Click here for the 2010 Founder’s Award Dinner Photo Gallery; here to watch Alumnus Denzel Washington greet honorees and guests; here to watch student scholarship recipients speak about their Fordham experiences; andhere for beginning-to-end coverage of the evening.
It was a night to honor stars and to bless Fordham’s lucky stars, as the University celebrated its ninth annual Founder’s Award Dinner on March 22 at New York City’s Waldorf Astoria.
The annual fundraising event, which benefits the Fordham Founder’s Presidential Scholarship Fund, raised $2 million, recognized the University’s 12 presidential scholars and honored three accomplished alumni. The 2010 Founder’s Award recipients were Maurice J. “Mo” Cunniffe, FCRH ’54; Mario J. Gabelli, CBA ’65; and Regina M. Pitaro, FCRH ’76.
“We are living through a particularly graced moment in Fordham’s grace-filled history,” said Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham.
The president thanked Fordham’s supporters who, despite the economic downturn, have contributed more than $300 million toward Excelsior | Ever Upward | The Campaign For Fordham.
“With your continued affection and with your prayers, Fordham will remain what it always is—a place of perpetual springtime, a place where hope is born, talent is nurtured and the world is transformed one heart, one soul, one student at a time to the greater glory of God.”
The evening got off to a stellar launch with a video welcome from Academy Award-winner Denzel Washington, FCLC ’77, who is opening on Broadway next month in August Wilson’s Fences.
“The entire evening is a celebration of Fordham University and its most cherished traditions as an institution dedicated to wisdom and learning in the service of others,” Washington said. “It is also a celebration of Fordham students, particularly those students who have benefited from your generosity.”
Father McShane joined Fordham Board of Trustees Chairman John Tognino, FCLS ’75, to present the awards. Bronx native Cunniffe, a Fordham trustee emeritus and current chairman and CEO of Vista Capital, LLC, said he and fellow awardee Gabelli were products of Fordham’s commitment to the American Dream.
“Fordham has had a tradition of educating immigrants, and Mario and I are central to that,” said Cunniffe. “We both had mothers who knew we had to be educated, so we wound up with the Jesuits for eight years.”
Cunniffe recently donated a gift toward a redesigned student center, to be named in honor of his late wife, Jane.
The son of Italian immigrants and the chairman and CEO of GAMCO Investors, Gabelli was a summa cum laude CBA graduate and a founding member of Fordham’s President’s Council.
“It is no more than 50 or 60 years ago that my folks were working in this hotel, so it’s wonderful to be here,” he said.
Gabelli said that, as children of immigrants, he, his wife, Pitaro, and long-term friend Cunniffe were all “very comfortable” accepting recognition from the Jesuit institution.
“What makes America great is education,” said Gabelli, who, like Cunniffe, grew up in the Bronx, attended Fordham Prep and Fordham and started his own business, “and the greatest educators [have been]the Jesuits—for 500 years.”
Gabelli also stressed the importance of faculty in his own education and in building a viable university.
Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham, thanks guests for their support of the University. Photo by Jon Roemer |
“One thing about faculty, you never know where your influence ends,” he said. “I had several professors at Fordham who were very fundamental in my career.”
Queens native Pitaro earned her undergraduate degree in anthropology and worked as an archeologist before earning an MBA at Columbia University. She is managing director for GAMCO Asset Management and serves on Fordham’s Board of Trustees.
Attendees in gowns and tuxedos watched from behind elegant floral displays, as Founder’s Presidential Scholar Nikeva Stapleton, a senior in the Ailey/Fordham dance program at Fordham College at Lincoln Center, performed a solo piece, Calling.
“There is so much talent in this room,” said master of ceremonies Bill Baker, Ph.D., Fordham’s Claudio Aquaviva, S.J. Chair and Journalist in Residence in the Graduate School of Education. Baker introduced the remaining 11 Presidential Scholars to loud applause.
Rose Hill senior Habiba Jannat, a native of Bangladesh, said the scholarship “paved the way” for her to attend her first-choice school and to realize her aspiration to be a doctor. “It contributed so much,” said the commuter student. “It enabled me to concentrate on grades instead of on how to pay tuition.”
In the spirit of interreligious dialogue, the evening’s invocation was given by His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios, Primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in America. Archbishop Demetrios gave blessings to the audience and blessed the evening’s honorees as those who “walk the noble path of God-illumined philanthropy.”
The Founders Award was established in 2002 to recognize individuals whose lives reflect the University’s defining traditions, as an institution dedicated to wisdom and learning in the service of others. Previous awardees include Avery Cardinal Dulles, S.J., Fordham’s first Laurence J. McGinley Professor of Religion and Society; former New York Giants owner Wellington T. Mara, FCRH ’37, and bestselling author Mary Higgins Clark, FCLC ’79.