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

History And Development of the Mace

President Dorman holding the new university mace

Although the mace was originally a weapon of defense, in modern times it has become most strongly identified with academic processions at formal university occasions, such as the inauguration of presidents and the opening of ceremonies. To commemorate his inauguration as the15th president of the American University of Beirut, President Peter F. Dorman commissioned a team from the Department of Architecture and Design to redesign the AUB mace. With advice and guidance from many members of the university community, Associate Professor Zeina Maasri (MGD ’96), Hatem Imam (MGD ’00), and Jana Traboulsi (MGD ’00) designed the new mace that was used for the first time during inauguration ceremonies for AUB’s 15th president on May 4.

The redesigned mace has a polished wooden shaft crafted from a 7,000-year-old- cedar log, which has been preserved and is on display on the AUB campus. The ancient wood is inlaid with three metallic rings bearing engraved inscriptions that represent the heritage of academia and the history of Lebanon and the University: AUB’s Latin motto, UT VITAM HABEANT ABUNDANTIUS HABEANT (“that they may have life, and have it abundantly”); the name of the University in an Arabic script derived from a Kufic model; and the name of the University in English. The shaft captures AUB’s essential connection to Lebanon, its deep roots in the local environment, and its rich and diverse community.

The mace head is formed by a flame crafted in metal and enclosed within a metallic ring.

The flame is fashioned of modern curvilinear shapes sculpted in thin ribbons to reflect lights, symbolizing both hope and the light of knowledge that has guided generations of AUB men and women as they look toward the future. The ring, which holds the flame, symbolizes AUB’s global reach and aspirations — its far-flung alumni and its commitment and contributions to a sustainable and humane world.

Serving as a link to university heraldic tradition, the base of the mace is adorned with a replica of a Roman coin bearing the word “Berytus” and a trident enclosing two stars, with a dolphin entwined about its shaft — the symbols that inspired the originals university mace as well as the shields of the university’s six faculties.

As President Dorman explains, “the new mace embodies many essential characteristics of AUB in subtle yet beautiful ways, with a strong look back toward the University’s unique heritage in Lebanon. It is at the same time a model of tactile elegance and modernity.”