skip to main content

University Honors Fordham Founders

0

Click here to watch student scholarship recipients speak about their Fordham experiences.
Click here to watch the President’s remarks.
Click here to watch the Fordham University Choir perform
Click here to watch Darlene Luccio Jordan, Esq., FCRH ’89, accept the 2012 Founder’s Award.
Click here to watch John Tognino, PCS ’75, accept the 2012 Founder’s Award.
Click here to watch Dan Hegarty, GSB ’12, speak on behalf of the scholars.

As New York City showed signs of an early spring, the Fordham community assembled on March 26 to celebrate its own transformations, and those who make them possible.
Students, alumni, faculty, administrators, and friends of the University gathered at the 11th annual Founder’s Award Dinner in the Waldorf Astoria Grand Ballroom to pay tribute to Fordham’s most devoted benefactors and their beneficiaries.

Joseph M. McShane, left, presents a Founder’s Award to Darlene Luccio Jordan, Esq., FCRH ’89. Photo by Chris Taggart

This year’s event raised $2.2 million for the Fordham Founder’s Presidential Scholarship Fund, tying last year’s total, the second-highest in Fordham’s history. The heart of the annual gala, the scholarship fund awards young women and men who demonstrate a desire for excellence in all aspects of life and whose characteristics reflect the qualities shared by Fordham’s founding members.
Two distinguished alumni were presented with the 2012 Fordham Founder’s Award: Darlene Luccio Jordan, Esq., FCRH ’89, the executive director of the Gerald R. Jordan Foundation, and John N. Tognino, PCS ’75, CEO of Pepper Financial Group.
Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham, told a crowd of more than 1,000 guests that the annual dinner embodies the spirit of Fordham and of Jesuit education.

John Tognino, PCS ’75 Photo by Chris Taggart

“When you put it all together, what is a Jesuit education all about? It is nothing less than empowerment and transformation—and our graduates emerge from their experience at Fordham as recognizable Jesuit graduates,” he said. “They are men and women of competence, conscience, compassion, and commitment to the cause of the human family.”

“They are men and women who make a difference in the world.”

Jordan, a Rose Hill graduate who earned a law degree from Suffolk University, worked as a prosecutor before becoming assistant district attorney and later assistant attorney general in Massachusetts. Besides working for the nonprofit organization that supports the arts, education, and health and youth services, Jordan is active in fundraising and philanthropic work, andis a member of Fordham’s Board of Trustees.

Father McShane lauded Jordan’s willingness to “do whatever it takes” to promote projects in service for others.

“My involvement with Fordham has been one of my greatest pleasures,” Jordan said. “Being on the Board has provided me with unique insight into the true workings of the University. I’ve gotten to witness firsthand the dedication to excellence that all people associate with the school.”

Tognino was introduced by Father McShane as “a true man for others.” He serves as vice chairman of the St. Barnabas Hospital Board of Trustees, and president of the Board of Directors at Union Community Health Center.

Though Tognino has also served for the last eight years as chair of the University Board of Trustees, his connection to Fordham began well before he matriculated as a student.

A native of the Bronx, Tognino grew up “in the shadow of Keating Hall.” He had to defer his college education for financial reasons upon graduating from high school. But after 15 years in the workforce, he returned as an undergraduate in what is now the School of Professional and Continuing Studies.

“I came to Fordham late in life,” Tognino said. “Fordham opened its doors to me, and gave me a chance.

“It’s a short distance from the Bronx to this stage, but it is a long journey,” he said, thanking in particular his wife, Norma, who joined him onstage to receive the award.

Earlier in the evening, Father McShane and Tognino presented the historic Insignis Medal to Mario Gabelli, GSB ’65, and Regina Pitaro, FCRH ’76. It was the 25th time since its creation in 1955 that the medal has been awarded. It distinguishes individuals who have transformed the University, and whose service to God and humanity is “ardent and unstinting.”

“Mario and Regina share an inviolate belief in education as the great equalizer, the heart and soul of the great American experiment,” said Father McShane, describing how the pair had reinvigorated Fordham’s business education by making the largest gift in the University’s history, to fund the Gabelli School of Business (GSB).

Speaking on behalf of the presidential scholars was Dan Hegarty, a GSB senior who, upon graduating in May, will begin an M.B.A. program while working as an auditor at PricewaterhouseCoopers.

“You made Fordham happen for us,” Hegarty told those benefactors in attendance. “Without your immense generosity, the 12 people you see on this stage would not have had the chance to attend this incredible University.

“I look forward to the day when I sit with you as a Fordham Founder’s donor.”

Share.

Comments are closed.