CoreValues Great Leaders - University of St. Thomas
Transcription
CoreValues Great Leaders - University of St. Thomas
HOUSTON Core Values Great Leaders ANNUAL REPORT 2007-2008 Board of Directors GEORGE A. DEMONTROND III, CHAIR HIS EMINENCE DANIEL CARDINAL DINARDO CORA SUE MACH DeMontrond Automotive Group Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston Mach Industrial Group MICHELE MALLOY, VICE CHAIR BRUCE EARTHMAN PHYLLIS MANDOLA Marathon Oil Company Earthman Capital, LTD Tony Mandola Enterprises DR. ROBERT IVANY, PRESIDENT DR. HERBERT P. EDMUNDSON, JR. GILBERTO PEREZ University of St. Thomas Memorial Neurological Association CEMEX MINNIE BAIRD FRANCES ESCRIVA REV. JOSEPH PILSNER, CSB Community Volunteer Mid-South Telecommunications Co. University of St. Thomas REV. ROBERT J. BARRINGER, CSB GEORGE FARRIS KIM RUTH University of St. Thomas Private Investor Bank of America REV. PATRICK BRADEN, CSB MICHAEL P. FLEMING REV. RONALD G. SCHWENZER, CSB University of St. Thomas Michael P. Fleming, PC St. Thomas High School J. DOWNEY BRIDGWATER REV. JOHN CLARENCE GALLAGHER, CSB ROBERT J. SIGNORELLI Sterling Bank University of St. Thomas Retired, Anheuser Busch, Inc. REV. BRENDAN J. CAHILL REV. ANTHONY GIAMPIETRO, CSB DR. GUILLERMO TORRE-AMIONE St. Mary’s Seminary University of St. Thomas Methodist DeBakey Cardiology Associates DR. DOROTHY E.F. CARAM JOHN E. HAGALE RANDY E. VELARDE Retired, Administrator/Educator The Methodist Hospital System The Plaza Group GERARDO A. CHAPA DAVID HARVEY, JR. DR. KENNETH WELLS Global Financial Services D.E. Harvey Builders Allied Health Resources SR. MARY ROBERTA CONNORS, FSE PAUL LAYNE RAYE WHITE University of St. Thomas Brookfield Properties Fayez Sarofim & Co. MICHAEL CORDÚA RAYMOND A. LEBLANC A. MARTIN WICKLIFF, JR. Cordúa Restaurants, LP Retired, Keystone International Epstein Becker Green Wickliff & Hall, PC REV. ROBERT W. CROOKER, CSB DR. SANDI LEMMING BRUCE WILKINSON University of St. Thomas Village Family Practice McDermott International, Inc. Committee Volunteers Vision 2010 MARLENA BERGER ROSANNA MORENO EXECUTIVE CABINET HONORARY COMMITTEE GABRIEL CANALES PATRICK O’DONNELL ELIZABETH LYONS GHRIST, CHAIR JOAN AND STANFORD ALEXANDER LAURA CECIL LOUISE PARSLEY DR. ROBERT IVANY, PRESIDENT HOLLY CLAPHAM-ROSENOW PATRICIA PENA GERARDO CHAPA THE HONORABLE BILL AND MRS. SHARON ARCHER ALEJANDRO COLOM RICK REYES MICHAEL CORDÚA JOHN DEL TATTO SOFIA RICHES GEORGE DEMONTROND III JOHN DIGIULIO JOHN ROCHA MARJORIE E. EVANS BETSY EARTHMAN ROSE MARY SALUM MADELYN FARRIS ANDREW ELLER TRINI MENDENHALL SOSA JOSEPH A. HAFNER, JR. MADELYN FARRIS KITTSIE THOMAS RAYMOND A. LEBLANC FRAN FAUNTLEROY LORI THOMPSON PATRICK MORAN DIEDRA FONTAINE MEI WAN TONG GLORIA M. PORTELA DUSTY GILBERT HECTOR VILLARREAL BILL SLICK BOB GRAHAM MADELYN VON ESCHENBACH TRINI MENDENHALL SOSA MARGARET GUERRIERO TERESA WONG TOM STANDISH PRESTON HILL CHARLIE THOMAS GLORIA KALMAN RAYE WHITE KELLI KICKERILLO PAMELA H. LOVETT JOHN MAIETTA MICHAEL MARONEY JAMES METZGER FRANK MICHEL Cover: Christ statue in the Samfield Garden GINGER AND JACK BLANTON HIS EMINENCE DANIEL CARDINAL DINARDO MOST REVEREND JOSEPH FIORENZA MAUREEN AND JIM HACKETT BARBARA AND CHARLES HURWITZ BETTE AND LEO LINBECK, JR. MEREDITH AND CORNELIA LONG MOST REVEREND J. MICHAEL MILLER, CSB CYNTHIA AND GEORGE MITCHELL ANNETTE AND GEORGE W. STRAKE, JR. ELLIE AND JACK SWEENEY BISHOP JAMES TAMAYO LYNDA AND DAVID UNDERWOOD MRS. LLOYD P. WEBRE CoreValues Goodness, Discipline, Knowledge, Community — these are the core values that define our existence and shape our vision. Educating students who will embrace and carry these values with them remains our mission. Their achievements and affection will determine our success. Our First Year Experience program, Core Curriculum Reform effort, and a vibrant Augustine Hall living-learning community reflect our goal to enrich their years with us. The new Mendenhall Achievement Center has already made an impact on providing students with an integrated support center. As our faculty and staff continue to offer an engaging curriculum and quality services and activities, increasing numbers of students will finish their studies at St. Thomas and remain dedicated to an ongoing pursuit of knowledge and to the University. We will concentrate our efforts to retain our students and admit another committed class of freshmen and transfers. We realize the sacrifice that many of our families are making to send their sons and daughters to St. Thomas. They understand that the value of an outstanding, faith-based education only increases during a recession. It has been heartening to witness the resolve of our benefactors, our students, their parents and relatives. We will do our part to build the momentum of the past year in which the 2007 Freshmen Student Survey showed that students feel connected to UST and strongly agree that services such as counseling, learning and writing center, business office and financial aid, adequately meet their needs. It also revealed a 92 percent retention rate from fall to spring as compared with 88 percent the previous year. Scholarships are key to student retention, and we are committed to providing as much aid as we can. Illustrated in this annual report is a summary of the initiatives, achievements and relationships that shaped the 2007-2008 academic year. We are excited about a new graduate program that trains educators for Catholic schools. Key to the success of the University’s athletic program is the support of the newly formed Champions Club. Academic excellence is recognized as we continue to rank high in national and faith-based college reviews. And as we expand the influence of our mission beyond the boundaries of our campus, we continue to be blessed by those who share our vision and are active participants on our path toward greatness. Thank you for your prayers and for your commitment to ensuring that a Catholic, Basilian education is within reach. With your participation and support, together we will make the St. Thomas star shine more brightly than ever. Sincerely, Dr. Robert Ivany PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY 1 We serve God in faith and love by giving of ourselves to students, colleagues, and society. A new group of University of St. Thomas students moved into the UST residence hall on June 5, but this was no ordinary class of incoming students. These are future educators looking for a different approach to graduate education, one that requires a greater commitment, more dedication, and spiritual exploration than a traditional Master in Education tract. They are the first cohort of the Gulf Region Academy for Catholic Educators (GRACE), a new graduate program that trains educators for Catholic schools. Over the next two years, this group will live in a faithbased community and support each other while they take on the challenge of simultaneously teaching in a Catholic school, completing a Master in Education and obtaining Texas teacher certification. Cohort members include two UST graduates, Meris Chaumont and Leigh Sherman; two University of Texas graduates, Humberto Carmona and Luc Tran; Sharon Winski, Creighton University in Omaha, Nebraska; and John Bates V, Strake Jesuit High 2 School, who will complete the same sequence of classes, but not live among his fellow students. GRACE is the newest member of the University Consortium for Catholic Education, an alliance of universities that offer similar programs including University of Notre Dame, Boston College, University of Portland, Seton Hall, Loyola Marymount University, Loyola University Chicago, Valparaiso University, and Christian Brothers University. Dr. Robert LeBlanc, dean of the School of Education, pictured right with cohort members, is director of the GRACE program. Benefactor and Board Member David Harvey of Harvey Builders made the gift that enabled St. Thomas to introduce the GRACE project to our Galveston-Houston Archdiocese. His interest in making sure that a Catholic education is available to all families and sustaining the long tradition of Catholic schools in the inner city areas is perfectly matched in this project. The University of St. Thomas School of Education was named one of the “Great Schools for 15 of the Most Popular Undergraduate Majors” in a list compiled for The Princeton Review’s 2008 edition of “The Best 366 Colleges.” UST was among 55 other universities, including Columbia University, Cornell University, Trinity University in San Antonio, New York University and Wellesley College, recognized for providing an exceptional undergraduate education program. Goodness Discipline Knowledge Community Goodness 3 Discipline 4 We demand personal responsibility, accountability, and integrity in ourselves and in one another. T he University of St. Thomas recognizes the role of sports in building character and teaching leadership in a competitive environment. Intramural sports, club sports and intercollegiate sports inspire the discipline to be humble in victory, gracious in defeat and steadfast in overcoming great odds. From the outset, Basilian Fathers considered sports essential to building students of faith and character. Founding President Vincent J. Guinan, CSB, fielded baseball and basketball teams – from a student body of 60! The late Pope John Paul II saw the value of sports. In the year before his death, he announced the formation of a Vatican sports department. A “sports culture,” he reasoned, would promote personal growth and serve as an instrument in the service of peace and brotherhood among peoples. University of St. Thomas Men’s Soccer team entered the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics as the first men’s varsity team on the UST campus in more than 20 years. The 2007 roster included 19 players with 13 players from Texas, 11 of those hailing from Houston area high schools. Their backgrounds are as diverse and international as the sport of soccer itself. Players claim “hometowns” in countries spanning the globe that include Mexico, Colombia, Panama, Germany, England, Saudi Arabia and Iran. The UST Women’s Volleyball team finished its second season ranked 10th in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics Region Six ratings. Volleyball Co-Captain Mary Ann Shaw was named 2007 Daktronics-NAIA Volleyball ScholarAthlete. The award is presented to student athletes for their achievements on the playing field and in the classroom. Shaw, the first UST student to receive the award, graduated in May 2008. The 2009 season will be enhanced by the revival of intercollegiate basketball at UST. Newly appointed Athletic Director and Men’s Basketball Coach Todd Smith will recruit the new team. Rallying in the support of the University’s athletic program is the newly formed Champions Club. With his number “7” recently retired by the Houston Astros, Craig Biggio, pictured above with Marianne Ivany, Patty Biggio, C. Gregory Evans, Dr. Robert Ivany and Todd Smith, addressed the first Champions Athletic Club Benefit Luncheon held on May 5, 2008. The Champions Club provides financial support for the intercollegiate athletics program, encourages student athletes, and promotes community awareness about the University. Its founding members are Philip Burguieres, C. Gregory Evans, Marjorie Evans, corporate founder Universal Weather & Aviation, Jim McIngvale, and Corbin Robertson. 5 We pursue truth and academic excellence in the Catholic intellectual tradition, emphasizing the dialogue between faith and reason. T he University of St. Thomas will continue to grow, to promote academic excellence, and to enhance our service to the community as we take our place among the best universities in the world. In 2007-2008, the University of St. Thomas received high marks in three of the nation’s leading college reviews. • In 2007, UST was ranked 29 in the list of U.S. News & World Report’s “America’s Best Colleges.” Every year since 1994, the University has been named to the top tier of universities offering master’s degrees in the Western region. UST’s low student-to-faculty ratio, small class sizes and the high percentage of freshmen who ranked in the top quarter of their high school graduating class were key factors in the school’s ranking. • Shortly after the U.S. News & World Report rankings were announced, The Princeton Review named UST one of 123 outstanding colleges and universities in the West that The Princeton Review recommends to college applicants in the 2008 launch of its student opinion data, “Best Western Colleges” on PrincetonReview.com. The online profile of UST describes the school as a place where students rave about the small-school feel, and where diversity is welcomed, embraced and celebrated. • The University of St. Thomas was named one of 21 top Catholic colleges and universities by the Cardinal Newman Society in the 2008 Newman Guide to Choosing a Catholic College: What to Look for and Where to Find It. UST was selected as a “Joyfully Catholic” school, characterized by a Catholic identity that permeates all areas of campus life. Those recommended represent the top 10 percent of Catholic colleges in the U.S. based on Catholic identity and cover a wide range of institutions in terms of history, size, location and academic focus. 6 Goodness Discipline Knowledge Knowledge Community 7 Goodness Discipline Knowledge Community Community 8 We build and nurture relationships that transform our lives, our university, and our world. W ithout the foresight and generosity of those who embrace the values of Catholic higher education and the mission of the University, such as Richard Stork and Liz Ghrist, pictured left with Talitha Tanksley and Veronica Coriano, our story would be a very different one. We are blessed to be surrounded by alumni and friends intimately engaged in our vision of being counted among the nation’s great Catholic universities. Among them are the late Mrs. Miriam Burnett, daughter of the late Canadian businessman and philanthropist W. Garfield Weston, and her son, Mr. Charles Burnett III, who established the Burnett Family Distinguished Chair in Leadership in the Cameron School of Business, instituted through a $2.6 million gift from the Notsew Orm Sands Foundation. In cooperation with the Center for Business Ethics, the creation of the endowed chair in the Cameron School of Business will promote the development of leadership potential among students and other constituents. Longtime benefactor of the University, The Harry and Isabel C. Cameron Foundation, approved a pledge of $1.5 million in the spring of 2008 to create the Cameron Endowed Chair in Management and Marketing for the Cameron School of Business. The pledge to fund a chair was made to assist the University in its plan for the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB) accreditation. In 1969, St. Thomas received one of the first gifts from the foundation to establish the Cameron School of Business. The Houston Endowment Inc. awarded the University a $500,000 grant to help provide faculty development opportunities, school enhancements and student enrichment experiences for private and charter schools in Harris County. This is the fifth year that the Houston Endowment has renewed the grant, totaling $2.5 million. By working with UST, the goal of the Houston Endowment is to reach out to underresourced schools to offer quality professional development opportunities that will improve classroom instruction and student success. The grant provided services to approximately 250 private and charter schools in the Houston area. In April 2008, the University received a $3 million gift from the Cullen Trust for Higher Education. The gift will be used towards the acquisition of one and a half blocks at the Montrose Boulevard and Richmond intersection. The property anchors the southeast corner of the University’s campus in accordance with the master plan for physical expansion. With this acquisition, the University occupies most of 19 square blocks in the Houston Museum District. 9 2007-2008 T he University of St. Thomas is a private institution committed to the liberal arts and to the religious, ethical and intellectual traditions of Catholic higher education. The highlights of the past year reflect our measurable progress toward our goal of becoming one of America’s finest Catholic universities. AUGUST 2007 The new Celts Soccer team begins the season by winning its first intercollegiate game against the Our Lady of the Lake Saints in San Antonio. The Office of Alumni Relations hosts All-Classes Reunion with a dinner, dance, movie on the Campus Life Mall, and alumni vs. students soccer game. Annual Irish Gala, honoring Debbie and Patrick J. Moran and chaired by Michele Malloy, grossed more than $150,000, with money also raised for the Bishop John McCarthy Scholarship for Study Abroad in Ireland. NOVEMBER Dr. Victor Davis Hanson, senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, delivers the 2007 President’s Lecture discussing “The Ways of Western War and the Way Not in Iraq.” OCTOBER DECEMBER SEPTEMBER Catholic Intellectual Tradition Lecture Series hosts Dr. Edmund Pellegrino, founder of the Georgetown University Center for Clinical Bioethics, speaking on “Liberal Education: Is it Worthwhile to Those in the Medical Professions?” Dr. Robert Ivany, along with Mrs. Raye G. White, dedicates the Edward P. White Memorial Plaza, named in memory of one of the University’s most dedicated benefactors. The landmark is one of the last creative designs of renowned architect Philip Johnson. 10 UST hosts a discussion led by opposition leaders in Zimbabwe, Morgan Tsvangirai and Roy Bennett of the Movement for Democratic Change. John L. Allen, senior correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter, delivers the 2007 Archbishop J. Michael Miller Lecture discussing “Megatrends in Catholicism: Ten Forces Turning the Church Upside Down.” Fall Fashion Event chaired by alumna Robin Thomas Klaes raises funds for the Alumni Association Endowed Scholarship Fund. Winter Class Completion Mass honors December graduates. Graduate Student Association hosts Ali Findik, Consul of Turkey, speaking on Turkish Foreign Policy and Turkish Economic Development. JANUARY 2008 His Eminence Daniel Cardinal DiNardo celebrates Mass in the Chapel of St. Basil at the special request of his own Knights of Columbus Vincent J. Guinan Council 13940, the only college council to have a cardinal as a member. Center for International Studies MicroCredit Program members greet 2006 Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus, known for his pioneering work in international microcredit programs that grant loans to the poor for small business endeavors. Bishop Salvatore Rino Fisichella, Auxiliary Bishop of the Rome Archdiocese, delivers the Msgr. William Steele Lecture speaking on “Living as a Catholic in a Post-Modern Culture.” Annual Aquinas Lecture features Msgr. John Wippel, professor of philosophy at The Catholic University of America, speaking on “Thomas Aquinas and the Controversy Concerning Unity of Substantial Form in Human Beings.” University dedicates the Edward A. Stumpf II Memorial Plaza, funded by the Wortham Foundation. The fourth year of the USTinsights Alumni Mentoring Students Program matches 25 students with alumni. FEBRUARY “An Evening of Stars” Mardi Gras Gala raises $800,000 for the Fr. Francis E. Monaghan Scholarship Fund, honoring Houston Chronicle President and Publisher Jack Sweeney, and chaired by Cora Sue and Harry Mach. The Friends of Archaeology hosts Dr. Ana Munk speaking on “Remembering the Saints: An Interpretation of the Early Christian Confessio beneath the Church of SS Giovanni e Paolo in Rome.” MARCH The Inaugural Herzstein Lecture in Judaism features Rabbi Roy A. Walter, Senior Rabbi at Congregation Emanu El in Houston, speaking on “Abraham Joshua Heschel: A Philosopher for All Faiths.” B.K. Smith Lecture in History features Charles Doherty, School of History and Archives at University College Dublin, speaking on “The Early Irish Church: The City of God in Early Ireland.” UST Center for Business Ethics and the Greater Houston Partnership name Drayton McLane, Jr. recipient of the 2008 Ethical Leadership in Action Award. APRIL President’s Lecture Series hosts Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto speaking on “Why and How to Globalize: The Role of Law.” MAY Anadarko Petroleum Corporation Chairman, President and CEO James T. Hackett delivers the University’s commencement address, where he and Trini Mendenhall Sosa receive honorary doctorates. JUNE The Rev. William J. Young Institute Social Justice Summer Conference explores “Solidarity in an Election Year,” focusing on the principles of solidarity and faithful citizenship. We are the University of St.Thomas, the Catholic university in the heart of Houston. We are committed to the Catholic intellectual tradition and the dialogue between faith and reason. By pursuing excellence in teaching, scholarship, and service, we embody and instill in our students the core values of our founders, the Basilian Fathers: goodness, discipline, and knowledge. We foster engagement in a diverse, collaborative community. As a comprehensive university grounded in the liberal arts, we educate students to think critically, communicate effectively, succeed professionally, and lead ethically. Educating Leaders of Faith and Character 3800 MONTROSE BOULEVARD HOUSTON, TEXAS 77006 713-525-3100 www.st thom.edu The University of St. Thomas is a private institution committed to the liberal arts and to the religious, ethical and intellectual traditions of Catholic higher education.