AUB Presidential Inauguration Embraces Liberal Arts Education  
Introduction by Thomas Morris, MD - Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Thomas Morris, MD - Chairman of the Board of Trustees
Hisham Tohme - Vice President of AUB USFC
Gladys Mouro - Assistant Hospital Director for Patient Care Services at AUBMC
Makhluf Haddadin - Professor, Department of Chemistry
Ambassador Khalil Makkawi - President of WAAAUB Board of Directors
President Peter F. Dorman Presidential Inaugural Address
Steering Committee
Subcommittee Members not on Steering Committee
Institutional Delegates at the Inauguration
History And Development of the Mace
Faculty and Students Embrace “an abundant life”; Winners of Essay Contest Announced
Professor Ahmad Dallal from Georgetown University is AUB’s next Provost
Highlights of 42nd MEMA
Ceremony in Honor of Faculty of Medicine Class of 1959
AUBMC Naef K. Basile Cancer Institute Dedication
WAAAUB Holds Second International Convention
Faculty Profile: Ali Rkein
Faculty Profile: Lilian Ghandour
Faculty Profile: Hubertus Johann Ruel
New AUB-SLOAN Partnership
AUB HR Conference Embraces Human Capital
AUB Holds 15th Science, Mathematics and Technology Fair
Alameddine Lectures on New Book
Greener Technologies Save Planet and Money
Do Palestinian Camps Add to Instability in Lebanon?
Symposium on the Impact of Conflict on Health
Jafet Ceramics Exhibition
2009 AUB Job Fair Gives Hope Despite Economic Crisis
Staff Profile: Kassem Siblini
Staff Profile: Nidal Zaiter
Business and Financial Systems Support Department
Ambulance Transportation
Farewell to Marquand House’s Zeina and Hassan Drar
IBSAR Researchers Awarded Arab Science and Technology Foundation Grant
New Executive Board of Women’s League
Women’s Auxiliary Fundraising Luncheon
Recently Published: Secondary School External Examination Systems – Reliability, Robustness and Resilience Barend Vlaardingerbroek (AUB) and Neil Taylor (University of New England, Australia)
Announcement: Mark your Calendars
Death of Former AUB Professor of Mathematics Edward S. Kennedy
The Reverend George Frederick Miller, Jr.
In Memoriam: Helen Khal sets her paintbrush to rest, one last time
AUB Hosts International Tango Festival
The AUB Folk Dance Festival Resumes with Unchanged Vigor and Style
Commemorating the 200th Anniversary of Felix Mendelssohn and the Inauguration of the New President
May 2009 Vol. 10 No. 7

AUB Presidential Inauguration Embraces Liberal Arts Education

The official Assembly Hall ceremony attracted many officials and academics

The official ceremony marking the inauguration of the 15th president of AUB on May 4 was all about embracing a liberal education, freedom of thought, and tolerance—the University’s recipe for living life more abundantly.

The inauguration ceremony of President Peter F. Dorman, merging tradition with forward thinking, was the first inauguration ceremony held at the University in 25 years. It also proved to be a forum for celebrating both AUB’s legacy and impact on liberal arts education in the Middle East, while simultaneously setting the stage for some exciting developments in academic scholarship through the empowerment of research, enhancing student diversity through financial aid and international recruitment, and promoting a dynamic work culture to allow for greater interaction with Lebanese society.

“As we acknowledge the past—both distant and recent—we resolutely look ahead to the future, pursuing what we believe to be AUB’s destiny and its mission—to be a beacon of higher education that lights the way for the leaders of Lebanon and the region,” said Dorman in his inaugural speech.

The new president highlighted the three priorities he has set for his term in office: empowering faculty through research and fostering interdisciplinary innovation and academic discourse, especially in areas where AUB can excel, such as the study of renewable energy resources and the promotion of a sustainable environment; recruiting a more diverse international student body, particularly young Americans who could benefit from interacting with peers from the Middle East; and creating a responsive campus community to enhance internal accountability as well as interaction with Lebanese society. Moreover, the new presidency hopes to target financial aid and increase the number of students who benefit from it, particularly as the world is hit by a severe financial crisis, Dorman said.

“But these three priorities cannot be pursued without heed to the careful balance that must be struck between the imperative to develop professional mastery on the one hand and great leadership skills on the other,” Dorman added. For this reason, AUB embraces a liberal arts education that allows students wide exposure to a variety of languages and cultures, helps them cultivate abstract thinking, master written expression, as well as amass broad competence in the methodologies of arts and sciences. “This more generalized education is intended to provoke curiosity across disciplines and to instill a lifelong thirst,” he said, noting that a liberal arts education “teaches us how to live life, not necessarily how to earn a living.”

Addressing “the most important community on campus,” Dorman reminded students that they are following in the footsteps of prominent ambassadors and diplomats. “You should expect to leave campus a different person than when you arrived, because AUB offers you much more than the education you came to acquire. It offers you, in addition, a variety of educations, a variety of paths,” he said. “Although it’s possible, superficially, to view AUB as a collection of buildings and people and classes and research labs, it is in essence a series of dialogues, relationships, and interactions. I hope you will feel challenged during your time at AUB,” he added.

Attended by a host of senior Lebanese officials, foreign diplomats, and delegates from top-ranking US universities, in addition to 12 descendants of AUB founder Daniel Bliss in addition to President Dorman, who is his great-great-grandson, the official ceremony started at around 11:30 am with a procession of flags outside Bliss Hall around the Green Oval. Led by the red-and-white AUB flag, students from 68 countries followed, carrying flags of their respective countries. Also participating in the procession were AUB professors in academic regalia as well as delegates from 26 US and European universities, including Harvard University, Columbia University, Boston University, the University of Chicago, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Several trustees also joined the line-up, including former Prime Minister Najib Mikati, MP Ghassan Tueni, and MP Saad Hariri, one of the newest members of the AUB Board of Trustees.

Among the officials attending the ceremony in the Assembly Hall were Prime Minister Fuad Siniora,  representing President Michel Sleiman; MP Yassin Jaber, representing Speaker Nabih Berri; ministers Mohammed Jawad Khalifeh, Tareq Mitri, Tammam Salam, and Raymond Audi; MPs Ismail Sukkariyyeh and Mohammed Amin Itani; former ministers Karam Karam and Michel Pharaon; US Ambassador Michel Sisson, and Jordanian Ambassador Ziad al-Majali.

AUB deans and trustees also joined the march to the Assembly Hall.

The official ceremony was begun by Chief Marshal Samir Makdisi, who called on Board of Trustees Chair Thomas Morris to address the assembly. Noting the beginnings of a liberal arts education at AUB in 1901, when it was still known as the Syrian Protestant College, Morris said, “This historic occasion . . . is a wonderful opportunity to celebrate the mission of this truly remarkable institution.”

While introducing the 15th president of the University, Morris explained the board’s choice of Peter F. Dorman, an Egyptologist from the University of Chicago, and a direct descendant of AUB founder Daniel Bliss.


“In the appointment of Peter Dorman as AUB’s 15th president, the board chose a man of integrity and vision, a man with a strong affinity for Lebanon and the region, and someone who shares the enduring commitment of the trustees to the mission of the University,” said Morris.

Like Dorman, speakers preceding him also lauded AUB’s liberal arts model, praising the University’s past and looking forward to working on enhancing its future.

Hisham Tohme, vice-president of the University Student Faculty Council, spoke on behalf of the students, praising the new president’s inclusive approach to governing the University. “President Dorman has already demonstrated his interest and willingness to involve students in the future of AUB,” he said, noting how students were invited to participate in the search for a provost and to assist in the ongoing accreditation process.

“To maintain this healthy and solid partnership, we, AUB students and the AUB president, will have to maintain close ties, listening to and engaging each other, while respecting each other’s rights and responsibilities. And we should do this while pursuing one common goal—our ever-lasting mission to improve education and offer our students more opportunities for a brighter future.”

Representing AUB staff members, Nursing Services Director Gladys Mouro, who has been with AUB for over 30 years, welcomed the new president, underlining his family’s strong ties to the University, starting with his great aunt, Mary Bliss, who founded the School of Nursing. Recalling her first impression of the president as “someone who understood the values that had sustained this university over the years and who would encourage us to achieve our vision,” Mouro said that many have already discovered in the president a person who “represents hope and security for us, in a world that is full of uncertainty.”

“We are eager to embark on this challenging journey with you and to do so with loyalty, commitment, and dedication. The energy, the faith, and the devotion that we bring will light up our AUB and shine out to the world,” she said.

On behalf of faculty members, chemistry Professor Makhluf Haddadin, who was AUB’s vice-president for Academic Affairs for almost 20 years, also welcomed the new president, highlighting his publication record—articles and books which have established him as an international scholar on the old Middle East. “Scholarship is synonymous with a free, inquisitive mind,” said Haddadin. “Academic research at AUB will witness new heights of excellence under the leadership of the fine scholar you are. I firmly believe that excellence in higher education requires an environment that values freedom of inquiry. Lebanon has nourished, defended and promoted this environment. Thus, AUB cannot flourish without academic freedom,” he added.

Ambassador Khalil Makkawi, president of the Worldwide Alumni Association of AUB executive committee, spoke on behalf of the University’s alumni. “We alumni graduate with an enormous appreciation for the experience that we have had, and a strong belief that the world would be a better place if more people and future generations had the same opportunity,” he said. “AUB... [made] us individuals [who are] committed to creative and critical thinking, lifelong learning, personal integrity and civic responsibility, and leadership.”

Makkawi reminded the president of all the successful alumni the University has graduated, including the 19 AUB alumni who attended the conference in San Francisco in 1945 during which the United Nations Charter was signed. “But I am particularly proud to be an alumnus of a University that celebrates all of its alumni—the ones who stay close to home and the ones who travel the world…” Before inviting the new president to the podium to deliver his speech, Chairman Morris handed him the beautifully redesigned university mace, “which captures both the hope and the light of knowledge that has guided generations of AUB women and men as they look toward the future.”

“As an ancient symbol of authority, the university mace also embodies the enduring traditions of the University, the deep roots in Lebanon and the Middle East, the global reach and aspirations, and the commitment of the University to work toward a sustainable and humane world,” noted Morris. “On behalf of the Board of Trustees of the American University of Beirut, it gives me great pleasure to present the American University of Beirut Mace to President Peter F. Dorman.”

“My primary feeling on this day is one of some amazement… I am humbled by their invitation to lead an institution that has had such a deep and continuing impact in the Middle East for almost a century and a half,” said Dorman in his opening remarks, noting the hospitality and friendship he and his wife have been accorded since moving to Lebanon.

Following the official ceremony, a campus-wide picnic was held to celebrate the special occasion. The day ended on a high note with a “jam session” and a student concert, featuring five AUB-student-created music or martial arts groups: Last Minute, Mashrou3 Leila, Rasta Beirut, Eardrum, and Filhos de Bimba Capoeira.

The entire month of May has been declared Inauguration Month and will feature the Folk Dance Festival, a sports parade, and the student Outdoors activities event.