VOL.10
NO. 4 SPRING 2001
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O U N D E R S D AY 2 0 0 1
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“You are not here merely to make a living. You are here to enable
the world to live more amply, with greater vision, and with a finer
spirit of hope and achievement. You are here to enrich the world.
You impoverish yourself if you forget this errand.”
—Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924)
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It is often said that if you want to get something done, ask a busy
person to do it. Those individuals who were chosen to receive the Honorary
Alumnus and Distinguished Alumni Awards at the Founders Day event February
21, 2001, are representative of that maxim. Keeping busy, in the spirit
of enriching the world, is clearly what they do very well.
Each is an exemplary representative of the University. On behalf of
the entire U of U community, the Alumni Association is pleased to honor
them.
Honorary Alumnus Award
Although
Clark Giles is a graduate of Harvard University and its law school,
he embodies the essence of Utah spirit. A regular at U of U football games
and gymnastic competitions, he serves as acting advisor to the campaign
to restore historic Fort Douglas, and is a member of the College of Fine
Arts Advisory Board and the National Advisory Council. As a member of
the Ray Quinney & Nebeker Foundation and the S.J. and Jessie E. Quinney
Foundation, and chair of the Emma Eccles Jones Foundation, he has played
a key role in the capital improvements of the University.
Distinguished Alumni Awards
Author, lecturer, and leadership guru, Stephen Covey BS’53 became
nationally recognized
with the publication of his book, The 7 Habits of Highly Effective
People, which sold over 12 million copies in 33 languages and reached
number one on the New York Times bestseller list. Covey is cofounder/vice
chairman of Franklin Covey Company (previously Franklin Quest). For over
thirty years he has trained leaders in business, industry, education,
and government. His vast clientele includes such corporations as IBM,
Procter & Gamble, DuPont, Bonneville International, Caldwell Banker, Hewlett-Packard,
and US West. He has received wide recognition for his achievements, including
four honorary degrees.
The
son of a migrant worker, Mickey Ibarra MED’80 is proof that the
“American Dream” can be realized (see Continuum, Winter 1998-99). From
June 1997 to January 2001, Ibarra served as the U.S. Director of Intergovernmental
Affairs in the Clinton Administration, one of only 20 people to hold the
rank of assistant to the President. Prior to his White House appointment,
Ibarra had dedicated his career to education, teaching for five years
in Utah’s public schools and representing the nation’s educators for 16
years with state and national education associations. He also served as
political manager at the National Education Association and has been a
longtime political activist.
In 1956, while on a fellowship in the United Kingdom, Thomas Rees
BA’46 MD’48 ,
in collaboration with his tutor, Sir Archibald McIndoe, and a colleague,
Dr. Michael Wood, formed the Flying Doctors Service of East Africa, a
project that would bring, for the first time, reconstructive surgery to
the region. The organization evolved into the African Medical and Research
Foundation (AMREF). In October 1999, the foundation received the Conrad
N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize, the largest humanitarian award in the world
($1 million). The author of six medical books, Dr. Rees serves as clinical
professor of plastic surgery and senior surgeon at the Institute for Reconstructive
Surgery at New York University.
Jane
Summerhays BA’67 has carved out a remarkable career in musical theatre
in New York. In 1987 she won the prestigious Drama Desk Award and was
nominated for a Tony Award as “Best Featured Actress” in a musical for
her work in Me and My Girl. She has appeared in other Broadway
and off-Broadway productions, including A Chorus Line, Promises
Promises, Good News, Broadway Gypsies, and Sugar
Babies. Summerhays has also given generously of her time, taking leadership
roles in humanitarian projects such as the Broadway Musical Project—Tel
Aviv/New York, the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation, the Holy Cross Theatre
Workshop, and the Broadway Christmas Boutique.
Continuum
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