demonstrate, a diversity of bona fide American icons have paid memorable visits to Widener and its predecessor institution, Pennsylvania Military College. From Dwight D. Eisenhower, the two-term president who led the allied forces to victory in World War II, to Bruce Springsteen, the rock’n’roll star whose music has entertained and documented America, the range and cultural significance of our influential visitors to campus have made an indelible stamp on the Widener community. The tradition of hosting visiting dignitaries and entertainers dates back almost a century when students and faculty engaged with leaders such as Franklin Delano Roosevelt, then secretary of the Navy; composer and conductor John Philip Sousa; Gen. John J. Pershing, leader of the American Expeditionary Forces during World War I; Connie Mack, the legendary baseball manager; and filmmaker Cecil B. De Mille, once a student of this institution. Others to visit campus include notable figures as diverse as Wernher Von Braun, the German-American once called “the greatest rocket scientist in history,” and Ethel Waters, a renowned jazz and blues vocalist and actress who hailed from Chester and broke racial barriers on stage and screen. This tradition is one that continues with the very popular Philadelphia Speakers Series, an event Widener has sponsored for nine consecutive years. Our distinguished speakers share with the capacity crowds at the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia their unique experiences and perspectives on a wide variety of topics, and many often visit campus. Recent speakers include President Bill Clinton, political strategist Karl Rove, Mexican President Vicenté Fox, Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf, former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, and leading journalists and writers, including Tom Brokaw, Bob Woodward, Salman Rushdie, and Amy Tan. The upcoming 2013–2014 season beginning in the fall has recently been announced, and includes Apple Computer co-founder Steve Wozniak, former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, historian Doris Kearns Goodwin, and author Bill Bryson. For more information on tickets, visit the Philadelphia Speakers Series website at www. philadelphiaspeakersseries.org. We would be thrilled for you to join us for these captivating presentations that Widener is proud to present. Dr. James T. Harris III, President RULA AL-SAFFAR’S SPIRIT INSPIRES WIDENER AUDIENCE Just six months after having her 15-year prison sentence overturned, Rula Al-Saffar, a 2000 master’s graduate of the School of Nursing, captivated an audience at Widener with her story of imprisonment for treating injured protesters during Bahrain’s Arab Spring. “They could beat me, they could shock me, but they could not take my spirit away from me,” said Al-Saffar, former president of the Bahrain Nurses Society who was detained and tortured for nearly five months in 2011. Al-Saffar, ranked number 11 on the list of the 500 most influential Arabs by Arabian Business Magazine, was highlighted in the fall 2012 issue of Widener Magazine. Al-Saffar’s journey is a story of unwavering commitment to her profession and to serving people, a story of leadership in the face of extreme adversity, and a story of the triumph of the human spirit. Fresh from speaking at an international human rights conference in Washington, D.C., Al-Saffar visited campus in December and spoke about her continuing fight to free the medics whose convictions were not overturned and remain in prison in Bahrain. “We need to teach about humanitarian law, about ethics,” Al-Saffar said. “There needs to be medical neutrality. If this can happen in Bahrain, it can happen anywhere.” Rula Al-Saffar ’00 (pictured with Nada Adam, ‘12, a communication studies Widener alumna from the United Arab Emirates) brought her trademark peace symbol to campus in December. Al-Saffar will return to Widener on May 18 when she will give the commencement address and receive an honorary doctorate in public service. 3 VOICES OF LEADERSHIP VOICES OF LEADERSHIP Boeing Executive Shares Lessons from the Top From left, Jonathan Greene ’15, Dr. James T. Harris III, David Oskin ’64 ’07H, Dennis A. Muilenburg, and retired Gen. John Tilleli ’63, ’96H. Dennis A. Muilenburg, president and CEO of Boeing Defense, Space & Security, was honored at the annual Voices of Leadership dinner hosted by Widener’s Oskin Leadership Institute in November. Muilenburg, who oversees a $33 billion business and 60,000 employees worldwide, received the Widener Bugle, given by the university in recognition of those who have answered the call to lead. Retired Gen. John Tilelli, a 1963 graduate of Pennsylvania Military College who is vice chair of the Widener Board of Trustees, interviewed Muilenburg. “He’d be a leader that I would follow into battle, or I’d follow into business,” Tilelli said. 4 Muilenburg on mentors, role models, and leadership I had the privilege of meeting Neil Armstrong a few times. I’ve never met a more humble man. Here you are sitting with the first man to walk on the moon. This was a man who just had incredible courage. I remember him talking to me about the first Apollo mission. If you added it up mathematically and utilized all the engineering approaches we use today, he and his crew had less than a 50 percent chance of returning to Earth alive on that mission. So imagine the courage it took. You talk about competency—one of the reasons that mission was successful is his raw piloting skill to put a capsule on the moon with a computer that probably has Muilenburg was interviewed by retired Gen. Tilelli at the annual Voices of Leadership dinner. less horsepower than my watch does today. Just an incredible man. Very humble. An extraordinary leader. On being pushed out his comfort zone I came to Boeing because I wanted to design airplanes. I spent fourteen years designing airplanes, and just loved it. Every kind of airplane you can imagine. I thought, “This is a great career. I’m just going to do this as long as I am in the business.” At about the fifteen-year point in my career, a senior leader at Boeing came to me and said, “Dennis, we’ve got something else we want you to try.” I said, “I don’t want to switch gears. I like what I’m doing.” He said, “We want you to move to Washington, D.C. and run our air traffic management business, a new startup for Boeing.” I said, “I don’t know a lot about air traffic management. I’m a fighter [plane] designer. Why do you want me to do that?” He said, “Because it’s going to stretch you and grow you.” So I moved my family across the country. I still remember driving from Seattle to Washington D.C. We arrived in D.C. moved in, and got settled. About ten days after we arrived, 9/11 happened. For those of you who remember the summer of 2001, the air traffic system was bursting at the seams. There was not enough capacity in the system. Overnight, the problem went from not enough capacity to not enough security. It completely blew up our business model, and dismantled the air traffic management business. That was a very tough experience for me. We had to unravel that business model. There were some tough personnel issues to deal with. That wasn’t much fun while I was doing it. But looking back on that time period, I probably grew more as a leader in that year than any other time in my career because it pushed me outside of my comfort zone. I ended up meeting a whole bunch of new people in Washington, D.C. and dramatically expanded my network. I had a much more global understanding of the business and how it worked. As my next job, I ended up taking over future combat systems. That move ended up being the single most influential, important event in my career— and it was something that originally I didn’t even want to do. Advice for students on courage I think this idea of courage, to have the courage to go do something, is very significant. Don’t underestimate what you can do. At this stage of your career, and with the investment that has been made in you as leaders, imagine big things, think about world-changing things, and don’t be limited by what people might say you can do. Especially early in your career, you can afford to take a big swing. If it doesn’t go so well, you’ll learn so much. I’d encourage you to have the courage to think big and really imagine what you can do. For a video of the Voices of Leadership discussion, visit widener.edu/vol. 5 ON CAMPUS ON CAMPUS Widener Joins President Clinton’s Effort “To Make a Difference in the World” Widener University is the first institution in the Philadelphia region to join a growing consortium of colleges and universities nationwide participating in the Clinton Global Initiative University Network, an ambitious program founded by President Bill Clinton. “Young people have a greater ability to enact change than ever before,” Clinton said in a statement about the organization’s 2012 annual conference, “and CGI U is a global network of young people seeking to use the resources at their disposal to make a difference in the world.” Living Learning Communities Enhance Student Experiences By Maria Klecko ‘15 Karly Simon, a senior sociology major from Medford, N.J., has spent much of her time at Widener “living and learning” leadership skills. In addition to being a manager at the Wellness Center and the vice president of communications for the Panhellenic Association, Simon is resident adviser for the Leadership and Civic Engagement Living Learning Community. 6 From Chester to Chongqing: Social Work Scholarship on a Global Scale CGI U is Clinton’s initiative to engage the next generation of leaders on college campuses worldwide. Since its inaugural meeting in 2008, CGI U has brought together more than 4,500 students from more than 130 countries to make commitments to action. The program is a project of the larger Clinton Global Initiative, founded in 2005 with the mission to “turn ideas into action.” Widener joined the network in January. A student representing the Widener chapter of Engineers Without Borders attended the recent CGI U meeting at Washington University in St. Louis. Widener is providing a minimum of $10,000 from an endowed fund to be divided among student projects. Widener President James T. Harris III said the program aligns perfectly with Widener’s commitment to leadership development and civic engagement. “The Clinton Global Initiative goes to the very heart of our mission at Widener,” Harris said. “We are very excited to be selected as a member of the University Network.” A far-reaching partnership between social work faculty and students at Widener and Chongqing Technical and Business University (CTBU) in China continues to expand learning and enhance social work services on both sides of the globe. The collaboration, begun in 2006, has focused on faculty and student exchanges, training, and research. Widener students and faculty have visited the Chinese university frequently in the past seven years, and Chinese students and faculty have come to Chester to learn and share as well. “The eye-opening opportunities for our students and the research partnerships this has created for our faculty have been tremendous,” said Dr. John Poulin, director of Widener’s Center for Social Work Education. This year brings plans for even more cross-global cooperation. Poulin said Widener’s Center for Social Work Education is working on developing a program that will allow CTBU social work students to transfer to Widener and obtain a bachelor’s of social work degree in two years and be eligible for advanced standing to receive a master’s of social work degree in one year. In addition, Dr. Robin Goldberg-Glen, an associate professor of social work who has spent a semester at CTBU teaching and conducting research on Chinese elderly, will collaborate this Living Learning Communities—known as LLCs on campus—are residential groups of students with similar interests. The clusters of like-minded students allow for in-residence programming, outside-the-classroom experiences, and learning opportunities that are tailored to academic disciplines. Other LLCs include nursing students, engineering majors, honors students, and biology, environmental science, and chemistry majors. LLC programming began several years ago in smaller iterations but has become more formalized over the past three years. Now approximately 200 students participate. The Leadership and Civic Engagement LLC is the latest to emerge, starting in fall 2012. “It has helped me reflect on my leadership style and has encouraged me to become better aware of those who need my assistance,” Simon said. The Leadership and Civic Engagement LLC houses upperclassmen, but most of Widener’s LLCs accommodate freshmen. The university has experienced positive results in terms of student retention. “Students that participate and live in LLCs are retained at Widener from freshman to sophomore year at a rate that is about 10 percent higher than other freshmen who come to Widener with similar academic preparation,” said Dr. Denise Gifford, associate provost and dean of students. Gifford and Catherine Bermudez, assistant dean for residence life, work together to ensure that the LLCs grow, linking both the classroom and out-of-classroom experiences. Programs for students have included the “spaghetti challenge” for engineering students in which students paired up in teams of three to create a tower of spaghetti using only one yard of masking tape that held a marshmallow for 60 seconds. The nursing LLC hosted a movie night that focused on the struggle of a cancer patient and the hospital experience. In addition to a greater retention rate, the LLCs offer benefits such as an enhanced sense of community, the creation of bonds between students with similar interests, a stronger interaction between faculty and students, and continual learning opportunities. “LLCs positively impact the success of students,” Gifford said. summer with a CTBU professor to teach a service learning course for graduate students on social work practice with elderly Chinese clients. Students will conduct biographical timelines and develop intervention plans with CTBU social work students. “This multilayered partnership has enriched our understanding of the human needs that social work can fulfill on a global scale,” Poulin said. Dr. Robin Goldberg-Glen, a social work faculty member, with a performer from the Sichuan Opera in Chengdu, China, and with students and faculty from Chongqing Technical and Business University. Students in the engineering LLC competed in the “spaghetti challenge,” a contest to build a tower out of spaghetti, masking tape, and a marshmallow. 7 ON CAMPUS ON CAMPUS ENGINEERING GALA MARKS 150 YEARS, HONORS ALUMNA AND FACULTY MEMBER In a festive room full of engineers, entrepreneurs, researchers, authors, and executives, one particular alumna— Sandra (Fay) Morgan ’71—stood out. Morgan, the very first female engineering student on campus, was honored with the Widener School of Engineering’s 150th Anniversary Medal at the gala dinner held at Philadelphia’s Franklin Institute. “When I saw Kirkbride Hall, I felt like I was at a ‘real’ engineering school compared to everything else I had seen at that time,” said Morgan, who enrolled in 1967 when Widener was known jointly as Pennsylvania Military College and Penn Morton College and went on to a career as a civil engineer. As a scholarship recipient, Morgan said she strongly supports the new Anniversary Scholarship Fund, which was launched during the sesquicentennial celebration. When fully endowed, this fund will provide financial assistance to future generations of engineering students. Dr. Ray Jefferis, the longest tenured faculty member at Widener, was also honored for his commitment to teaching excellence and community service. Jefferis, who joined Pennsylvania Military College in 1966, has developed a number of courses in the School of Engineering. He also holds two patents and over the past decade has become an active volunteer for the Red Cross. From left to right: quarterback Chris Haupt set numerous Widener records; wide receiver/returner Anthony Davis earned second team All-America honors; and running back Couve LaFate ran for four touchdowns and more than 300 yards. Sandra (Fay) Morgan ’71 received the School of Engineering’s 150th Anniversary Medal. A NEW GENERATION OF LITERARY JOURNALS By Chara Kramer ‘14 Widener’s student-run literary journal that publishes student poetry, fiction, nonfiction, drama, and artwork has a new name: Widener Ink. The journal had been known as the Pioneer Review, using the name of the university’s Pioneer mascot that was changed to the Pride in 2006. Why the title change? “We wanted to be more reflective of the school as it stands today,” said Erin Sylvester ’13, this year’s editor-in-chief. Student editors have worked diligently through the spring semester to produce the journal. The journal will be available in April, and can be found online by searching for Widener Ink on Widener’s website at www.widener.edu. Another literary journal on campus is The Blue Route, which is a national online literary journal. This journal, although closed to Widener students for submission, is run this year by Jillian Benedict ’14, editor-in-chief, along with other students, and is published twice a year. It is available at http://widenerblueroute.org/. The Poet Lips and limbs and broken things on nights of midnight moons, hands and strings and hazy wings inside too-small bedrooms. Disarray and disaster holding hands like brides and grooms, wed beneath quilts and pillows hanging onto dusty brooms. Force it, spin it, twist and groan until the words sound better. Thread the ink and heart, pull until it tethers. Glass and bones and ashy wood, crash those words together, and read them in the morning because you know you won’t remember, the blinding brilliance of wordsmithery and consummation of a sound. Keep it flowing, keep improving, and spill your canvas proud. —A poem from Widener Ink by Ashley Connor, a senior communication studies major from Milmont Park, Pennsylvania. 8 A BANNER YEAR ON THE GRIDIRON By Derek Crudele As Widener football players gathered for the annual preseason team photograph, a staff member commented that it looked like a championship picture. That prophecy proved true as the Pride went 11-1 for the season that included an undefeated record in the Middle Atlantic Conference, earning the program’s leaguerecord 19th crown. Widener started 11-0 for just the fourth time in its 132-year history, tied a school record with seven home victories at Leslie C. Quick Jr. Stadium, and advanced to the NCAA quarterfinals for the first time since 2001. With every great team comes great leaders, and Widener had that in senior quarterback Chris Haupt. Buoyed by his experience as a minor league catcher with the Florida Marlins and the Toronto Blue Jays farm clubs, Haupt used that ingenuity and poise to be named second team All-America by the Beyond Sports College Network, as well as the Offensive Player of the Year in both the MAC and ECAC South Region. In concluding a standout career, Haupt finished with 9,907 career passing yards, 88 touchdown passes, and 10,256 yards of total offense—all school records. He also broke the school’s single-season record with 3,827 yards passing, 4,007 yards of total offense, and 38 touchdown passes. Sophomore wide receiver/returner Anthony Davis always has been an explosive player, and that was further proven this season. An electrifying competitor with awesome athleticism, Davis was named second team AllAmerica by the Beyond Sports College Network, second team All-East Region by D3Football.com, second team ECAC All-South Region, and first team AllMAC for a second straight year. Also being named first team AllMAC were junior left tackle Mike Pacitti, senior tight end Dom DePasquale, senior defensive end Chad Gravinese, senior inside linebacker Joe Wojceichowski, junior safety Colin Masterson, and senior kicker James McFadden. Junior outside linebacker Dylan Ditmer and sophomore cornerback Nick Rodriguez were tabbed second team AllLeague. Senior center Andrew Philpott, senior right tackle Gerry Pacitti, and senior outside linebacker Jamal Dorsey were named honorable mentions. After the season, Head Coach Isaac Collins, picked as Coach of the Year by both the MAC and ECAC, announced in January that he was leaving Widener after three seasons to take the head coaching position at Seton Hill University, a Division II program in Greensburg, Pa. He was replaced by Bobby Acosta, previously an assistant coach at The College of New Jersey. The new season opens up at Wesley College on September 6, with the home opener against Lebanon Valley on September 14. Widener players and cheerleaders celebrate recapturing the Keystone Cup with a 42-23 win over Delaware Valley College. 9 Moll. One challenge Eisenhower’s visit posed was where to serve the lunch to the president and about two dozen select guests. “We had no good place to have a nice meal for that many people who would all want to be seated at the same table with the president,” Pierpont said. He said the solution was a large, temporary table of plywood built in the lobby of Alumni Auditorium, at the time a twoyear-old building. A copy of PMC’s budget for “Eisenhower Day” indicates the “special table” cost $50 to build. According to a planning menu, the entrees served on that table were a choice of “Lobster Newberg in Patty shell OR Filet Mignon.” An earlier suggested menu had proposed “Frog legs & Crab Meat in Casserole on Melba Toast,” but like the offer of a round golf, that entrée didn’t make the final cut. An Afternoon with Ike Eisenhower on Campus One-Half Century Ago By Sam Starnes Opposite page: Eisenhower mingled with students from Stetser School who attended the military review; above, with John Lance “Jack” Geoghegan ‘63. M ore than three decades before he would achieve the rank of four-star general, John Tilelli, who grew up on a farm in New Jersey, shook the hand of Dwight D. Eisenhower, one of only five men ever named a five-star general in America’s history. The handshake came when “Ike,” as the two-term former commander-in-chief was commonly known, visited Pennsylvania Military College on the Friday before the 1963 commencement for a luncheon in his honor, a military review of the cadets, a ceremony in which he bestowed awards, and a reception. “In my wildest dreams as a young man, I never dreamed I would get that close to a president,” said Tilelli, a 1963 PMC graduate who was awarded an honorary doctorate from Widener in 1996. 10 As he prepared to graduate from PMC that weekend, Tilelli was bound for military service, but said he did not aspire to make a career of the Army until ten years later. He ultimately was named a four-star general in 1994, becoming the highest-ranking graduate from PMC and Widener. While serving as a general and working in the Pentagon, Tilelli went on to meet other presidents. He worked as a commander in the first Gulf War for President George H.W. Bush, whom he refers to as “Bush 41,” and he later served in the Pentagon under President Bill Clinton. Although Tilelli retired in 1999 before President George W. Bush took office, he also worked with “Bush 43” when he served as president and CEO of the United Service Organization (USO.) Almost fifty years later, looking back on his first meeting with a president, Tilelli, now chairman and CEO of Cypress International and vice chair of Widener’s Board of Trustees, remembers it as a landmark event for the class of 1963 that pointed its graduates on a path toward success. “It set the final values and allowed us to come to where we are today,” he said. The origin of Eisenhower’s visit to PMC began the previous year with a letter from Philip T. Sharples. Sharples, a businessman, aviation pioneer, and an active Republican fundraiser, was the brother of the PMC chairman of the Board of Trustees, Laurence P. Sharples, then a vice president in the thriving family business and also an aviation innovator. In December 1962, Brigadier Gen. Robert Schultz, aide to Eisenhower, responded to Philip Sharples’s request of the president. “He is presently in Georgia but read your letter while in enroute from New York to Augusta and has asked me to advise you that he will take the review late in May,” Schultz wrote. (Eisenhower was a frequent visitor to the Augusta National Golf Club in Georgia where the Masters tournament is played.) After the invitation to visit campus was accepted, President Moll appealed to Eisenhower’s widely known love of golf—one history of Eisenhower indicates that he played about 800 rounds of golf in the eight years that he was president—in a letter to Schultz in February 1963. “Appreciating the General’s fondness for golf,” Moll wrote, “we would be most pleased to arrange a foursome for him at the Springhaven Club in Wallingford, less than 10 minutes from here.” Eisenhower, however, did not take Moll up on his offer. Although Eisenhower is arguably the most significant historical figure ever to visit Widener or PMC, the college in this period was quite accustomed to welcoming influential guests to campus and took the event in stride, said Robert Pierpont, a 1954 PMC graduate who at the time of Eisenhower’s visit worked in the college’s administration as assistant to PMC President Clarence The late spring day of Eisenhower’s visit offered a clear blue sky with a low in the high fifties rising to the high seventies. Barbara Geoghegan Johns, then a junior at Beaver College (now Arcadia College) in Glenside, Pa., said that her future husband, John Lance “Jack” Geoghegan, a senior at PMC and the class president, drove from PMC to pick her up that morning to attend the Eisenhower review. It would be one of their very first dates. Eisenhower, at the time 72, and twoand-a-half years after leaving the White House, arrived at noon in a car driven by his aide. Wearing a dark blue suit and tie and a gray fedora, he was greeted at the front entrance to Old Main by an honor guard and President Moll and Maj. Gen. William Shepard Biddle, PMC’s commandant of cadets, who escorted him to Alumni Auditorium. Biddle, according to the Delaware County Daily Times, was an “old friend” who had served under Eisenhower in World War II. After the lunch but before the review and awards ceremony, Pierpont joined Eisenhower, Moll, and others who adjourned for a break in the Tumbleston Room, a lounge area that is now the PMC Museum. Eisenhower, as others remarked, was very gracious. “He was generally a nice, 11 Eisenhower’s visit came on the cusp of much great change in the college and in the country. Eisenhower, in fedora, seated here between President Moll and Gen. Biddle, bestowed military awards to nine cadets. Geoghegan presented Eisenhower with a silver sabre and plaque declaring him the first honorary captain in PMC’s history. 12 polite guy,” Pierpont said. “You would never know that he had been the commanding officer who won the war—and had been president.” Jack Geoghegan had arranged for Barbara Geoghegan Johns to sit in the bleachers for the review on what was then the football field behind Old Main. The stands were packed, and included some students from nearby Stetser School, with whom Eisenhower chatted. Jack Geoghegan had not told Barbara of the high-profile role he would play in the ceremony: Serving as the cadet escort for Eisenhower during the parade and review, and presenting the president with a silver sabre and reading a short statement making him the first honorary captain in the history of the school. When the military parade began with Jack Geoghegan by Eisenhower’s side, an entrance that included the president standing at attention for a 21-gun salute, Barbara Geoghegan Johns told those in the stands with her that she could not tell which one Jack was—all cadets had donned formal military dress uniforms with hats that featured a strap worn beneath the nose. “They told me, ‘He’s the one with the president,’” she said. “I remember what a strange feeling it was watching them walk together.” Geoghegan then rode standing in the front of an Army Jeep while Eisenhower and Laurence Sharples stood in the back as the cadet band played. Geoghegan later presented Eisenhower with a silver sabre and a plaque, making these comments: “Sir, this sabre is a symbol of leadership within the Corps of Cadets. It carries also with it a willingness to fight and die for our country, that you were so willing to do yourself. It finally carries responsibility. A responsibility that you as general and statesman were all too willing to exercise. Upon your decisions has rested the fact that we are free rather than captive Americans.” After Geoghegan’s presentation, Eisenhower made brief remarks to the crowd. “I assure you,” said Eisenhower, a 1912 graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, “I did not attain the rank of first captain at West Point.” Eisenhower presented awards to nine cadets, including Geoghegan who took the top honor with the Francis M. Taitt Prize, designated for an outstanding soldier and gentleman with the neatest appearance in the cadet corps. “He was truly honored that Eisenhower came,” Barbara Geoghegan Johns said. “He was very happy to be the person escorting him.” David Oskin ’64, ’07H, a junior at the time, received the Lt. J. William Wolfgram Memorial Medal given to the most soldierly cadet. Oskin does not remember precisely what Eisenhower said, only that he was very warm and courteous while Oskin himself was quite nervous. “I just wanted to make sure that my knees didn’t buckle,” said Oskin, a member of Widener’s Board of Trustees who served as the board’s chairman for nine years. “I was absolutely spellbound and elated. He was a general and president I had read about in books for years. It was very special to have someone like Ike put the award on your chest. It is one of the things in life that you don’t forget. I felt very proud of my college that day.” David McNulty, secretary of the class of 1963 and editor of that year’s Sabre & Sash–the PMC annual–was excited about Eisenhower’s visit because copies of the yearbook he had labored to compile and edit had arrived only two days prior. Biddle agreed to give McNulty and his friend B. David Lake, president elect of student council for the rising senior class, time to present Eisenhower with the yearbook. With McNulty’s family, fiancé, and Cadets and others in the PMC community remember Eisenhower’s graciousness and warmth during his visit. 13 others looking on, he and Lake shook his hand and spoke briefly with Eisenhower while standing outside the Biddle residence on 14th Street. McNulty said the historical significance of the moment resonated deeply. “We met and got our pictures taken with the Supreme Allied Commander of World War II, the man who ordered the D-Day invasion and achieved victory in Europe, the president of the United States, the man who put the words ‘under God’ in our nation’s pledge of allegiance,” McNulty said. “It was a day that we all would cherish as a milestone in our lives forever.” After a short reception back in Alumni Auditorium, Pierpont remembers Eisenhower leaving with very little fanfare. Unlike modern presidential visits that feature a heavy police presence, security was minimal. “There was no Secret Service with him,” Pierpont said. Nor was there a motorcade. “I distinctly remember his driving off with the aide back to Gettysburg. As far as I can remember, they were the only two people in the car.” The time of Eisenhower’s visit came on the cusp of much great change in the college and in the country. “In June of 1963, we couldn’t even spell Vietnam,” said McNulty, who, like Tilelli, was commissioned into the Army that weekend. “It was the end of an era.” That November, President Kennedy would be assassinated, and into the mid1960s, the Vietnam War would escalate. Eisenhower visited PMC again in 1965, speaking to freshmen and to the Greater Chester dinner held on campus. He died in 1969. Nine years after his first visit and three years after his death, Pennsylvania Military College and Penn Morton College would become Widener College. The coming years also brought much personal change for the class of 1963. Jack Geoghegan and Barbara Geoghegan Johns were married after her graduation in June 1964. After a year serving with the Catholic A Parade of Presidents 1 2 David McNulty ’63, left, and B. David Lake ’64 presented Eisenhower with a copy of the Sabre & Sash, PMC’s yearbook. 3 Relief Services in Africa, they had a child, Camille, in June 1965. Jack Geoghegan, who was commissioned in 1963 but had a two-year wait before serving, soon shipped off to Vietnam and was killed in the battle of Ia Drang in November 1965. The 1992 book, We Were Soldiers Once… and Young, tells the story of the battle in which he was killed (actor Chris Klein portrayed Geoghegan in the 2002 movie based on the book). Widener’s John L. Geoghegan Student Citizenship Award is given annually for academic achievement, leadership, and community service. Keeping Geoghegan’s memory alive at Widener has been important to McNulty, a close friend of Geoghegan. “Jack was a great guy,” McNulty said. “He could have been president.” David Oskin, who in the years following served in Vietnam and then went on to a very successful business career, said the leadership exemplified by Eisenhower should be studied. “When I think of Ike, I think of leadership,” said Oskin, for whom Widener’s Oskin Leadership Institute is named. “He showed character and courage.” Tilelli also concurred with the leadership qualities of Eisenhower. “Your leaders in essence are a patchwork quilt of people you look up to,” Tilelli said. “His style of leadership is an excellent one to emulate for young people.” Looking back, Tilelli said it is remarkable how fast half a century can pass. “Fifty years went by in a blink of an eye,” he said. “Time goes a lot quicker than one might hope.” But he said those years have been good to the place he calls his undergraduate alma mater and has continued to serve as a trustee. “The college changed to a magnificent university,” Tilelli said. “It was a great college at that time. It’s now a great university with the right mission and the right goals—supporting global and community leadership.” w 4 5 14 Eisenhower was not the first president to step on campus and visit with PMC and Widener undergraduates, nor was he the last. Seven of the last sixteen presidents, starting with Warren G. Harding and ending last fall with Bill Clinton, have either visited campus or been the guests of PMC or Widener University. February 1920: Warren G. Harding received an honorary doctoral degree from Pennsylvania Military College in a ceremony in the Armory in February 1920, one year before taking office. “If I had a dozen sons, I’d send every one of them to PMC, for here you make men,” he said. A senator from Ohio at the time, he was accompanied to the ceremony by George B. Christian Jr., an 1896 graduate of PMC who served as secretary to Harding. On the photo above, he wrote, “To Col. Frank K. Hyatt. With cordial greetings and good wishes from the one who holds Chester’s famous college in high esteem. Sincerely, Warren G. Harding.” 1 2 June 1920: Franklin Delano Roosevelt received an honorary degree in 1920 while assistant secretary of the Navy, thirteen years before beginning the first of his four terms. Received at commencement, his degree hangs in his childhood bedroom at Hyde Park. He said, “Pennsylvania Military College is one of the few schools in the land that teaches leadership of far-reaching vision.” 3 October 1929: Herbert Hoover and his wife were riding a train bound for Philadelphia to see the final game of the 1929 World Series when they stopped at the Chester B&O Railroad Station to briefly review cadets. The event became known as the “tensecond review.” Hoover went on to see the Philadelphia Athletics win the series against the Chicago Cubs in Shibe Park only a few weeks before the great stock market crash of 1929. October 1980, and October 2000: George Herbert Walker Bush visited Widener two times twenty years apart– both before and after his residency in the White House. He campaigned as a vice presidential candidate in 1980 for the Reagan-Bush ticket, and he returned in 2000 to stump for his son George W. Bush. In 2000, a crowd packed into the Schwartz Athletic Center to watch Widener football coach Bill Zwaan and players present Bush with a Widener warm-up suit. 5 October 2008: Barack Obama, then a senator from Illinois, made a campaign speech one week before election day to about 9,000 people who packed onto Memorial Field behind Old Main and waited in the rain and 39-degree temperatures for him to appear. Obama drew on the imagery of the rain throughout his speech, saying, “A little rain never hurt anyone. When times are tough, when it’s cold, when it’s raining, when it’s hard— that’s when we need to stand up.” 6 October 2012: President Bill Clinton opened the 2012–2013 season of the Philadelphia Speakers Series presented by Widener University. He joined Widener President James T. Harris III for a Q&A session before a capacity crowd at the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia and applauded Widener for its vision of community involvement. Currently head of the Clinton Foundation, he discussed the worldwide efforts he oversees to improve the quality of life for those living in poverty. 4 For more images of presidential visits to PMC and Widener, visit the Wolgram Memorial Library Digital Collections at http://digitalwolfgram.widener.edu/cdm. 15 6 THE BOSS AND THE BOOTLEG: WIDENER CONCERT VIDEO THE “HOLY GR AIL” FOR SPRINGSTEEN FANS 16 By Dan Hanson ’97 The Widener student working the door to the Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band show on a freezing February night in 1975 looked quizzically at Michael Turner when he presented his $ 6 ticket. “What’s that?” the student asked, his gaze fixed on the large case slung over Turner’s shoulder. Turner didn’t miss a beat. “I have a breathing problem and this is a portable iron lung,” he said. Either satisfied with Turner’s answer or too cold to inquire further, the student took Turner’s and his friend Jeff Audet’s tickets and waved them through the entrance to the Schwartz Athletic Center field house. Turner and Audet didn’t know it at the time, but their “portable iron lung”—actually Audet’s Sony Portapak video camera and reel-to-reel video recorder—would record some of the earliest and rarest concert footage of Springsteen, a New Jersey rocker with a strong regional following poised to become a music industry icon. Springsteen played three Widener concerts—one on April 5, 1974, and consecutive nights on February 6 and 7, 1975—before his Born to Run album launched him to superstardom and landed him on the covers of both TIME and Newsweek in October 1975. Video Turner and Audet shot of the first 1975 show became a hot commodity on the bootleg music market for years, first on VHS and then on DVD, before gaining a worldwide audience on YouTube. “We didn’t know it would be a piece of Springsteen history,” said Turner, who grew up in Broomall, Pennsylvania, and was attending Temple University when Photo: Daniel Upton ’75 he and Audet recorded the concert. “We would show the video at parties in my parents’ recreation room, hang out, and drink beer. We just thought it was pretty cool to have this thing.” “I asked for his autograph, but all we had was a magic marker,” said Paul Shandelman ’79. “Springsteen’s piano player lifted my shirt and drew two eyes and a face, and Springsteen signed it, ‘Nice belly, Bruce Springsteen.’ It was pretty awesome.” Glory Days Vivid images of Springsteen’s shows also live in the heads of Widener alumni who attended the concert as students almost 40 years ago. New Jersey-native Anthony Zizos ’75 was accustomed to seeing Springsteen play at the Jersey Shore prior to his rise in popularity. “It was as if he followed me to college, bearing comfortable memories of my high school days,” Zizos wrote. “The indoor track was packed that night with a crowd so electrified it rivaled the Saturday afternoon rousing crowds watching the magic of Billy Johnson, Richie Weaver, and the PMC drill team on the football field behind Old Main. That concert was amazing!” Paul Shandelman ’79 was lucky to have a roommate, Ron Siarnicki, who worked behind the scenes at the field house and had backstage access. Siarnicki recruited Shandelman to help with concert preparations, and he got to meet Springsteen in person. “I asked for his autograph, but all we had was a magic marker,” Shandelman said. “Springsteen’s piano player lifted my shirt and drew two eyes and a face, and Springsteen signed it, ’Nice belly, Bruce Springsteen.’ It was pretty awesome.” As a photographer for the Widener yearbook, Daniel Upton ’75 had a pass to photograph the concert, and took the images that appeared in the yearbook and in this magazine. “I was there with my future wife, Jean, and remember it being a good show with a very energetic crowd,” Upton said. “He’s a great entertainer, musician, and poet.” And Mark J. Luongo ’78 remembers moving into his dorm as a freshman in fall 1974 and seeing posters for Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. plastered on walls and doors. “I recall asking myself what was the fuss over this guy named Springsteen,” Luongo said. “I remember going to the field house and sitting on the track covered with a huge rubber sheet and waiting for this show to begin. Then one of the biggest people I had ever seen came out and started playing a saxophone, and that’s how I was introduced to Clarence Clemons. Then this little, greasy guy hops out on stage, and the energy was phenomenal. I was mesmerized and came back for the next show. I have been a Boss fan ever since.” Tracking “The Holy Grail” of Bruce Videos For many years, the identity of who recorded the Widener concert footage was unknown. Springsteen 17 Daniel Upton ’75, a photographer for the Widener yearbook, shot the photo of Springsteen at far left in the hat during the 1974 concert, as well as images used on page 16 and the cover of this magazine. The two center images of Springsteen from the 1975 concert appeared in the yearbook, and are believed to be taken by Joe Quinn ’75. The image of the ticket was provided by brucebase.wikispaces.com. fans on the Internet speculated that the video was shot by Widener students with authorization from Springsteen’s management. As a Springsteen fan and director of public relations at Widener, I set out to solve the mystery. I solicited information on the Widener Magazine blog, but the request yielded nothing. While reading comments left by viewers of the video on YouTube, I stumbled across a response to a comment that led me to Michael Turner. Turner said that he and Audet gave a copy of the reel-to-reel tape to a popular Philadelphia radio disc 18 jockey, and they believe that’s how it was distributed. Other than that, Turner and Audet made a handful of copies for friends and family with the advent of VHS video technology several years after the show. Now anyone can access the video. Go to YouTube.com and search “Springsteen Widener” and be transported 38 years back in time to February 6, 1975—three months before the release of Born to Run. Through a haze of smoke, Audet’s video camera focuses on a 25-year-old Springsteen belting out favorites from his first two albums, Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. and The Wild, The Innocent, and the E-Street Shuffle. The grainy black-and-white image jumps, goes in and out of focus, and cheering concertgoers temporarily block the camera’s view of the band. As the concert progresses, you are there with Turner and Audet, moving closer to the stage as they move closer with the camera. You hear familiar tunes from Born to Run as they are heard by many for the first time—including the title track and the song “Wings for Wheels,” which would become “Thunder Road” on the album. Comments left by viewers of the concert footage on YouTube treat it as a rare archaeological find. “This is the Holy Grail of Boss performances,” writes one. “This is like finding an early version of the Gettysburg Address. Priceless!” says another. The rarity of the video is unmistakable according to Erik Flannigan, a national expert on digital media and the senior editor of Backstreets, the official Springsteen fan magazine. “When it surfaced, it was a revelation,” Flannigan said of the Widener concert footage. “Nobody had ever seen any footage of Springsteen from this era unless they attended those shows in person. In 1975, it was almost unthinkable that someone would sneak a video camera into a concert. They were almost the first ones to do it.” When a documentary on Born to Run was released on the 30th anniversary of the album in 2005, Turner, as a devoted Springsteen fan, purchased a copy. Watching the documentary in his living room, he was blown away by what he saw. There, in all of its grainy, black-andwhite glory, was Turner and Audet’s footage of the song Born to Run they shot at Widener. “I was flabbergasted,” Turner said. “I had no knowledge that it would be on there.” Turner said he doesn’t know if the original half-inch reel-to-reel exists anymore. Even if he could find it and the video was worth big money, Turner said it probably wouldn’t be for sale. “I’m not sure I would take money for it. I would rather donate it to Springsteen or the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.” He paused for a moment and added, “But I would take a couple of front row tickets to a Springsteen concert for it.” Turner’s and Audet’s efforts to film the Springsteen show has allowed a younger generation of Springsteen fans, such as William Mikolajewski, a 2011 graduate of Widener’s School of Engineering, to connect with the legendary shows here. “I was not in attendance at this concert as I was not born yet, but I couldn’t help but respond to how amazing this show was,” Mikolajewski said. “The set list has to be one of Bruce’s best. A show with ’Rosalita,’ ’Born to Run,’ ’Spirit in the Night,’ and a ’Wings for Wheels’ rendition is to be remembered for the ages. As a younger Bruce fan who has attended Widener, this show will always hold special meaning to me, and remain a frequent play on my iPod.” w Please see page 30 for a story about alumni who won tickets from the Widener fund to attend a 2012 Springsteen concert. 19 SEX ED— FOR SENIORS? Widener program one-of-a-kind in addressing issues of sexuality and aging, including fostering research and addressing intimacy in nursing homes By Allyson Roberts After working for 30 years as director of staff development for a hospital in Connecticut, Jane Fleishman decided that she had one more career in her. Fleishman, 58, a doctoral student in Widener’s Center for Human Sexuality Studies, became interested in the issues of sexuality and aging after a friend introduced her to Dr. Laura Singer-Magdoff, a 95-year-old practicing psychotherapist. Fleishman soon began presenting sexuality education lessons for the gray-haired set in SingerMagdoff’s weekly discussion group at her assisted living community in the Bronx, N.Y. Fleishman, through qualitative research to gauge the effectiveness of her teaching, learned that two things are clear: First, people in their 70s, 80s, and 90s still think about and often pursue intimate relationships. Second, most older adults are thrilled to learn how the human sexual response affects them in their later years and to know that they can still experience tremendous pleasure. Many people who have forgone 20 sexual activity due to health or cognitive changes are happy to learn ways to accommodate these changes, Fleishman said. She found that there is a substantial lack of research in this area. “Most research related to sexuality and aging centers around problems related to sexual function, which creates a lopsided view and a stereotype that healthy older people aren’t interested in sex,” Fleishman said. “Without researching samples of healthy older adults, we can’t develop or generalize models of sexual relationships later in life.” Filling that void of research and providing more education on a subject long viewed as off-limits is the goal of the Sexuality and Aging Consortium, an education outreach program of Widener’s Center for Human Sexuality Studies. The Consortium, founded in 2007 and integrated into Widener in 2010, is comprised of professionals nationwide who provide sexuality education, counseling, and resources for older adults, their families, and caregivers. Members also 21 offer training, consulting, and policy development services to professionals serving older adults. The program is the only one of its kind in the country, said Melanie Davis, current co-president of the Sexuality and Aging Consortium at Widener University. “No other organization exists that’s quite like ours,” she said. Davis said that through conferences, training sessions, and media exposure, consortium members share their unique areas of expertise with each other and with other professionals interested in sexuality and aging. She hopes these efforts spark a shift in attitudes about sex and aging throughout the nation. “The Consortium’s work is especially important as Baby Boomers age,” Davis said. “These people grew up in a time when sexual freedom was glorified and the contraceptive pill was introduced. They’re not giving up these freedoms now just because they’re growing older, and they shouldn’t have to.” Part of the Sexuality and Aging Consortium’s work focuses on educating and counseling older adults directly so that they can enjoy life-affirming, safe sexual expression as they age despite both biological and cultural challenges that may get in their way. Davis said the challenges are varied, yet they are rarely broached by physicians or discussed between aging partners. “There are real challenges to being sexually expressive at a later age,” Davis said, listing several examples like lowered sex drive due to hormonal changes, surgeries that may affect performance or the experience of pleasure, side effects from medication, the loss of a partner, or the notion that an aging body is 22 Dr. Laura Singer-Magdoff, left, invited Jane Fleishman, right, a doctoral student in Widener’s Center for Human Sexuality Studies, to lead sex ed lessons in Singer-Magdoff’s assisted living community. unattractive. “Education can help older adults manage most of these challenges so they can enjoy being as sexually expressive as they want to be.” Davis said sexual expression, whether experienced alone or with a partner, has many benefits: “People who accept and enjoy their bodies sexually report a greater sense of self-esteem and well-being. Those who engage in sexual activity may enjoy increased circulation, better sleep, and even decreased pain from medical problems. Older adults with sexual partners may enjoy greater emotional intimacy and sexual satisfaction once they adapt to age-related changes and rethink their sexual scripts. The Consortium is eager to help make these positive changes possible.” Peggy Brick, 84, the founder and a past president of the Sexuality and Aging Consortium, said feelings of intimacy and desire do not have to end as one ages. “It’s still appropriate for people at our age to be intimate. It’s OK.” Brick has co-published two textbooks on the subject and regularly teaches a class known as “sex ed for seniors.” She said the goal of her class is to get attendees to open up and rethink their sexual scripts, beliefs that paint a picture of what people who engage in intimate behavior look like and how intimacy unfolds in a methodical way, from a caress leading to a kiss and so on until intercourse occurs. “We need to give adults a broader definition of sexuality,” she said. “We need to change the sexual scripts that we learned as kids, where the young are sexy and the focus is solely on sexual intercourse and orgasm.” Brick said forms of sexual intercourse are typically part of sexual relationships, but as couples age, the act may become harder to complete due to physiological changes. Men especially become frustrated and embarrassed that they can’t perform as they once did in their youth, she said. “It’s most often the men, not the women, who abandon their sex life and intimacy altogether as they age,” she said. “We want them to continue to embrace their sexuality to enjoy healthy, happy, fulfilled lives, but awareness as to how to move forward is half the battle.” The Consortium is committed to educating caregivers on the intimacy rights and needs of seniors but struggles to make inroads into nursing homes and assisted living facilities. “A lot of facilities are reluctant to train their staff on these sexuality issues because they operate under the mindset that if they don’t do anything, nobody will criticize them,” Brick said. She explained that most facilities broach the subject only when a question arises among the staff about residents’ relationships or the behavior of a specific resident. Brick was approached by her own senior living facility when a male resident became involved with a female resident who had early onset dementia. Brick helped the administration develop a policy for reacting to such issues and held a training workshop for staff. “Facilities need policies that dictate a collective approach to dealing with issues such as this so that one staff person doesn’t feel the pressure to make a decision,” Brick said. “Furthermore, one staff person may handle the issue one way, while another may handle it another. There needs to be consistency.” Brick sees the sexuality education of older adults and the training of caregivers as equally important because as older adults look to fulfill their intimacy needs, their places of residence and caregivers will have to adjust. She’s witnessed her peers at her senior living facility grow bolder after attending her lessons. One woman felt empowered to ask for a double bed for her husband who was suffering from Parkinson’s disease and living away from her in a separate wing. “After lunch, she’d go in and lie with him; her husband said it was the best part of his day,” Brick said. “How simple was that? People need to know that it’s OK to ask for that, and residences need to know it’s OK to say yes.” w To contact the Sexuality and Aging Consortium at Widener University, call 610-499-1378, e-mail [email protected], or visit www.widener.edu/sexualityandaging/. Peggy Brick founded the Sexuality and Aging Consortium, now a program of the Widener Center for Human Sexuality Studies. ABOUT THE CENTER FOR HUMAN SEXUALITY STUDIES Widener University’s human sexuality program was originally an academic department founded at University of Pennsylvania in 1976 that moved to Widener in 1999. In the years since, the program has thrived at Widener, growing in the diversity of the students and the number of options for those who want to pursue a career in human sexuality education. Now known as the Center for Human Sexuality Studies, it offers the only fully accredited doctoral program in human sexuality in the country. The program, which also offers a master’s degree, prepares future and current professionals to teach, consult, provide counseling and therapy, and conduct research in a variety of settings on complex issues related to human sexuality. Graduates of Widener’s program go on to fulfill leadership roles nationwide as therapists, educators, and researchers. “In a time when the majority of the population lived through or was born after the sexual revolution, when sexual rights are political hot potatoes, it is critical that higher education institutions train professionals who understand and use best practices in human sexuality education, therapy, and research,” said Dr. Justin A. Sitron, assistant professor in Widener’s Center for Human Sexuality Studies and vice chair of the Board of Directors of the Sexuality Information and Education Council of the United States (SIECUS). 23 CLASS NOTES Class of 1943 Lt. Col. Joseph O’Hare, BS, business, turned 92 in May and celebrated the event with three generations of family and friends. Joe remains comfortable and well at his home in McLean, Va. Class of 1953 LTC William John Thompson, BA, political science, was buried at Arlington National Cemetery on November 21, 2012, with full military honors. His casket was carried on the Caisson. Bill’s family members thank all his fellow cadets for their kind words and condolences. Class of 1955 Robert Burns, BS, mechanical engineering, received the 2012 Distinguished Service Award for Individual Volunteer of the Year from LeadingAge PA, an association of notfor-profit organizations that provides services, housing, and health care for older adults. Burns was recognized for his generous donation of time to ease the challenges of aging for fellow residents. The committee was particularly impressed with his founding of the REACT (Resident Enterprise Assistance Chore Technician) Committee, a group of men who address resident needs with small repairs to furniture, medical 24 CLASS NOTES and electronic equipment, and other household items. Burns repairs the residents’ scooters and replaces scooter batteries. He also repairs and maintains scooters that are donated to the residents association so that other residents can use them. He is past president of Brittany Pointe Estates Residents Association and currently chairs five committees. Vincent J. Land, BS, accounting, chairman of Miners Bank was inducted recently into the Pennsylvania Association of Community Bankers Hall of Fame. In a ceremony held in Vail, Colorado, Land was honored by the association for his “significant contributions to his community, institution, and in particular this association.” Land retired from Miners Bank in April 2012 and currently serves as chairman of the board of directors. He is a retired Army colonel. Class of 1960 Sheldon “Shelly” A. Schwartz, BS, mechanical engineering, of Greencastle, Pennsylvania, was interviewed in January 2012 by the Public Opinion newspaper. Schwartz, winner of the 2012 Widener-PMC Alumni Association Alumni Service Award, was asked about his family, his favorite things, his career, and to share a memorable event in his life. He said, “While the birth of our children are A Return to Cambodia Leth Oun, a U.S. Secret Service Officer and 1998 Widener graduate featured in the fall 2011 issue of Widener Magazine, visited his native Cambodia for the first time after he escaped the murderous regime of dictator Pol Pot 34 years ago. Oun traveled to Cambodia for his job when President Obama toured Southeast Asia in November. He stayed on for a week to reconnect with his homeland. While in Cambodia, Oun had a tearful but joyous reunion with his younger sister, Poch, who was only two years old when he last saw her. perhaps the most satisfying, proud, and memorable events in my life, I have one career highlight: After the Chernobyl accident in the USSR, I was among a group of government officials who went to the IAEA headquarters to work with other nations to develop two international treaties—one to deal with mutual response and the other with early notification of a radiological event. After nearly a month in intense negotiations, we managed to get unanimous support for our efforts, and the two treaties were agreed upon. Years later they were ratified by the U.S. Senate. It is a career highlight to have sat in the IAEA chambers, along with other international representatives, with the sign and flag of the United States in front of me and speaking for our nation.” Class of 1963 Peter Linton, BS, management, retired to Arizona after 25 years of civil service. Linton was a GS 13 engineer and served with the Army, Navy, and Air Force in Alaska, Japan, Korea, the United Kingdom, Iceland, and California. He is a World War II history buff who has four grandchildren and still is hiking and dancing weekly. In 1996, he remarried, marrying Liz Leonard, a surgical nurse. Linton lost his daughter, Sylvia, to cancer in 2009. Class of 1969 Roy Eaton, BS, economics, has published a new book, Makers, Shakers, and Takers. He covers a myriad of subjects, such as education, marriage, responsible behavior, social reform, discrimination, government misconduct, complacency, and traits of an admirable nation. According to Donald Trump, “Roy writes with compassion, skill, and insight. Makers, Shakers, and Takers is a terrific collection of stories and essays—and definitely worth your time and attention. A great read—from someone who knows and respects Roy.” Class of 1981 David Bouffard, BS, biology, former vice president, public relations for Sterling Jewelers Inc., the largest specialty retail jeweler in the country, has assumed the new role of vice president of corporate affairs for parent-company Signet Jewelers Limited. In his new role, Bouffard will be responsible for developing and implementing the company’s corporate social responsibility and sustainability initiatives, as well as maintaining government and industry relationships. Bouffard joined Sterling Jewelers in 1981 as part of field operations management in Philadelphia. Throughout his 31-year career, he has held various managerial positions including director of sales, merchandising and advertising, general manager in New York, marketing director, and vice president of public relations. David resides in Fairlawn, Ohio, with his wife, Barbara, and daughter, Amanda. Helene Burns, BS, nursing, ’94 MS, nursing services and administration, has been named one of the New Jersey Institute for Nursing’s “Divas and Dons.” Burns, vice president for Patient Care Services at Kennedy University Hospital in Stratford, N.J., was one of 19 New Jersey honorees from all areas of nursing recognized for their extraordinary impact on the profession and the community. Burns has been a member of Kennedy’s leadership team since 2008. In her role as VP for Patient Care Services at Kennedy —Stratford, she oversees the operational and clinical aspects of care at the acute care hospital, which has more than 800 employees. With more than 30 years of nursing experience, Ms. Burns is a board-certified Nurse Executive, Advanced through the American Nurses Credentialing Center. She and her husband reside in Berlin, N.J. JOIN WIDENER’S NEW ONLINE ALUMNI COMMUNITY Connect with other alums, and create profiles, class notes, alumni clubs, photo galleries, events, giving, and more. Continue the lasting connection! alumni.widener.edu SEND US YOUR CLASS NOTES Tell us. Who are you now? Where are you now? You can submit your class notes and photos three ways: 1. Enter on the Widener Pride Network at alumni.widener.edu 2. Email to Patty Votta: [email protected] 3. Mail to the Office of Alumni Engagement, One University Place, Chester, PA 19013 25 CLASS NOTES CLASS NOTES Class of 1983 Management and Law Alumna Pursues a Sweeter Science Kristin Weldon Peri, a 1998 Widener management alumna who graduated from Widener Law in 2001, appeared on the third season of the Food Network’s pastry chef competition show Sweet Genius. According to a story in the Delaware County Daily Times, after graduation from Widener Law, Peri worked for several years as a trial attorney and “loved the courtroom” but also had other interests. “In 2007 I took a cake decorating course…and was instantly hooked,” she told the newspaper. “But I was constantly trying to challenge myself to see what else I could do.” Peri pursued her love of baking and started a business called Divine Cakes. “When I decided to do this, there were some people who couldn’t understand moving from practicing law to this business, but my family and friends didn’t blink an eye,” she said. Although she said competing on the show was fun, it also was filled with pressure and hard work. “I was so nervous,” said Peri, who was not permitted to divulge the results before the show aired. “It was harder than studying for the bar exam.” Kristin Weldon Peri ’98, ’01L, competed on the third season of the Food Network’s pastry chef competition show Sweet Genius. Communication Studies Grad Included on Forbes’ List Christopher Matthews, a 2008 Widener communication studies graduate and former lacrosse standout who also served one year as an assistant coach, was named to Forbes magazine’s list of high-achieving marketing and advertising professionals under the age of 30. Forbes created 15 different lists of 30 people younger than age 30 who are the “young disruptors, innovators, and entrepreneurs impatient to change the world.” Matthews was recently named a senior brand strategist for Goodby, Silverstein & Partners, a fullservice integrated ad agency, in New York. Previously, he worked at the digital creative agency Big Spaceship where he led the firm’s work with the Google Creative Lab. Forbes wrote, “His focus was to explore new platforms and products undefined in the market and develop novel ideas for them with his team. The most successful idea was ‘What Do You Love? ’—a meta search tool that won several awards, including the revered Tomorrow Award.” At Widener, Matthews helped lead Widener’s men’s lacrosse team to four Middle Atlantic Conference titles. The Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania, native and Monsignor Bonner High School graduate served as an assistant coach for the Pride in 2009, helping guide them to the MAC final. 26 John Passarella, BS, accounting, has written a tenth novel, Supernatural: Rite of Passage (August 2012) available at Passarella.com, Amazon.com, and wherever books are sold. Rite of Passage is an original novel based on the hit CW series Supernatural and is set in the seventh season of the show. This is John’s second original Supernatural tie-in novel. He won the Horror Writers Association’s Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a First Novel for the co-authored Wither. Class of 1984 John Fleurant, BS, accounting, has been promoted to deputy chief financial officer for New York Life Insurance Company. It is a new position reporting to the executive vice president and chief financial officer. As deputy CFO, Fleurant will retain his current roles as senior vice president of finance and controller, positions he has occupied since joining the company in 2010. Prior to joining New York Life, Fleurant, a certified public accountant, served as controller at Prudential Financial. Before that, he was a senior manager for Deloitte & Touche, where he spent nine years. Class of 1985 Gregory Pronesti, BSN, nursing, married Denise Hodson on November 1, 1998. They have four children: 8-year-old twins Giovanni and Samuel, 4-year-old Zachery, and the newest addition to the family, Joshua, born on October 23. Greg has been working for the past five years at The Queen’s Medical Center, Honolulu, Hawaii, as a perioperative nurse. He is also a member of the CV Transplant Team. Kevin Muir, BA, government and politics, ’98, MEd, social studies education, recently received his Six Sigma Green Belt certification by applying Six Sigma methodology and principles towards reducing transfers of advanced placement (AP) reader inquiries in his workplace at Educational Testing Service, Princeton, N.J. Kevin analyzed and categorized past defects in the routing and handling of inbound inquiries from seasonal test raters for the AP program, then implemented an action plan to reduce the percentage of calls and emails being transferred from a first-line support team to other staff. The solution was successfully implemented for the 2011-2012 AP reading cycle, leading to a more stable, predictable, and betterperforming process for meeting business objectives and customer expectations. Class of 1989 Mark Carrow, MS, taxation, is among seven Citrin Cooperman accounting professionals named Philadelphia’s Top Practitioners by SmartCEO Magazine. They were included in the magazine’s SmartCPA Readers Choice section. The section recognizes the Philadelphia area’s top accounting professionals —those trusted advisors on whom CEOs rely for everything from accounting and tax preparation to mergers and acquisitions and general business consulting. Carrow, the managing partner of the firm’s Philadelphia office, provides tax services and business consulting advice to closely held entities, executives of publicly held corporations, and development-stage enterprises. “We take pride in our work and appreciate this recognition from our valued clients and colleagues,” Carrow said. Class of 1995 Christopher Davis, BS, biology, was recently re-elected to serve on the board of trustees of the Pennsylvania Osteopathic Medical Association (POMA), a statewide organization for physicians holding the doctor of osteopathic medicine (D.O.) degree. Board certified in family practice/osteopathic manipulative medicine, Davis is a physician at Springfield Sports Science Center and medical director at Heartland Home Health Care and Hospice in Delaware, Montgomery, and Philadelphia counties. He is also a staff physician at Springfield Hospital and Harlee Manor Nursing Home in Springfield, Pennsylvania. Chairman of POMA’s District 2, Davis serves as a delegate to the POMA, the American Osteopathic Association, and the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians. President of the American Osteopathic Association of Prolotherapy Integrative Pain Management, he is also a member of the Pennsylvania Osteopathic Family Physicians Society. Davis was re-elected as a trustee-at-large during POMA’s 104th Annual Clinical Assembly. Class of 2005 Rodney Jackson, MEd, counseling higher education, ’08 MEd, student and personnel counseling, has been promoted to chief, education and training at RAF Lakenheath in Suffolk, England for the 48 Force Support Squadron, USAF. Rodney and his wife reside in Cambridge, England. Class of 2007 Katarzyna Bartoszek, BA, anthropology, was awarded a master of science degree in forensic medicine by Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine at the graduate program’s commencement ceremony in 2012 at the Academy of Music in Philadelphia. Class of 2012 Stacey Snyder, BS, accounting, joined the Belfint, Lyons & Shuman Firm as a staff accountant in their Accounting and Auditing Department. Stacey interned with BLS before coming on full time with the firm and currently resides in Garnet Valley, Pennsylvania. 27 CLASS NOTES Marriages Sara Traviline ’06 and Shawn McAuley ’06, “class couple of 2006,” were married on September 24, 2011, at St. Basil the Great Parish in Kimberton, Pennsylvania. Lauren Vassallo ’06 and Patrick Renegar ’02, ’05L were married on October 27, 2012. CLASS NOTES New Arrivals Kristin (Hulmes) ’09 and Andrew Malloy ’09 announce the arrival of their son, Mark Douglas Malloy. Mark was born on September 9, 2012. Kelly (Haughey) West ’04 and Alex West ’02, MBA ’03, members of Alpha Sigma, were married in Berlin, Maryland, on September 5, 2009. Kelly and Alex would proudly like to announce the birth of their son, Daniel Aloysius West, on February 7, 2012. In Memoriam Barnett Sussman ’45 Frank McClenaghen ’46 Robert Bashore ’48 John Touey ’48 Edward Grinnan ’49 Warren Pushaw ’49 Anthony Caia ’50 Remo Farinelli ’50 Brandon Hehn ’50 George Sfirri ’50 John Momot ’51 Roger Williams ’51 Ernest Tremblay ’52 William Thompson ’53 John West ’55 Edward McNelis ’57 J. Hughes ’59 Filideo Pompilii ’59 Edward Watson ’59 Vincent Gorman Jr. ’61 William Seaman ’64 John Grant ’65 Stephen Kauffman ’65 Robert Sicotte ’65 John Snyder ’65 William Harris Stevens III ’65 John Cimino ’67 A Real-Life Ironman: Widener Grad Training for Professional Triathlon Tour Kenrick Smith, a 2002 civil engineering graduate who played football, rugby, and ran track and field while at Widener, is now setting his sights on making it as a professional in the most grueling of sports: triathlons. In October, Smith competed in the Ironman World Championships in Kona, Hawaii, completing the race that consists of a 2.4-mile swim, a 112-mile bike ride, and a 26.2-mile run—the length of a full marathon. “I was very humbled by this experience of being able to race against the best triathletes from around the world,” he said. “To be considered one of them was truly an honor.” He says that the sport is addicting, and he is devoting himself to training full-time in order to make it as a professional. “My goals moving forward are to eventually race professionally and race on the pro circuit,” he said. “I hope to motivate and inspire others to chase their dreams by showing them that you can achieve anything if you truly have a passion for it.” Smith is married to Jodi M. (Russell) Smith, a hospitality management major who was Widener’s valedictorian in 2002. They live in Schnecksville, Pennsylvania, with their three children. You can read more and follow his progress in triathlon competitions on his website at http://www.k17sport.com/. 28 James Monaghan ’67 William McDevitt III ’70 James Phreaner ’70 Joseph McKee ’71 Arthur Hafner ’72 Joseph Marzili ’72 Charles Harper ’73 William Grigg ’74 Costas Krikelis ’75 Carol Ritter ’76 Earl Heffernan ’77 Paul McCracken ’77 Neil Fongeallaz ’78 Joseph Ryan ’78 Keith Meckley ’80 John Sikorski ’80 Edward Kelly ’81 Gilbert Stinitus ’81 Walter Kern ’82 Robert Linden ’82 Charline (McKoy) Allen ’83 James Kelly ’84 Robert Matuszewski ’84 Augustus Derle ’85 Benjamin Cowley ’88 Carl Malatesta ’88 Mary Smith ’89 Frances Marchol ’90 John Metz ’90 Stephen Antonik ’91 John Covert ’92 James Watson ’94 Colette Molloy ’95 Sally Eberhard ’98 Edward Rankin ’00 VINCE GORMAN ‘61 Vincent C. Gorman Jr. of Media, a retired U.S. Army lieutenant colonel who was a 1961 graduate of Pennsylvania Military College and later a faculty member and administrator at Widener, passed away January 4, 2013, at his residence. Born in Philadelphia, he was raised in Doylestown. During his 20-year Army career, he served two tours in Vietnam, was commander of the 42nd MP detachment in Germany, taught security at the MP School at Fort Gordon, Ga., and was professor of military science at Widener University from 1979-1983. While at Widener, he expanded ROTC enrollment by starting ROTC programs at Villanova, West Chester, and Cheyney universities. Retiring from the U.S. Army in 1983, he became director of the Annual Fund and Planned Giving at Widener from 1983-1986. From 1986 until his death, he was a registered broker and financial consultant, and certified financial planner with numerous banks, the most recent being First Niagra Bank. Brian Ware ’02 Stephanie Harris ’03 Taisha Turner ’10 Friends, Faculty, and Staff Paul Anapol Barry Bean Andrew Bushko Vernice Ferguson Patrick Fisher William Foose Elizabeth McGonigle Paul Perreca Alexander Sarcione Steven Wilson SAVE THE DATE: HOMECOMING Save the Date for 2013! 2013 Homecoming/ Reunion Weekend October 18 & 19, 2013 We welcome all Widener ~PMC Alumni! For more information, please visit alumni.widener.edu ROBERT C. MELZI, PROFESSOR EMERITUS Robert C. Melzi, a professor emeritus of romance languages at Widener University, died March 1, 2012, at the age of 96. Known as a lexicographer, Renaissance scholar, and a leading authority on the Italian language, Dr. Melzi served on the Widener faculty for 30 years and chaired the romance language department in the 1970s. In 1967, Dr. Melzi, an expert on Dante, wrote Castelvetro’s Annotations to the ’Inferno’: A New Perspective in Sixteenth Century Criticism. He published the Bantam New College Italian-English Dictionary in 1973, a project that took eleven years. Triathlete Kenrick Smith ’02 and his wife, Jodi M. (Russell) Smith ’02. She was Widener’s 2002 valedictorian. 29 CLASS NOTES CHAPTER NOTES A “Bazaar” Tale Told By Widener Alums By Autumn Heisler ’15 English and engineering majors are not usually pictured together, but class of 1999 alums Patrick Manley, with a degree in English, and Brendan O’Riordan, with an engineering degree, are an exception. This pair of Widener graduates collaborated to make and produce a documentary on a groundbreaking Delaware County mall known as the Bazaar of All Nations. The Bazaar was one of the first models of today’s modern mall, predating the King of Prussia Mall, among others. It opened November 8, 1960, on Baltimore Pike in Clifton Heights with the idea of bringing stores together. A community—one that some considered a family— grew out of the four-city-block-long center. Manley and O’Riordan, along with cinematographer and director Melissa Whitely, decided to commemorate this “mother of all malls” by creating the documentary that debuted in 2010, the 50th anniversary of the Bazaar’s opening. The Bazaar of All Nations closed in 1993 and was demolished two years later. The idea for the documentary came to Manley about a decade ago when a basic search on Google turned up little information on the Bazaar. “It seemed odd to me, considering there are websites for even the most obscure things, that a place as fondly remembered had no presence on the Internet, or anywhere else for that matter,” Manley said. It wasn’t until 2006, when Manley met Whitely and proposed the idea of putting together a documentary, that the idea truly blossomed. Manley asked his lifelong friend O’Riordan to join them in their project. Through their research, the three-person partnership discovered a lot of Bazaar tales, ranging from contests, to celebrities, to simple acts of kindness. “One woman we interviewed won a pony at a contest in front of the Bazaar when she was about 10 years old,” O’Riordan said. “She “I think I can, I think I can”… and yes she did! Kristin McJunkins ’92 contacted the Office of Alumni Engagement to inquire about an alumni chapter in New England. There was not one, so she decided to start one! Months later, McJunkins and alumni hosted a cocktail reception at a restaurant and bar in Connecticut. Another event was held on September 16 aboard the Essex Steam Train. There are plans for future events with the Connecticut Whale minor league hockey team and a wine tasting at Haight-Brown Vineyards. The group hopes to expand events across New England soon! If you’d like to get involved, please contact chapter chair Kristin McJunkins at [email protected]. From left to right: Patrick Manley ’99, Melissa Whitely, and Brendan O‘Riordan ’99. had to call her father to come to the Bazaar and help her bring the pony back to their suburban home. Together they walked the pony across Baltimore Pike and through the neighborhood streets to the confusion of onlookers.” Even political figures stopped by this remarkable landmark during their campaigns. The documentary features never-before-seen photographs of Robert F. Kennedy, Ted Kennedy, and President Richard Nixon. The documentary has been featured on PBS station WHYY-TV, and DVDs are available at http://www.thebazaarofallnations.com. Widener Alumna Wins Springsteen Tickets Von Luehrte, right, with Hewes, at Springsteen show in Citizens Bank Park. 30 New England Regional Group Cathy Von Luehrte was only six years old and too young to see Springsteen the last time he played at Widener, but she did see The Boss because of Widener. A 1993 graduate of the JD/MBA program, Von Luehrte won tickets through the Widener Annual Fund “Glory Days” give-a-way. She made a donation to the annual fund that made her eligible to win two field-level tickets to Springsteen’s show at Citizens Bank Park in September. “I never win anything, so I never gave it a second thought,” Von Luerhte said. She was pleasantly surprised when she learned that she won. She also knew exactly who to invite—friend and co-worker Lisa Hewes, a fellow Widener graduate holding a 1985 bachelor’s degree and a 1988 law degree. “The concert was incredible,” Von Luehrte said. Pictured Essex Steam Train attendees include: (Left Side, Front to Back) Frank Mancuso ‘67, MaryAnn Mancuso, Neva Graham, Chris Briscoe ‘87, Mary VanBuren, and Steven Fratoni ‘74. (Right Side, Front to Back) Bradley Fish, Chris Fish ‘87, Rhea DeBari ‘81, Katherine Leier ‘81, and chapter chairperson Kristin McJunkins ‘92. (Not pictured: Jeff ‘66 and Lynn Travers.) Upcoming Spring/Summer 2013 Regional Alumni Event Schedule April 24: Central PA—Harrisburg Senators vs. Reading Phillies, Harrisburg, PA 27: CA—USS Midway Museum Tour, San Diego, CA 28: Washington State—Horse Races at Emerald Downs, Auburn, WA May 05:Greater Philadelphia—Point to Point Steeplechase, Wilmington, DE 08:Greater Philadelphia—Networking Luncheon, Philadelphia, PA June 15:New England—Wine Tasting at Haight Brown Vineyards, Litchfield, CT 18:Greater Philadelphia—6th Annual Phillies Game at Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA 30:CA—Dodgers vs. Phillies, Los Angeles, CA July 20:Greater Philadelphia—Happy Hour at La Costa Lounge, Sea Isle City, NJ … and many more to be added! For the latest information about these events and others, please visit: http://alumni.widener.edu/events Regional Chapter Contact Info: Greater Philadelphia Area: w P hiladelphia County, PA Jeff Flynn ‘04 [email protected] w W ilmington, FL—East Coast Tom Dougherty ‘93 [email protected] w D elaware Atlanta, GA Morrie Spang ‘62 [email protected] w B ucks Baltimore, MD Office of Alumni Engagement [email protected] FL—Orlando Stephanie Dudley ‘11 dudley-stephanie@ aramark.com County, PA Jim Gentile ‘77 [email protected] & Montgomery Counties, PA Gregg Strom ‘64 [email protected] DE Vera Kunkel ‘78 [email protected] w C hester California Sharon Carothers ‘92 [email protected] w S outh Central PA Office of Alumni Engagement [email protected] County, PA Frank Pellegrini ‘66 [email protected] Jersey Office of Alumni Engagement [email protected] District of Columbia Office of Alumni Engagement [email protected] Puerto Rico Dennis Lopez ‘85 dennis.lopez@ compass-usa.com Texas Gerry Gaeta ‘77 [email protected] FL—West Coast Office of Alumni Engagement [email protected] Washington State Alex Poblete ’89 [email protected] New England Kristin McJunkins ‘92 [email protected] If you have interest in starting a new chapter, please contact the Office of Alumni Engagement at 610-499-1154 or [email protected]. NYC / North Jersey Garren Pflueger ‘94 [email protected] 31 Campaign Update STUDENTS AIMING HIGH IN OSKIN LEADERS PROGRAM By Autumn Heisler ’15 THE 2012 PRESIDENT’S COUNCIL DINNER The 2012 President’s Council Dinner marked the first time this event honoring the university’s top donors was held on campus. The dinner featured the dedication of the Bown Dome Sculpture Garden, which now graces the area behind Old Main. The Garden was a gift from Thomas H. Bown II ’67 and his wife, Bonnie. Top: From left, Heddie and Suk-Chung Yoon are joined by the master of ceremonies for the evening, Trustee Brian Tierney ‘87L and his wife, Maud. Above: Tom ’67 and Bonnie Bown (center) pose with their family before the start of the festivities. Momentum remains strong as we stride closer to our campaign goal. This level of support is unprecedented in Widener’s history, and is a reflection of the outstanding commitment to the university’s future by alumni, friends, and partners. Campaign Progress $54.3 million Goal: $58 million Amount Raised as of 3/1/13 32 The world can’t be changed overnight; it takes time and commitment. Here at Widener, the Oskin Leadership Institute is changing the world one project at a time. The Oskin Leadership Institute was established in the fall of 2011 through the vision and generosity of Widener’s former chairman of the Board of Trustees, David Oskin ’64 ‘07H. Oskin’s wife, JoEllen, and their late son, David, joined him in making this gift to the university. But what difference does the Oskin Leadership Institute make? One shining example of the Institute’s impact is the Oskin Leaders program for students. Sixteen sophomores were chosen during the spring 2012 semester to become the inaugural class of Oskin Leaders. Students were nominated and accepted into the program based on their ability to create, present, and accomplish a leadership project that is near and dear to their hearts. Daniel Hartney and Sumo Yarkpawolo have been planning out their “dreams,” as Yarkpawolo calls them, ever since the Oskin Leaders program became a part of their lives. “Feeding the hungry people of the world is what my work is all about,” Hartney said. He is working on developing different methods to grow nutrient-rich foods through advanced agricultural methods, such as hydroponics and aquaponics. “I aim to create a business that will allow food to be grown locally, sustainably, and economically—anywhere on the planet.” Yarkpawolo has a much different, but equally exciting, project he has been working on. He decided to choose something close to home. “This project is important to me, because as a little boy growing up in Liberia, I hated the fact that for such a small and beautiful country, there was such a high unemployment rate,” he said. He is currently working on bringing tourism to his home country, not only attracting vacationers, but also creating jobs in the hotel and resort business. Dr. Arthur Schwartz, founding executive director of the Oskin Leadership Institute, has played a role in each of the sixteen inaugural students’ projects. Through Dr. Schwartz’s reliable guidance, the Oskin Leaders are making progress toward their unique and ambitious goals. With plans as varied as creating meditation classes here at Widener, creating a new foreign exchange program, and aiding pregnant women without homes in Philadelphia, this year’s Oskin Leaders will influence the lives of many, as well as leave a legacy for those to come. “Dr. Schwartz has been a great inspiration to me,” Yarkpawolo said. “Whenever I talk to him about my project, I feel like I have what it takes to accomplish this dream.” Autumn Heisler, a sophomore from Allentown, Pennsylvania, majoring in creative writing and English, is an Oskin Leader (pictured front row, far right.) Sixteen sophomores, most pictured with Dr. Arthur Schwartz, the founding executive director of the Oskin Leadership Institute, were chosen during the spring 2012 semester to become the inaugural class of Oskin Leaders. 33 Campaign Update Campaign Update PROMISING FUTURES While the country struggles to work its way through these tough economic times, many students struggle to afford the quality college education they need to succeed. These students can’t wait until all the varied and sundry economic indicators are more favorable; they are facing their college years now, and they need help. That is why Widener has taken a proactive approach to this situation and made the decision to channel all gifts to the Widener Fund exclusively to financial aid. Funds will be awarded FIRST GENERATION FUND to students based on need and will augment Widener’s already substantial financial aid and scholarship programs. The university’s Development Office has dubbed this initiative Promising Futures, and includes gifts to the fund toward the $58-million goal of the university’s overall fundraising campaign, Taking the Lead—The Campaign for Widener. The simple truth is that for most students, covering the cost of attending Widener would not be possible without the help of financial aid. Financial aid packages are invaluable in bridging Widener has taken a proactive approach to the problem of student debt and made the decision to channel all gifts to the Widener Fund exclusively to financial aid. the gap and bringing a Widener education within their grasp. Applications to Widener continue to rise, and the qualifications of these applicants are increasing, as indicated by higher SAT scores. Financial aid is a key factor in why these highly accomplished students choose Widener above the countless other universities that are vying for their enrollment. According to the 2012 UCLA Freshman Survey, the top reason the class of 2016 chose Widener is the financial assistance that was awarded, followed closely by Widener’s academic reputation and the success Widener grads have in the job market. Gifts to the Widener Fund allow the university to continue to attract some of the brightest and most motivated students, enhancing the university’s reputation and enriching the academic experience of all its students. By supporting the Widener Fund and Promising Futures, alumni and friends help to alleviate the daunting pile of debt that many students face upon graduation. Receiving sufficient aid while they are in school will provide these new graduates the financial freedom to pursue their dreams. Students who are the first in their family to attend college face a unique set of challenges, which is why the university established the “First Generation Fund” to allow donors to specify their gift to the Widener Fund to provide financial aid for these students. In this year’s freshman class, 23 percent are first generation, with another 20 percent having parents who started but did not complete a college degree. Because these students don’t have a family history of college attendance, the university makes a concerted effort to better understand and help guide these pioneers toward success. Financial aid is often the lifeline that brings a Widener education into the realm of possibility for first generation students and changes the course of history for not only the recipient, but for the entire family for generations to come. SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION DEAN FUNDS SCHOLARSHIP Widener School of Business Administration Dean Savas Özatalay and his wife Liz made the decision to establish a scholarship because they’ve seen firsthand the kind of positive impact financial support for a student in need can have. Dean Özatalay himself was a scholarship recipient while pursuing his education. Those who contributed to scholarship boosted Savas’s confidence and motivated him to succeed. He is pleased to be able to offer the same kind of opportunity he received to a student today. He envisions the same positive outcomes for the recipient of the Savas and Mary Elizabeth Özatalay Scholarship. The dean observed that faculty and staff have a unique perspective on the challenges of students facing financial need. Throughout his career, he witnessed numerous talented and eager prospective students who could not enroll at Widener because of the cost, and also saw top students who were forced to drop out after a semester or two for financial reasons. "In many cases, they just needed a little help,” he said. “A scholarship would have made all the difference for them.” Gifts to the Widener Fund support the promising futures of students like Spencer Ng ’15. Spencer is preparing for a career as a primary care physician working with lowincome and underserved populations. 34 35 THE BACK PAGE Deep Roots on a Widener-PMC Family Tree By Tina Phillips ‘82, ‘98, ‘03 Long before Widener senior Lindsay Currie attended her first Widener Homecoming when she was only a toddler, her Widener-PMC roots had grown deep in the Chester soil. The family connection took hold with her great-grandfather, John R. Hanna, a star guard on the Pennsylvania Military College football team of the late 1920s who graduated in 1930 with a degree in civil engineering. His family owned a contracting business that installed most of Chester’s sidewalks, and he went on to become a prominent businessman. He was a loyal supporter of PMC and held various leadership positions, serving on the PMC Board of Trustees and as president of the Alumni Association. His daughter, Gayle Hanna Stauffer, fondly remembers when a residence hall was named in her father’s honor in the mid 60s. “I was so proud watching my father accepting such an honor in front of his family, alumni, and friends. We all knew how dedicated he was to the college and how hard he worked to promote growth and change.” Although she did not attend PMC since it was not co-ed at the time, her brother, John Hanna Jr., graduated from PMC in 1966. When Gayle’s daughter, Tracy Stauffer Currie, chose a college almost fifty years after her grandfather graduated, she picked Widener. It was a fateful decision. She would go on to meet her future husband Bruce Currie during a house party on fraternity row. For weeks, Tracy said she wouldn’t go to the cafeteria because she was nervous about running into Bruce—she would always feel butterflies in her stomach whenever seeing him. Lindsay Currie ’13 and her brother Jeffrey Currie showed Widener spirit at an early age. 36 Their first date was a ski trip, and to this day they still enjoy skiing with family and friends. They have many fond memories of their time at Widener, including how some of Bruce’s friends were known to portray “Willie Widener,” an unofficial campus mascot during the 80s who would stroll the campus with his sidekick dog known as “chick dog.” After graduating and marrying, Bruce ’83 and Tracy ’84 have long enjoyed attending Homecoming to reconnect with their friends and classmates. When their From left to right, the children Lindsay and Jeffrey lineage of John R. Hanna were born, they continued to ’30 in front of residence attend, bringing their kids hall named for him: Gayle every year. Lindsay fondly Hanna Stauffer, Lindsay remembers her mother pulling Currie ’13, and Tracy out the matching Widener Stauffer Currie ’84. sweatshirts for her and her brother to wear. When it came time for Lindsay to choose a college, she said she felt she didn’t need to tour the campus, believing she knew all about it from her parents and the many Homecoming gatherings she attended. She was glad, however, that she took the tour because that was when she met School of Hospitality Management Dean Nicholas Hadgis and learned about the program, which was a perfect fit for her. When she started Widener, she moved into Hanna Hall— the residence named for her great-grandfather who died in 1982, nine years before she was born. She went on to be a successful Widener student, and recently completed an internship in Greece where she applied her managerial and service education. She is on schedule to graduate from Widener in May and plans to participate in the senior class gift fundraiser. She also plans to attend future homecomings as an alumna with her family and friends. “I am very proud of my legacy at Widener, and I believe my education has more than prepared me to successfully enter the hospitality job market,” Lindsay said. You can bet her great-grandfather who began college life as a freshman cadet at PMC in 1926 would be very proud. Dr. Tina Phillips, executive director of Alumni Engagement is the first in her family to graduate from Widener University. She also has two sisters and two children who are graduates. Her niece currently attends Widener and will graduate this May. Widener Leadership Works For graduate students. Today, leadership is at a premium. In today’s global economy there are no guarantees. That’s why it’s more important than ever to give yourself an edge that can take your career to the next level. Offering more than 60 graduate degrees from Biomedical Engineering to Business Process Innovation and Special Education Assistive Technologies, Widener University has the graduate program for you. With classes taught in full-time, evening, weekend, accelerated, on-line, and part-time formats in three convenient locations, Widener fits your schedule. Visit today to learn how to jump-start your career at widener.edu/graduate 37