Changing the World (Jan-Feb 2012)

7
jan./feb. 2012 Alumni gifts breathe new life into a beloved campus green space FIELD OF DREAMS WHAT YOUR INVESTMENT IN UT MAKES POSSIBLE

description

What your investment in UT makes possible. Along with UT’s faculty, staff, and students, its alumni and friends are out there changing the world every day. It may start on campus, but it continues with you.

Transcript of Changing the World (Jan-Feb 2012)

jan./feb. 2012

Alumni gifts breathe new life into a beloved campus green spacefield of dreams

THE WORLD

what your investment in ut makes possible

Make a gift to UT

giving.utexas.edu/CampaignForTexas866-4UTEXAS

How is your university changing the world?

The Campaign for Texas is a major fundraising effort to increase

UT’s quality, competitiveness, and impact. Right now, with help

from donors like you, The University of Texas at Austin is tackling

cancer, researching new diabetes treatments, developing

technology for new fuels, addressing social issues, fostering

the arts and humanities, and much more. So far 27% of UT

alumni have given to the college, school, program, or department

that is dearest to them during the campaign. Join us in supporting

your university. Large or small, every gift matters.

Our goal is to be the best public university in the nation.

Our mission is to change the world.

CAVEN LACROSSE AND SPORTS CENTER AT CLARK FIELDCampus favorite gets new look, new features, new name

PUBLISHER, AUTHOR, ARTISTFleur Cowles’ archive comes to UT

ENHANCING THE UNIVERSITY FOR 10 YEARSHarrington Fellows Program enters second decade

TRAINING TOMORROW’SENERGY-INDUSTRY WORKFORCESoftware donations help UT do more with less reprinted from jan./feb. 2012

cover: Texas Lacrosse has a new campus home.

credit: Brian Birzer Photography

above: Scholars and faculty come together at a Harrington Fellows gathering. The program has drawn academic stars from 94 universities.

credit: Marsha Miller

What your investment in UT makes possible

Contents

changing the world

58| The

changing the worldWhat your investment in UT makes possible

Alumni Drive Clark Field Revamp

L acrosse, anyone? students can now enjoy that and other club and intramural sports on a newly renovated Clark Field, thanks

to two Houston families with strong ties to the University. The $4 million project was made possible largely through private gifts. The Divi-sion of Recreational Sports, which manages the facility, covered the remainder and continues to raise supporting funds. Located west of San Jacinto Boulevard and south of 21st Street, the popular green space now features a synthetic turf playing surface, a refurbished track, new exercise stations, restrooms and lockers, and a new pedestrian bridge across Waller Creek.

Former chair of the UT System Board of Regents H. Scott Caven Jr., BBA ’64, LLB ’67, and his wife, Vivien Caven, BS ’72, Life Members, made the first major gift to launch the renova-tion. The couple wanted to upgrade Clark Field, make it accessible to more students, and rede-velop it to accommodate Texas Lacrosse, one of the best collegiate programs in the Southwest.

The Cavens first approached UT about reno-vating the field in 2005 in memory of their son, Scotty Caven, a Plan II Honors student whose athletic passion was lacrosse, and in honor of the many family members who have been involved with UT for more than 90 years. In recognition of their dedication and leadership, along with their steadfast support for the sport, the field has been renamed Caven Lacrosse and Sports Center at Clark Field.

“This day is special for my family and me as we help create a permanent home for men’s and women’s lacrosse,” Scott Caven said at the cen-ter’s November dedication. “I am honored that through the generosity of many contributors, UT students will enjoy the wonderful experiences that many of us alumni had, participating in a variety of sports on this historic field.”

The other major commitment to the renova-tion came from longtime UT supporters Gary Crum, MBA ’72, and his wife, Sylvie Crum, BA ’74, Life Members. The Crums’ daughter, Clayton, is

credits: This page: Brian Birzer Photography; Opposite: Harry Ransom Center

field of dreams

clockwise from center: Scott Caven helps dedicate the Caven Lacrosse and Sports Center at Clark Field; the women’s lacrosse club conducts an intrasquad scrimmage the first day at its new home; the Longhorn Band lends some musical pomp to the festivities.

s e p t e m b e r | o c t o b e r 2 0 1 1 |59

Publisher, author, artist Fleur cowles’ archive comes to Ut

A s a humanities research library and museum housing some of the world’s finest cultural collections, UT’s Harry Ransom Center has always had a certain flair. Now it has the complete Flair, following the donation of the

personal archive of Fleur Cowles (1908–2009). Cowles published Flair, a magazine celebrated for its provocative design, enlightened articles, and sophisticated advertising layouts, in 1950-51. Its brief run left an indelible mark on publishing, and the archive documents that period with Cowles’ correspondence, manuscripts, galleys, research material, albums, books, press clippings, and photographs.

With Flair, Cowles prescribed a rich mix of works from writers, artists, critics, and other notables, including Tennessee Williams, W.H. Auden, Simone de Beauvoir, Salvador Dalí, Jean Cocteau, Rufino Tamayo, and Gypsy Rose Lee. The heart of the magazine was its success in pulling together the new, the controversial, the innovative, and the creative. The archive documents her efforts to merge literature and art through her wide-ranging relationships and creative endeavors.

Cowles and her husband, Tom Meyer, had a longstanding relationship with the Ransom Center, and the Ransom Center has an endowment named in their honor. It supports a graduate internship program, the biennial Fleur Cowles Flair Symposium, research fellowships, and a replica of Cowles’ study from her London residence. “Fleur was very interested in the Ransom Center and our aim to bring together literary and artistic achievements of the 20th century,” says center director Tom Staley.

In addition to her work in publishing, Cowles was an author and artist. She wrote more than 15 books, including a biography of Dalí, and exhibited her artwork in galleries and museums around the world. Some works are on display in the center’s Fleur Cowles Room.

a co-captain of the women’s lacrosse team, and Sylvie Crum is former chair of the Longhorn Foundation Advisory Council.

The original Clark Field, named for UT proc-tor and regent James Benjamin Clark, was at 24th and Speedway and was used by the athletic teams from 1887 to 1927, when the University claimed the land to build Taylor Hall. The next location made way in the 1970s for the College of Fine Arts and Performing Arts Center, and the field has stayed put at its current site since then. Now, in addition to being a magnet for students who enjoy jogging and getting an outdoor work-out, Caven Lacrosse and Sports Center at Clark Field will serve as a championship-quality cam-pus venue that replaces Whitaker Fields, three miles north, as home for Texas Lacrosse.

Support is still needed for Caven Lacrosse and Sports Center at Clark Field. Visit utrecsports.org/friends/initiatives/clarkfield.php. Donors of $1,000 or more through Feb. 1 will be named on a plaque to be installed this spring.

Movers and Shakers: Fleur Cowles’ Flair magazine was one of many notable projects in a remark-able, century-spanning life. Cowles liked to surround herself with movers and shakers, as here with Ransom Center director Tom Staley and playwright Tom Stoppard, whose archive also resides at UT.

“ I am honored that through

the generosity of many

contributors, UT students

will enjoy the wonderful

experiences that many of

us alumni had, participating

in a variety of sports on

this historic field.”

60| The

changing the worldWhat your investment in UT makes possible

I f the names donald and sybil harrington are familiar, it could be because they built a hugely successful independent Texas oil and gas operation — or because they chose to share their good fortune to aid worthy causes. The

Amarillo couple married in 1935 and later created the Don and Sybil Harrington Foundation to benefit medicine, education, and the arts. Today the Harrington legacy remains far-reaching, not only in the Texas Panhandle but across the nation. After Donald’s 1974 death, Sybil, who lived another 24 years, conceived the idea of a fellowship in his honor, a program to support gifted and ambitious young scholars of all disciplines at levels matching or exceeding prestigious longstanding programs.

credits: Marsha Miller except Harrington portrait, courtesy Harrington family

Distinguished Alumnus and fellow Amaril-loan Wales Madden, Jr., BA ’50, LLB ’52, Life Member, was instrumental in bringing together Sybil, the Harrington Foundation (now affiliated with the Amarillo Area Foundation), and the University to create the Donald D. Harrington Fellows Program. Madden worked with former UT president William Cunningham, the late Shirley Bird Perry, and then-executive vice president and provost Gerhard Fonken to design the framework, and the first Donald D. Har-rington Fellowships were awarded in 2001. Since then, scholars from 94 universities in the United

enhancing UTPrestigious Harrington Fellows Program Enters Second Decade

States and 10 other nations have received 48 faculty fellowships and 102 graduate fellowships.

These highly sought-after fellowships have a considerable impact at UT: they enhance its reputation among the world’s top universities, encourage relationships with those institutions, and bring to campus some of the brightest scholars out there. Dedicating themselves to a period of intense study in their chosen field, Harrington fellows collaborate and explore ideas together and with other scholars on campus. They attend events like receptions and lunches that build a sense of community. Some fellows

s e p t e m b e r | o c t o b e r 2 0 1 1 |61

T ake America’s largest geosciences school —the Jackson School of

Geosciences — and its top univer-sity petroleum and geosystems engineering program — at the Cockrell School of Engineering — connect them with some of the world’s leading geotechnology soft-ware companies, and the synergy that results is no small wonder.

Landmark Graphics Corporation (a subsidiary of Halliburton Company), Schlumberger Technology Corporation, Paradigm, Seismic Micro-Tech-nology, Inc., and IHS Global, Inc., produce cutting-edge computer applications that help oil and gas companies improve business performance while reducing explora-tion and development risk. The software these companies create represents the state of the art in energy-related fields, so it’s only natural that UT, a major pipeline of personnel and expertise to the energy industry, uses it regularly as a teaching and learning tool. And thanks to more than $208 million in software donations from these corporate partners over the past five years, the University has been able to do more with less, a necessity in tight budgetary times.

Professor Mary Wheeler, director of the Center for Subsurface Modeling, says the donated software has had a profound impact on training students in areas such as enhanced oil recovery and carbon sequestration. “These contributions have been valuable in ensuring that we’re working with proper and effective data, so that we can remain a frontrunner in academia and research,” Wheeler says. “They help the University continue to graduate tomorrow’s leaders in the oil and gas industry.”

sofTware donaTions help Train Tomorrow’s energy-indUsTry workforce

Changing the World is produced by the University Development Office. Please send your feedback and suggestions to editor Jamey Smith at [email protected]. For more news and information about giving to UT, visit giving.utexas.edu.

present their work to the Ama-rillo community at an annual all-day symposium.

Perhaps most important, the program provides a boost to the careers of highly talented indi-viduals, benefiting not just them but all of society. Michael Pettes, a 2005 fellow who came to UT from Duke University, received his doctorate and now continues to research carbon nanotubes as a postdoc in the Cockrell School of Engineering ’s Advanced Manufacturing Center. Pettes

and his colleagues are producing new insights on a material with tremendous potential in elec-tronics and other fields. Harrington support in his first year at the University provided “unparal-leled intellectual stimulation from some of the world’s brightest minds,” he says. “The fellowship allowed for focus on research with significantly more risk and longer timelines than would have otherwise been possible.”

Yale law professor John Fabian Witt’s faculty fellowship allowed him to write a book, which came out in 2007: Patriots and Cosmopolitans: Hidden Histories of American Law. “The extraordinary generosity of the Harrington Fellows Program, along with the warm collegiality of colleagues at UT, shaped the book in ways that made it far better than it otherwise would have been,” he says. “I’ll always be grateful for the timely assis-tance the Harrington program and UT offered.”

Not all Harrington fellows remain in academia. Kimberly Hopkins arrived via UC Santa Barbara and completed her PhD in mathematics in 2010. Now a senior associate with a national tax-consulting firm, Hopkins says activities outside the classroom were a large part of her success at UT, and that her fellowship made many of those things possible. Conferences she was able to attend, for instance, enabled her to mix with and learn from others in her discipline. At the same time, like all recipients she had the chance to focus deeply on her research. “That skill of applying intensity and ambition to get a job done — it transferred to my job search and to the way I do my job now.”

Learn more about the Donald D. Harrington Fellows Program at utexas.edu/harrington.

As of January 1, 2012, alumni and friends had made

nearly 800,000 gifts to the Campaign for Texas,

contributing $1.8 billion toward the campaign’s $3 billion goal.

Donors have funded 951 new endowments since the campaign

began, representing 19% of UT’s total number of 5,009

endowments. The value of these new funds will continue to grow,

but already they are projected to provide $13 million for the 2011-12

academic year, directly benefiting the students, faculty, and programs they

were created to support.

opposite, clockwise from lower right: Sybil and Don Harrington in the 1940s; Victoria Rodriguez, vice provost and dean of the Graduate School, foreground, chats with fellows at a 2009 dinner; a 2005 reception at the Littlefield Home. above: Postdoctoral fellow Reza Tavakoli uses donated software at UT’s Center for Subsurface Modeling. The center studies the behavior of fluids in permeable geologic formations like petroleum and natural gas reservoirs.

campaign updateUnparalleled intellectual stimulation from some of the world’s brightest minds

giving.utexas.edu/campaign