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A M AG A Z I N E f or A LU M N I a n d F R I E N D S of HOLY N A M E S U N I V E R SI T Y

VOL. XXIX No. 1

W i nt e r 2 012

LEADING THE CHANGE


NCAA Application Accepted Due to HNU Teamwork!

P R E S I D E N T S M E S S AG E

William J. Hynes, PhD President

Lead, Follow, or Get Out of the Way


block progress, we need to get out of the way and let the The first time I saw this aphorism, it was proclaimed on a community go forward. Thus, to be an effective master or hand-painted sign in the middle of a very busy kitchen at mistress of change, one needs to practice the three arts of Gonzaga University. Anyone who has ever ventured into a leading, following, and stepping aside. well-functioning commercial kitchen at mealtime, watched the interplay of food preparation, plating, transporting of Jim Falaschi, chairman of our board of trustees, often refood trays, and the flow of kitchen and wait staff, will under- minds us that the heart of the story of Holy Names University stand how lead, follow, or get out of the way provides a very ... is the continuous, courageous, and passionate leadership practical model for meeting unrelenting demands in a con- of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary. This fined time and space. Fortunately, issue of HNU Today pays homthis model works equally well in age to two particularly gifted ...the heart of the story of Holy Names our fast-paced, modern, technoteacher-leader Sisters: Margaret Univer sity is the continuous, courageous, logical world. Campbell, SNJM, and Nancy

and passionate leadership of the Sisters of Teskey, SNJM. This issue also If there is an art to leading, there the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary. features a wide range of other also is an art to following, and an leaders, including leading entreart to getting out of the way. As Jim Falaschi, Chairman of our Board of Trustees preneurs in California food and Americans we tend to concentrate wine, leaders in HNU athletics upon only the first of these arts. who are taking us to NCAA However, at any given moment, if status, and leaders in writing skills, including Dr. Rebecca we all try to be leaders, we put ourselves in gridlock. Every one of us needs to follow others at least some of the time. Chapman, who has begun our first Writing Studio in the Fortunately, the Catholic philosophical principle of subsid- library, Dr. Dan Schmidt who leads our Writing Program, iarity encourages us to solve problems closest to the action and Belo Cipriani 12, our first writer-in-residence. rather than letting each problem rise to the highest level I hope you enjoy the inspiring stories of effective facilitators of the organization. At other times we need to step aside, of progress included in this issue of HNU Today. when we are neither prepared to lead or follow. Rather than

William J. Hynes, PhD President

It is hard to fail, but it is worse never to have tried to succeed. Theodore Roosevelt

VOL. XXV No. 1

W inter 2012 Volume XXIX N o . 1

Contents
2 3
Passionate Leaders
Passionate Leaders in Food and Wine Speak at James Durbin Entrepreneurship Speaker Series

Holy Names University is a private, four-year, co-ed, Catholic university located on 60 wooded acres in the hills of Oakland, California. An academic community committed to the full development of each student, HNU offers a liberal arts education rooted in the Catholic tradition, empowering a diverse student body for leadership and service. The opinions expressed in HNU Today do not necessarily represent the views of the editors nor policies of Holy Names University. Comments for the editor may be sent via email to: sims@hnu.edu Or in writing to: Lesley Sims, Director of Marketing and Public Relations Holy Names University 3500 Mountain Boulevard Oakland, CA 94619 Update your contact information online at: www.hnu.edu/alumni UNIVERSITY OFFICERS William J. Hynes, PhD, President Stuart Koop, Vice President for Finance and Administration Lizbeth Martin, Vice President for Academic Affairs Michael Miller, Vice President for Student Affairs
and Enrollment Management

Salon Series
Speakers at Cushing Librarys Salon Series

10 HNU Hawks Lead the Change 10


HNUs NCAA Application Accepted

Photo by Maria Theren

12 Sr. Margaret Campbell


A Woman Who has Always Embraced Change

On the cover:
NCAA Application Writing Team

2 Campus News 4 Student News 6 Staff & Faculty News 10 Feature Story 12 SNJM News 14 Alumni News 18 Class Notes 19 In Memoriam 20 Last Word

Richard Ortega, Vice President for University Advancement Carol Sellman, SNJM, Vice President for Mission Effectiveness ALUMNI EXECUTIVE BOARD PRESIDENT Ana Raphael-Scott 89 HNU TODAY STAFF This issue of HNU Today is directed and published by the HNU Marketing and Public Relations Department. EDITOR Lesley Sims, Director of Marketing and Public Relations CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Carolyn Boyd, University Communications Manager Jesse Loesberg, University Web Manager CONTRIBUTING WRITERS William J. Hynes, PhD, President Belo Cipriani, Writer-in-Residence Jessica Escobar, Student Affairs Coordinator HNU Athletics Jesse Loesberg, University Web Manager Miriam Malone, SNJM John R. McCoy, Director of Alumni Relations Lesley Sims, Director of Marketing and Public Relations Lisa Thuer, Assistant Director Athletics CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHERS Jesse Loesberg, University Web Manager John R. McCoy, Director of Alumni Relations Karen Schneider, University Librarian DESIGN AND PRODUCTION Maria Theren, University Graphic Designer

14 Homecoming 2012

Four Days of Homecoming Events

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C AMPUS NEWS

The James Durbin Entrepreneurship Speaker Series features student entrepreneurs and new guest speakers throughout the year. This series is named in honor of beloved HNU Professor James Durbin, Director of the MBA Program and Chair of the Business Department.

assionate

The Holy Names

Leaders

in

Food & Wine


while savoring prosciutto and soppres sata vicentina from his grandfathers cellars. Bertollis products include dry salami, pancetta, cooked salumi, sau sage, and prepared foods sold at Costco and Whole Foods Markets. In speaking about the characteristics of an entrepreneur, Bertolli said, you have to find your passion, you have to know what it is. If you love what you do, you will never work a day in your life!

James Durbin Entrepreneurship Speaker Series opened its 2012 season with passionate leaders in food and wine.

From top to bottom: Mary Clark Bartlett of Epicurean talks about sustainable food; Paul Bertolli discusses entrepreneurship; Cathy Corison, Debora Kilborn (sister of Cathy and member of the HNU Nursing faculty), and President William Hynes at the reception.

The series finale featured Cathy Corison, winemaker and proprietor Managing the catering at HNU for of Corison Winery. a national food Corison discovered her service, Bartlett Find your passion you passion for wine while conceived of a better will never work a day in pursuing a bachelors way to give people your life. degree in biology at wholesome, locallygrown, delicious food. Paul Bertolli, Founder and Curemaster, Pomona College in FraMani Handcrafted Foods Claremont, California. HNU was the third Inspired by the notion institution to sign that wine is alive at every level, she with Epicurean. Now Bartlett has nearly went on to receive a masters degree in 40 accounts. As a recognized leader in oenology from U.C. Davis in the midserving sus tainable food, having an entrepreneurial mindset is not a choice, 1970s. Many years of winemaking for others, including Chappellet Vineyard, but a necessity for Bartlett. You need Staglin Family Vineyard, York Creek to stay hungry for success and never be Vineyards, and Long Meadow Ranch, afraid to experiment or innovate. honed her skills and left her eager to Founder and curemaster of FraMani express her own winemaking voice. In Handcrafted Foods, Paul Bertolli 1987 she made the first vintage of Corison was next in the line-up of speakers. Cabernet. There was a wine inside me Bertolli is chef emeritus from Chez that needed to be made, she says. The Panisse, former co-owner of Oliveto, and harvest of 2011 marks her 25th vintage of the recipient of the James Beard Award Corison Cabernet. Corison started with Best Chef in California of 2001. $200 from her dad and now her winery In discussing the history of his early sits in the center of the Napa Valley. If culinary journey, Bertolli said that his you want to be an entrepreneur, you have love of cured meats started at a young age to have a stomach for risk.

Epicurean Group founder and CEO Mary Clark Bartlett opened the series at Holy Names University on September 20 with her talk From the Ground Up: Pathways to Entre preneurial Success. Epicurean Group, a $35 million innovative Californian food provider, is on Gentry Magazines 2012 A List.

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Cushing Librarys

Salon Series
By Jessica Escobar

Clockwise from top left: Students sign in for the International Student Reception; Lars Rosager performs for library patrons; QueenKay (KayKay Amamgbo) 14 speaks at an alumni book reading; Will Baty, a library space planner, discusses new library design with a focus group; Father Conroy, chaplain to the House of Representatives, is a guest speaker.

Holy Names Universitys

academic culture is expanding significantly, and at the center of that growth is the Cushing Library and its state-of-the-art programming. Under the leadership of University Librarian Karen G. Schneider, the library has become the physical center of a shift on campus that includes more cultural and intellectual enrichment outside of classrooms. That shift is symbolized by the changes in the Salon Series.

absolute silence, and even livelier conversations. With the creation of the Salon Series, Schneider has encouraged time and space for lively conversations, and they have attracted many people from the HNU and Oakland community. Schneider would No one is born knowing how like for the library to use a library. People have to provide for every users needs. As she to be conditioned to use a points out, No library, and making them feel one is born know- welcome is the first step. ing how to use a li- Karen Schneider, brary. People have University Librarian to be conditioned to use a library, and making them feel welcome is the first step. There is food available at the Salon Series, and time for mingling before and after the main event. Schneider says, Libraries represent the life of the mind, and we consider our library to be one of the living rooms on campus. Having established itself as a hub of artistic, accessible, and intellectually provocative events, the Salon Series has made the library an integral part of HNUs changing, expanding academic and social culture.
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The series began in February 2010, and many additional events have been held on the HNU campus for the entire community. These have included Art Talks, hosted by faculty and visiting artists, an Alumni Book Talk featuring HNUs Writer-in-Residence Belo Cipriani, piano and choir performances by students in HNUs Music Department, two International Student Receptions, research presentations by HNU faculty and staff, presentations from visiting SOA Watch activists, and Gay-Straight Alliance speakers. Schneider uses the library as a focus of outreach for the University by creating space and time for events that broaden ideas about the librarys purpose. In a Chronicle of Higher Education article Schneider said, A lot of libraries are zoning their space into areas where there can be quiet conversation,

STUDENT NEWS

Changing Perceptions About Disability


By Belo Cipriani

HNUs Writer-in-Residence Belo Cipriani talks about his experiences as a student, writer, and advocate for the disabled

People in public like to scream at me

I explained to a group of students at Yale University. That lecture, like many I have done across the country and abroad, focused on disability studies. I used to be surprised when college students would share that they had never talked with a blind person before. Now, I understand that the lack of successful blind role models is due to the fact that up until recently, the blind did not have any rights.

The Americans with Disabilities Act was passed in the early 1990s. So, if I had been born blind, I would not have had any rights People do not yell at me to until my teens. However, my be rude ... they yell at me story is not about because they do not know a tough childhood, but about becom- any better. ing disabled as an Belo Cipriani, HNU Writer-in-Residence adult. In my late 20s, I was brutally assaulted in San Francisco by my childhood friends. The beating left me blind but with a new vision for life. Although I was rehabilitated back into my job as a technical recruiter, I no longer felt the same passion for my career. I began to write and after a few years, I have published a book, have a second in press, and am currently working on my third literary project. I make one-third of my previous Silicon Valley salary, but I am happier. When I teach writing or lecture on disability social justice, I beam. I am not the only blind writer producing memoir and fiction, but I believe there should be many more. It was not until I met another blind author that I realized I could be one too. My hope is that more disabled individuals tell their stories to help the able-bodied understand physical and mental limitations. People are realizing that what they know about the disabled is outdated due to new technology or because it was information produced by Hollywood. The disabled community is the largest minority group because it overlaps

Belo Cipriani and his guide dog companion, Madge.

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Who is Belo Cipriani?


In the spring of 2007, Belo Cipriani was beaten and robbed of his sight at the hands of his childhood friends in San Francisco. Blind: A Memoir chronicles the two years immediately following the assault. At the age of 26, Cipriani found himself learning to walk, cook, and date in the dark. Armed with visual memory and his newly developed senses, Cipriani shows readers what the blind see. Cipriani writes both fiction and creative non-fiction across several genres with the help of adaptive technology. To read and edit, he uses a desktop application for the blind called JAWS and a talking dictionary device called Franklin. Cipriani was born in Guatemala City to a Brazilian father and an Italian mother and is fluent in English, Spanish, and Portuguese. His fathers work with nonprofits and his mothers passion for the study of herbalism took Cipriani to Brazil, Peru, Mexico, and Canada in his early childhood. At the age of seven, his family relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area, which he now calls home. Cipriani is a Lambda Literary Fellow, Literary Death Match champion, and holds a masters degree in English with an emphasis in creative writing from Notre Dame de Namur University, where he studied under award-winning poet Jacqueline Berger and fiction writer Kerry Dolan. He is actively involved with the San Francisco literary community, supporter of Litquake and the California Writers Club, and a contributing writer for Bay Area publications. Belo and his guide dog, Madge, live in San Francisco.

Belo Cipriani (left) speaks with students at the Social Justice Cafe Disability Justice forum.

with religion, race, sexual orientation, and gender. It also includes individuals who are temporarily handicapped. I am optimistic about the future of disability studies. It is slowly getting recognition because people are realizing that anyone can become disabled, especially later in life. Disability studies is still in its infancy, but it makes me glad to know that the students who attend my lectures will be armed with the information to help, hire, and host a blind person. People do not yell at me to be rude, I said to a group of Holy Names University students. They yell at me because they do not know any better.

Coming in Fall 2014


Faceless A new book by Belo Cipriani
It appears to some that I live in a faceless world. Darkness has proven to be tough, turbulent, and exciting all at once. My connection to the world has changed, yet I still desire the same experiences disabled and abled people value, as those experiences exist outside the senses. We close our eyes to enhance intimacy, to hear our inner voice, avoid distractions, and seek clarity. Many of the emotions and experiences humans value such as love, friendship, safety, and even God do not have a face, making them accessible to anyone with breath. What differs among people is the path one chooses in which to find happiness and what we each define as contentment. Faceless represents not only the world of the blind but the world of needs and desires that humans value.

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S TA FF & FAC U LT Y N E W S

Change the World


Become a Teacher

TAP
Teacher Apprenticeship Program

Dr. Julie Henderson,

assistant professor of education, launched the U.S. Department of Educations Transition to Teaching Grant in September. The grant objectives will be achieved through HNUs Teacher Apprenticeship Program (TAP). Over the next five years, Holy Names University will receive more than $5 million to recruit and retrain future teachers for the Oakland, West Contra Costa, and Hayward Unified School Districts.

Dr. Julie Henderson makes a presentation to TAP students.

Dr. Henderson believes that the pillars of support that are built into the program will be the key to its success. The Teacher Apprenticeship Program provides assistance that helps students to achieve their dream in the shortest amount of time. TAP enrollees receive professional support from a mentor/teacher, assistance with preparing resumes, and help with interviewing techniques. They also receive up to $5,000 in tuition reimbursement and an annual salary of $40,000 while a teaching intern, and most books and fees are covered, Henderson said. In a traditional single-subject credential program, students are enrolled for two years before they receive the credential.
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Students who enroll in the TAP program will complete their credential in one year, without sacrificing the quality of their education program. In addition, TAP participants will receive both a masters degree and a teaching credential upon completion. In a traditional credential program, students would normally have to complete a separate masters degree. The TAP program targets people who want to change careers or who want to make a difference in the community through teaching and, more importantly, who like kids and working with people. Dr. Henderson challenges people who are choosing a new career path, Change the World. Teach.

Leading Change
Change at the Top
Associate Professor of Education

IN THE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT

Marion Marshall Elected to the Association of Educational Therapists Board


The Association of Educational Therapists (AET) elected Marion Marshall to the board of directors this summer. In addition to being an associate professor of education, Marshall coordinates HNUs Educational Therapy program and is the former clinical director of the Raskob Learning Institute. She has won multiple teaching awards and provides leadership for many masters degree candidates with an emphasis in educational therapy. Marshall was also recently named in Whos Who in the World, and was installed as an AET national board member in October.

Change a City
Dr. Kitty Kelly Epstein Releases New Book Associate Professor of Education
Dr. Kitty Kelly Epsteins new book, Organizing to Change a City, was released on August 10 by Peter Lang Publishing. Along with her co-authors, Kimberly Mayfield Lynch and J. Douglas Allen-Taylor, Dr. Epstein provides a history of the ongoing social justice movement in Oakland and its efforts to address issues of education, employment, gentrification, and inner-city violence. An academic and policy advisor, Dr. Epstein is also the author of A Different View of Urban Schools (Peter Lang Publishing, 2006) and was named one of the 2012 Powerful Women of the Bay by Black Women Organized for Political Action.

Change Lives
Chris Schmitz Retires this Year Former Master Teacher
A master teacher is the coach who turns over her own classes in order to observe how student teachers are progressing and provides feedback on their performance. Chris Schmitz retired this year. Schmitz teaches fourth graders at Monroe Elementary School in San Leandro, and she has served as the HNU Education Departments master teacher for more than 10 years. Her excellence in shaping future teachers will be a difficult assignment for anyone to follow. Schmitz has earned the respect of more than 18 student teachers, and the admiration of the faculty and staff of the Education Department. She has also improved the learning experience for thousands of Oakland children. Norma Murphy, adjunct professor of education at HNU, explains why Schmitz teaching style has appealed to so many, Chris is an exceptional teacher of children along with being a fine human being. Working with each student teacher, she allows them to develop in their own unique ways. She models good teaching strategies, and then she is willing to let go of the class and let the student teacher teach the class. She is one of the unsung heroespassing on her wisdom and guiding prospective students. The magnitude of her impact can be understood by observing her teacher trainees in the profession and by how many showed up to honor her at her retirement event.

Change of Leadership
Zaida McCall-Perez Elected to Board of Bilingual Educators Associate Professor of Education
Zaida McCall-Perez was elected vice president of the board of the California Association of Bilingual Teacher Educators for 2012. The organization is affiliated with the California Association of Teacher Educators and the California Association for Bilingual Education. Perez is also certified by the California Department of Education as a disproportionality facilitator. In this role, she works to reduce the disproportionate over-representation of minority students in special education. Her most recent facilitation has been with the East Side Union High School District in San Jose. She is one of only 21 educators in California who has this certification.

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S TA FF & FAC U LT Y N E W S

Writing Studio
The establishment of the Writing Studio signals an exciting academic change on campus
By Jessica Escobar
Dr. Rebecca Chapman, Founder of HNUs Writing Studio

Dr. Rebecca Chapman

has established an exciting writing environment at HNU with the September 10 opening of the Writing Studio. Dr. Chapman is an assistant professor of English at HNU and a passionate advocate for liberal arts education.

Located inside the Cushing Library, the studio employs two post-graduate fellows, one graduate consultant, and three undergraduate consultants. All of the consultants are HNU students and they work with individual students at their own academic level. In support of this concept Dr. Chapman pointed out, Research shows that peergenerated knowledge is the most enduring knowledge. Before they can work for the studio, each consultant must complete ENGL 160: Theory and Practice of Teaching Writing with a B+ or higher and have 30 hours of consultation with peer authors. Dr. Chapman indicated that a comfortable relationship with ones own writing process is important to a good liberal arts education and is an important foundation for any academic pursuit. In times of economic crisis, a liberal arts
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education often becomes relegated to the margins of what many consider to be successful educational practices and pursuits, says Dr. Chapman. HNUs investment in supporting critical reading, writing, and thinking demonstrates the Universitys commitment to the concepts outlined in our mission statement: empowerment, leadership, and service. It shows how firmly HNU stands by its values. Im proud to be a part of this demonstration of that commitment. The Writing Studio provides an environment where students can receive feedback about their writing assignments, but it is more than that. Dr. Chapman points out that consultants are not just copy editors. The purpose of the consultation role is focused less on writing technique and more on each writers own writing process. Dr. Chapman believes that writing is actually a means of processing thoughts and ideas, a tool that students can use in every area of academic pursuit and beyond graduation. As HNU grows and develops additional academic programs, the need for a strong writing infrastructure will be essential. The establishment of the Writing Studio signals an exciting academic change on campus that will address that need.

HNU Welcomes New Staff and Faculty for 2012


In 2012 Holy Names University departments made the following staff changes:
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS Stephan Bera ATHLETICS Cesar Cardenas John Carrion Jeffrey (Scott) Howard Junichi (Jovan) Yamagishi BUSINESS Chiu Chen Jason George BUSINESS OFFICE Kris Bailey CAMPUS MINISTRY Christopher Trinidad CAMPUS SAFETY Joseph Frenz Isaiah Gilkey Debra Ramirez EDUCATION Barney Wong Hao Le MATH AND SCIENCE Leslie Bach Michael Limm MUSIC Janos Horvath NURSING Joan Edelstein Danielle Gayden Michal (Miki) Goodwin Holli Griffin Olufunmilayo (Grace) Idowu Ogunremi (Remi) Ogunlana Celeste Rivera Ruth Terry Patresia Thomas Instructor Operations Coordinator Associate Professor Undergraduate Academic Advisor Instructor Preceptor Coordinator Administrative Assistant Assistant Chair Instructor American Council on Education (ACE) Fellow Andrew Wilson Instructor of Music Wendell Tull Instructor Assistant Professor of Biology Aaron Garcia Credential Analyst Research Analyst FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION Campus Safety Staff Campus Safety Staff Field Supervisor Justin Vacca Music Director and Liturgist Accounts Payable Specialist Assistant Professor of Business Undergraduate Academic Advisor Associate Director of Athletics Assistant Athletic Director and Head Baseball Coach Head Womens Tennis Coach Head Womens and Mens Soccer Coach and Summer Camp Coordinator Assistant Academic Dean OFFICE OF UNIVERSITY ADVANCEMENT Carolyn Boyd Jesse Loesberg Elizabeth Williams RASKOB Amelia (Emma) Ammirati Paul Bancroft Nicolette Hagstrom Theresa (Terry) Hove Karen Sinn SOCIAL SCIENCE Perri Franskoviak Richard Sprott STUDENT ACCOUNTS Ann-Marie Doherty STUDENT AFFAIRS Javier De Paz Assistant Director of the Center for Social Justice and Civic Engagement Assistant Director of Campus Life and Coordinator of Housing and Residence Life Enrollment Counselor, Student Retention Enrollment Counselor, Graduate Students Enrollment Counselor, Undergraduate Students Assistant Director for Enrollment Management and Enrollment Counselor, Adult Students Enrollment Counselor, Graduate Programs Office Coordinator Student Accounts Specialist Assistant Professor Psychology Field Placement Coordinator Teaching Associate Teaching Associate Teacher Teacher Teaching Associate University Communications Manager University Web Manager Director of Advancement

STUDENT AFFAIRS AND ENROLLMENT MANAGEMENT Christopher Chu Lori Knight-Baker

STUDENT FINANCIAL SERVICES Rosanna Kauffmann UPWARD BOUND Jamie Marte Tutor Coordinator

OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT AND ACADEMIC AFFAIRS Dr. Steven Yao

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FE AT U R E S T O R Y

CHANGE THE GAME


HNU Hawks application to NCAA is accepted
, Holy Names University learned that its application for membership to Division II of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) had been accepted. This was exciting news for the entire campus community. The University had been a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and a founding member of the California Pacific Conference (Cal Pac). Moving forward, the University will participate in the Pacific West Conference (PacWest), the largest NCAA Division II conference in the western region.
10 LIBERATING MINDS TRANSFORMING LIVES SINCE 1868

On Friday, July 13, 2012

HNU Athletics was established in 1994 and is an integral part of the University. For nearly two decades, athletic programs have impacted hundreds of students. Students have realized success through intercollegiate competition, academic pursuits, and an emphasis on the full development of ones potential. Director of Athletics Dennis Jones always says to students and their families, Our promise to you: academic success first, athletic success always, service to others forever. The University has 12 sport teams, six for women and six for men. There are soccer, basketball, volleyball, and

cross-country teams for men and women. HNU recently established mens baseball and womens tennis teams, and also offers mens golf and womens softball. Jones was jubilant when he received the acceptance message from the NCAA. We knew Division II of the NCAA was a great place for us, Jones said. Their philosophy focuses on balancing athletic achievement with a commitment to educational development and community service, which matches well with our commitment to the full development of all student athletes through their engagement in the total educational experience. The membership application for the NCAA was a lengthy and arduous process, involving extensive strategic planning and data analysis (for a copy of HNU 2016, the strategic plan for athletics, go to www.hnu.edu/ We knew Division II of the athletics). Prior to its acceptance, NCAA was a great place the University for us. Their philosophy community spent focuses on balancing considerable efathletic achievement with a fort preparing commitment to educational for membership. development and community Instrumental to service. the process was a team of colleagues Dennis Jones, Director of Athletics who prepared the application. We were fortunate that such a fine group of colleagues helped us through this process, Jones said. The group included Marcie Haduca, athletic compliance coordinator; Olivia Mendez-Alm, assistant dean for enrollment management; Cesar Cardenas, associate director of athletics; and Lisa Thuer, assistant director of athletics. Each of them did a fantastic job. While HNU Athletics has much to celebrate, the departments work has just begun. Application acceptance is one of the first steps in the NCAA process. Once an institutions application is accepted, there is a two-year candidacy period, followed by one year of provisional NCAA membership. HNU Athletics will spend the candidacy period meeting various requirements, such as attendance at NCAA meetings, assessment by NCAA representatives, and completion of annual reports and Institutional Self-Study Guides. During these three years, HNU Athletics will continue to realize its mission and vision, placing it well on its way to full membership in Division II of the NCAA by fall 2015.

In the meantime, the Hawks will compete in the PacWest, where they will rekindle rivalries with Dominican University and Notre Dame de Namur University. Other members of the conference include universities from Southern California, Arizona, Utah, and Hawaii. To learn more about HNU Athletics and the NCAA, search YouTube for Winning NCAA Application VideoHoly Names University (2012), a video produced by Todd Keitz at Rebalrose Cre8tive. You can like HNU Athletics on Facebook, and join Hawk Nation on Ning. To become a member of the Hawk Nation United booster club, contact Assistant Director of Athletics Lisa Thuer at 510-4361491. More information regarding the booster club and HNU Athletics can be found at www.hnuhawks.com. Go Hawks!
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SNJM NEWS

Sister Margaret Campbell


Brilliant and beloved are two adjectives that aptly describe Sister Margaret Campbell, alumna and long-time faculty member at Holy Names Universityand a woman who has always embraced change
By Sr. Miriam Malone

entered the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary in 1952 after two and a half years as a student at then College of the Holy Names. She fondly remembers the campus as a place of friendliness, yet with serious concern about intellectual matters.

Sister Margaret Campbell

Sister Margaret continued that tradition throughout her tenure as an integral part of the core program, professor of religious studies, and co-founder of the masters program in pastoral ministries. Dr. Sheila Gibson describes Sr. Margarets compelling teaching style: She believed passionately in the power of story-telling. She was a master tale-spinner herself, and students would be captivated by the wry and funny anecdotes that turned out not to be diversions from the master story she was masterfully giving them. Dr. Sophia Park, SNJM, who was mentored by Sr. Margaret describes her as a great thinker with an open mind who taught me how to love and serve the people in studying and teaching. Rabbi Shelley Waldenberg, a long-time, professional colleague of Dr. Campbell, worked closely with her in the development of the Pastoral Ministries Program. Rabbi Waldenberg explains, Sister Margaret Campbells life reflects the profundity and sincerity of her faith.

Sr. Margaret Campbell and Sr. Sophia Park share a special moment during a community celebration at Convent of the Holy Names in Los Gatos, California.

With integrity, compassion, and humor, she inspires us to live up to our own ideals. Two significant influences in Sr. Margarets personal life as a religious woman and her professional life as a professor of theology, were the initiation of the English as a Second

12 LIBERATING MINDS TRANSFORMING LIVES SINCE 1868

Language program at HNU and the Second Vatican Council. The former, she says, brought an international student body that stretched the campus community to new understandings of openness to other people. The spirit of hospitality characteristic of the campus remained the same, but we learned new ways of being welcoming.

The spirit of Vatican II lives in Sr. Margarets own spirit and informed many discussions with Sister Delores Rashford, which led to the initiation of the masters program in pastoral ministries in January 2001. Sr. Margaret and her colleagues grew the program on the conviction that parishes were in need of lay ministers of various kinds. These were often people who had skills or talents that they were performing in informal ways. We could see that if they had a better theological background they would have a better sense of their ministry and, therefore, a better way of serving parishes and be able to speak with understanding based on an educated background. What kept Sr. Margaret going through the changes and challenges of the passing years? I met each day with whatever wisdom and grace I could muster or receive. I also maintained an openness to people whom I had never met before. This gave me a deeper understanding of what is required professionally as a scholar and teacher, and as a person working with international students. When she ponders the future of HNU, Sr. Margaret is clear. The reason the place exists is because we think we have something to impart to the world about how to live in this world, with one another as human beings, and as children of God. That insight, that way of meeting the requirement to love as we are loved, is very much at the heart of what HNU is all about. She embraces each new day in the same spirit, staying devoted to whatever comes next in the name of Gods love.

Sister Nancy Teskey Retires

Clockwise from top: Sr. Nancy Teskey displays her honorary service plaque; President William J. Hynes, PhD speaks about Sr. Nancys service at HNU; Sr. Nancy and Sr. Maureen enjoy the evening.

The

University community honored Sister Nancy Teskeys career of service and devotion on November 30. Sisters, students, faculty, staff, and administrators came together to acknowledge the impact of Sr. Nancys contributions at HNU. Her accomplishments include assignments as the associate dean for academic affairs and associate professor of biological science. Dr. Teskey, an animal physiologist who specialized in neurophysiology and physiological psychology, taught a wide range of subjects in her 27 years on the faculty at Holy Names College including genetics, biochemistry, physiological chemistry, cellular and systemic physiology, physiological psychology, and a senior colloquium increativity.

Holy

Names

In honor of Sr. Nancys exceptional service, particularly to students, the new Advising and Learning Resource Center has been named after her.
Dr. Beth Martin, Vice President for Academic Affairs

Dr. Teskey was chair of the Division of Mathematics and Sciences from 19932001. She was also instrumental in writing two documents for the approval of the undergraduate preparation of teachers for the elementary classroom which were approved in 1992, and again in 2002, by the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing. This liberal studies program remains a hallmark program at HNU.
Sr. Nancy grew up in San Francisco (a third generation San Franciscan) and graduated from St. Cecilias and St. Rose Academy. She obtained a BA in biological science from Holy Names College and a PhD in physiology from the University of California, Davis. WINTER 2012|HNU TODAY13

ALUMNI NEWS

2012 Homecoming Presents

The 2012 HNU Homecoming

Four Days of Events


Alumni Awards
1 2

was celebrated with four days of events and special acknowledgments. A community picnic dinner opened the series of events on September 29. Alumni and friends were invited to celebrate the 1964 College of the Holy Names Womens Volleyball team and the 40th anniversary of Title IX. Two weeks later, the Cushing Library Salon Series hosted an Alumni Book Talk showcasing the literary accomplishments of three HNU alumni: Jennifer Martin 67, author of The Huna Warrior: The Magic Begins; Belo Cipriani 12, author of Blind: A Memoir, and QueenKay (KayKay Amamgbo) 14, author of The Reconstruction and Transformation of QueenKay. The next day, participants spent an evening with Father Greg Boyle, the founder of Homeboy Industries (serving atrisk and gang-involved youth) and author of Tattoos on the Heart. The final events were the Homecoming Reunion and presentation of the 39th Annual Alumni Awards Ceremony, and the wine social at Cerruti Cellars on October 20.

3 Clockwise from top to bottom, left to right: (1) Bruce Winegar, PhD, Selpha O. Odero 00, Ganymede Odero-Winegar, Monica Odero-Winegar, MSN 00, FNP 09, RN; (2) Jo Anne Quinlivan, SNJM 60, Monica Odero-Winegar, MSN 00, FNP 09, RN; (3) Carol Sellman, SNJM 69, Thuy-Lan (Tweety) T. Nguyen 87; (4) Michael Stout 01, Monica Odero-Winegar, MSN 00, FNP 09, RN, Thea Maestre 71, EdD.

Volleyball
2

Clockwise from top to bottom, left to right: (1) Sheila M. Malloy 67, Jacqueline C. Bradley 66, Catherine J. Wooten 66, Roberta L. Paul 66; (2) Todays HNU Womens Volleyball team show unity; (3) Elza L. Paul 61 and Roberta L. Paul 66 remember their days at HNU; (4) Two HNU Womens Volleyball players talk at picnic; (5) HNU Womens Volleyball Team poses in St. Francis Courtyard.

14 LIBERATING MINDS TRANSFORMING LIVES SINCE 1868

Homecoming

Clockwise from top to bottom, left to right: (1) Yearbook display; (2) Gladys Keller Radecke 52, Patricia White Sunseri 52, Shirley Sexton, SNJM 52, Marguerite McKinnon Hill 52, Marianne Zolg Griffin 52; (3) President William J. Hynes, PhD and Marie L. Roth 42; (4) HNU students reunite; (5) The Class of 1961 shares a celebratory moment on the HNU steps.

Cerruti Cellars

Clockwise from top to bottom, left to right: (1) President William J. Hynes, PhD and Ana Raphael-Scott 89; (2) Suzanne J. Thoreson 62, Susan Lester Ortega 62, and Diana Burger Sawin 62 share a toast; (3) Bryan Smith and Michelle R. Simon 90; (4) Linda T. Nunes 97 and Greg Nunes; (5) Lynn Murphy 90, Rexie A. Fox 90, Thuy-Lan (Tweety) T. Nguyen 87, Michael O. Mosby 88.

WINTER 2012|HNU TODAY15

Tuscany Tour
ALUMNI NEWS

The 39th Annual Alumni Awards Honorees


Alumni Recognition Award
For outstanding achievement in a profession or service to the church or community MONICA ODERO-WINEGAR, MSN 00, FNP 09 REGISTERED NURSE, KAISER PERMANENTE

Faculty Award
Presented to a member of the full-time faculty for outstanding service and loyalty to the University THEA MAESTRE 71, EDD PROFESSOR AND COORDINATOR OF THE MULTIPLE SUBJECT CREDENTIAL PROGRAM

Monica Odero-Winegar, MSN 00, FNP 09, RN received the Alumni Recognition Award for her outstanding achievement in a profession or service to the church or community. OderoWinegar is a member of the board of directors, Prevention International: No Cervical Cancer, the Tamu Orphans Support Foundation, and the Tiba Foundation. Originally from Kenya, Odero-Winegar came to the United States in 1980 to begin her undergraduate studies at California State University, Sacramento. She later enrolled at Holy Names University, where she graduated in 2000 with a Master of Science in nursing. She currently works in the outpatient Travel Clinic at the Kaiser Medical Center in Oakland.

Young Alumni Award


Recognizing a recent graduate who has enhanced the prestige of the University MICHAEL STOUT 01 SENIOR GAME DESIGN SPECIALISTACTIVISION

Thea Maestre 71, EdD, professor and coordinator of the Multiple Subject Credential Program, was awarded the 2012 Faculty Award for her outstanding service and loyalty to the University. Throughout her professional career, elementary teaching has been the focus of Professor Maestres activities. She received her teaching credential at Holy Names College in 1971. She then taught grades one through six in the Oakland Unified School District for 25 years. After earning her doctorate at the University of California, Berkeley in 1995, she returned to Holy Names to prepare future elementary school teachers. Following her interest in social studies curriculum, she coauthored the book Through Other Eyes: Developing Empathy and Multiple Perspectives in the Social Studies with Dr. Joan Skolnick and Dr. Nancy Dulberg. In her most recent work, she has incorporated mindfulness as a stress reduction strategy for urban teachers.

In Memoriam
The Alumni Awards Celebration also honored the late James E. Durbin, MBA, CPA for his distinguished service and leadership to the University as an associate professor, director of the MBA Program, and chair of the Business Department. Durbin had more than 20 years of professional business experience in middle and senior management positions, he owned a privately-held $11 million building supply company, and he was also a California real estate broker. Durbin was a treasured friend and colleague to the HNU community since 1971. The awards committee for this event was composed of Ann C. Dunlap-Kahren 88, chairperson; Julie Nelson Echaniz 75, former alumni board president; Roberta C. Fogerty 72; Beth H. Hoenninger 88; Patricia McMahon 64, PhD; and Roberta M. Palumbo 68.

The Young Alumni Award was presented to Michael Stout 01 for his efforts in enhancing the prestige of the University. Since graduating in 2001, Michael Stout has been successful in creating franchises in the Video Game Industry (Skylanders, Ratchet and Clank, Resistance: Fall of Man). Stout has also authored a number of featured articles for Gamasutra.com, the online version of Game Developer Magazine. He currently works at Activision Publishing as a senior game design specialist.
16 LIBERATING MINDS TRANSFORMING LIVES SINCE 1868

Sharing the future


Annual Report 2010-2011

The 20102011 HNU Annual Report should have acknowledged the following Presidents Circle HONOR ROLL donors for contributions made from July 1, 2010, to June 30, 2011:
Presidents Circle ($1,000 to $2,499)
Anonymous (3) Agnes V. Anderson 46 Jason Ballance The Bank of America Foundation Richard Barbieri Michael J. Batza Jr. Betsy Sullivan Bazdarich 71 BBSI Nina and Donald C. Bentley David Bond Dr. Jean C. Born Fay L. Bower, DNSc Lillian and Ross Cadenasso Erwin Carson Vernon and Barbara Fahey Chase 56 Barbara Ruddy Ciccarelli 61 Clear Channel Outdoor, Inc Margaret and Walter H. Clemens Cathi Connelly 08 John W. and Mary McDonald Coykendall 48 Robert Day Karen and Steven DeGalan Diamond Services & Supply Co. Julie 75 and Tom Echaniz Rachel N. Sing and Vitra N. Eisen Eric Schumacher Photography Emily Fine Woodland Stairs Goats R Us Nancye Graeser 11 Elana Hunter Hall 60 Todd Hansen Jon F. Hartung Robert Hatton Margaret and Matt Heafey Barbara E. Hood 70 Janyce A. and David A. Hoyt Rosanna Ho Hsi 64 Carol A. Hubert 59 Intel Foundation Volunteer Grant Program Lisa and Juan Jones Joshua Ets-Hokin Photography Mary M. Joyce 58 Gerry and Howard Korth Mary and John Marinshaw Margaret D. McPhee Reich 39 MG Remediation Dolores 74 and Carl Monismith Jason C. Mosher 96 Aileen Butler Morello 51 Melinda and Jason Mosher 96 Mary Alice Muellerleile, PhD Christina and Joseph G. Nassif Oakland Feather River Camp Ethel J. Paap Peter Olivetti Photography Rita Olsen Pister 47 Mary Ann Bareilles Quittman 55 Ann and Jon Reynolds Tom Rinehart Louise and Ronald Rosequist Ruth B. Ryan-Hanlon 44 Lindy and Gary Sitzmann Sitzmann-Morris-Lavis Incorporated Carol L. Zamora Small 64 Mary Dwyer Spellman 53 Ella and Moshe Sternberg Vartain Law Group Ronald J. Vincent Susan M. Vinella-Brusher 91 Wells Fargo Community Support Campaign Eileen 62 and Ron Weston Lorri and George Zimmer

SPECIAL OFFER! Save up to $500 per person


check website for details

pate in an exclusive educational and travel experience to Tuscany on May 2230, 2013. This special travel program will include guided sightseeing excursions to the medieval towns of Perugia, Siena, and Montepulciano. Travelers will enjoy informative presentations by local experts and will be given personal listening devices so that every word can be heard. A visit to Florence will showcase the splendor of the Renaissance and a trip to Assisi will welcome travelers to the home of St. Francis. Guests will experience the beauty and bounty of Tuscany first-hand with visits to vineyards, museums, churches, piazzas, fountains, meetings with local residents, and much more. For information about signing up, visit community.hnu.edu and click on 2013 Alumni Tuscany.

Alumni and friends of HNU are eligible to partici-

Founders Society ($5,000 to $9,999)


Emerald Packaging, Inc. Helen Trahan Farschon 65 Robert and Marie Damrell Gallo 57 Mary Heafey Maura E. Kelly Koberlein 84 and Derril L. Koberlein 84 The MacGillivray Family 66 Rosemarie Nassif, SSND, PhD OShea Foundation Josephine and Edwin Raphel Thomas W. Smith Foundation Upjohn Fund of San Francisco deceased

WINTER 2012|HNU TODAY17

Class Notes
Bebe Faas Rice
Duff, are continuing to enjoy life at Falcons Landing, a military retirement community in northern Virginia. They have recently moved from a house to one of the apartments, realizing that, since weve just celebrated our 80th birthdays, wed better make the move while we still can. Bebe says that we love Falcons Landing and the people here. I am keeping busy writing for our in-house newspaper, doing interviews on our little TV station here, and am on the advisory board of a local library Its hard to believe that my classmates and I are now octogenarians. Heavens, where did the years go? I hope you are all happy and well, and enjoying your golden years.

Ana Raphael-Scott 89
Elizabeth Mokalla Spencer
and her husband, Michael, are thrilled to announce the birth of their third son, Matthew Collins Spencer. He was born on May 23. The family lives in the Fig Garden neighborhood of Fresno. Spencer enjoys raising her boys at home and is currently working on a bilingual childrens book.

53 and husband,

96

Upon graduation from HNU in

Dr. Carla A. Bouska Lee

Professor Thea Maestre

, EdD and her husband, Jos, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary on October 1. Maestre is the coordinator of the Universitys Multiple Subject Credential Program.

71

was appointed to the American Nurses Associations Committee on Standards of Practice, for a four-year term (20102014). The committee recently completed standards for faith community nursing and a current review is in process for aesthetics nursing. Dr. Lee also serves on the Bylaws Committee of the American Association for Credentialing in Nursing. She, along with HNU graduate Rita Ruderman 98, MSN 01 serve as reviewers of the instructor resources for the Rosethals Foundations for Nursing.

03

Omar Sanchez

Katherine Donovan Perez

lives in Alameda, California, with her husband Robert Perez. She is a professor of education at Saint Marys College of California. Recently returning from sabbatical travels, Perez wrote her second best-selling book for teachers: The CoTeaching Book of Lists. Her sons, Hart and Devon, are directing films. Check out Perezbros.com for their latest creations. Perez has worked for the Ministry of Education in Singapore for the past eight years where she trains teachers.While in Singapore, she visits her college roommate and fellow HNU alum, Nathalia Lie 72.

71, EdD

Marinella welcomed baby girl Ella Jolie Sanchez to their family.

04 and his wife,

1989, Ana Raphael-Scott was awarded the Founders Medal. This award recognizes leadership through civic work, intellectual excellence, or extracurricular activities. During the time between graduation and the assumption of her new post as alumni board president, Raphael-Scott exemplified the qualities of the Founders Medal in a multitude of ways, not the least of which, was her role in the 2002 opening of the St. Joseph Catholic School in Richardson, Texas. Raphael-Scotts goal for the alumni board are to increase awareness of our graduates impact in communities near and far, raise HNUs profile as a positive aspect of the city of Oakland, and to increase participation of alumni who graduated in the 70s, 80s, 90s, and 2000s.

Chris Rascon

married Uta Lorenzen on June 23. Both Chris and Uta are current HNU employees. Chris works as data manager/analyst and Uta is the Universitys associate registrar.

06

Africa Is A Continent Not A Country


MBA at HNU studying finance, management, and leadership. Okoro is the coauthor of Birds Without Wings and his latest book, Africa

SYLVESTER OKORO, MBA 07

Sylvester Okoro completed his

Suzanne Lee MSN/MBA , RN, CCM, was appointed vice president of


operations for Tristar Insurance Group on June 22. Lee has more than 20 years of experience in various industries from health care to technology in the Silicon Valley. After working as a registered nurse at several high profile institutions such as Kaiser Permanente, Lee gained her first exposure to Leave of Absence administration at the Intel Corp. After 10 years of innovation at Intel, she became the director of human resources at Washington Hospital.

10

Is A Continent, Not A Country,


was written to get readers to think about their knowledge of Africa. Sylvester concluded that many people do not know much about Africa and even refer to it as a country (instead of a continent). For more information, visit: outskirtspress.com/africaisacontinent

18 LIBERATING MINDS TRANSFORMING LIVES SINCE 1868

IN MEMOR I A M
Kathryn A. Fountain 90 February 4, 2005 Patricia E. Winchcole Hill November 11, 2012 Loretta McKernan Rausin (sister of Emily Marie McKernan, SNJM 61 and Rita Josephine McKernan, SNJM 66) January 8, 2012 Margaret Pierce Cesa 63 November 8, 2011 Christine Terlizzi Neunsinger 75 February 6, 2012 John Raphael (father of Ana Raphael-Scott 89) February 6, 2012 Yvonne Valdez (former staff) February 13, 2012 Edward (Bart) Byrne 08 February 15, 2012 Grace Larsen (former faculty and staff) February 18, 2012 Marta Ormand Avila Medeira 45 (cousin of Rev. Henry Hank Ormond) February 23, 2012 Capt. Eugene Malone (father of Miriam Malone, SNJM 72 and Cora Jane Malone McFarren 78) February 24, 2012 Jack Kusters (brother of Kathy Kusters Herrington 64) March 1, 2012 Lucille Boero (mother of Linda Boero Cook) March 1, 2012 Lydia Eddy (mother of Miriam Mark Eddy, SNJM 66) March 2, 2012 Marie Pahl (mother of Frances Pahl Alling 67, Mary Pahl Retchless 70, and Johanna Pahl Conroy 72 and sister of Grace Dykzeul, SNJM 61) March 4, 2012 Louise DeVincenzi (mother of Mary DeVincenzi 69 ) March 5, 2012 Jack J. Baker (husband of Janis Brown Baker 50) March 7, 2012 Rosa Loughman (mother of Colleen Loughman 57 and Rosemary Loughman 65) March 8, 2012 Teresa Ann Zarnowski, SNJM 76, MEd (former Raskob faculty) March 9, 2012 Thelma Soldavini (mother of Marianne Soldavini, MEd 70) March 10, 2012 Willowdean Brown 63 2012 Anne Garin (Simon) Emerson 87 March 16, 2012 Cecilia Chan (aunt of Christina Meyer, staff) March 19, 2012 Barbara Kern Allen (sister of Colleen Kern, SNJM 62) March 20, 2012 Ron Brady (husband of Nancy Brady, former staff) March 22, 2012 Ruth Grady Cuddyre 46 March 22,2012 Margot Abrott-Merz 63 March 22, 2012 Fr. John McEnhill, SM (brother of Mary McEnhill McInerney 48 and Judith McEnhill Jasko 83) March 22, 2012 Adelemarie Dunne March 23, 2012 Barbara Marie Pedemonte Ulbrich 47 March 25, 2012 Kathryn Grady Clark April 4, 2012 Olga Anna Galletti 51 April 7, 2012 Mary V. Silva Ackerman 45 April 8, 2012 Hilary Grace Bryant (daughter of Andrea Brearcliff Bryant 60) April 8, 2012 John Loudin Reid (former faculty) April 11, 2012 Catherine Cathey Scotlan (sister of Joyce Scotlan 95) April 13, 2012 Robert Fagan (brother of Dianne Fagan, SNJM 66) April 14, 2012 Helen Erlwein Fauria 43 (mother of Elaine Fauria 79) April 30, 2012 Maura Tucker 06 May 1, 2012 Jean McCormick Valva 50 May 1, 2012 David Hamilton (brother of Rev. Ken Hamilton, SVD, Mass celebrant) May 3, 2012 Rosalie Estrada Juarez 79 May 16, 2012 Roberto Serna (uncle of Rebecca Hinckley 96, HNU staff) May 16, 2012 Honora Barnacle, PBVM, MA May 17, 2012 Carole Ann Angeli Benjamin 62 May 21, 2012 Antonia Molina (aunt of Rebecca Hinckley 96, HNU staff) May 22, 2012 Paul Siple (husband of Gerda Breitkopf Siple 57) May 22, 2012 Michael Joseph (Joe) Hester (brother of Maureen Hester, SNJM 57, friend of HNU) May 29, 2012 Mary Joan Duncan MA 77 May 26, 2012 Marjorie Mitchell Healey May 31, 2012 Rita M. Felix 62 June 8, 2012 Edith Evelyn Cattam Hinds-Wilson June 12, 2012 Antionette Schenone Egan 33 June 17, 2012 Christopher Joseph Spencer July 4, 2012 Patricia M. Caldbick Mohan MA 93 July 7, 2012 Lois Marie Clark Scanlon (Sr. Miriam Ann) July 15, 2012 Roberta Lee Nevitt MA 96 July 27, 2012 Margaret McDonald Elsbernd July 27, 2012 Debra J. Hawkins Lee 96 August 2, 2012 Wendell Brooks (husband of Cheryl Keller) August 3, 2012 Judith Lusk Kerstiens 54 August 11, 2012 Marilyn M. Faraudo Pellegrini 43 August 14, 2012 Rosalie Estrada Juarez 79 August 16, 2012 Hilda M. Costa (mother of Barry Costa 74) August 25, 2012 Jacqueline C. McAuley Hayes 51 August 26, 2012 Anne Dinneen (Michelle Denise), SNJM 65 August 29, 2012 Clifford R. Daulman 76 August 31, 2012 Robert Skoczulek (cousin of Nancy Flinn, HNU staff) September 21, 2012 Patricia Conrado Sullivan 39 (mother of Mary Sullivan Klein 73 and Kathleen Sullivan 74) September 28, 2012 Cyril T. Tom Bendorf (brother of Martha Bendorf, SNJM 43, and Margaret Bendorf Callahan 48) October 6, 2012 Louis Joseph Pagan (friend of HNU) October 8, 2012 Rev. Aaron Arce, OP (former Mass celebrant) October 9, 2012 Dorothy Doyle Reed Whitty October 9, 2012 Virginia Roesch (sister of Cornell Maier, HNU Regent) October, 10, 2012 Lydia Lopez (mother of Robert Lopez 91) October 14, 2012 Christa Marie Neary Bennetts October 16, 2012 Onnie Taylor (former faculty member) October 16, 2012 Madelyn Byron 49 October 23, 2012 Marion Joanne Miller Heydon 68 October 31, 2012 Joan M. Mullen 61 (cousin of Dianne Nixon, SNJM 67, Barbara Nixon, SNJM 67, and Beverly (Nixon) Harrison 69) November 3, 2012 Mary Garvin, SNJM (former Trustee) January 5, 2013

WINTER 2012|HNU TODAY19

LAST WORD

HO L Y NA M E S UN I V E R S I T Y

SESQUICENTENNIAL CAMPAIGN

In anticipation

forward

of the celebration of the 150th anniversary of the arrival in Oakland (from Canada) of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary, Holy Names University is launching the EVER FORWARD FUNDRAISING CAMPAIGN. The next five years will be devoted to reinvesting in the Universitys most precious assetsits students, faculty, and staff and enhancing campus facilities. The maintenance and perpetuation of the core values and legacy of the Sisters building the future and transforming livesis at the heart of this major fundraising activity. Early generous commitments are already being made in support of these plans. Watch here for further updates, or for more information contact: Richard Ortega Vice President for University Advancement (510) 436-1198 (510) 846-9983 Cell rortega@hnu.edu

Transforming Lives, Building the Future


20 LIBERATING MINDS TRANSFORMING LIVES SINCE 1868

Campaign Committee
Co-Chair
HNU is a vibrant and wonderful place to get an education. We have a great faculty and staff, and we are blessed with wonderful students. But we need your support and contributions to ensure that our facilities and endowments are able to continue for many years to come.

Board Chair

James D. Falaschi Managing Principal, Jack London Square Partners

Holy Names University is undertaking the largest fund raising campaign in its 150 year history. This event is happening at the same time as the University is making plans to celebrate a century and a half of the SNJMs providing education in the Oakland area. The money raised in the Ever Forward Fundraising Campaign will make a dramatic impact on the life of the University. HNU leaders are making major efforts to ensure that the focus of these two events will create a more outstanding learning environment at Holy Names University.

Alan Hyman Chairman, Fremont Bank

Co-Chair

Ann Reynolds Community Leader

HNU is an Oakland treasure. With our diverse student body and talented faculty, we offer an exceptional educational home to the Oakland community. I am thrilled that we are on this journey, and I hope that you will join the effort to move the campus into the 21st century and beyond.

Members:
Steven Borg Cynthia Canning, SNJM Carol Corrigan Jim Falaschi Alan Hyman James Kelly Cornell Maier Nikki Maziasz Ann Reynolds Ana Raphael-Scott Ronald Rosequist Loretta Smith Jim Vohs Eileen Weston Agnieszka Winkler

Ex Officio:
William J. Hynes, PhD Richard Ortega Carol Sellman, SNJM

WINTER 2012|HNU TODAY21

3500 Mountain Boulevard Oakland, CA 94619-1699 www.hnu.edu

Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage PAID Holy Names University

British Isles Music Festival


Saturday, February 9, 2013, 2 p.m. 7:30 p.m.
Valley Center for the Performing Arts In honor of Benjamin Brittens 100th birthday, we invite you to join us for a day of music from the British Isles. HNUs Music Department and Preparatory Music Department present a day of music from the British Isles, from the Renaissance to the 20th century. For more details, go to www.hnu.edu/musicevents

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