President's Remarks on the Occasion of the Tenth Annual President's Dinner

St. John's University President Rev. Donald J. Harrington, C.M. delivered the following speech at St. John's 10th Annual President's Dinner October 25, 2007:
 
As you entered the Waldorf this evening, you may have noticed that a St. John’s flag hangs over the main entrance in celebration of our 10th President’s Dinner. Indeed, my friends, St. John’s has come a long way!

On November 5, 1998 St. John’s University held its first dinner at the Pierre Hotel.  Peter Tobin was our first and only honoree and 550 friends and supporters were in attendance. Cardinal John O’Connor, a beloved friend of St. John’s, addressed the gathering and spoke of the wonders St. John’s had wrought for over 125 years. That evening the university raised over $700,000.

Tonight we gather 1,300 strong for our 10th annual dinner. As you have already heard the revenues this evening have exceeded $2 million and we celebrate the most successful of our 10 annual dinners. Much has changed at St. John’s over those years. I wish to highlight now just a few of those changes.

In the fall of 1998, 7,200 young men and women applied for admission to the freshmen class at St. John’s University. In the fall of 2007, 28,000 young people applied to enter St. John’s as freshmen – an increase of almost 400%. In 1998, St. John’s enrolled 2,500 freshmen and in 2007, 3,160 freshmen – an increase of 25%. And the current freshmen class has the strongest academic profile in our history.

Although we have long offered a quality education for our students, in 1998 no one of our graduate schools was ranked in the Top 100 in our nation. As we gather this evening the School of Law and our School of Education are so ranked. Our pharmacy school boasts a passage rate of 95% on its licensure examination and our law school celebrates a bar passage rate of 91%. And these are but a few indicators of the quality of our academic programs.

In 1998 St. John’s was composed of three campuses, Queens, Staten Island and Rome. Now the university serves students on five campuses having added eastern long island and Manhattan.

In 1998 our Rome campus entered the third year of its existence offering one graduate program and no opportunity for student housing. In the summer of 2008 our Rome campus will complete its move to a new location providing our graduate and undergraduate students with more than 10 times the space of our previous location and housing for over 200 young men and young women. And, in the summer of 2008, we will open a new extension site in Paris, France with classrooms, offices and housing for 100 students.

In 1998 St. John’s had no resident students on any of its campuses. In 2007 the housing capacity on our campuses exceeds 3,000 students.

Since 1998 the university has constructed 18 buildings on the Queens campus and two additional buildings on our Staten Island campus.

In the midst of this expansion St. John’s has also remained fiscally strong. Prior to 1998 the largest capital campaign in our history had raised $54 million. Last year the university completed a campaign which raised over $271 million to support the education of our students.

And this is just a small part of our story. How has this been possible? I believe that there are two distinct reasons why St. John’s has met such success.  First and foremost we have been blessed because of fidelity to our mission. In the spirit of St. Vincent de Paul we know our special responsibility and privilege is to assist those in need.

In 1998 St. John’s provided $39 million institutional dollars in financial aid to our needy students. In 2007 St. John’s provides $139 million to insure that even students with greatest need can afford a St. John’s education. Thousands of our students and faculty are involved in service of the poor of our city.  And St. Thomas More Church stands as a vibrant place of worship and quiet prayer in the center of our main campus. In these and countless other ways we have been faithful to our mission in the past; we will continue to be faithful to our mission in the future.  And for this we have been blessed with great success in serving our students.

Secondly, I believe our success is directly attributable to so many who have gathered in this room this evening. You have shared your resources and your wise counsel with us as we walked this path of making St. John’s an ever stronger university. In celebrating our success this evening I also wish to acknowledge many who have played a significant role in that success.

I cite tonight the leadership provided by Bill and Lesley Collins as chairs of our dinner. We owe Bill and Lesley our most sincere thanks for all that they did to make this the evening that it is. Thank you Bill and Lesley.

Bill is a member of our Board of Trustees and many of his fellow trustees are with us this evening. I thank them for their leadership and for sharing their talents, their time, and their resources with St. John’s University. I ask you to join me in acknowledging, Tom McInerney, chair of the board, and all the trustees and trustees emeriti whom I ask to stand.

We also have with us this evening several members of our Board of Governors. The board of governors is an advisory board to the board of trustees in addressing the strategic challenges and issues which face St. John’s as a major university. I thank the Board of Governors for their willingness to assist the university in this way and I ask that all the members stand to be recognized. Thank you.

The Founder’s Society is composed of an elite group of benefactors who have supported the university at a level of one million dollars or more. They are our greatest supporters. I ask please that they stand to receive our thanks.

I also think tonight of our faculty, our staff, our administrators, and our wonderful students, so many who make up the St. John’s University community. I acknowledge them and I thank them for all that they do every day to make us an ever stronger university. In a very special way I single out two members of our university community who served us in an extraordinary way just a few weeks ago. I presume that almost everyone in this room has heard of the incident on campus on September 26th. That afternoon the university community was spared a great tragedy when two individuals confronted and apprehended a troubled student who had come on campus with a rifle.  You know the story and you know the heroism of these two individuals. I ask you now to join me in recognizing and expressing our gratitude to Public Safety Officer Dan Boylan and Student Cadet Christopher Benson.

I believe in the midst of that incident St. John’s was protected and preserved by the blessings of a God who is active in our midst.  Tonight we once again see that god present in the generosity of so many friends and supporters who have gathered here to honor three very special St. John’s couples, the Mirantes, the Sheas and the Taffners. These are individuals with close ties to St. John’s and very simply, they are very, very, special people. You have come here tonight to celebrate them and to celebrate St. John’s.  And the two are inseparable. People such as these, our honorees, embody the values of our university so clearly and help us day after day to insure that students of the future will continue to receive a wonderful education at this university. I thank our honorees for allowing us to honor them.  And I thank them for believing in St. John’s University. I assure them that their trust is well placed.  I know that I speak for all present here this evening in saying to Art and Liz, to Brian and Patricia and to Don and Eleanor that we thank you for the wonderful example you provide. May the values which you embody in your lives thrive and flourish on the campuses of St. John’s University.

I thank all of you for being present this evening and for joining this wonderful celebration.  As we leave this ballroom later this evening may we do so ever more firmly committed to recognizing and responding to the great needs of our brothers and sisters throughout the world. May the St. John’s flag flying over the Waldorf this evening always call us forth to the values for which it stands. Thank you.