tag:news.nd.edu,2005:/news/authors/dennis-moore tag:news.nd.edu,2005:/latest Notre Dame News | Notre Dame News | News 2002-08-06T20:00:00-04:00 Notre Dame News gathers and disseminates information that enhances understanding of the University’s academic and research mission and its accomplishments as a Catholic institute of higher learning. tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5961 2002-08-06T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:56:22-04:00 University bars campus tailgating during games The University of Notre Dame no longer will permit tailgate parties while football games are under way in Notre Dame Stadium. The new policy is in response to a growing incidence of alcohol-related problems—including public intoxication, drinking games, gambling, fighting and vandalism—stemming from daylong parties that continue even as the games are being played.p. “This is not a prohibition of all tailgating,” stressed Phillip A. Johnson, assistant director of Notre Dame Security/Police, in announcing the new policy. "Tailgating before and after games is a great game-day tradition—a time for reunions of family, friends, and alumni—and the University is pleased to serve as the host for these gatherings. Increasingly in recent years, however, some people have used football Saturdays as simply an excuse to stage all-day drinking parties in the University’s parking lots, virtually oblivious to the games—and to the best interests of the great majority of our fans and guests.p.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5924 2002-07-10T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:56:21-04:00 Haynes named first director of DeBartolo Performing Arts Center John A. Haynes, formerly chief executive officer of the California Center for the Arts, has been named the first executive director of the University of Notre Dame’s new Marie P. DeBartolo Center for the Performing Arts. His appointment is effective August 1.p. As chief administrator of the DeBartolo Center, Haynes will be its representative to the campus community and the world at-large; his mission will be to help raise the profile of the arts at Notre Dame through the vehicle of its new performance spaces. He will manage the center’s day-to-day operations; serve as liaison with the University’s academic departments and other constituencies and, equally important, with the local and national arts communities; oversee all nonacademic artistic programming; and play a central role in the center’s marketing and fund-raising activities.p.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/6706 2002-07-08T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:56:48-04:00 Woo to appear tonight on Lehrer News Hour p. Carolyn Woo, Martin J. Gillen Dean of the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business, will appear tonight on the Lehrer News Hour as part of a panel discussing today’s speech by President Bush on corporate responsibility. The segment will begin with an interview of Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, then shift to the panel discussion with Woo; Damon Silvers, who is associate counsel of the AFL-CIO; and Joseph Grundfest of Stanford University.p. The News Hour airs at 7 pm Eastern, 6 pm Central, on PBS network stations.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/6684 2002-05-16T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:56:48-04:00 Beauchamp named senior vice president at University of Portland p. Rev. E. William Beauchamp, C.S.C., executive vice president emeritus and special assistant to the president of the University of Notre Dame, has been named to the newly created post of senior vice president at the University of Portland.p. The appointment, effective August 1, 2002, was announced by Rev. David T. Tyson, C.S.C., Portland’s president. The University of Portland, like Notre Dame, is affiliated with the Congregation of Holy Cross. Father Beauchamp has been a member of Portland’s Board of Regents since 2001. He will continue as a member of Notre Dame’s Board of Trustees and as a Fellow of the University.p. As senior vice president, Father Beauchamp will be responsible for Portland’s division of university relations and its department of athletics. He also will serve as the university’s investment officer and, in that role, will assist the investment committee of its board. He will oversee Portland’s legal affairs and coordinate university planning with Brother Donald Stabrowski, C.S.C., the current academic vice president who will assume the newly created position of provost on August 1.p. Father Beauchamp’s responsibilities at Portland closely track those he carried out as executive vice president of Notre Dame from 1987-2000. The executive vice president is the third-ranking officer of the University, after the president and provost, with responsibilities including finance, business operations, human resources, and campus construction.p. As executive vice president, Father Beauchamp was responsible for Notre Dame’s endowment as it grew to more than $3 billion, directed a major restructuring of its budgeting procedures as the annual operating budget approached $500 million, and oversaw the human resources operations for its 3,900 employees. Under his direction, the campus construction program played an integral role in advancing the academic mission of the University and improving student life. Among the major projects initiated during his tenure were DeBartolo Hall, one of the most technologically advanced classroom facilities in higher education; the Mendoza College of Business complex; four undergraduate residence halls; the expansion and renovation of Notre Dame Stadium; the Warren Golf Course; the Eck Center, which houses the Hammes Notre Dame Bookstore, the Notre Dame Alumni Association, and the Eck Visitors’ Center; the Coleman/Morse building; Malloy Hall; and, perhaps the crown jewel among his projects, the renovation of Notre Dame’s historic Main Building.p. Also overseeing athletics, Father Beauchamp was the architect of Notre Dame’s groundbreaking television contract with NBC and orchestrated the University’s entrance into the Big East Conference.p. In addition to his administrative responsibilities at Notre Dame, Father Beauchamp has taught business law in the University’s Mendoza College of Business. He also serves as steward for the Indiana Province of the Congregation of Holy Cross.p. Father Beauchamp was born May 17, 1942, in Detroit to Edward F. and Marion K. Beauchamp. He was graduated from the University of Detroit in 1964 with a bachelor’s degree in accounting and received an MBA degree from Detroit two years later. He returned to his alma mater in 1989 to be honored as its alumnus of the year.p. Father Beauchamp taught accounting and served as associate director of admissions at Alma College in Michigan from 1967-72. He attended the Notre Dame Law 91Ƶ from 1972-75 and, after earning his degree, returned to Alma to work as an attorney in the firm of Goggin, Baker and Beauchamp.p. Father Beauchamp entered Moreau Seminary at Notre Dame in January 1977, received a Master of Divinity degree in 1981 and was ordained a priest April 17, 1982. He served as executive assistant to his predecessor, Rev. Edmond P. Joyce, C.S.C., and, subsequently, to then-University president Rev. Theodore M. Hesburgh, C.S.C., from 1980-87, when he was elected executive vice president.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/6689 2002-05-02T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:55:35-04:00 Nanni elected vice president for University relations p. Louis M. Nanni, currently vice president for public affairs and communication at the University of Notre Dame, today was elected vice president for University relations by the Board of Trustees. The appointment is effective July 1.p. Nanni, 40, succeeds William P. Sexton, 64, who is retiring as an officer and returning full-time to his position as professor of management in the University’s Mendoza College of Business. Nanni’s successor will be named at a later date.p. In his new position, Nanni will direct the University’s development operation, the Notre Dame Alumni Association, and the offices of special events and international advancement. He assumes those responsibilities after having served for the past year as vice president of the newly created division of public affairs and communication. In that role, he crafted a new structure for four departments that formerly had been part of University relations?public relations and information, community relations, University communications design (formerly publications), and Notre Dame Magazine?plus a new department of governmental relations.p. “In building a new division over the past year, Lou Nanni has demonstrated his great energy, vision and charismatic leadership skills. Now he will turn those talents to the critical areas of alumni relations, international outreach, and securing the additional resources Notre Dame needs as we live out our mission as a great Catholic university,” Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., Notre Dame’s president, said in announcing the Board action.p. “Along with his legacy of historic success as vice president of University relations, Bill Sexton has left a unique and lasting personal stamp on those efforts,” Father Malloy said. “His accomplishments and style will make him an enduring figure in the story of Notre Dame.”p. A member of the Notre Dame faculty for 36 years, Sexton has headed University relations since 1983. He directed the University’s last two major capital campaigns, each of which concluded as the most successful in the history of Catholic higher education to that time.p. The most recent of these efforts, “Generations”, made Notre Dame the first Catholic university to achieve a $1-billion-plus fund-raising campaign.p. Also under Sexton’s leadership, the Notre Dame Alumni Association has grown to more than 200 clubs around the world and its pioneering programs in areas including community service have become models for other colleges and universities; Notre Dame Magazine consistently has been ranked at or near the top of all university magazines; and the University’s reputation has soared, helping it to become a fixture in top-20 rankings as well as one of the best known of all institutions of higher education.p. Holder of bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees from Ohio State University, Sexton this year was the first recipient of a new Notre Dame award established in his name to recognize outstanding service to the University by a non-alumnus. He will receive an honorary Notre Dame degree during Commencement exercises May 19 (Sun.).p. Sexton and his wife, Ann, have six children, four of whom are Notre Dame graduates, and 13 grandchildren, the eldest of whom is completing her first year at the University.p. Nanni returned to Notre Dame in 1999 as executive assistant to Father Malloy after serving eight years as executive director of South Bend’s Center for the Homeless, which he established as a national model in addressing the complex issues of homelessness.p. A native of Akron, N.Y., Nanni was graduated from Notre Dame in 1984 with a bachelor’s degree in government and the Program of Liberal 91Ƶ. He served for two years following graduation as a Holy Cross Associate living in Santiago, Chile, and addressing issues of poverty and injustice there. He then entered Notre Dame’s pioneering international peace studies program, earning a master’s degree in 1988.p. Nanni became director of the world mission office of the Catholic Diocese of Orlando, Fla., in 1988 and was elected to Notre Dame’s Board of Trustees as a three-year, young alumni member in 1990. As a Trustee he became aware of Notre Dame’s involvement with the fledgling Center for the Homeless and was invited to apply for the position of executive director, which he accepted in 1991.p. Nanni and his wife, Carmen, a 1993 Notre Dame graduate, were presented one of three national exemplar awards by the University as part of a special observance in May 1997. A former member of the advisory council for Notre Dame’s Institute for Church Life, Nanni received the Notre Dame Alumni Association’s Dr. Thomas Dooley Award for Humanitarian Service in 1994.p. The Nannis have two daughters and a son.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5825 2002-03-21T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:56:19-04:00 Fire damages room in Welsh Family Hall Welsh Family Hall, a student residence hall for women at the University of Notre Dame, was evacuated this morning when fire broke out in a third-floor student room shortly before 9 a.m.p.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5705 2002-01-02T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:55:20-04:00 Willingham on CNN Friday New Notre Dame head football coach Tyrone Willingham is scheduled to appear on CNN Morning News Friday (Jan. 4) at approximately 8:30 a.m.p.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/6522 2001-12-13T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:56:40-04:00 Statements on the resignation of Coach O'Leary Last night Notre Dame received the following statement from head football coach George O’Leary:
p. “Due to a selfish and thoughtless act many years ago, I have personally embarrassed Notre Dame, its alumni and fans. The integrity and credibility of Notre Dame is impeccable and with that in mind, I will resign my position as head football coach effective December 13, 2001.”
p. Statement of Kevin White, director of athletics, University of Notre Dame:
p. “I have accepted the resignation of George O’Leary as head football coach at the University of Notre Dame. George has acknowledged inaccuracies in his biographical materials, including his academic background. I understand that these inaccuracies represent a very human failing; nonetheless, they constitute a breach of trust that makes it impossible for us to go forward with our relationship.”
“I intend to restart our search for a new head football coach immediately.”
p. A further statement from George O’Leary:
p. “For more than thirty years I have been blessed to be a football coach. That’s all I have ever wanted to do. The victories, post-season bowls, honors, and success of my players on and off the field speak for themselves. One constant throughout my career has been my coaching philosophy of demanding personal accountability for one’s actions.
p. Today, I regret to report that last night I tendered my resignation as head football coach of the University of Notre Dame. My resignation has been accepted. This action has been taken by me for the following reasons.
p. Many years ago, as a young married father, I sought to pursue my dream as a football coach. In seeking employment, I prepared a resume that contained inaccuracies regarding my completion of course work for a master’s degree and also my level of participation in football at my alma mater. These misstatements were never stricken from my resume or biographical sketch in later years.
p. During my coaching career, I believe I have been hired because of the success of my players on the field and the evaluations of my peers. However, these misstatements have resurfaced and become a distraction and embarrassment to the University of Notre Dame, an institution I dearly love. I regret that I did not call these facts to the attention of the University during their search. It now seems, therefore, that in keeping with my philosophy of personal accountability for these errors, I resign my position and deeply apologize for any disappointment I have caused the University, my family and many friends.
p. I pray that my experiences will simply be yet another coaching lesson to the youth of this country that we are all accountable for our actions and there can be no double standard. I appreciate the courtesy and consideration extended to me by the University of Notre Dame.”

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/6524 2001-12-01T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:56:40-04:00 Statement from Notre Dame Director of Athletics Kevin White p. Following is a statement from Kevin White, director of athletics at the University of Notre Dame, concerning the head coaching position of the Notre Dame football team: p. "I have informed Bob Davie today that he will not be retained as head football coach at the University of Notre Dame.p. "After talking to Bob, I also have spoken with our football team and assistant coaches. Our assistant coaches understand that a new head coach will select his own staff, but I’ve told them that they will continue as Notre Dame employees at least until that time. I’ve told our players that their welfare during this transition is our number one concern and that our sole focus in the coming search is to bring them a coach who will give them the best possible chance to succeed at Notre Dame, on and off the field.p. "This is difficult for all of us. It is never a pleasant duty to part company. It is no secret to anyone that high expectations come with the job of head football coach at Notre Dame. Those expectations are the product not only of our history and tradition and national following, but also of our institution-wide commitment to excellence in everything that we do. I know there are those who believe it is no longer possible for us to contend for national championships on the field while continuing to win graduation-rate honors, but I don’t accept that premise, nor does anyone involved with athletics at Notre Dame.p. Bob Davie has brought good students and good people to Notre Dame, he has supported and taken an active interest in the academic progress of his players, he has encouraged good citizenship. These are expectations we have of all our coaches in all sports. However, we also expect and intend to excel on the field, and there, unfortunately, our results and progress have been disappointing. A year ago at this time, I believed that we had turned the corner under Bob and that we were prepared to reclaim our traditional standing among the nation’s elite college football programs. Today I no longer can say that.p. The search for a new head coach will begin immediately. I made a commitment to Bob that I would not contact anyone about this job until he had first heard from me concerning his status, and I have honored that commitment. I’ve made no contacts with potential candidates or their employers before now, and I don’t expect to comment on the contacts that we do make during the search. I appreciate the appetite for news about a search of this kind, but you don’t hire good people by negotiating through the media. We all know that the rumor mill has been in operation for many weeks now, and we know that today’s announcement will kick it into overdrive. Let me just state one caution about the rumors and ‘informed sources’ that are bound to surface in the days ahead: As soon as there’s something to report, you’ll hear it from me, but until you hear it from me, anything you might hear will be nothing more than speculation.p. p. _A transcript of Kevin White’s press conference and audio are available at the _

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5326 2001-10-10T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:50:55-04:00 Statement from Father Malloy concerning enforcement of the University's disciplinary policy Following is the statement of Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., president of the University of Notre Dame, concerning the enforcement of the University’s disciplinary policy in conjunction with Saturday’s football game between Notre Dame and West Virginia University:p.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/6478 2001-10-03T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:56:39-04:00 Pitt game flight restriction p. A Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) flight restriction will remain in effect for the University of Notre Dame’s home football game with Pittsburgh Saturday (Oct. 6), but those attending the game may see aircraft near Notre Dame Stadium as commercial and private planes land and take off from South Bend Regional Airport.
p. The restriction prohibits aircraft such as planes towing banners or helicopters (other than military, police or emergency craft) from flying within 3 miles and 3,000 feet overhead of the stadium.
p. Commercial and private aircraft using South Bend Regional Airport may fly within the restricted area at the discretion of air traffic controllers, and since the airport’s primary landing pattern is east-west, traffic frequently flies over campus in the vicinity of the stadium.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/6575 2001-06-28T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:56:42-04:00 Kantor, Affleck-Graves and Nanni elected officers of the University p. Jeffrey C. Kantor, John Affleck-Graves, and Louis M. Nanni today were elected to new officer positions at the University of Notre Dame by its Board of Trustees. The appointments all are effective immediately.p. Kantor, who has been a vice president and associate provost of the University since 1996, will become vice president for graduate studies and research and dean of the graduate school, succeeding James L. Merz, who is leaving that office to return to full-time research and teaching. Reporting to the provost, the vice president for graduate studies and research is responsible both for the development and state of all postbaccalaureate work in the University and for the development and administration of all research conducted by its faculty.p. Affleck-Graves, a Notre Dame faculty member from 1986-2000 who spent the last year as the Patty Hill Smith Eminent Scholar in Finance at Florida State University, will succeed Kantor as a vice president and associate provost and also will assume a new endowed professorship, the Notre Dame Chair in Finance, in the University’s Mendoza College of Business. He served three years as chair of the Department of Finance before leaving Notre Dame.p. Nanni, who has been executive assistant to the University’s president, Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., will become the University’s first vice president for public affairs and communication, a newly created division that will include four departments formerly part of University Relations?public relations and information, community relations, University communications design (formerly publications), and Notre Dame Magazine?as well as a new department of governmental relations. The University’s development operation, the Notre Dame Alumni Association, and the offices of special events and international advancement now will constitute University Relations, which will continue to be led by vice president William P. Sexton.p. “The administration of the University will benefit greatly from these appointments,” Father Malloy said in announcing the Board action.p. “Jeff Kantor has been a dynamic and innovative presence in the provost’s office who will bring those same qualities to the University’s expanding efforts in research and graduate studies. John Affleck-Graves was among the most active members of the faculty during his years at Notre Dame?as a teacher, scholar and in administration?and we are delighted to bring him back to campus as an officer of the University. Lou Nanni is a charismatic leader of great energy and vision whose talents will bring immediate shape and substance to the new division of public affairs and communication.”p. Among his accomplishments in the provost’s office, Kantor established the University’s Web administration office, created and filled the position of chief information officer, and was instrumental in academic budget and space planning. He also chaired the Provost’s Task Force on Strategic Directions in Science and Engineering. A member of the Notre Dame faculty since 1981, he is a professor of chemical engineering and specializes in chemical process dynamics and control theory. His research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the Department of Energy and a number of industrial sponsors. He has been the recipient of a National Science Foundation Presidential Young Investigator Award and the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation Teacher-Scholar Award.p. A 1976 graduate of the University of Minnesota, where he served as student regent, Kantor received his master’s and doctoral degrees from Princeton University, where he was a National Science Foundation fellow from 1976-79 and a George Van Ness Lathrop fellow in 1979-80. Prior to joining the Notre Dame faculty, he spent a year in postdoctoral studies at the University of Tel Aviv.p. Kantor and his wife, Diane, have two sons.p. Affleck-Graves specializes in the study of initial public offerings, valuation and asset pricing models, and shareholder value-added methodology. He has served as a consultant to numerous corporations, including Allied Signal, Bayer, Merck, and Pharmacia&Upjohn.p. Highly regarded in the classroom, Affleck-Graves has received six teaching awards at Notre Dame? three in the regular MBA program, two in the Executive MBA program, and one for undergraduate teaching. He also has been actively involved in governance at Notre Dame, serving on the Academic Council, the Faculty Senate, the Academic Code of Honor Committee, and as chair of the Provost’s Task Force on Curricular Innovation.p. A native of South Africa who now is a U.S. citizen, Affleck-Graves taught from 1975-86 at his alma mater, the University of Cape Town, where he earned his bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees.p. Affleck-Graves and his wife, Rita, have two daughters.p. Nanni returned to Notre Dame in 1999 after serving eight years as executive director of South Bend’s Center for the Homeless, which he established as a national model in addressing the complex issues of homelessness.p. A native of Akron, N.Y., Nanni was graduated from Notre Dame in 1984 with a bachelor’s degree in government and the Program of Liberal 91Ƶ. He served for two years following graduation as a Holy Cross Associate living in Santiago, Chile, and addressing issues of poverty and injustice there. He then entered Notre Dame’s pioneering international peace studies program, earning a master’s degree in 1988. Nanni became director of the world mission office of the Catholic Diocese of Orlando, Fla., in 1988 and in 1990 was elected to Notre Dame’s Board of Trustees as a three-year, young alumni member. As a Trustee he became aware of Notre Dame’s involvement with the fledgling Center for the Homeless and was invited to apply for the position of executive director, which he accepted in 1991.p. Nanni and his wife, Carmen, a 1993 Notre Dame graduate, were presented one of three national exemplar awards by Notre Dame as part of a special University observance in May 1997. A former member of the advisory council for Notre Dame’s Institute for Church Life, Nanni received the Notre Dame Alumni Association’s Dr. Thomas Dooley Award for Humanitarian Service in 1994.p. The Nannis have two daughters and a son.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5533 2001-04-25T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:56:09-04:00 Notre Dame initiates campus plan update The University of Notre Dame has begun the process of updating its campus master plan and has hired Ayers/Saint/Gross (A/S/G), an architectural and planning firm which specializes in college and university plans, to assist in the project. A/S/G’s previous clients have included the University of North Carolina and Emory and Johns Hopkins Universities.
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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/6539 2001-04-25T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:55:52-04:00 New theology/philosophy building to be named Malloy Hall p. The new theology/philosophy building under construction at the University of Notre Dame is being underwritten by Donald R. Keough, chairman emeritus of the University’s Board of Trustees, and will be called Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., Hall in honor of Notre Dame’s president, who also is a full professor of theology.
p. Malloy Hall is a 67,000-square-feet office building for faculty and graduate students in the departments of theology and philosophy and also includes a chapel, conference rooms, and other amenities. It will be completed by the opening of the 2001-02 academic year, and dedication events, including an academic conference and honorary degree ceremony, will coincide with the fall meeting of the University’s Trustees in October.
p. “Don Keough is at the forefront of that group of contemporary Notre Dame benefactors who rightly can be called the University’s ‘new founders’ ?those whose support has propelled Notre Dame to national and international prestige,” Father Malloy said in acknowledging the gift. “I am flattered and humbled by his wish that the building carry my name.”
p. “It was my great good fortune, as chairman of the Board of the University, to be part of the selection of Father Malloy as Notre Dame’s president in 1987,” Keough said. “Both walking at his side, along with vice chairman Andy McKenna and the Board, and watching from the wings, I have seen his legacy as a leader of Notre Dame take shape over the past 14 years. My family and I are pleased that his name will identify the theology and philosophy center at Notre Dame.”
p. Keough is chairman of the board of Allen&Company, Incorporated, a New York investment banking firm which he joined following a distinguished, 43-year career with The Coca-Cola Company. He retired from Coca-Cola in 1993 as president, chief operating officer and a director and remains an advisor to its board.
p. The father of five Notre Dame graduates, Keough was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University at Commencement in 1985 ?the same day his youngest son received his baccalaureate degree?and in 1993 he was awarded the University’s Laetare Medal, the oldest and most prestigious honor given to American Catholics.
p. Keough’s gifts to the University have been as numerous as they have been generous. With his wife, Marilyn, he established the University’s prestigious Irish studies institute, and the institute, its principal academic chair, and Notre Dame’s Irish studies center in Dublin’s historic Newman House all bear the Keough name. Marilyn Keough joined her husband as the recipient of a Notre Dame honorary degree during the dedication ceremonies for the Dublin center in October 1998. A men’s residence hall on the Notre Dame campus also was a gift from the couple and is named for Marilyn.
p. Don Keough was elected a Notre Dame Trustee in 1978, served as chairman of the Board from 1986-92, and was designated a Life Trustee in 1997.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5528 2001-04-22T20:00:00-04:00 2021-09-03T20:52:48-04:00 Seamon appointed executive assistant to Father Scully p. Rev. Timothy R. Scully, C.S.C., executive vice president of the University of Notre Dame, has announced the appointment of Michael D. Seamon as his executive assistant.
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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5477 2001-03-25T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:54:51-04:00 Gas line break prompts evacuations of five campus buildings A gas line break on a construction site at the University of Notre Dame today (Mon.) prompted the evacuation of five nearby campus buildings, disrupting some morning classes.p.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5495 2001-03-05T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:56:08-04:00 President Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C. accepts the recommendation of ND Task Force on Anti-sweatshop Initiatives that the University join the Worker Rights Consortium. The University of Notre Dame’s president, Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., has accepted the recommendation of his Task Force on Anti-sweatshop Initiatives that the University join the Worker Rights Consortium (WRC).p.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5417 2001-02-15T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:49:17-04:00 February 16, 2001 - Newswire Release Northeast Neighborhood residents and University of Notre Dame staff and students will celebrate the grand opening of the new, University-sponsored Community Learning Center, in the former Goodwill Building on North Eddy Street, beginning at 4 p.m. Wednesday (Feb. 21).p.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5304 2001-01-24T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:56:05-04:00 January 25, 2001 - Newswire Release William G. Gilroy has been appointed assistant director of public relations and information at the University of Notre Dame. He will cover science, engineering and related research at the University.p.

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tag:news.nd.edu,2005:News/5297 2001-01-23T19:00:00-05:00 2021-09-03T20:55:51-04:00 January 24, 2001 - Newswire Release Rev. Edward A. Malloy, C.S.C., president of the University of Notre Dame, has announced the members of the University’s new Academic and Student Life Advisory Committee.p.

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