Trojans Bid Farewell to Joseph Aoun
Photo/Steven Cohn
“I look at our life here at USC as the best part of our existence,” said Aoun, who attended the event with his wife, Zeina, and their sons, Adrian Marwane and Joseph Karim, both USC students. “And I mean it. This has been a special moment, a small 25-year moment in our lives.”
USC President Steven B. Sample told the audience that he clearly understood why Northeastern University had hired Aoun as president of the 28,000-student campus in Boston.
“It’s his uncompromisingly high standards,” Sample said.
Aoun will take office as the seventh president of Northeastern in August. Peter Starr, professor of French and comparative literature and currently dean of undergraduate programs in the College, will act as interim dean, effective July 1. A search committee is being formed to recruit a permanent successor.
“The second thing was that Joseph was interdisciplinary in his approach,” Sample continued. “He really believed in bringing people together across disciplines. Not just across disciplines with the College, but across disciplines between one school and another professional school.
“Another thing was his fund-raising ability,” Sample said. “They loved that.”
USC Trustee Pat Haden, chair of the Tradition & Innovation Initiative launched in September 2005, said that under Aoun’s leadership the College reached the halfway mark in the fund-raising effort and has raised $200 million.
During Aoun’s tenure, College fund-raising rose from an average of $18 million per year to $40 million in 2005, a sum already surpassed in 2006.
Aoun, holder of the Anna H. Bing Dean’s Chair and professor of linguistics, has written seven books and earned two USC Phi Kappa Phi Faculty Recognition awards. He also won the USC Associates Award for Creativity in Research and Scholarship, the university’s highest honor for research.
“Heaven knows the man has energy,” said Beth Meyerowitz, professor of psychology and preventive medicine and former College dean of faculty. “The qualities he brings to Northeastern will assure his success there.”
Among the many honors Aoun received Monday was a citation by the USC Board of Trustees, which named his Senior Faculty Hiring Initiative as one of his major accomplishments. Since the initiative launched in 2002, the College faculty has increased from 350 to nearly 500.
The citation also credited Aoun with the addition of 11 endowed chairs and professorships. He oversaw an unprecedented 51 percent increase in the College’s sponsored research funding and the construction of two state-of-the-art buildings, the Dornsife Cognitive Neuroscience Imaging Center and the Molecular and Computational Biology Building.
Important partnerships also were formed under Aoun’s leadership. These include the USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and Education, the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West, the USC-Huntington Institute for Early Modern Studies and two collaborations with the Getty Research Institute.
Aoun was extremely supportive of the Joint Educational Project, one of the nation’s oldest and largest service-learning programs.
“He’s been one of the only deans in our history to completely understand and be a strong advocate of our program,” JEP Director Tammara Anderson later said. “I told one of our community partners that he was leaving and she said, ‘No! He can’t go!’ ”
Aoun also launched the Korean Studies and Armenian Studies institutes.
“Joseph, we are in your debt,” Sample told Aoun. “We wish you and Zeina God’s Speed and every possible success in your new assignment.”
While celebrating Aoun’s sweeping accomplishments, many expressed sadness at the departure of a cherished friend.
“We’re going to miss him for many, many reasons,” said Delta Murphy, a USC alumna and chair of the USC Wrigley Institute for Environmental Studies Advisory Board. “But mainly we’ll miss him because he is a dear, dear man.”
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The Chronicle of Higher Education mentioned USC’s $6 billion fundraising campaign. The story noted that USC had already raised $1 billion in a “quiet phase,” including the $200 million naming gift from USC Trustee and alumnus David Dornsife and wife Dana Dornsife to the USC Dornsife College.
The Guardian (U.K.) highlighted two major gifts to USC in a list of the 10 biggest philanthropic benefactors in America. The list included the $200 million naming gift from USC Trustee and alumnus David Dornsife and wife Dana Dornsife to the USC Dornsife College, and the $110 million gift from USC Trustee and USC Viterbi School alumnus John Mork and wife Julie to create the USC Mork Family Scholars Program.
The New York Times featured the USC U.S.-China Institute documentary “Assignment: China — The Week that Changed the World.” The documentary, part of a series, examines media coverage of the 1972 Nixon trip that reshaped U.S.-China relations after a quarter century of isolation and hostility. “People look back now and take it for granted that the outcome was preordained,” said the institute’s Mike Chinoy, who produced the documentary. Voice of America also featured the story.
Los Angeles Times featured the Oscar Senti-meter, a tool developed by the USC Annenberg School, Los Angeles Times and IBM that analyzes thousands of tweets about the Academy Awards nominees. The story noted that Mexican actor Demian Bechir received an enormous boost on Twitter the day of the nominations, with a total of 6,893 tweets mentioning him, a 47-fold increase from the day before. The story noted the tool uses language-recognition technology developed in collaboration with USC Viterbi School’s Signal Analysis and Interpretation Lab.
The Times of India (India) featured a three-day medical emergency training workshop organized in association with USC. At the workshop, held at GCS Medical College in India, 50 doctors and more than 100 paramedics learned how to improve emergency support systems. William Mallon of the Keck School of USC said that discussion topics included the use of portable ultrasonic devices to scan patients. “The ultrasound applications help physicians make accurate and timely decisions,” he noted. Daily News & Analysis (India) also featured the workshop.
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