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St. Ed's (St. Edward's University Magazine) Fall 2018

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st.ed’s ST. EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE

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Holy Smoke!

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Fall 2018


first look


Best of the Best

Say hello to the 804 students of the Class of 2022. “They’re ready to learn, they’re not afraid to take risks, and they’re not afraid to fail,” says Associate Professor of Communication Teri Varner. Varner teaches first-year students in Introduction to Communication and an Honors course called Speaking Truth to Power. At a workshop with a slam poet who asked the students to write a letter to something they were afraid of, the freshmen addressed their fears about mental illness, racism, even death — and read their letters aloud to their classmates. “I was not anticipating them getting so deep so quickly, nor their level of vulnerability and their patience with one another,” Varner says. “These students get it, so as an educator, I’m going to raise my bar too: I’m preparing intense lectures, and I’m not afraid to raise challenging topics. I’m in awe of this group of students and honored to be a teacher with this cohort. We got the best of the best this year.”


the hilltop BEST & BRIGHTEST

Go With It Splitting the college experience between Austin and Beppu, Japan, necessitates a certain adventurous spirit. BY STACIA M. MILLER MLA ’05

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BRIAN TO ’18 has a tried-and-true method for ordering food in a foreign country. “Just point at the menu and see what happens. Sometimes it’s really good,” he says, “and sometimes you congratulate yourself for trying.” Either way, “it’s about being okay with the unknown. Go with it, and eventually you figure it out.” That adventurous philosophy has served To well throughout the two years he spent in Beppu, Japan, as part of a dual-degree partnership between St. Edward’s and Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University. To spent his freshman and senior years on the hilltop working on a bachelor’s degree in Global Studies and his sophomore and junior years in Beppu earning a bachelor’s degree in Asia Pacific Studies. In May, he became the first St. Edward’s student to complete the dual-degree program. To, who is Vietnamese American and grew up in Houston, had traveled to southeast Asia on family trips throughout his childhood. He also participated in the Global Engagement Living Learning Community his freshman year at St. Edward’s, connecting with like-minded students about everything from international furniture styles to how people date in other cultures. In retrospect, his time in the LLC “was a microcosm of what I experienced in Japan. I thought ‘globalism’ was an overused word, but the world really is a melting pot.” Still, total immersion in a foreign culture isn’t easy, he says: “You have to be able to pack up your home in a suitcase and make a new home somewhere else.” While it can be daunting, it was also a common denominator for To and his classmates at APU, where half the students come from outside Japan. “Nothing brings you together like not understanding anything,” says To, who forged fast friendships with his classmates from 73 countries. Together they took six hours of daily Japanese lessons coupled with business, political science and international relations classes taught in English. Fulfilling the requirements for two degrees from two universities on opposite sides of the world was sometimes challenging. Enter Professor of Political Science William Nichols, academic coordinator of the dual-degree program, chair of the Global Studies department and “my handler,” says To (who also fulfilled the requirements of the St. Edward’s Honors Program). “Dr. Nichols helped me navigate everything.”

Since the dual-degree program started in 2013, Nichols has shepherded eight APU students and seven students from St. Edward’s through the process. (Four have completed both degrees, while others are in the midst of the program.) He relies on email and Skype to stay in touch with the Hilltoppers in Beppu, and he meets regularly with the Japanese students in Austin, even hosting Thanksgiving dinner and giving a primer on opening bank accounts. The opportunities the dual-degree program offers students are unique on an undergraduate level, says Nichols, who is mapping out a possible dual-degree Environmental Science and Policy program and is working to initiate a faculty exchange between APU and St. Edward’s. “It’s very unusual to be able to sync up core classes, majors and languages among universities. I’ve presented at several conferences, and I can’t find anything like our program.” Not to mention its life-changing impact on his students: “From the language acquisition to the cultural understanding, they really are different people when they come home.” Just ask To, who is spending a year teaching English in Vietnam while he applies to graduate schools. He eventually hopes to take the U.S. Foreign Service Exam. “If you want to level up in life, go abroad,” he says. “Once you get a taste of that wanderlust, once you make friends from all over the world, you can’t stop.”

“You have to be able to pack up your home in a suitcase and make a new home somewhere else.”

Editor

Frannie Schneider Art Direction

Zehno Associate Vice President for Marketing Christie Campbell Designer

Erin Strange Photographer

Whitney Devin ’10 Creative Services Manager

Maegan Steele President

George E. Martin, PhD Vice President for Marketing and Enrollment Management

Paige Booth On the Cover

Texas-sourced Wagyu brisket, pastrami, beef ribs, chicken and housemade sausages are smoked twice per week in South Austin by Matti Bills ’15, co-owner of Mum Foods. Photography by Wynn Myers ’13 and food styling by Ashleigh Amoroso. St. Edward’s University Magazine is published three times a year by the Marketing Office for alumni and friends. ©2018 St. Edward’s University. Opinions expressed in St. Edward’s University Magazine are those of the individual authors and do not reflect the views of the university. Inquiries to the Editor: 512-448-8775, frannies@stedwards.edu.

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High-school students at East Austin College Prep who participate in Austin Soundwaves take private music lessons, as well as participate in the advanced music groups at the school, including orchestra, band, mariachi and philharmonic. From left to right: Miriam Manzano, Assistant Professor of Social Work Anna Escamilla, Samuel Olmos and Barbara Reyes

AUSTIN CONNECTION

Music Is for Everyone Professors in the Social Work program use data to bring music to more kids. BY STACIA M. MILLER MLA ’05

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WHEN ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR

of Social Work Anna Escamilla heard about Austin Soundwaves, a program that brings music education to more than 200 underserved students across the city, she knew she had to get involved. As a teenager growing up in Corpus Christi, she’d once been one of those at-risk kids — and music had offered her a glimpse of all the world could offer. When a favorite teacher suggested she join choir, Escamilla initially shrugged off the idea. “Music? Singing? Me?” she remembers. “But by the time I graduated, I was president of the choir. For the first time, I had been given access to something that made me feel like I could be successful.” Through Soundwaves, Escamilla is helping bring that sense of possibility to others. She and Assistant Professor

Adam McCormick first collaborated with the group last year through a Hispanic Alliance grant that funded faculty interviews and student resiliency testing across the Soundwaves program. This year, as part of a second grant, Escamilla is evaluating the effectiveness of Soundwaves’ smaller and more targeted Advanced Skills and Mentoring Program, which offers one-on-one instrument lessons in everything from violin to euphonium, along with leadership training and help with college and scholarship applications. “The anecdotal evidence is that the kids love it,” says Escamilla, who conducted seven focus groups with participants and presented her findings to the Hispanic Alliance earlier this fall. Before the second grant ends in February, she’s planning more in-depth focus groups and

targeted questionnaires. “We’ve really got to ask questions that reflect the concerns affecting this group of kids,” she says. “They are a big part of what makes Austin Austin — they are motivated to overcome their lack of privilege, to find a way to go to college, to be agents of change in their communities.” Ultimately, she hopes her work will showcase both the qualitative and quantitative outcomes that can help Soundwaves secure more funding and reach more students. “I’ve spent a lot of time talking with these kids and observing their lessons,” she says, “and there might be nothing more hopeful and gorgeous than the sound of brand new musicians scratching out a tune on their violins. I could stay and listen all day.”


PURSUITS

Artificial Intelligence, Communication and Medicine Three students lay the groundwork for their careers — and still find time to have fun. BY ROBYN ROSS AND CAMILLE SAAD

How it works: In RIT’s Center

Ayesha Gonzales ’20 Mathematics How she spent her summer: Gonzales

completed a 10-week Research Experience for Undergraduates, or REU, at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) — one of two programs that offered her admission. Along with her mentor, a PhD student, she worked on an aspect of artificial intelligence called deep learning.

for Imaging Science, Gonzales focused her research on training computers to identify the content of an image. “It’s something humans are able to do really well, but computers have a harder time because the human brain is extremely complex,” she says. She and her mentor wrote codes to help computers, which read images as numbers, determine the contents of pictures by first identifying the key points of an image.

How deep learning can be applied:

The technology has military applications, such as using computers to interpret thousands of satellite images and identify suspicious activity. It has been used to detect land mines in aerial images. Scientists are working to improve computer recognition of faces and bodies in security footage to assist law enforcement.

KC Hurley ’19 Communication Why he’s a student to watch: Hurley

has his sights set on working in public relations for the Walt Disney Company. He even did a presentation on his dream job with Disney as part of a communication course taught by Associate Professor Teri Varner, whom he credits as a mentor. Over the summer, Hurley interned as a social media assistant with the School of Arts and Humanities.

On getting involved on the hilltop:

Hurley has been an officer on the club swim team since his freshman year, has performed in two university theater productions, and is a member of the St. Edward’s Omni Singers. He is also a resident assistant in The Pavilions. “These activities have helped me be more confident in challenging myself and working toward my goals,” says Hurley.

St. Edward’s “allows me to grow in my faith as I grow in knowledge.” ANGEL PHAN ’20

Angel Phan ’20 Biology On becoming a physician: Since

childhood, Phan has known she wants to be involved in the medical field. She chose St. Edward’s as a school that “allows me to grow in my faith as I grow in knowledge.” Her experiences on the hilltop have inspired her to pursue

medical school. “For me, becoming a physician is the most impact I can have serving the community,” she says.

Why she loves microbes:

Phan is fascinated with microbiology, a course she says Professor of Biology Trish Baynham makes exciting.

(Her favorite microbe to study: Helicobacter pylori — a bacterium that causes stomach ulcers.) She’s active in the St. Edward’s chapter of the American Society of Microbiology (ASM) and presented her research in May at the ASM Texas Branch meeting

alongside Baynham and other students.

Away from the lab:

When it’s time for a break from science, the ardent pianist and Music minor can be heard practicing on pianos around campus. “Music lets me relax and use my brain in a different way,” she says.

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MY HILLTOP

Try Everything Isabella Judge ’20 has made it her mission to try as many new things as she can during her time at St. Edward’s. BY ERICA QUIROZ MLA ’18

DURING A HOT SUMMER day

on Lady Bird Lake, a 35-foot pontoon boat glides through the water with Isabella Judge ’20 at the helm. The boat drifts under the Congress Avenue bridge, and Judge points out buildings along the skyline, making jokes and sharing trivia about the city. Originally from Akron, Ohio, Judge got her start as a tour guide for Hilltop Hospitality, but it was a public-speaking class her freshman year that gave her the confidence to guide a boat full of tourists down the lake. “I’d never driven a boat before, but my boss said it was more important that I was comfortable speaking in front of people,” she says. When she’s not on the water, the Communication major is a content manager for It’s On Us (a student organization that works to stop sexual assault), teaches barre classes as a GroupX instructor, is a lector and Eucharistic Minister for Campus Ministry, is a communications intern with the Girls Empowerment Network, and

practices her self-taught American Sign Language (ASL) skills with deaf and hard-ofhearing employees at Crepe Crazy, a bakery near campus. “It’s a bonus being in Austin and living close to the Texas School for the Deaf,” she says. “ASL is a passion for me, and being in a city with a large population of people who are deaf or hard of hearing helps me become fully immersed in a community where I can practice and observe.” Judge says her goal for her next two years on the hilltop is to try everything, even if she doesn’t think she’ll succeed. “You never know; it could be the perfect fit for you. That’s the story of my life at St. Edward’s,” she says. “My advice is to try things that you don’t think you have the resources or ability to do because you may fall in love with ASL or you may move 1,300 miles across the country to go to school where you don’t know anyone, and it turns out to be the best decision of your life.”

Judge catches up on homework at Crepe Crazy on South Lamar Boulevard.

Milo, her 1-year-old dog, leads the way through campus on a daily walk.

Watch the video stedwards.edu/ myhilltop

As a communications intern for the Girls Empowerment Network, Judge serves as a leadership mentor to high-school students during a field trip. 6

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This South Austin bakery is deaf-owned with many deaf and hard-of-hearing staff, which gives Judge an opportunity to practice her self-taught American Sign Language skills.

Judge says finding St. Edward’s felt like a puzzle-piece moment, when everything came together: The university’s mission aligns perfectly with her future goals.

Judge's Bichon Frise and Shih Tzu mix is a natural in front of the camera. She maintains an Instagram presence for him at @a.doggo.named.milo.

Associate Dean of Students Connie Rey Rodriguez ’04, MAHS ’06 and Judge work through creating graphics for an It’s on Us campaign to prevent sexual violence.

Judge transforms into Captain Bella for her job with Loan Star Riverboat Cruises, where she guides tourists along Lady Bird Lake.

Judge says her favorite part of the boat tour is watching the bats fly out from under the Ann W. Richards Congress Avenue Bridge. ST. EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE

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For just over a month this summer, Assistant Professor of Sculpture and Ceramics Tammie Rubin made her studio visible within the confines of a caged trailer at the Museum of Human Achievement in East Austin. Rubin dipped ball moss in a porcelain slip. The transformed plants would eventually be attached to the ceramic conical forms that define much of Rubin’s work. The new pieces are on display in Rubin’s solo exhibition “Everything You Ever” at Women and Their Work in Austin through Jan. 10, 2019.

Q

THINKING BIG

AN ARTIST FOR OUR TIME

Contemporary artist and Assistant Professor of Sculpture and Ceramics Tammie Rubin disrupts the associations we have with mundane objects and explores the Great Migration. BY AMARIE GIPSON ’18

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AG: The first time I saw your work was in 2016 for your solo exhibition, “Before I Knew You, I Missed You.” Could you talk about how your work mines your family history and is an investigation of the Great Migration? TR: Growing up in Chicago, it was

common for people to have family that lived down South. I was curious about modes of migration and wondered how African Americans made it to so many different places in the country. By the time I moved to Texas, both of my parents had passed away. I became more aware of how their history brought us to the present. It was such a fascinating and challenging experience, realizing there were all these things that I didn’t know about my family history.

AG: What is your artistic process like? TR: Accumulation is central to my

work — adding information and pulling it away. I start with the idea that objects hold an innate power in themselves. Whether it’s something we see or something that is unrecognizable, we are drawn to objects and have our associations with them. The material is fragile, and I use that as a way to expand ideas of mapping and demography by drawing and collaging onto the surface.

AG: What is your experience working as an artist in this political climate? TR: I feel like we live in a country where we have permanent amnesia. There’s a lack of accuracy and accountability that contributes to this complacency we see in politics. As an artist, I’m not living in

isolation. When you share the work with the world, all this meaning is applied. My work has become impactful in a way that maybe it would not have a year ago.

AG: How has your role as an educator shaped your artistic practice? TR: I always wanted to be a teach-

ing artist. I really believe in higher education because it is a place where you can ask questions and explore a subject without judgment. Contemporary art is a living field, and I am tasked with finding the conversations as they unfold for myself and my students. Teaching and making fuel each other. About the writer: Amarie Gipson ’18 is an Emerging Arts Leadership fellow at the Art Institute of Chicago.


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Around Campus

$1.5

7

million

PREPARING FOR THE FUTURE St. Edward’s University has received a fiveyear, $1.5 million grant from the National Science Foundation to establish the Institute for Interdisciplinary Science, which will prepare students for careers in the fourth Industrial Revolution. This revolution is marked by advancements in robotics, artificial intelligence, 3D printing, biotechnology, autonomous vehicles and other emerging technologies.

@CUSTOMER FEEDBACK Professor of Management Lorelei Ortiz and Digital Media Management major Ashlyn Weiner ’19 are collaborating on research that investigates how customers communicate with organizations in the era of social media. The pair is considering questions such as: Which social media platforms do customers and retailers use most? How has the ascendancy of social media shaped how organizations manage customer claims?

COMING HOME After seven years, Emily Barton ’11 returned to the hilltop as an assistant professor of Behavioral Neuroscience. Barton earned her PhD at the University of Houston and completed a postdoctoral fellowship at MD Anderson Cancer Center.

NOVEL IDEA I’m Not Missing, the debut young-adult novel of Writer-inResidence Carrie Fountain, was published this summer. Set in Fountain’s hometown of Las Cruces, New Mexico, the story follows half-Latina Miranda after her headstrong best friend Syd runs away during the middle of the girls’ senior year. Missing is Fountain’s third book, following her poetry collections Burn Lake and Instant Winner.

“St. Edward’s was where I decided I wanted to be a professor, and I wanted to teach at a university just like it,” Barton says. “Coming back is a dream job.”

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TOP TEACHERS St. Edward’s alumni have garnered recognition in Del Valle ISD’s recent “Teacher of the Year” awards. In the past three years, Spanish, Language Arts and Reading major Dory Ruby Perez ’11, Mathematics major Leslie Daughtry ’14, Biology major Erica Valdez ’13, English major Brittney Jackson ’13, Art major Katy Potts ’13 and Social Studies major Jeff Rasp ’11 have all won “Teacher of the Year” at their schools. Daughtry was also chosen as the overall Del Valle Independent School District Secondary Teacher of the Year in 2017.

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A Champion for the Greater Good

“St. Edward’s established the College Assistance Migrant Program, and, happily, other colleges — especially in the South and Southwest — have developed comparable programs. But the St. Edward’s CAMP is the original and, in my opinion, the most successful.”

Bishop John E. McCarthy, who died August 18, was a friend to St. Edward’s University for more than three decades.

A LIFE OF SERVICE

Bishop McCarthy, who was born in 1930, grew up poor. As a priest and later a bishop, he kept a spotlight on programs to help those in poverty. He was one of the founders of the Catholic Campaign for Human Development, the U.S. Bishops’ major domestic anti-poverty effort. He became the executive director of the San Antonio–based U.S. Bishops’ Committee for Spanish-speaking Catholics in 1966, the same year farmworkers marched from the Rio Grande Valley to the State Capitol to demand better wages for their labor. As Bishop of Austin from 1986 to 2001, he expanded Catholic education and programs providing legal services and health care to the disenfranchised. His legacy lives on at St. Edward’s in a lecture series bearing his name and an endowed scholarship for students in the College Assistance Migrant Program, an initiative close to his heart. Bishop McCarthy was an avid writer, and after retirement he published reflections on his website, “A Bishop’s Blog: Common Sense Catholicism.” He posted this reflection about CAMP in August of 2012.

Bishop McCarthy was a steadfast supporter of St. Edward’s. His service spanned three decades:

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Serving two terms on the university’s Board of Trustees, 1979–1981 and 2009–2011.

“Most thoughtful Americans are conscious of the difficult lives that are lived by migrant farmworkers. Their jobs in any given area last only a short period of time, and the workers move on with the changing harvest schedules. This has disastrous effects on the education of children, and although many of them heroically manage to get into and finish high school, it is only after extreme difficulties are overcome. And then comes college. Migrant families have a difficult time putting enough food on the table. They are in no position to pay the extraordinarily high cost of today’s college expenses. Forty years ago, Brother Stephen Walsh, CSC, ’62 president of St. Edward’s University, saw a need, had a vision and chose to do something about it. St. Edward’s established the College Assistance Migrant Program, and, happily, other colleges — especially in the South

and Southwest — have developed comparable programs. But the St. Edward’s CAMP is the original and, in my opinion, the most successful. CAMP is not simply a first-rate academic support program, as important as that is. It also creates a family-like support system for students coming to college from rural areas where they’ve developed very limited academic credentials. CAMP students soon bond together as a family. They help each other, encourage each other, and are thrilled to see those ahead of them in the program moving on to graduation and success beyond college. Since 1972, close to 3,000 students have graduated from this program and are scattered across the country in business and professional roles. St. Edward’s has a lot to be proud of. Those who know the university are thankful for the vision of its leaders.”

Supporting the Bishop Vincent Harris Endowed Scholarship at St. Edward’s University, which provides scholarships for students from the Austin diocese.

Speaking at the university’s 1994 commencement, at which he received an honorary degree.


TAKE ON YOUR WORLD

A CONSISTENT MISSION

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Sister Donna Jurick, SND, came to St. Edward’s in 1988 as the academic vice president and spent the next 30 years leading and supporting faculty and students. She retired in June as executive vice president emerita. BY ROBYN ROSS ILLUSTRATION BY LUKE WALLER

1 HOW SERENDIPITY BROUGHT HER TO ST. EDWARD’S

When I left Trinity Washington University [after serving as president], I called the director of the Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities, whom I knew well from working together in Washington, D.C. I told her I wanted to visit institutions that were trying to serve disadvantaged students in the same way as many of our congregations that stayed in the inner city to provide private education to disadvantaged students. She said, “Call Pat Hayes at St. Edward’s, because if anybody’s doing it, they are.” I had never been to Texas or heard of St. Edward’s. The very next week, the Chronicle of Higher Education published their posting for an academic vice president, so I applied.

3 “I respect the value of people’s complementary abilities, and that comes from the Holy Cross mission.”

THE BEST EDUCATION SHE EVER HAD My undergraduate degree is in Speech Communication, and my master’s is in Rhetoric and Public Address, and my doctorate is in Communication Theory and Organizational Communication. But, hands down, the best education I ever had was debate and extemporaneous speaking in high school. I learned to think on my feet. My debate partner — with whom I’m still in touch — and I only lost one debate that we shouldn’t have. We were up against a team from the Catholic boys’ school that included this unbelievably handsome guy, and we got confused and distracted. But the next time we went up against that team, they got slaughtered, because we had gotten over the distraction.

ON APPRECIATING EVERYONE’S SKILL SET

When I was working on my doctorate, I was talking with a much older nun who had taught first or second grade all her life and did it very well. She was going on and on about how wonderful it was that I was earning a doctorate, and I finally said, “Sister, I like what I’m doing, and I’m good at it. But if I had to teach your class, I would be terrified — I have no idea what to do with 5- and 6-year-olds! What you do is every bit as important, if not more important, than what I do.” I respect the value of people’s complementary abilities, and that comes from the Holy Cross mission that emphasizes the dignity of the human person. That plays out in terms of our respect for students, as well — we need to help all students achieve what they’re capable of achieving, which isn’t the same for everybody.

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HER NEXT CHAPTER

It’s the right time to retire, personally and institutionally. I’m happy for how things have worked out. I’m going to take a significant trip — I haven’t decided where yet. And I’m staying on the Holy Cross Institute board, as well as the boards of Marygrove College and Notre Dame de Namur University. I can continue my mission-driven approach there. I want to read more in theology and philosophy, and novels that are thought provoking. And I hope to have more social interaction with my friends who are also colleagues, with whom I haven’t always had time to socialize.

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the

Keychain A simple object shows how one student’s journey of earning her PhD was both tough and triumphant. BY ROBYN ROSS PHOTOGRAPHY BY WHITNEY DEVIN ’10

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Victoria Rodriguez ’11 grew up in San Antonio, in a house built in 1933 on land purchased by her great-great grandfather. Her mom, Connie, still lives there.

VICTORIA RODRIGUEZ ’11 stood at the lectern and surveyed the upturned faces in the campus center ballroom. Dessert had been served, coffee had been poured, and she was nearing the end of her speech. It felt surreal to be the keynote speaker at the University of San Diego McNair Scholars awards banquet. But it also felt right: Seven years ago, she had been in these students’ shoes. Like many of them, she had celebrated being the first in her family to graduate from college — and to get accepted to a graduate program. As a postdoctoral fellow at USD and an alumna of the McNair program at St. Edward’s, Rodriguez was a natural choice to speak at the end-ofyear luncheon. The honored guests, the graduating seniors, numbered only 17. But the ballroom was packed with their faculty mentors, family members and friends, who perfectly illustrated the point Rodriguez was about to make. She took a deep breath and began the last part of her speech, the one that had made her tear up every time she practiced on the phone with her mom back in San Antonio. “When I was really struggling my second year at Stanford, I called my mom to say what a hard time I was having,” she began. “I remember my mom saying that, because she had never been to graduate school — or finished college — she couldn’t help me with my academics. So she told me to close my eyes and picture everyone from back home: her, my late grandma, my uncles, aunts and cousins; my ancestors; people from my church; and people from St. Edward’s. She said, ‘All of their hopes and dreams — and all of your ancestors’ hopes and dreams — rest on you. On your shoulders. But I want you to also picture them holding you up, backing you up, supporting you. We are all rooting for you. We all believe in you.’

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When Rodriguez graduated with her PhD from Stanford, her mom gave her a simple keychain that serves as a reminder of all Rodriguez has accomplished.

“That gave me, and still gives me, motivation to keep going. You are all the product of your parents’ hopes and dreams, which is not always an easy burden. But remember, you have the support of your ancestors and of your community holding you up, no matter where you end up.” After the applause, one of the McNair Scholars whom Rodriguez had taught that year approached her. “You made me cry, Professor,” she said, smiling with damp eyes. “Good!” Rodriguez joked. “At least I wasn’t the only one.” As she dug in her purse for a tissue, her fingers grazed her keychain, and for a moment she felt the tears well up again. It was a simple keychain, 2 inches wide, with white letters reading Stanford Graduate School of Education set against a cardinal red. People probably thought she carried it because she was proud of the PhD she’d earned there last year. She was. But, like her journey to the PhD itself, the story was more complicated and more bittersweet.

Rodriguez grew up in the green-and-white frame house her great-great-grandfather had built on the west side of San Antonio. She shared the house with her mother and grandmother, and every Sunday, all three walked down the block to Our Lady of Guadalupe, the church that served the predominantly working-class, Latinx neighborhood where Rodriguez also attended Catholic school. The family was so involved in the church that, when Rodriguez finished eighth grade, the priests offered her a scholarship to attend a Catholic high school with an outstanding academic reputation.


On Rodriguez ’s visits home to San Antonio, she and her mom pick up their Scrabble game with their own set of rules. No college words, says Connie.

Rodriguez had always been academically inclined — even as a kid she’d turned up her nose at the children’s section of the library, preferring to browse the adult stacks — and the high school had a challenging curriculum. But she felt hopelessly out of place. As parents picked up their children after the first day of school, she counted each Lexus and Porsche as it pulled up to the curb. Unlike her classmates, she didn’t have a computer at home, so she handwrote her papers and typed them in the school library. When it was time to fill out the online application for federal financial aid, called the FAFSA, she and her mom spent a Saturday at her neighborhood branch library, steeped in its old-books-and-animalcrackers smell. It took all day: The library restricted internet use to 30-minute increments, so the women would work furiously, only to have their session time out. After waiting in line, they’d tackle the form again. At school, Rodriguez asked if anyone else thought the FAFSA was complicated. What’s the FAFSA? her classmates asked. As uncomfortable as the social dynamics were, Rodriguez knew she had academic opportunities her neighborhood friends weren’t getting at their public school. It gnawed at her. “I thought, Why? It’s not fair that, just because I knew people at a church who were willing to pay for this experience, I got to have a better education than my friends from the same background. I knew I wanted to do something to pursue educational equity.” She came to St. Edward’s with the help of scholarships and financial aid, including a job as office assistant to Social Work program directors Jean Frank and, later, Stacey Borasky. Conversations with professors in her Psychology major suggested that she’d need

Rodriguez celebrates her quiñceanera with grandmother and mom at Our Lady of Guadalupe, the church near her family’s home.

an advanced degree to influence education policy, but she knew nothing about graduate school. One day, in a psychology class, she heard a professor mention an initiative that prepared students for graduate-level research: the Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement Program. “McNair does a really good job helping low-income, firstgeneration students, who have minimal exposure to the graduate school application process,” says Sonia Briseño, assistant director of the St. Edward’s McNair program. “McNair provides that training, so the process is not as intimidating.” The program is named for Ronald McNair, the second African American to fly on a NASA space shuttle, who was killed when the Challenger exploded in 1986. Although McNair grew up poor in segregated South Carolina, he earned a PhD in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology at age 26. Active on 187 college campuses, the federally funded McNair program aims to increase the number of students from disadvantaged backgrounds who earn doctorates. Today, Hispanic, black, American Indian and Alaskan Native students together earn roughly 15 percent of the nation’s PhDs, despite comprising a third of the nation’s population. The program has two pillars: an intense, faculty-mentored research experience and mentorship through the graduate school application process. To become McNair Scholars, students must be low-income and first-generation college students, or come from ethnic groups underrepresented in graduate education. At St. Edward’s, about 35 students apply for 12 spots each year. Some apply as sophomores and conduct research over two summers;

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The San Antonio neighborhood where Rodriguez grew up is working class but also has a rich cultural, social and spiritual life. The murals depict Mexican and local history that’s often not discussed in schools, says Rodriguez.

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others enter the program as juniors and conduct research the summer between their junior and senior years. In the spring, the students work with a faculty mentor on their literature reviews and research proposals. Summer begins with a two-day graduate school boot camp. Then, the students, with the help of their mentors, collect and analyze data, write a paper, and prepare it for presentation — all in a breakneck eight weeks. The program culminates with the McNair Scholars Program Research Symposium, where the students present their work for the first time. Meanwhile, they learn about graduate school: how to choose target schools, find funding, write a purpose statement and prepare for the entrance exam. Throughout the school year, the group meets weekly for sessions about interviewing, networking and managing money, and to hear advice — via Skype — from St. Edward’s McNair alumni currently enrolled in graduate programs. (Molly Minus, associate vice president for Academic Affairs, remembers one conversation that developed from a student’s question about the best part of graduate school. An alumnus who had worked multiple jobs throughout his undergraduate years answered with a touch of amazement that he was now being paid to go to school.) Seniors also shadow The University of Texas at Austin doctoral students in their respective disciplines. Since 2003, nearly 70 St. Edward’s McNair Scholars have earned master’s degrees, and 13 have earned PhDs. Another 20 are currently enrolled in doctoral programs. “When we first started the program, these students were behind the eight ball because the majority didn’t grow up in a home where people went to college,” says Minus, the program’s director. “We often had to convince them of the value of earning a PhD. But as things have changed on our campus, and more students want to go to graduate school and are studying abroad, it doesn’t seem so out of reach. Our scholars want to pursue those opportunities, too.”

TRAILBLAZERS

NUBIA BRIONES ’18 | PSYCHOLOGY

Last summer, I did research about ethnocultural empathy, which is people’s ability to empathize with people from a different race or ethnicity. My research this summer continued the same theme, but I’m looking at whether ethnic identity — or how strongly you identify with your ethnic group — influences your ability to empathize with people from other backgrounds.

When Rodriguez was preparing her McNair summer research proposal, she knew she wanted to focus on racial and ethnic identity: how it develops, and how it impacts a person’s lived experience. She was intrigued by the studies psychologists Kenneth and Mamie Clark had conducted in the 1940s with African-American children in Clarendon County, South Carolina — an hour’s drive from where Ronald McNair would grow up. The Clarks showed the children white and black dolls and asked them questions: Which doll was “nice”? Which was “bad”? The children assigned negative qualities to the black dolls, a result the Supreme Court later cited in its Brown v. Board of Education decision as evidence of segregation’s harmful impacts. Rodriguez wanted to design a similar study examining the racial and ethnic attitudes of Mexican-American children. Working with the Boys & Girls Clubs of Austin, she showed her subjects pictures of children in different ethnic groups and asked which children were smart? nice? mean? not smart? “Basically, what happened was the Mexican-American children reproduced the racial hierarchy of the United States,” she says. “The most likely group to get the negative adjectives attached to them was African Americans, followed by the Latino picture, followed by the Asian-American picture, followed by the white picture. I was a little sad, but not surprised, I guess.” Rodriguez applied to 15 graduate schools and was accepted to four doctoral programs and several master’s programs. She was waitlisted for the Stanford Graduate School of Education’s PhD in Developmental and Psychological Sciences — a result she considered an achievement in itself. Assuming she wouldn’t get in, Rodriguez focused her energy on visiting the other schools. Those universities, along with the McNair program, covered her travel costs. But the day before she had to commit to a program, she received an email from Stanford: We are pleased to offer you admission and five years of full funding. You have 24 hours to accept or decline our offer.

Research experience gives McNair Scholars an advantage in the graduate-school admission process because they already know how to conduct independent studies. Not all applicants have these skills. Three McNair students tell us about their St. Edward’s research experience.

ANTHONY SANCHEZ ’19 | BIOCHEMISTRY

I’m working on a biochemistry project in which my professor and I study C. elegans roundworms that are genetically modified to have mutations similar to mutations in humans who have neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s and ALS. Their nervous systems are very similar to humans’. We’re also testing a new drug to see if it restores nervous system function in these mutated roundworms.

CHANTAL NEUTZLER ’19 | BIOLOGY

I’m studying the process of autophagy — an organism’s waste-removal system — in the roundworm C. elegans. My research advisor and I are testing whether roundworms cultivated in an environment with rapamycin, a drug that induces autophagy, are healthier and more able to clear amyloid beta plaques (which are associated with Alzheimer’s disease in humans) than a control group.

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When Rodriguez was around 11 years old, an artist painted a mural on the parish hall at Our Lady of Guadalupe. The mural depicts kids from the neighborhood with different careers, and the artist told Rodriguez he was depicting her as a housewife. “That made me a little upset,” says Rodriguez.“I wanted to be something different, like a doctor or a teacher.” She later realized that a casual observer can’t tell what her career is supposed to be.

Rodriguez raced across campus to the Social Work office, where she assembled a team: then–Social Work chair Stacey Borasky and her research mentors, Professors of Psychology Jeannetta Williams and Sara Villanueva. Together they brainstormed a list of Stanford’s pros (full funding!) and cons (Rodriguez hadn’t visited). Nearly 24 hours later, Rodriguez replied to the email: I accept.

On a Tuesday morning in September, Rodriguez took a seat in her first class at Stanford, a seminar for all 27 first-year doctoral students in the Graduate School of Education. “Welcome to Stanford,” her professor said. “Let’s start with everyone introducing themselves and telling us what you did this past summer.” One by one, her fellow students began to speak. “I just wrapped up a master’s degree at Harvard University.” “I spent the last few years working at the World Bank.” “I just returned from doing a Fulbright in Norway.” “I’m coming to Stanford after teaching high-school math for 20 years.” Sitting in the back of the classroom, Rodriguez could feel her heartbeat accelerate. What. The. Heck. Am. I. Doing. Here. I spent my summer working at the Gap to save up money for my security deposit and first month’s rent in California. I’m the youngest person here, and the only Latina, and the only one who came straight from undergrad. When it was her turn to speak, she smiled. “This summer a friend and I went on a road trip to see the last manned shuttle launch at Cape Canaveral.” It was true, but it didn’t seem like enough.

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That morning kicked off several rough years, marked by persistent impostor syndrome — something she’d been warned about by her McNair mentor, Jennifer Kay Leach, a PhD student at UT, who’d taken Rodriguez under her wing. Eventually she confided her doubts to her friend and classmate Ingrid, an experienced teacher. “But, Victoria, can you imagine what you look like from everyone else’s perspective?” Ingrid responded. “They think, Wow, I had to go off and get a master’s at Harvard, and this girl just walks in straight from undergrad. She must be a super genius.” Those words helped. “Because of McNair, I was one of the only ones in my cohort who already had research experience, had already done her own independent study, knew how to write a literature review and had done one before,” Rodriguez says. “That moment of reframing helped shift my perspective.” In her last three years of the program, Rodriguez’s confidence gradually returned. For her dissertation, she studied college readiness in a charter school in a nearby low-income, predominantly Latinx neighborhood. At her dissertation defense, a friend offered to bring the snacks that are customary for PhD candidates to provide the professors on their committee. “Let’s make it Mexican themed,” Rodriguez told him. “I’m Mexican, and there’s not a lot of that here at Stanford, so I want to assert my identity.” Her friend went a little overboard. Instead of simple coffee and pastries, the snacks table at Rodriguez’s defense was packed with hot Cheetos, popcorn with Tapatío hot sauce, chamoy-covered gummy bears, pan dulce, chips and salsa, guacamole, and fruit cups with Tajín chili-lime seasoning.


Rodriguez’s family donated part of the land Our Lady of Guadalupe parish was built, and she and her mom were deeply involved in the church. The priests offered her a scholarship to attend a Catholic high school with an outstanding reputation.

In Rodriguez’s research about the Latinx community in higher education, she’d learned that only 3 percent of PhDs in the United States are awarded to Latinas. “We’re unicorns,” Rodriguez thought at the time. “We’re rare.” The day of her dissertation defense, Rodriguez’s friends decorated the space in front of the lectern with a unicorn piñata.

The San Diego sunshine was a stark contrast to the air-conditioned ballroom, and Rodriguez basked in its warmth as she walked across campus. On either side of the pedestrian plaza, cream-colored buildings topped with rust-red Spanish tile stood etched against the azure sky. Fountains burbled beneath the jacaranda trees spilling over with violet blooms. After a year at USD, she still couldn’t get over the campus’s beauty. She had come to USD from Stanford as a Diversity Post-Doctoral Fellow, a position created to help the university recruit a more diverse faculty. The two-year position gave her extra time to teach and publish before applying for tenure-track professorships. It was a dream job. Students often waved at her from across the plaza: “Hey, Dr. Rodriguez.” “Hi, Professor.” It always took her a few seconds to realize she was the one they were addressing. As she walked toward her car, thinking of the students she had seen at the luncheon, Rodriguez fished her keys out of her purse. The silver border of her keychain caught the light, and she looked down, reading the name of her alma mater, as she did several times each day.

Six months before Rodriguez’s graduation, her mother had lost her job. Friends pooled their money to buy her a plane ticket to California so she could attend the ceremony. Still, the only graduation present her mother could afford was the $8 keychain. As the elder Rodriguez handed her daughter the box, she looked down. “I’m sorry this is all I can give you right now.” Rodriguez shook her head. “No, Mom — you’ve given me so much more. You’ve given me this.” She gestured at the Stanford campus. “I wouldn’t have gotten here if it wasn’t for you and all the sacrifices you made for me.” The keychain had become a symbol of where Rodriguez had come from, and a constant reminder to help others the way she’d been helped. She closed her hand around it as she took in the view that never ceased to impress her: Mission Bay, and beyond it, the blue Pacific Ocean. For an extra moment she stood and watched the sun sparkle on the waves, all the way to where the ocean met the sky.

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Matti Bills ’15, co-owner of Mum Foods, uses a cooking process that is true to traditional Central Texas–style barbecue. “We use an offset smoker and cook with a fire of post oak wood, without any electricity or propane. We slow smoke for 12 hours twice a week in South Austin,” she says.

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Two St. Edward’s alumni are turning up the heat on the Texas barbecue scene by reimagining the classic cuisine. BY CYNTHIA J. DRAKE / PHOTOGRAPHS BY WYNN MEYERS ’13

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“It’s everyone’s responsibility to make this world a better place to live. We can’t expect anybody else to do it for us, and I guess that responsibility falls especially on the businesses.”

IF THERE IS AN unofficial flavor of the state of Texas, it’s brisket: perfectly smoked with a crush of spice on the outside giving way to a soft, savory inside. It seems scientifically impossible for meat to melt in the mouth, but the best-cooked briskets dissolve the minute they hit the tongue. Bragging rights over who has the best barbecue in Texas are constantly shuffled, and barbecue braggadocio has become a statewide sport, with communities of fans steadfastly staking claim to their favorites. But two people have recently changed the rules of the game in their own ways. Miguel Vidal ’03, owner of Valentina’s, offers an authentic Tex-Mex take on barbecue, while Mattison (Matti) Bills ’15, co-owner of Mum Foods, serves critic-favorite pastrami built on an appreciation for locally sourced meat. Both are storming the Austin barbecue scene by infusing it with new ideas and recipes. And the inspiration for both of their ventures started at St. Edward’s.

IN THE SOURCE THEY TRUST

At the Texas Farmers’ Market at Mueller on a Sunday morning, sellers are setting up their tents and tables and swapping hellos. At Mum Foods, eighth-generation Texan Bills and Geoffrey Ellis, her partner in barbecue and life, ready the scale, the chopping block and a hefty roll of butcher paper. Within an hour of opening, they’ll have dozens of faithful customers standing in line in the early-summer heat, waiting to buy their Wagyu brisket, sausage, chicken and pastrami. The latter was named best in the state by Texas Monthly’s barbecue editor, Daniel Vaughn. “It has taken me five years

to find the best in the state,” Vaughn wrote of Bills’ and Ellis’ creation. He said: “It’s like the Platonic ideal of Texas pastrami.” The whole concept of their business begins with the source — “Mum” (as in mother) echoes this importance for Bills, who spent a lot of time in and out of school reflecting on food. She started at St. Edward’s pursuing a degree in business before changing her major to Environmental Science and Policy. She remembers an assignment from Professor and Coordinator of Environmental Science and Policy Peter Beck that was a turning point for her. “It was a hugely impactful class,” she says. “We went three days without electricity — it literally changed the way my body felt. I was able to be in tune with nature in ways that I didn’t even know were possible.” As part of the assignment, she hosted a dinner party by candlelight where she served food cooked over a firepit. “It was wonderful,” she remembers. No cell phones or social media, no TV or other interruptions. “It brought people together in a way that we just can’t access anymore,” she says. Around that time, Bills spent a year as a vegan as part of her journey to explore where food comes from and people’s relationship to it. She gradually returned to eating meat, motivated by a desire to consume a broader diet of local foods and by a longing to reconnect with the foods of her Central Texas upbringing. That thoughtfulness and intention became the cornerstone of her business venture with Ellis. The business buys meat from four or five different small farms and is always trying to

find new sources. It’s a more expensive and complicated route for them, but it’s a core part of Mum’s mission. The meat is all locally raised, pastured, and hormone- and antibiotic-free, and the cattle never leave the state of Texas. “By buying from places that don’t send the animals off — that do it all in one closed loop — we’re keeping the money away from the big packing houses and putting it toward these family-owned businesses,” she says. Bills says that asking questions about food sources is changing the industry. “It helps more than just the ranchers. It provides the ranchers with a market to sell these products that are better for our state, our animals and our consumers,” she says. “It’s everyone’s responsibility to make this world a better place to live. We can’t expect anybody else to do it for us, and I guess that responsibility falls especially on the businesses.”

THE TEXAS TWIST

The duo of Bills and Ellis — plus one additional employee who helps them with smoking — sells about 675 pounds of meat per week at Austin-area farmers markets. The traditional smoked brisket starts with highquality Wagyu beef and is a bare-bones traditional recipe that uses only salt and pepper. Their highly acclaimed pastrami was the result of a uniquely Texas experiment with some surplus brisket. “We were interested in turning the lean end of the brisket into pastrami, and then pretty soon we were starting to turn whole briskets into pastrami,” curing and smoking it instead of steaming it as chefs do in

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Vidal considered MexicanAmerican cuisine provincial and average, but living in Austin and Miami gave him a new perspective.

New York delis. “The moist pastrami is so decadent and delicious. It’s something that really set us apart,” she says. “At most places in New York, they’ll use either navel or top round, but we use brisket, which we think has just the perfect fat content,” Bills says. The result is soft and peppery, delicate and luxurious. Bills and Ellis dream of one day opening a storefront in a small town like Elgin, and a companion bakery. “We’d be honored to have the opportunity to continue the history of Texas barbecue in Elgin, alongside historic barbecue joints Southside Market and Meyer’s,” says Ellis. “And then I can finally fulfill my dreams of having a small farm,” adds Bills. “Every day people ask us about where the food comes from, how it’s raised, what type of feed they use. The world is a better place with increased food transparency.” Underneath all the success, Bills has always wanted to be a farmer. She loves the production of food more than anything. Somewhere along the way, barbecue took hold as a complementary passion — sourcing, curing, smoking. It brings people together, much like her electricity-free dinner party experiment during college. “This found me,” says Bills. “I love cooking with fire. It’s a dynamic and variable experience, much like farming. You have to work with the flow of nature in lieu of trying to control it. It’s difficult work, but it’s stimulating and fulfilling.”

BARE BONES AND BACKYARD

Miguel Vidal paces around the four trailers that house the pits

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and kitchens on a property he leases on Manchaca Road in South Austin. He dreams of one day breaking ground and creating a permanent restaurant to house Valentina’s, which is currently a compound of free-standing smokers and food trailers and a large covered picnic area. Even without a brick-and-mortar restaurant, he’ll sell 4,000 pounds of brisket this week. Business is good, he says. But he’s hungry for more. Nearly 20 years ago, when Vidal was a student, he lacked a clear direction. He was a Communication major, then shifted to media production. He often felt unfocused in pursuit of his future career. He held down a job at the restaurant Ranch 616 downtown, while also playing varsity soccer (serving as captain for two years), and dreamed of becoming a professional athlete. “I worked hard at soccer more than anything, but it got to a certain point where I kind of got lost,” he says. “I knew that I didn’t want to have a corporate job. I didn’t want to work for anyone. I had always had an entrepreneurial spirit, but I just didn’t know how to go about it at the time.” Vidal tore the medial collateral ligament in his knee during his fourth year at St. Edward’s. He recovered and was a student soccer coach for one semester, while also playing for the Austin Lightning, a development team. He moved to Miami and tried to make a go of playing semi-professional soccer, traveling with teams across the United States. While in Miami, he worked as a waiter. In his downtime, when he wasn’t playing soccer, he’d work for free in restaurants, just to hang out with chefs and learn new recipes

and techniques. He returned to his home in San Antonio whenever he could, finding comfort as his knee injuries persisted. As his soccer dreams faded, he was left without a real idea of what he could do with his life. Then, on one of his visits home, the threads of his life started to come together — the entrepreneurial spark he started to feel as a student, the love of food he nurtured in Miami and the comfort of his family that sustained him through challenging times. Home was where his dad and uncle smoked barbecue, and his mom cooked traditional Mexican-American cuisine with a real San Antonio style — rice and beans, beef picadillo, fideo, homemade tortillas, arroz con pollo. In his youth, Vidal considered this provincial and average, but living in Austin and Miami gave him a new perspective. “I went home to my parents’ house, and my dad had made barbecue,” he remembers. “And I was sitting there eating, taking a couple slices of my dad’s brisket and my mom’s tortilla. I put some avocado and salsa on the taco, and rice and beans on the side, and I’m like, ‘This is it, Dad: Tex-Mex barbecue. This is what I want to do. I’m going to open up a restaurant with this food right here: bare bones, what we do in the backyard, what your cousins do. A true representation of Tex-Mex food — what Tejanos eat.’” His parents, like Vidal before, didn’t see the food as anything notable. It was just what they ate. But Austin diners begged to differ.

BARBECUE FOR THE SOUL

The original location of Valentina’s, named for Vidal’s oldest daughter, opened during SXSW


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Miguel Vidal ’03 grew up watching his dad use mesquite wood to smoke barbecue. Valentina’s now goes through about two cords of mesquite wood each week. 26

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in 2013 in a small trailer near Star Bar on West 6th Street. Vidal had spread the word to a few friends to generate pre-opening buzz, and it worked: When he took the first order, 100 people were waiting in line. He refused to compromise on quality even then, rolling fresh tortillas by hand in spite of the crowds (“I’m pretty adamant about making our own tortillas. I’m from San Antonio, and my mom would slap me if I didn’t do it!”). He improvised when his crew ran out of food for the throngs that showed up in the early morning hours. One day, when he’d run out of the brisket, ribs and pork butts typically used in barbecue, he created Mexican hot dogs — now officially called Tejano Dogs — with Kosher all-beef franks smoked for up to an hour, then seared on a flat-top grill, and served with caramelized onions, habañero mustard and salsa atop a freshly made tortilla. They, along with other dishes he created out of necessity, still make an appearance as daily specials. In 2015, he opened another food trailer, Violet Taco (named for his youngest daughter) on East Cesar Chavez. He moved the business several times before deciding to focus his energies — and his staffing — on a permanent location for Valentina’s on Manchaca Road in South Austin. “Violet Taco was thriving, but so was Valentina’s. I had to make a choice because I needed another kitchen and double the staff at Valentina’s.” Valentina’s has become known as the Tex-Mex barbecue fusion spot in Austin, but with an emphasis on flavor that meanders into creative territories: Pork belly with caramelized

onions. Tomatillo crema with those soft, fresh tortillas, charred and crisp in just the right spots. As he surveys a trailer at his restaurant, Vidal points to the spreadsheets, organized lists, handbooks and event workflow charts he’s created to run his business. “This is all stuff I didn’t think was going to help me from my college courses, but it does,” he says. “Everything in the Communication program — like new communication research or interpersonal communication — all those things I take with me now. If I didn’t do those things at St. Edward’s, I wouldn’t be able to be the boss or leader that I am here. Not at all. Those things help me run a staff of 33 people.” Even soccer has played a reprising role. A pep talk to his staff includes allusions to a hotshot soccer player who is only as successful as his determination and level of coachability. Those were lessons Vidal says have been reinforced later in life. “I wasn’t ready to seek the guidance I should have” in college, he says. “I was a little too arrogant at the time. Even though I wanted to be my own boss, I still needed to have some sort of mentorship.” His process may have been unconventional and the path a little unclear at times, but Vidal held fast to the risk-taking and entrepreneurial thinking he saw both at St. Edward’s and in Austin’s thriving culinary scene. “His barbecue and what he does is probably my favorite,” says Matt Pittman, owner of Meat Church BBQ and Seasoning in Waxahachie. “I think what he’s done is unreal. It’s almost gutsy to open a barbecue restaurant in Austin

these days, and you have to go through Austin — drive south of Austin — to get to Valentina’s,” says Pittman. “He has a place where literally no one has said anything bad about it. It speaks to my soul, basically. He’s so meticulous, he can’t take his eyes off his business. He’s involved in everything.” Vidal simply calls his approach hecho con amor (made with love). He says you have to feel cooking from your heart, not just from recipes.

Where to Try It

Hungry for some ’que from fellow alumni? Check out Miguel Vidal’s and Matti Bills’ delicacies for yourself at these locations.

Mum Foods

mumfoodsatx.com Texas Farmers’ Market at Lakeline Mall 11200 Lakeline Mall Dr., Cedar Park Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. year round Barton Creek Farmers’ Market 2901 South Capital of Texas Hwy., Austin (at the back of the Barton Creek Square Mall parking lot) Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. year round Texas Farmers’ Market at Mueller 4209 Airport Blvd., Austin Sundays, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. year round

Valentina’s

valentinastexmexbbq.com 11500 Manchaca Rd., Austin Monday through Sunday, 7:30 a.m. until everything is sold out

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GROW HOW TO

SMARTER Professors draw on their academic expertise to offer smart and savvy solutions to pragmatic problems. BY JOEL HOEKSTRA / ILLUSTRATIONS BY SAM PIERPOINT

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1

HOW TO HAVE A HARD CONVERSATION

When Associate Professor of Philosophy Jack Musselman asks his students to debate sticky ethical issues, he encourages them to remain respectful. Listen carefully. Make eye contact. Nod in affirmation. “You have to affirm the person, even if you disagree with their perspective,” Musselman says. Recently, Musselman had to have a difficult discussion with his 92-yearold father. The patriarch’s health was failing, and his family felt it was time Dad stopped driving. Musselman knew it would be an emotional conversation. He had to be respectful in his approach: “My parents are adults. You can’t force them to do anything. You have to be persuasive.” Musselman reminded his father that he had raised some terrific kids. They were successful. They were smart. And they could do the driving. “I said, ‘It’s time to let them pay you back,’” Musselman recalls. ‘“You’ve done all these things for your kids over the decades to make sure they were safe and cared for. Let them return the favor.’” Casting things in a positive light — showing the benefits that come with an altered position — can help people feel more comfortable changing their minds. “You have to present the argument in a way that they still win,” Musselman says. “My parents want to be proud of their kids.”

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When to Worry About Your Kid’s Test Scores Parents everywhere want their children to succeed. But what do you do when your kid’s standardized test score falls below the 50th percentile? “Don’t panic,” says Associate Professor of Counseling Bill McHenry, a former high-school counselor and a father of four. A test score is just a snapshot of performance on a particular day. More important, McHenry says, is taking a look at your child’s long-term performance: Low scores in math over multiple years, for example, are worth investigating. Talking to teachers — both past and present — can also provide insight. Is the test score data consistent with what teachers tell you about the student’s performance in that subject? If so, McHenry recommends trying to pinpoint the specific skills your child needs to improve, then asking teachers about resources — either during the day or after school — that may be available. “Parents should look at scores contextually,” McHenry says. “Kids develop reasoning and critical-thinking skills at different paces, and it’s important to account for that.”


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What to Do About Household Smells Assistant Professor of Chemistry Raychelle Burks likes the smells of saltwater, suntan oil and freshly baked bread. But as someone who once worked in a crime lab, she also knows that not every smell has happy associations. “I find comfort in the smell of bleach,” Burks says. “But I also smell the possibility of a cover-up.” When bad smells (think rotting meat and sour milk) take over, use absorbent molecules that are acids, bases or both to catch and neutralize stinky volatile molecules. Baking soda — sodium bicarbonate — likes to act as a base and can react with foul-smelling acids to render them far less stinky or odorless. “Vinegar and lemon juices, which are both acids, are good cleaners and disinfectants,” says Burks. “As a kid, I remember my mom running vinegar through the coffee pot to clean it. She was using chemistry instead of elbow grease.” Scale, the mineral deposits that build up in a coffee pot, is insoluble in neutral water. However, scale is soluble in acids, like vinegar. “We use chemistry every day in cooking, yardwork and housework,” Burks says. Once you’ve banished the bad smell with bases and acids, you can layer on the good: put out some cinnamon potpourri or spritz on the Chanel. People will notice the scent and won’t suspect a cover-up.

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HOW TO BE A BETTER NEGOTIATOR

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WHAT YOU CAN DO TO BOOST BIODIVERSITY Yards all over Austin are planted with privet. Full grown, the large, leafy shrub makes a nice privacy hedge and provides shade from the hot Texas sun. But privet is a foreign invader, says Amy Concilio, assistant professor of Environmental Science and Policy. It spreads easily, and like many invasive species, it tends to push out native

plants. “Even if you cut it down, it resprouts if you don’t tear out the roots,” Concilio says. Besides tearing out your privet, what can you do to improve biodiversity? “This is one environmental problem you can actually act on,” Concilio says. Don’t plant privet or other non-native species in your yard. While U.S. laws prohibit

the sale of some invasive species, many are still readily available in nurseries. (Bamboo, English ivy and sweet autumn clematis are popular invasives.) Introduced into gardens and yards, these tough non-native species relocate quickly — often taking over wild habitats. You can replace those nonnatives with plants that

thrive in your region. Concilio urges gardeners to be selective about the plants they purchase and cultivate. Native plants often require less water. And the wild kingdom you plant may ultimately draw wild creatures. “What people plant in their yard can be one of the best predictors for bird diversity,” Concilio says.

A lawyer by training, Antonio Alvarado, executive-in-residence in The Bill Munday School of Business, has been through hundreds of situations that involve negotiation. The key to success, he says, is the three P’s: preparation, planning and practice. First: Start with a solid understanding of how you are perceived. Do you radiate confidence or worry? Is your presence big or small? Position yourself so your strengths (intelligence, connections, financial options) are apparent, Alvarado says. Second: Plan how you’ll play your hand. “Have a checklist of the things you want to get and the things you have to give. Don’t give up anything unless you get something in return. It doesn’t have to be of equal value, but don’t give up something for nothing.” Next, practice some potential language — either in writing or out loud. Test the words. Check the flow. You’ll feel less rattled during negotiation and be less likely to let emotion color your communication if you’ve memorized a few key lines and run some trials. “If you can, get another person’s perspective on what you have to say,” Alvarado says. “Practice is invaluable.” Finally, at the end of the process, make sure you have agreement on what was decided: Something in writing is best, but you could start with a verbal “I just want to make sure I understand the terms.” “Set your markers so you don’t get surprised,” Alvarado says.

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red doors

LIVING THE MISSION

The Art of Service

The oil paintings of Brother Robert Weinmann, CSC, ’66 reflect a life dedicated to the children of Brazil. BY ROBYN ROSS

The walls in the studio of Brother Robert Weinmann, CSC, ’66 are adorned with brightly colored paintings: scenes of Brazilian women in billowing dresses dancing at a festival,

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depictions of daily life in Brazil and images of flowers from both the hillside near the Vincent Pieau Residence in Austin, where Weinmann lives, and Brazil, where he served

the Congregation of Holy Cross for decades. Weinmann studied education at St. Edward’s, taking up painting as a hobby at the encouragement of an older Holy Cross brother. After graduation he taught at the congregation’s grade school, Colegio Notre Dame, in Campinas, Brazil. When he wasn’t teaching, he turned his attention to nearby Sousas, where children lived in the favela, or slum, and spent their days on the street, vulnerable to the advances of gangsters who sold weapons and drugs. Weinmann and a group of Notre Dame parents bought an abandoned factory and in 1985 turned it into The Community Center

of Brother Andre, a safe place for the Sousas children. In Portuguese, the first letters of these words form the abbreviation CECOIA, a word that also evokes the giant redwoods of the American West, enormous trees that each begin as a single seed. The Cecoia, too, began small and eventually grew to serve 600 children at two facilities. The brothers, including Weinmann, became the children’s father figures. “I was with a number of the kids from the time they were 6 years old to 18,” he says. “We wanted the best for them.” He still receives mail and Facebook friend requests from Cecoia alumni who tell him about their marriages,

college degrees and children. In spare moments, Weinmann walked through the favela with his camera, taking portraits of the children who volunteered to be his models. These photos became the basis for his paintings, with many of the children styled as saints, or as Mary and Jesus. He sold his work at art shows across Brazil and poured the proceeds back into the Cecoia, a practice he continues in retirement. “Once I get into painting, I get completely lost. I go into another world,” Weinmann says. “It’s been a gift and a blessing.”


TOP OF THE GAME

GLOBAL TRENDSETTER BY JOSHUNDA SANDERS PHOTOGRAPHY BY MONIKA KRATOCHVIL ’08

It would be easy to assume that Lindsay Vick ’07 has always been destined to blaze a trail in global brand management, because she looks the part: She’s stylish, polished and poised beyond her years. But it was a pivotal studyabroad experience during her St. Edward’s years that inspired her to live and work abroad. As an undergraduate at St. Edward’s, Vick was planning to pursue a career in politics. She majored in Political Science and completed internships at the Texas State Capitol and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.

Studying abroad in Spain during her junior year prompted a profound change in how she thought about her future. “I fell in love with it,” Vick says. “There’s an openness and tolerance you gain living in a culture that’s not your own. You have to assimilate and learn what drives people in a place that’s nothing like where you grew up.” For Vick, that experience was only the beginning. “My time at St. Edward’s instilled in me a sense of awareness and seeking something, of making the world better,” she says.

Lindsay Vick ’07 Read more stories stedwards.edu

''''' HOW MY CAREER PROGRESSED

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After graduating, Vick moves to Spain and works as a student affairs coordinator at the International College of Seville. Through her work helping North American students during their study-abroad experiences, she becomes fluent in Spanish. She draws on her political experience to organize for President Obama’s first campaign, founding a chapter of Democrats Abroad in Southern Spain.

Vick moves to California, where she is a founding employee of a private international startup affiliated with eBay. She still dreams of living and working abroad and decides to return to Spain.

Vick earns a master’s degree in International Relations at Universidad Pablo de Olavide in Seville. She has a brief stint with the sales and marketing department of a Spain-based international hotel and resorts chain. Her role with Barcelo Hotels and Resorts gives her the experience she needs to start working in the water division of the global renewable energy company Abengoa.

From 2013 to 2016, Vick works at Abengoa in global marketing, serving as the chief marketing officer for most of that time. While at Abengoa, she brokers a deal with Manchester United, which she leverages to move into the sportsmarketing arena.

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Now based in Manhattan, Vick is director of marketing at FILA North America, where she leads high-level strategy and brand building with retailers. Last spring, she launched the brand’s first global pop-up shop program, which was covered by Fast Company magazine.

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red doors

Hilltopper Connection Today’s scholars live and learn on a modern campus that honors our history, from the newly completed The Pavilions apartments to the restored Holy Cross Hall. Next, the university will transform the Recreation and Convocation Center, which opened in 1985. A contemporary two-story addition on the building’s east side will dramatically update the existing facility. See the plans at stedwards.edu/hilltop.

The Pavilions

194 PERCENT Increase in use of recreation and well-being spaces since 2010. And 90% more students participate in club sports.

“Well-being for St. Edward’s is really a multidimensional, holistic and active process that integrates the mind, body and spirit,” says Andy Lemons, director of Recreation and Wellness. The Holy Cross imperative of whole-person development inspires Lemons every day. “No matter where your purpose has taken you after graduation, you can still experience wellness through St. Edward’s initiatives.” Curious? See the suggestions at right.

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Students employed by the university across Outreach and Promotions, Outdoor Adventures, Aquatics, Club Sports, Intramural Sports, Informal Recreation and Fitness.

FOCUS ON WELLNESS

LET’S CATCH UP Discover information, inspiration and more from Recreation and Wellness at St. Edward’s on social media @SEURecWell or visit stedwards.edu/ recreation-wellness.

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ST. EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE

NOV.

11 MILES FOR A MISSION 5K Enjoy a fun run and benefit students serving through Campus Ministry.

DEC.

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FESTIVAL OF LIGHTS Celebrate Advent during this favorite hilltop tradition for students, alumni and families.

FEB.

15–17 HOME AGAIN Check out Homecoming & Family Weekend 2019 events.


HEALTHY BEYOND THE HILLTOP Even after graduating, you can find balance in your daily life with the help of St. Edward’s. Here are five ideas.

Social Meet St. Edward’s alumni near you through Alumni Association–hosted happy hours, sporting events and more.

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Spiritual Deepen your faith and explore your values through service projects near you that are coordinated by Alumni Association chapter volunteers.

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Vocational Gain career insights and find meaningful mentorship opportunities through the Career and Professional Development Office.

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Intellectual Engage with top minds through events hosted by the Kozmetsky Center, the Center for Ethics and Leadership, and more. Look for our livestreams!

DISCOVER more ways St. Edward’s can foster your well-being at stedwards.edu/alumni.

Financial Gain financial literacy, access products and services, and get a St. Edward’s affinity card through University Federal Credit Union, a long-time partner of the university. ST. EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE

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IN MEMORIAM

ILLUSTRATION BY LUKE WALLER

“I would not have been able to come to college if it wasn’t for the Munday Scholarship.”

Bill Munday’s generosity leaves a university — and students’ lives — changed for the better. 36

ST. EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE

Bill Munday loved scholarship receptions. He — along with wife, Pat Munday ’97 — would visit with every single student who benefited from the couple’s gifts. They would ask questions and listen carefully to the students’ answers. After the receptions, they’d sit down at home with a book containing a short biography of each Munday Scholar: the student’s hometown, major, campus activities and hopes for the future. Turning the pages, they’d read about the lives they touched. The Mundays have never simply written checks to St. Edward’s. They always have wanted to get to know the students and have been happiest when surrounded by them and hearing their stories.

The Mundays are the largest donors in the university’s history, investing nearly $50 million in campus buildings, like the Munday Library, and in the Bill and Patricia Munday Endowed Scholarship, which has helped fund the education of more than 350 students to date. These gifts are the embodiment of the Mundays’ belief that everyone deserves a fair chance in life, and that their own resources could provide opportunities for students at St. Edward’s. Bill Munday, who died Aug. 19, changed hundreds of lives with his generosity. “I would not have been able to come to college — let alone the college I most wanted to attend — if it weren’t for the Munday Scholarship,” says Molly von

“Because of the Mundays, hundreds (soon to number in the thousands) of Munday Scholars are now successful St. Edward’s graduates, ready to compete in our workforce and contribute to the betterment of our economy and our society.” George E. Martin, PhD President


Berg ’17, a Communication major. Von Berg, who is from San Antonio, had discovered St. Edward’s when she was 14 and played in a volleyball tournament across the street from campus. It became her dream school, but also one she knew was likely out of reach financially. Von Berg was accepted to the university with a Dean’s Achievement Scholarship, a Pell grant, loans and work-study employment, but it was the Munday Scholarship that finally closed the financial gap and turned her dream into reality. Von Berg made the most of her St. Edward’s experience, participating in S.E.R.V.E. Austin, playing club volleyball and club tennis, and interning with the Girls Empowerment Network. She studied in Australia for a semester and served as an academic mentor to students from Saudi Arabia and China. Munday Scholarship recipients like von Berg attend financial literacy classes each year to learn about budgeting, credit, investing and employerbenefits options. The Mundays established the classes to help students manage their own resources wisely, as well as be able to give back one day. Von Berg was struck by an idea of Bill Munday’s that was presented in those lessons: No matter how much money you make, you need to conserve it, you need to invest it properly, and you need to include charity in your budget. “That spoke to me, because my mom had been on a very tight budget for a long time,” von Berg remembers. “Here was a man who had far more money than we did, and yet he still managed it well. He passed on the importance of that with his scholars, and obviously what he did with his money changed so many students’ lives, like my own. “That experience made me think of Bill Munday as a person who was modest, noble and gracious. He showed a lot of integrity by following through on his beliefs.”

Forever Grateful A look at the Mundays’ gifts to St. Edward’s University In 2004, the Mundays provided the final gift needed to complete the John Brooks Williams Natural Sciences Center–North Building. The Munday Organic Chemistry Lab is named in their honor. In 2011, the Mundays donated $13 million for the Munday Library, a stateof-the-art learning center with global digital classrooms and a light-filled reading room. The library opened in fall 2013.

In 2015, the Mundays donated $500,000 for the Bill Munday Outstanding Business Student Endowed Scholarship.

In 2003, the Mundays donated $500,000 for student scholarships. They gave generously for this purpose — $20 million in 2013, $500,000 in 2017, and a $10 million charitable gift annuity in 2016. About 140 students a year earn the Munday Scholarship.

In 2017, they gave $500,000 to help create The Dr. George E. Martin, PhD, Presidential Scholarship Endowment. ST. EDWARD’S UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE

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The View from the Stacks

As a fall chill takes hold, sunlight invites students to sit and stay awhile in the Munday Library, which opened in 2013 thanks to a $13 million gift from Bill and Pat Munday.

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