Category Archives: Illinois Higher Education

Demonstrate the Power of Philanthropy: Participate in the SIU Day of Giving

SIU Class of 2020 group shot

On Wednesday, March, 1, 2017, the Southern Illinois University community will celebrate its inaugural SIU Day of Giving – a day for students, staff, faculty, alumni and friends to give back to the university.

SIU Day of Giving celebrates the university’s Founders Day, which is a time to mark the achievements of our great institution and look to the future. This year, the SIU Day of Giving is a particularly great opportunity for donors and potential donors to demonstrate the power of philanthropy.

The SIU Foundation is asking every person on campus, in the community, across the state and throughout the world to take one minute on March 1 to stop and reflect what SIU has done for you – and then give back.

“This is our effort of rallying our campus, our alumni and our community,” says Jim Salmo, SIU vice chancellor for development of alumni relations. “We want people to be involved in numerous ways, and giving is one way to show their support of SIU.

“Your donation, whether it is $10 or $1,000, will help support our staff and students campuswide. If you have a particular passion for a specific department or cause on the campus, let us know and we will direct your donation appropriately. Your generosity allows us to help our students become successful future leaders.”

Salmo suggests that alumni and friends of SIU put a reminder on their calendars or mobile devices and then spend five minutes or fewer online to change the life of a promising student.

“There is no such thing as a gift too small, and all gifts are deeply appreciated,” he adds.

The Foundation is encouraging everyone to share the word through social media networks by using the hashtag #SIUDAY. For more information, visit siuf.org.

We hope you will join in this exciting venture and help make this a Day of Giving to remember for SIU. Making your gift or pledge is fast and easy. Beginning in February 2017, be listening and watching for easy ways to give. If you would like to give now, you may also participate via traditional mail, phone or in person at our Foundation Office. You may reach us at 618/453-4900 or at 1235 Douglas Drive, Mail Code 6805, Carbondale, IL 62901-4308.

Thank you for your support. Your gift will make a difference in the lives of our students.

SIU Class of ’65 Gives Back: Restoring the Paul and Virginia Statue

Southern Illinois University Class of '65 donates to restore the Paul and Virigina Statue.

By Rebecca Renshaw

Certain landmarks on campus serve as vivid testaments to SIU’s history and traditions. The great Delyte Morris statue at Shryock Auditorium, and the statue of the Saluki that stands guard in front of the football stadium and SIU Arena, evoke nostalgia and enhance the landscape in which students live and learn.

Yet one SIU iconic landmark rises above all others: The Paul and Virginia statue.
The statue of two small children was donated by the Class of 1887 and originally was located in the front of the entrance to Old Main, on the east side of the building. It was moved to the Stone Center following the burning of Old Main in 1969. A duplicate was cast in bronze and placed in the original fountain location between Shryock and Davies Gym, where the statue has stood since the 1970s. The original is still at the garden of the Stone Center.

In 2015, Class of 1965 representatives Michael Hanes, Phillip Pfeffer and Patti Elmore proposed restoring the statues as a class gift to the university. The SIU Foundation helped them solicit contributions from their fellow class members to fund the project in time for their class year’s 50th anniversary. More than $20,000 has been donated so far.

“We’re trying to revive the idea of a 50-year anniversary class gift that would be everlasting,” Hanes said. “The idea of restoring the Paul and Virginia statue that generations of us connect with really appealed to us.”

With this project, they are hoping to restore both statues. The condition of the statues and the surrounding area have been of great concern for years. Issues include cracks in the bottom of the pools, as well as the crumbling stone walls that surround the fountains. SIU Physical Plant employees became involved in the project because they, like Hanes, Pfeffer and Elmore, recognized that repairs need to take place soon.

In recent months, the employees have been working hard to restore the statues, repair the stone walls and the fountain basin, install lighting systems and add a water recirculation system. Their goal is to have everything completed by Homecoming 2016.

Hanes said the members of the Class of 1965 are hopeful that, with the restoration, a time-honored tradition will again take root.

“Any time students were heading to class for tests on campus, they would throw a penny in the fountain for luck,” he said. “It’s a nostalgic memory to see the fountain. It has a great deal of whimsy, and it makes our hearts glad to know that generations will continue to see the bronze pair bestowing good luck upon us as they stand quietly in the center of campus.”

Deadline for SIU Honorary Degrees & Distinguished Service Award Nominations

southern illinois university carboondale honorary degree

The deadline for honorary degrees and distinguished service award nominations is Monday, Oct. 24. Honorary degrees are presented to individuals who have made outstanding scholarly contributions or are of considerable renown in any field of activity. Distinguished Service Awards honor individuals who have contributed to Southern Illinois, the state, nation, world or the university.

Honorary Degrees
An Honorary Degree at Southern Illinois University Carbondale should be reserved for outstanding scholarly contribution or for a person of considerable renown in any field of activity. If given for other than scholarly contribution, the Honorary Degree should be awarded only to those persons who have uniquely contributed to human well-being or whose accomplishments have resulted in a marked benefit to society.

Distinguished Service Awards
The Distinguished Service Award should be reserved for persons who have contributed importantly to southern Illinois, to the nation, to the world, to the State, and/or to the University. No University employee shall be considered for a Distinguished Service Award in the year of his or her retirement; however, this does not preclude the consideration of an exceptionally qualified employee for an Award at a time either before or after the year of his retirement.

Nomination letters must include a two- or three-page resume, curriculum vita or biographic sketch that includes a description of the nominee’s unique contributions. All nominations, including with the nominee, are confidential. Further information about these awards is available at universityevents.siu.edu.

For more information, or to submit a nomination, contact Gina Shiplett, Office of the Chancellor, at 453-2341 (phone), 453-5362 (fax) or email. Please indicate in the submission whether the nomination is for honorary degree or distinguished service award consideration.

Jeanne Hurley Simon Scholarship: Paying it Forward

jeanne-simon

By Rebecca Renshaw

We all know of power couples who have the influence to do big things in our world and make it a point to help those less fortunate.

SIU Carbondale takes pride and honor being associated with its own power couple: Paul and Jeanne Simon. Together, they forged a new landscape for the university, the state and the country.

When Paul Simon, an Illinois Democrat, left the United States Senate in 1997, Jeanne Simon joined him on SIU’s faculty as an adjunct professor of library affairs. Together, they helped found and shape the agenda of the SIU Public Policy Institute.

In 1993, Jeanne Simon had been named chair of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science, a post to which President Bill Clinton reappointed her in 1997. In that position she promoted literacy programs and financing for libraries.

David Yepsen, director of what is now the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute, had this to say about the Jeanne Simon’s contributions: “She was a pioneering figure in her own right and was considered a true trailblazer. She was one of the few women law students at Northwestern University and one of the first female representatives in the General Assembly.”  Although Jeanne Simon passed away in 2000, Paul Simon continued their legacy until his passing in 2003.

A longtime Simon friend and former dean of SIU Library Affairs, Carolyn Wagner Snyder, sought a way to honor Jeanne Hurley Simon. Snyder helped establish the Jeanne Hurley Simon Memorial Scholarship to honor her life and legacy. In the last few months, Snyder and associate director, Delio Calzolari have worked tirelessly to raise commitments to endow the scholarship. Their small, but dedicated team has raised more than $60,000 so far.

The scholarship will honor Jeanne Simon’s legacy by providing financial assistance, mentorship and other opportunities to Illinois students interested in public service careers.

“In a very real way, this scholarship is an effort to keep Jeanne Simon’s mission alive by ‘paying it forward’ for other young women who want to pursue public service as Jeanne did,” Yepsen says.

The first student to benefit from the scholarship is Shantel Franklin, a first-generation college student from Chicago.

“Since my freshman year, I have witnessed the Paul Simon Institute go above and beyond to provide opportunities for students,” says Franklin, a political science major. “I am grateful to have been selected to be the inaugural recipient of this award honoring the remarkable life of Mrs. Jeanne Hurley Simon. I will benefit tremendously from the financial assistance of this scholarship.”

 

 

HARNESSING THE POWER OF GREEN

AG Greenhouse Watering

Karen Jones, chair of SIU’s Department of Plant, Soil, and Agricultural Systems, knew she needed to get creative to solve the very real space issues at the University Farms greenhouse. Over the years, a separate teaching greenhouse had fallen into so much disrepair that the department had to consolidate activities in the University Farms greenhouse. This move led to extremely cramped conditions, which negatively affected teaching and research.

With no funds on the horizon, Jones realized she had to think outside the box. If the department could start to grow plants by vertically layering them above the ground, it could significantly alleviate the space issues. Because the greenhouse’s footprint can only house so many plants on a horizontal plane, she recognized that using this added dimension could be the solution. To do this, she and Joe Matthews, assistant scientist in the department, concluded that growing plants in this fashion would require light emitting diodes, commonly referred to as LED lights.

“We need to enhance our research and fulfill our teaching mission, and we need to do so with creative resources,” Jones says. “We believe these lights are the resource we need.”

What are LED Lights?

LED lights are engineered specifically to emit photosynthetic active radiation. Scientists are using LEDs, rather than traditional high-intensity discharge lights, to expose plants to specific wavelengths that enhance nutritional values of edible crops, influence the concentration of color and foliage, and improve endurance. Such lights also would save up to 50 percent in energy costs.

Matthews says the University Farms greenhouse was remodeled in 2006 with traditional lights that typically have a lifespan of five years. Those lights are now going into their 10th year of use, so the need for new lights – as well as a way to grow vertically – is considerably real.

That’s where thinking outside the box entered the picture. Jones and Rhiannon Storm, development officer for the College of Agricultural Sciences, began to brainstorm on how to raise the money for the lights. Storm knew that Matt McCoy, assistant director of annual giving for the SIU Foundation, was spearheading a first-ever effort of raising funds through “crowdfunding,” so when she approached him with the LED fundraising project, they realized it would be a perfect fit for the foundation’s first crowdfunding venture.

What is Crowdfunding?

Crowdfunding is a platform for student groups, researchers, teams and others to raise funds for SIU initiatives. Students, alumni and community members can make relatively small online gifts to support projects of interest that are important but may not be at the level requiring larger, major gifts.

Donations to crowdfunded projects, such as the LED lighting initiative for the University Farms greenhouse, will be deposited in the appropriate department’s foundation account. The goal is $3,000, but Jones and Matthews say more funds raised will equal more lights that can be bought. LED lights are not inexpensive; costs can range from hundreds of dollars to well over $1,000 for just one light.

“We have so many needs in the College of Agricultural Sciences,” Jones adds. “And we could use a win for our faculty and students. Our hope is that everyone will rally behind this effort.”

This first step into the crowdfunding arena began May 1 with the LED initiative, as well as with another project that seeks $7,500 to buy precision agriculture GPS and software to enhance the teaching of students, research and sustainability goals. To view what has been raised thus far, visit https://salukifunder.siu.edu. To learn more, contact McCoy at the SIU Foundation. He can be reached at 618/453-6096 or by email at matthewm@foundation.siu.edu.

Air Force Veteran Pays It Forward

air force veteran pays it forward at Southern Illinois University Carbondale

A man who served his country for more than 20 years in the United States Air Force is giving back to his alma mater.

Terry Asher, a 1979 SIU engineering graduate, and his wife, Susan, are making a $1-million estate gift to the university to support SIU’s general scholarship fund for engineering.

“Giving back to SIU has been in the back of my mind for some time,” he says. “My decision to attend SIU was a fork in the road for me. I was the first in my family to go to college. I liked the engineering program, the professors and the campus. SIU welcomes everyone and opens its doors to people from lower-income backgrounds.”

Terry and Susan are both retired USAF officers and have no children. So he says they had the resources to help young people succeed at SIU.

Terry, who currently serves as Adams County Treasurer in Quincy, Ill., chose SIU because of its engineering program. He also discovered the Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program through a friend who was a recruiter.

“I joined ROTC in my junior year. This program and my engineering degree opened up some wonderful opportunities for me,” he says.

He received an Air Force commission and evaluated foreign space systems in his first assignment as an intelligence analyst. Asher proceeded to ascend to leadership roles in various intelligence, space operations and engineering assignments, including serving on two national level committees in Washington, D.C. He met his wife, Susan while both supported a special military project. In his last assignment he led a division of 80 military and civilians in five branch offices. He retired as lieutenant colonel in 2002.

“Whether it’s the military or another large organization, an individual is more valuable as a part of a team effort,” he says. “I had some great and challenging assignments. The Air Force was a great fit for me.”

After his military retirement, the Ashers returned to his hometown area near Quincy and served in numerous volunteer positions. Terry was offered the chance to run for Country Treasurer when the previous treasurer decided to retire. He was elected in 2010 and is currently serving in his second term.

“My leadership background comes in handy when I’m dealing with the public,” he says. “The broad education I received at SIU has been an asset throughout my career in the Air Force and now as county treasurer. I wouldn’t be in this position without the education I received at SIU. It’s only natural for me to make this gift so someone else can have the same opportunity.”

If you would like to make a gift through your estate or some other gift planning option, please contact Pat Moline at (618) 453.4947, or, patm@foundation.siu.edu.

‘I’ve Always Had Angels Looking Out for Me’

Carolyn WarmSun and Larry Cooke

While growing up in Vincennes, Ind., Carolyn WarmSun recalls her parents stressing the importance of education. She set college as a goal. However, her family’s limited financial resources meant WarmSun would have to develop a plan on her own.

She heard about Southern Illinois University through a friend. The university offered monetary support enabling her to enroll and WarmSun received a student worker position on campus.

“Tuition was $62 but I didn’t have any money,” she says. “The early portion of my life was a real struggle. I wouldn’t have received a college education without SIU.”
The vibrant 1968 psychology graduate was moved by a DVD she received from her alma mater about a decade ago. The DVD promoted SIU’s efforts to provide financial assistance for students who demonstrate need.

“SIU was striving to help first-generation students – like myself – who were the first in their family to attend college,” she says. “I had always thought that if I ever had more money than I needed to live on, SIU would be the place I wanted it to go.”

A fine artist and painter, WarmSun develops images alone in her Oakland, Calif.-based home studio. Now, she is creating brighter futures for students following in her footsteps. WarmSun and her husband, Larry Cooke, created The Carolyn Holloman WarmSun Scholarship by naming the SIU Foundation as a beneficiary of their retirement assets. The scholarships will support financially needy students from WarmSun’s native rural southern Indiana in addition to rural southern Illinois.

WarmSun aspires to help young people who are in the midst of similar circumstances that she encountered en route to SIU.

“I’ve always had angels looking out for me in my life. They provided encouragement and steered me in the right direction,” she says. “This is an opportunity for me to do for others what they did for me— paying it forward.”

WarmSun’s journey to a college education wasn’t easy. Personal issues led to WarmSun withdrawing from the university during her sophomore year. WarmSun’s father secured a $300 bank loan for her, and she left the Midwest for New York City.

She worked at Chase Manhattan Bank during the day and attended New York University at night. Co-workers were particularly supportive.

“New York was a thrilling experience in many respects,” she says. “I met some wonderful people who took me under their wing. I’ve been blessed to have individuals in my life who saw potential in me and were in my corner.

“They prepared me to return to SIU. I was ready.”

The University once again provided financial assistance and WarmSun became a perennial Dean’s List student. She is particularly grateful for a roommate from Greece who introduced her to diverse students from all over the world; Earl Glosser, PhD of the Counseling Center; and Richard Ury, manager and mentor at WSIU-TV.

Subsequent to attaining a bachelor’s degree in psychology from SIU, WarmSun, who also attained a master’s in social work at the University of Illinois, enjoyed a successful career in mental health. A career highlight was WarmSun establishing a women’s mental health services program for the state of Hawaii and being named an associate clinical professor of psychology by the University of Hawaii. She returned to the Mainland in 1979 and continued to work in mental health. In 1991, she became an organization development consultant for a major health care company.

As she approached retirement, WarmSun coveted an avocation that she could be passionate about. She enrolled in water color classes at a local high school near her Oakland, CA, home, and intensified her learning upon retirement. WarmSun subsequently discovered a book in her favorite used bookstore that continues to motivate her to this day.

“A real transformation occurred when I read Maxine Masterfield’s book, Painting the Spirit of Nature,” she says. “I saw how to paint the essence of nature.” In February 2010, WarmSun spent four days with Masterfield in Florida.

The SIU alumna has studied rock and stone carving, and cave art. She reads Native American spirituality and philosophy which further influences her work. WarmSun says “knowledge of psychology, the natural world, and Native American writings that reflect a deep connection between the two, has led me to explore the spirit of Nature and the nature of Spirit in my work.”

The influence of WarmSun’s parents is also apparent. Her mother was a creative woman who enjoyed art and music. Her father had always told his daughter that he had Cherokee in his genetic background. He was an avid reader whose love of Native American lore also influenced her life and art. Others are noticing.

She was invited to share art pieces for “Sacred Rhythms” at the Christ Church Cathedral in Lexington, Kentucky. WarmSun was also asked to present her work and conduct a presentation in February at the San Francisco Peace and Hope Fest at a gallery in the City. If you would like to see her work, go to www.warmsunart.com.

While her work continues to be in demand, WarmSun plans on taking a brief break from her art studio in October to attend a high school class reunion and visit family in her hometown. At the same time, she and her husband plan to visit to SIU campus, which she hasn’t seen since 1972.

“I have a master’s degree from the University of Illinois. But my true allegiance is to Southern Illinois University. Some special people in Carbondale truly believed in me and helped make my life happen in a really good way.”

If you are interested in learning more about supporting SIU through retirement plans or other gift planning options, please call Executive Director for Development Pat Moline at 618/453-4947 or visit our website at: www.siufgiving.org.

“This is My Way of Paying SIU Back”

William Hill

As William Hill reflects on a life of 94 years, his memories are vivid. And he takes great pride in a distinguished career which includes substantial contributions to his country through the military and a prominent federal agency.

The Anna, Ill., native earned a zoology degree from SIU in 1942. As World War II had broken out on Dec. 7, 1941, he enlisted in the Navy’s Reserve Officers Training School. He was called up for duty in Nov. 1942 to Northwestern University in Chicago. Upon completion of that training, he was commissioned as an Ensign. After another brief training in Washington, D.C., he was assigned to the U.S.S. Trenton, a light cruiser in the Pacific. He served on that ship until the war ended.

Following World War II, he taught high school biology and general science. However, he found it difficult to make ends meet.

“I was going broke and decided to look for something better,” Hill says. “The Food and Drug Administration had placed an advertisement seeking inspectors. I tested for the position and was one of the lucky ones to be hired.”

Hill accepted an assignment to St. Louis, where he was initially involved in the inspection of unsanitary conditions in the food industry and the illegal sales of prescription drugs. He was also involved in a nationwide investigation of the sale of amphetamines to long-haul truck drivers.

Hill’s 36.5-year career in the FDA included promotions and transfers to various locations in the country. After a transfer to San Francisco in 1956, he had ascended to senior inspector level and continued his duties in uncovering unsanitary conditions in major food manufacturing plants. This work led to substantial changes in plant operations and led to sanctions against responsible parties.

Four years later, the SIU graduate became a compliance officer in Dallas, preparing recommendations on legal cases and assisting U.S. Attorneys. The Agency established the position of Deputy District Director in 1964. Hill was promoted to that position. He returned to the West Coast in 1967, where he supervised compliance officers and assisted the director. A year later,Hill was selected to participate in the agency’s executive development program in Washington, D.C., where he was involved with congressional correspondence, monitoring hearings and drafting testimony for the FDA commissioner to present at the hearings.

“My career was exciting, with every day bringing new challenges,” he says. “The teaching background I received at SIU was beneficial, as we always had new employees coming on board that had to be trained in the law and shown how to enforce it.”
In 1970, Hill was assigned as the director of the Kansas City district, but returned later that year to San Francisco to be district director. This was ultimately the position he retired in on July 31, 1984. He and his wife, Mary Ellen, reside in Lee Summit, MO, just outside of Kansas City. The couple will celebrate 70 years of marriage on October 12, 2015.

William Hill as a SIU student

In retirement, Hill has become even more appreciative of his SIU years. When he returned to campus in 2002 to mark the 60th anniversary of his graduation, he presented the University with a $100,000 gift to establish the William C. Hill Zoology Scholarship Endowment.

“We had extra money and thought supporting SIU would be the best way to invest it,” he says. “The education I received at SIU truly prepared me for success in the FDA. It provided me with knowledge that allowed me to be a great fit for what the organization required.

“This is my way of paying SIU back.”

Hill recalls riding by SIU as a high school senior with his father, a World War I veteran. The elder Hill told his son that he would be attending the university someday.

“I discovered that SIU taught biology and that intrigued me. It was an enjoyable experience and I learned a great deal about life,” he says. “My second year, a teacher hired me into a student worker job paying .25 cents an hour.

“That was in the wake of the Great Depression. None of us had any money, but we all had a great time at SIU.”

To learn more about establishing a scholarship with an outright or estate gift, contact Gary Bogue at (405)334-2865 or garyb@foundation.siu.edu.

Flying Salukis win second straight national title

Flying Salukis win second straight national title

As defending National Intercollegiate Flying Association champions, Prescott R. Dean, Sean S. Gipe and the other members of the Southern Illinois University Carbondale Flying Salukis understood they were targets.

Their commitment to defending the 2014 title parlayed into a strong team effort this year as the Flying Salukis won a second straight national collegiate aviation championship Saturday at The Ohio State University. The title is the third in five years and the program’s ninth national championship.

The Flying Salukis finished with 430 points and beat the University of North Dakota by 35. Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University-Prescott, last year’s runner-up, was third with 366 points. Twenty-nine teams featuring 343 students and team members competed May 11-16 at OSU Airport in Columbus, Ohio.

A public reception to honor the team will be at noon, Wednesday, May 20, in the Transportation Education Center’s Multipurpose Room, 545 N. Airport Road, Murphysboro, at Southern Illinois Airport. The Flying Salukis have won titles in 1977, 1978, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1984, 2011, 2014 and 2015.

Dean, with a degree in aviation management and Gipe, a senior in aviation technologies, tied for third in the nation in individual scoring. Dean earned an individual title in simulated comprehensive area navigation (SCAN) and scored in seven of the 11 ground and flight events. Gipe, meanwhile, scored in six events, including teaming with Davin L. Miles to win the message drop title. Gipe is from Media, Pa., and Miles, sophomore in aviation flight, is from Penfield.

George H. Nimmer, a sophomore in aviation flight from Plymouth, Wis., was 10th in the nation in scoring. Emily K. Frasca, a May 2015 aviation management graduate from Champaign, was seventh in the nation among female contestants.
As a team, the Flying Salukis placed the maximum five scorers in two events — computer accuracy and SCAN, and finished first in both ground and flight events.

For first-year head coach James Libuszowski, winning the title is a “pretty unbelievable feeling.” He served the past two seasons as an assistant coach, and he credits former coach Nathan J. Lincoln with establishing “the diligence that the students need and the mentality for what it takes to win a national championship like this.”

“We’ve been able to carry that forward and it’s become so ingrained in the team that even with the leadership change it doesn’t affect them too much to get down to business and get the job done,” Libuszowski said. “The past few years have been special. Nate put a lot of hard work into what he did and won two national titles. It feels great to come into my first year and win a national title, but what I learned from Nate was invaluable. Had I not had those two years of valuable experience under him, I don’t know what the result would have been.”

Ground events are aircraft preflight inspection, aircraft recognition, computer accuracy, crew resource management, ground trainer simulator, IFR (instrument flight rules) simulator and simulated comprehensive area navigation (SCAN). Flight events are message drop, navigation, power-off landing and short-field approach and landing. The top 20 contestants in each event earn points for their team.

“Historically we’ve usually relied on our flying events to carry us to top placings and national championships,” Libuszowski, an assistant instructor in the Department of Aviation Management and Flight, said. “To win first place in both ground and flight events was a tremendous help and shows we have improved the depth of our team and we can spread the points and safeguard in case inclement weather cancels some flying events.”

Results are available at nifa.us/SAFECON_2015_Results.html.

John K. Voges, interim department chair, said that through “incredible dedication, tireless study and endless hours of practice” the team and coaching staff continue to show they are a “force to be reckoned with.”

“There is no doubt that this team has taken the quality training they have received from this program and through hard work and discipline, honed their knowledge and skill that set the national standard for aviation excellence,” Voges said. “I am pleased that this achievement demonstrates to our university and the collegiate aviation community that this program knows how to create the best aviators in the country year after year, without compromise. I could not be more proud of them and the national attention that they bring to our program.”

Voges also provided a bit of perspective: the aviation management and flight program has about 300 students on campus, yet beat competitors with enrollments greater than 1,000 students.

“This is comparable in the athletics world to a Division III school defeating Division I schools, and our team has done it for the second year in a row and the third time in the past five years. I am so in awe of this team,” he said.

Dean, from Olathe, Kansas, said the team approached this year as a chance to build upon the program’s legacy. The win marks the first back-to-back titles for SIU Carbondale since 1981 and 1982. Dean is going to work in corporate aviation in Kansas City, and came to SIU Carbondale specifically for the aviation program and an opportunity to compete with the Flying Salukis.

Team members committed to working harder each day; Dean called it a “one-day contract” with each day providing a new agreement.

“It takes the motivation to be able to be better than the person that is competing against you across the nation,” he said. “You know that someone, either just down the road or across the United States, is trying to study just as hard as you. We knew we had an ‘X’ on our back. We knew everyone was gunning for us. That is why this year we worked even harder to get past that. You just have to keep that in the back of your mind every day.”

Knowing that other teams were looking to take the title was a motivating factor, but Gipe said a key was to keep pushing.
“Putting in all of the hard work, it’s nice to have it pay off,” said Gipe, who with Miles are be captains next year.

Other scoring team members were co-captain John M. Behnke, a May 2015 graduate, aviation management, from Arlington Heights; Kevin D. Grandberry, Jr., junior, aviation management, from Chicago; Michael T. Maughan, a May 2015 graduate, aviation management, from Pinckneyville; Bradley C. Smith, sophomore, aviation flight, from Dove Canyon, Calif.; and co-captain Jacob R. Schwarz, a May 2015 graduate, aviation management, from Chesterfield, Mo.

Other team members are: Aaron I. Applebee, senior, aviation management from Seneca; Matthew W. Benson, junior, aviation flight; from Zumbrota, Minn.; Jon R. Dowell, senior, aviation management, from Lake in the Hills; Greysen H. Harlow, freshman, aviation flight, from Monmouth; Teddy M. Keenan, freshman, aviation flight, from Evanston; Dalton P. Thompson, freshman, aviation flight, from Geneva; and Kindra A. Wendling, sophomore, aviation flight, from Altamont.

The Flying Salukis assistant coaches are Kim Carter, a senior lecturer and academic adviser; assistant instructors and former Flying Salukis Michael A. LeFevre and Stephanie J. Armstrong, and David A. Blood, an assistant instructor in aviation management and flight.

PotashCorp invests in SIU agriculture students

PotashCorp donation to SIU College of Agriculture

Representatives from Southern Illinois University Carbondale and PotashCorp were on campus Saturday for a presentation and announcement of a $300,000 donation to the College of Agricultural Science’s Potash Executive i2i Pathway to Excellence Program. Shown here are, from left, Ashani Hamilton, a senior graduating from SIU’s animal science program and an i2i alum; G. David Delaney, executive vice president and chief operating officer for PotashCorp and a member of the SIU Foundation Board of Directors; SIU President Randy Dunn; Greg Cook, president of the SIU Foundation Board of Directors; and Mickey A. Latour, dean of the College of Agricultural Sciences at SIU. (Photo by Steve Buhman)

CARBONDALE, Ill. – Students in Southern Illinois University Carbondale’s College of Agricultural Sciences Ideas to Investigation program, better known as i2i, will benefit from the generosity of PotashCorp, the world’s largest fertilizer company by capacity.

The PotashCorp Executive i2i Pathway to Excellence program and the Department of Agricultural Sciences received a $300,000 contribution from the corporation. David Delaney, PotashCorp’s executive vice president and chief operating officer and also a member of the SIU Foundation Board of Directors, attended a check-signing ceremony on Saturday, May 2. Other attendees included SIU President Randy Dunn; College of Agricultural Sciences Dean Mickey A. Latour; and Greg Cook, president of the SIU Foundation Board of Directors.

The PotashCorp Executive i2i Pathway to Excellence program creates new options for students interested in conducting mentored research to address issues facing agricultural industries. Ideally, students work on research projects directly relevant to and immediately applicable to industry partners. Students who participate in the program learn from their research mentors and from each other while gaining valuable practical experience.

“Private-public partnerships such as this are essential to our ability to help students develop the skills they will need to make significant contributions nationally and globally,” Dunn said. “We appreciate PotashCorp’s confidence in the College of Agricultural Sciences and SIU Carbondale.”

Latour initiated the fledgling i2i program in the spring semester 2014 to provide an avenue for practical research skills, and opportunities for immediate application of what is learned to give students a real-life foundation for building career skills.

With the contribution from PotashCorp, the next phase, the Potash Executve i2i Pathway to Excellence, will focus on developing the next generation of highly trained executive talent with premier leadership, critical thinking and problem-solving skills. The program is a collaborative program with SIU and Purdue University.

“This contribution from PotashCorp embodies what we hope we can achieve with the i2i program – finding and maintaining industry partners to help our students develop marketable research and career skills, leadership qualities and professional networks,” Latour said. “Because of this gift, students selected for this elite program will receive a hands-on research experience by providing a collaborative environment for participating SIU and Purdue students, faculty mentors and industry representatives to explore controversial issues in food, agriculture, and the environment and receive training in executive leadership and business etiquette.”

“Great gains in agricultural productivity grow from creative, insightful leadership,” Jochen Tilk, president and chief executive officer of PotashCorp, said. “Our company believes that the PotashCorp Executive i2i Pathway to Excellence program will train and inspire leaders who share our vision of playing an integral role in the global food solution. We are pleased to be a partner in this project and to support students committed to improving agriculture for the benefit of all.”

As the world’s largest crop nutrient company, PotashCorp plays an integral role in global food production. The company produces the three essential nutrients required to help farmers grow healthier, more abundant crops. With global population rising and diets improving in developing countries, crop nutrients such as potash, phosphates and nitrogen offer a reasonable and practical solution to help produce the food we need from the land we have. For more information about PotashCorp, contact Rhonda Speiss at Rhonda.Speiss@potashcorp.com.