
USC President Steven B. Sample presents a citation from the USC Trustees commending Joseph Aoun for his many accomplishments during his 25-year tenure at USC College.
Photo credit: Steve Cohn
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A Trojan Farewell
USC community thanks Dean Joseph Aoun for contributions and wishes him success at next post
By Pamela J. Johnson
June 2006
A few hundred people packed Town and Gown Monday to honor and bid
farewell to Joseph Aoun, the 19th dean of the College of Letters, Arts
& Sciences whose career at USC spanned a quarter century.
I look at our life here at USC as the best part of our existence,
said Aoun, who attended the event with his wife, Zeina, and their sons,
Adrian Marwane and Joseph Karim, both USC students. And I mean it.
This has been a special moment, a small 25-year moment in our lives.
USC President Steven B. Sample told the standing-room-only crowd that
he clearly understood why Northeastern University had hired Aoun as
president of the 28,000-student campus in Boston.
Its his uncompromisingly high standards, Sample said.
Aoun takes office as the seventh president of Northeastern in August.
Peter Starr, professor of French and comparative literature and
currently dean of undergraduate programs in the College, will act as
interim dean, effective July 1. A search committee is being formed to
recruit a permanent successor.
The second thing was that Joseph was interdisciplinary in his
approach, Sample continued. He really believed in bringing people
together across disciplines. Not just across disciplines with the
College, but across disciplines between one school and another
professional school.
Another thing was his fund-raising ability, Sample said. They loved that.
USC Trustee Pat Haden, chair of the Tradition & Innovation
Initiative launched in September 2005, said that under Aouns
leadership the College reached the half-way mark in the fund-raising
effort and has raised $200 million.
During Aouns tenure, College fund-raising skyrocketed from an average
of $18 million per year to $40 million in 2005, a sum already surpassed
in 2006.
Aoun, the Anna H. Bing Deans Chair and professor of linguistics, has
written seven books and earned two USC Phi Kappa Phi Faculty
Recognition awards. He also won the USC Associates Award for Creativity
in Research and Scholarship, the universitys highest honor for
research.
Heaven knows the man has energy, said Beth Meyerowitz, professor of
psychology and preventive medicine, and former College dean of faculty.
The qualities he brings to Northeastern will assure his success there.
Among the many honors Aoun received this week was a citation by the USC
Board of Trustees, which named Aouns Senior Faculty Hiring Initiative
as one of his major accomplishments. Since the initiative launched in
2002, the College faculty has increased from 350 to nearly 500.
The citation also credited Aoun with the addition of 11 endowed chairs
and professorships. He oversaw an unprecedented 51 percent increase in
the Colleges sponsored research funding and the construction of two
state-of-the-art buildings, the Dornsife Cognitive Neuroscience Imaging
Center and the Molecular and Computational Biology Building.
Important partnerships also were formed under Aouns leadership. These
include the USC Shoah Foundation Institute for Visual History and
Education, the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West, the
USC-Huntington Institute for Early Modern Studies, and two
collaborations with the Getty Research Institute.
Aoun was extremely supportive of the Joint Educational Project, one of
the nations oldest and largest service-learning programs.
Hes been one of the only deans in our history to completely
understand and be a strong advocate of our program, JEP Director Tammy
Anderson later said. I told one of our community partners that he was
leaving and she said, No! He cant go!
Aoun also launched the Korean Studies and Armenian Studies institutes.
Joseph, we are in your debt, Sample told Aoun. We wish you and Zeina
Godspeed and every possible success in your new assignment.
While celebrating Aouns sweeping accomplishments, many expressed sadness at the departure of a cherished friend.
Were going to miss him for many, many reasons, said Delta Murphy, a
USC alumna and chair of the USC Wrigley Institute for Environmental
Studies Advisory Board. But mainly well miss him because he is a
dear, dear man.
University Professor Leo Braudy was one of several speakers at the
event, hosted by Haden, an alumnus and member of the College Board of
Councilors.
Braudy, the Leo S. Bing Chair in English and American Literature, called Aoun, an immensely cultured person.
And cultured in what I think of as more European than American,
Braudy told the audience. Let me explain. When we say in America that
people are cultured, we tend to mean they are like some species of
artificial pearl. They go to the opera or the ballet, they read
Schopenhauer before breakfast or cant shut up about the Albigensian
Crusade.
For the European, culture is everything, Braudy said. It grows
naturally from the ground. It includes wine as much as movies, good
food as much as Greek drama.
Josephs own intellectual heritage puts him many steps further along
the road, as anyone who has sat down with him at dinner can attest,
when he demonstrates his almost terrifyingly detailed knowledge of
wine.
George Boone, USC Life Trustee and member of the College Board of
Councilors, called Aoun a Renaissance man, but said hell miss the man
who was also kind and considerate. He recalled the day his grandson was
graduating from USC College, when Aoun gave him an unexpected gift.
The [graduation] program was just about to begin, recalled Boone, a
key supporter of the USC Wrigley Institute. Suddenly, Joseph asked me
if I wanted to give my grandson his diploma. Then I found myself on the
platform with a lot of distinguished professors.
I have that photograph on my desk, Boone said. Its one of the happiest things that my grandson and I have every done.
Others who spoke included Selma Holo, Fisher Gallery director; Antonio
Damasio, David Dornsife Professor of Neuroscience and director of the
USC Brain and Creativity Institute; USC Trustee Alan Casden; and Robert
Erburu, chair of the USC College Board of Councilors.
At the events close, Haden shared the adjectives and other words that the days speakers used to describe Aoun.
Relentless, entrepreneurial, loyal, cool, passionate, friend, feared,
respect, scholar, leader, integrity, Haden said. Accomplished,
brilliant, valued, considerate, risk taker, experimental, energy, two
BlackBerries, new possibilities, bold, innovative, scholarship,
curiosity, cultured, engaging.
Then he added, And I heard many times the word loved.
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