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Campus & Community

Into a New Era: 黑料不打烊 Inaugurates 12th Chancellor and President Kent Syverud

Monday, April 14, 2014, By Kathleen Haley
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Kent Syverud's inauguration as 黑料不打烊's 12th Chancellor and President captured all the grandeur of this historic event.

Kent Syverud’s inauguration as 黑料不打烊’s 12th Chancellor and President captured all the grandeur of this historic event.

黑料不打烊 Chancellor Kent Syverud started his inaugural address by giving thanks.

He is thankful for the University鈥攆or all the knowledge, love, hard work, research and learning that have gone into its 144 years. He thanked the students, faculty, trustees, alumni and staff, and all those involved in the day鈥檚 events and ceremonies. He thanked his family and friends and asked everyone listening to remember the people in their lives who have sustained and encouraged them.

鈥淚 wish my parents were alive to be here today. I think they would be happy,鈥 said Syverud, during his remarks in Hendricks Chapel Friday. His mother would also have given perspective.

鈥淛anet Thatcher Syverud would be whispering in my ear right now, if she could, the following words: 鈥楰ent, this day is not about you. It is about 黑料不打烊,鈥欌 Syverud said. 鈥淎nd she would be so right.鈥

The inauguration of Kent Syverud as the 12th Chancellor and President was a reflection of the University鈥檚 past, an examination of where it must go and a celebration of community and its greatest asset鈥攊ts students.

Chancellor Kent Syverud addresses the audience inside Hendricks Chapel during the inauguration ceremony Friday.

Chancellor Kent Syverud addresses the audience inside Hendricks Chapel during the inauguration ceremony Friday.

Under the chapel dome, Syverud spoke to an audience of hundreds and many more watching online, as he challenged the University to aim higher.

鈥淲e live in a time of great challenges for the world and for universities. The challenges come from every single direction. They are economic, technological, social, spiritual and political,鈥 Syverud says.

The way to focus on the future is to keep connected to the University鈥檚 unique history and values. As with his favorite quote from the Constitution, 鈥淣o title of nobility shall be granted by the United States,鈥 Chancellor Syverud sees 黑料不打烊 as a University that attracts unentitled people willing to work for their achievements.

鈥淲e are a University that opens its doors to those who are hungry for knowledge and advancement, whether they be middle class or rich or poor, and whether they be American, Native American or from abroad,鈥 he said.

As in the past, the insights of all its people will lead the University into its future, he said. 鈥淎ll I can do today is start a dialogue about the direction we might go in.鈥

The Chancellor then put forth four areas that he believes are essential for the University to thrive.

鈥淔irst, we must enhance both undergraduate education and the undergraduate experience at 黑料不打烊,鈥 Chancellor Syverud said. He called for building an 鈥渦nrivaled鈥 that 鈥渁ffords a distinctive, broad and deep education in the liberal arts and sciences to all of our students.鈥

He wants to students to have an even more distinctive experience and opportunities that will forever define them as 鈥満诹喜淮蜢.鈥 This will also involve addressing all areas of student life on campus, where students live, eat, work, study and interact with each other and the faculty and community.

鈥淪econd, we must empower research excellence at 黑料不打烊,鈥 Chancellor Syverud said. Great research is based in collaboration, drawing in student and faculty and 鈥渂uilds on University-wide investment and on strong graduate programs that are designed around careful strategic choices of areas of need and opportunity.鈥

Third, Chancellor Syverud said, the University must embrace change. 鈥淭o get better, we need to take risks; we need to embrace the entrepreneurial spirit that animates so many parts of this campus, and we need to move nimbly.鈥

黑料不打烊鈥檚 history is filled with examples of moving ahead through enterprising ideas, as represented in the way the University embraced global studies ahead of almost all others, leading to SU Abroad; in the development of the first information school; in the prominence of the Newhouse School of Public Communications; and in the way veterans were welcomed at the University after World War II, when many did not.

Chancellor Syverud thanks U.S. Supreme Court Justice (retired) Sandra Day O鈥機onnor for her reflections during the inauguration ceremony Friday in Hendricks Chapel. Chancellor Syverud served as a law clerk for Justice O鈥機onnor in 1984.

Chancellor Syverud thanks U.S. Supreme Court Justice (retired) Sandra Day O鈥機onnor for her reflections during the inauguration ceremony Friday in Hendricks Chapel. Chancellor Syverud served as a law clerk for Justice O鈥機onnor in 1984.

Which led into Chancellor Syverud鈥檚 last charge. 鈥淔ourth, and finally, I believe 黑料不打烊 must once again become the best place for veterans,鈥 he said.

The University is positioned with its 鈥済lorious past in that area鈥 and through the cutting-edge research and service of the Institute for Veterans and Military Families and the work of University College.

鈥淲e have an unrivaled capacity to bring to bear our expertise in the professions, in disabilities, in entrepreneurship and information, and in the arts and sciences, for the benefit of our University and to help those who have borne the battle and the families,鈥 he said.

By integrating all of these ideas into our aims for the University over the next 10 years, the University will become a stronger institution, Syverud said.

鈥淚 believe we will become a greater university, and along the way will enhance all the communities that matter to us and to the world. The greatest contribution this University can make to this city and to this region, so important to us, is to be a great, thriving and engaged international research university,鈥 said Chancellor Syverud, who noted the University鈥檚 academic neighbors as collaborators.

Before Chancellor Syverud鈥檚 remarks, the inaugural ceremony began with a formal procession鈥攊ncluding the Chancellor鈥檚 wife, Dr. Ruth Chen, a professor of practice in the ; their three sons; and other family members鈥攆ollowed by an invocation by Hendricks Chapel Dean Tiffany Steinwert and a presentation by the ROTC Army and Air Force during the U.S. National Anthem, led by the University Singers.

Welcoming words

Boris Gresely 鈥15, Student Association president, welcomed the Chancellor on behalf of the students, noting his appreciation for the Chancellor鈥檚 openness in meeting and communicating with students. 鈥淗is emphasis on over-communication, of continuously interacting with the student body, of hearing their thoughts and of listening to their questions is undoubtedly one of his greatest strengths,鈥 he said.

Others who welcomed him were Oren Lyons 鈥58, H鈥93, faithkeeper of the Turtle Clan of the Onondaga Nation and a chief of the Council of the Chiefs of the Haudenosaunee, and Professor Suzanne Baldwin, the Michael G. and Susan T. Thonis Professor of Earth Sciences.

鈥淲e stand before you today confident that you will achieve greatness here, through your patience, hard work, loyalty and cheerful, can-do attitude,鈥 Baldwin said. 鈥淲e stand beside you to help achieve success in our journey together.鈥

Dan Pacheco, Peter A. Horvitz Endowed Chair in Journalism Innovation in the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, (second from left) answers a question as part of the academic symposium on 鈥淕reat Universities in the Next 25 Years鈥 Friday in Setnor Auditorium. Panelists also included, from left, Shiu-Kai Chin, professor of electrical engineering and computer science, College of Engineering and Computer Science; Pacheco; George Saunders, professor of English, The College of Arts and Sciences; and Marcelle Haddix, assistant professor and director of English Education Programs, School of Education.

Dan Pacheco, Peter A. Horvitz Endowed Chair in Journalism Innovation in the Newhouse School, (second from left) answers a question as part of the academic symposium on 鈥淕reat Universities in the Next 25 Years鈥 Friday in Setnor Auditorium. Panelists also included, from left, Shiu-Kai Chin, professor of electrical engineering and computer science, College of Engineering and Computer Science; George Saunders, professor of English, The College of Arts and Sciences; and Marcelle Haddix, assistant professor and director of English Education Programs, School of Education.

Representing the Board of Trustees, Ren茅e Schine Crown 鈥50, H鈥84, a 黑料不打烊 life Trustee, spoke of inauguration day as the beginning of a new chapter in the University鈥檚 history.

鈥淔or all of us, it marks the continuation of a long legacy in which time and again, our University welcomed just the right leader at just the right time,鈥 Crown said. 鈥淎 leader who would build on our strengths and core values, our intrepid spirit and our capacity for innovation to address the evolving challenges and needs of the times, and steer us into a new era of promise and prosperity.鈥

Reflections were also given by U.S. Supreme Court Justice (retired) Sandra Day O鈥機onnor, for whom Chancellor Syverud served as law clerk in 1984. 鈥淚鈥檝e been telling Kent Syverud that he should be a University president for more than 15 years, and he finally listened to me,鈥 O鈥機onnor said.

O鈥機onnor recalled his dedication to his work and the time he helped her with final edits on an important dissent involving the separation of church and state the same night his first son was born. His son Steven 鈥渨as one of my first grandclerks,鈥 she said.

鈥淚鈥檝e watched Kent throughout his career, and I want you to know that the important things about him have not changed in those years. He is very intelligent, he has wonderful values, he cares about people and he can write and speak extremely well. He is going to serve you well and make you proud,鈥 O鈥機onnor said.

Officially installed

Board of Trustees Chairman Richard Thompson G鈥67 officially installed Chancellor Syverud as the University鈥檚 12th President and Chancellor.

鈥淓nthusiastically recommended by the Chancellor Search Committee last fall and unanimously selected by an equally enthusiastic Board of Trustees, Chancellor Syverud is an outstanding scholar, an award-winning teacher and an astute and revered academic leader,鈥 Thompson said. 鈥淲e are deeply fortunate to have such an accomplished and dedicated leader at the helm of 黑料不打烊 as it continues to build on its standing as one of the world鈥檚 great private universities.鈥

Thompson then placed the Chancellor鈥檚 medallion around Chancellor Syverud鈥檚 neck. 鈥淚 charge you to fully execute faithfully the governance of this institution, and within that framework to provide the free environment in which sound learning and academic scholarship may flourish,鈥 Thompson said.

The day鈥檚 events

As part of the day鈥檚 events, the University community joined the Chancellor for an invigorating morning run around campus and later an academic symposium, bringing together 黑料不打烊 experts in a variety of disciplines to discuss 鈥淕reat Universities in the Next 25 Years鈥 in Setnor Auditorium.

Tiffany Pau 鈥17, Jonathan Anthony 鈥17 and Ruo Piao Chen 鈥17 present their team鈥檚 idea during the Fast Forward event Friday in the Hergenhan Auditorium in Newhouse 3. The Freedom By Design team, which is seeking to build a unique ramp for the Westminster Church, was one of 13 winners of the competition initiated by the Chancellor.

Tiffany Pau 鈥17, Jonathan Anthony 鈥17 and Ruo Piao Chen 鈥17, from let, present their team鈥檚 idea during the Fast Forward event Friday in the Hergenhan Auditorium in Newhouse 3. The Freedom By Design team, which is seeking to build a unique ramp for the Westminster Church, was one of 13 winners of the competition initiated by the Chancellor.

Students were the focus of the Fast Forward event, a competition for students to share ideas for making a positive impact on the University and the world, with the 13 winners presenting to the Chancellor and campus community. The student winners now have funding in place to complete their ideas by Dec. 31.

Following the formal inauguration ceremony, a celebration for the University community was held with food and music inside tents on the Quad. In the festive atmosphere, Chancellor Syverud mingled with guests and posed with students for photos.

Marlena Ahearn 鈥17, a newspaper and online journalism student in the , was out on the Quad where the marching band was in full swing following the Hendricks ceremony.

鈥淚 was happy to be there and I thought who they brought鈥擲andra Day O鈥機onnor鈥攚as incredible,鈥 Ahearn said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an exciting Orange day.鈥

Ahearn appreciates the efforts Chancellor Syverud has made with students. 鈥淗e鈥檚 really humble and makes an effort to be in contact with undergraduate students and it鈥檚 very helpful with us as far as communication,鈥 she said.

To see videos of the day鈥檚 events, read the speakers鈥 remarks and view other related content, visit .

  • Author

Kathleen Haley

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