Rose Marie Bravo – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Fri, 27 Sep 2019 14:23:47 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Rose Marie Bravo – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Inspiring Quotes from Six Pioneering Fordham Women https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/inspiring-quotes-from-six-pioneering-fordham-women/ Fri, 27 Sep 2019 14:23:47 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=125162 Clockwise from top left: Barbara Dane, Valerie Rainford, Susan Conley Salice, Carolyn Dursi Cunniffe, Rose Marie Bravo, and Donna Smolens.Hundreds of women will gather on Fordham’s Lincoln Center campus on Oct. 23 for the third annual Women’s Philanthropy Summit. The full-day event will feature distinguished keynote speakers, panels on gift planning and coaching the next generation of women leaders, a workshop on imposter syndrome, and much more.

This year, six Pioneering Women in Philanthropy will be honored for the personal and financial support they have given Fordham. Leaders in their fields, each one has invested in bettering their communities and the world in their own way. Here, they share their thoughts on the importance of mentorship, empathy, self-confidence, and more on the path to success—for them and for all women.

In cosmetics, which is where I particularly grew up, we had these wonderful [women]  role models. … If you’ve been given this road map and you see that others have gone before you and achieved, you never have in your mind the notion of failure. You have the notion that you can do it too, if you’re good enough and smart enough and make the right decisions.
—Rose Marie Bravo, CBE, TMC ’71

Bravo grew up in the Bronx, the daughter of an Italian-born barber and a seamstress from Sicily. A Bronx High School of Science graduate, she earned a bachelor’s degree in English cum laude at Fordham’s Thomas More College in 1971 and later held leadership positions in several major fashion businesses—including Macy’s and Saks Fifth Avenue. She took over Burberry in 1997 and is widely credited with transforming the classic brand and greatly expanding its markets during her nine-year tenure as CEO. In 2006, Queen Elizabeth II recognized Bravo’s achievements in promoting British fashion, naming her a Commander of the British Empire.

Bravo will deliver a keynote address, “From the Bronx to Buckingham Palace,” at this year’s Women’s Philanthropy Summit.

I entered the work world bolstered by an amazing education in liberal arts that made me feel strong and confident. Still, to rise up the corporate ladder meant more than just feeling confident. I soon learned that it meant persistence and resilience, not being afraid to ask for help, and so much more. I quickly realized the importance of communicating, listening, adaptability, and using words like “us” “we” and “with.” I learned that the best leaders hire strong people, set goals, don’t make excuses, are empathetic, and understand their own self-worth.
—Carolyn Dursi Cunniffe, Ph.D., UGE ’62, GSAS ’65, ’71

Dursi Cunniffe grew up in a family of eight, including two brothers who also went to Fordham. Fluent in French and Italian, she studied at the Sorbonne and the University of Perugia as well as Fordham, where she earned bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees in French literature. She had a successful career as an executive in the cosmetics industry and, later, in executive recruiting. She spent 13 years at Revlon, rising to vice president at a time when that title was a rarity for women. She was a senior vice president and the key strategist in recruiting senior talent at Cablevision Systems Corporation before retiring in 2011. Her husband, Maurice “Mo” Cunniffe, FCRH ’54, is a fellow Fordham grad.

From my parents, I was always encouraged to be kind and fair—and to always let people know they are valued and loved. I think women have that capacity to inspire people by their passion, compassion, and empathy. Women stand tall for their beliefs and by nature have the ability to listen and compromise. We know how to bring people together and we are problem solvers.
—Barbara Dane, Ph.D., GSS ’67, ’85

Dane is a retired professor of clinical social work who has maintained a private clinical practice, working with dying and grieving persons and their families, since 1971. She earned both her M.S.W. and Ph.D. in gerontology from Fordham’s Graduate School of Social Service. She has taught at Fordham, Columbia University, and NYU, and has a substantial publishing record in social work. Dane was awarded a summer fellowship from the National Institutes of Health to conduct research on aging, and she was among the first recipients of a social work leadership grant from the Soros Foundation’s Project on Death in America. Her research on Thai women coping with HIV/AIDS and the role of meditation was presented at the Seventh International Interdisciplinary Congress on Women in Tromsø, Norway.

What I know is that we each have the opportunity to change a life every day, to share wisdom from experiences that can help one another, even if we don’t get to hear the triumphant follow-up story. What counts is what we give to lift others up around us, no matter how big or small our gift may be.
—Valerie Rainford, FCRH ’86

Rainford is head of advancing black leaders and diversity advancement strategies at JPMorgan Chase. She earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from Fordham. Prior to joining JPMorgan Chase, she served at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York for 21 years, where she rose to become the most senior black woman there and the first to rise to senior vice president. The author of an award-winning memoir, Until the Brighter Tomorrow: One Woman’s Courageous Climb from the Projects to the Podium (Eloree Press, 2014), she has dedicated much of her life to uplifting others by sharing her story of perseverance, as she did with local Bronx students on the Rose Hill campus in August.

Rainford will deliver a keynote address, “Paying It Forward: A Journey of Resilience and Giving Back,” at this year’s Women’s Philanthropy Summit.

Being a leader is about continuous learning, hands-on engagement, and the power of giving time and resources. Women do this exceptionally well. The challenge is to understand the exciting opportunities for change, and to still find time for self-care and reflection.
—Susan Conley Salice, FCRH ’82

Conley Salice is the president of the Salice Family Foundation. She also serves on the boards and chairs the development committees of Fordham University, Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of New York, and Greenwich Hospital. Before shifting her focus to philanthropy, she worked in the business sector for two decades. She earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Fordham College at Rose Hill and a master’s degree in fundraising and philanthropy from New York University. She was one of the keynote speakers at the inaugural Women’s Philanthropy Summit in 2017.

Women who have succeeded in business need to discuss how we navigated the workplace. These experiences are especially relevant today as some business leaders and politicians are seeking to erode the progress that women have made in this world. Women continually face discrimination based on their gender and have an especially tough path to managerial roles in many organizations. A man is considered tough when he makes a strong point while a woman is considered to be too emotional when making a similar point in a similar tone of voice. These stereotypes need to be put to rest. We must lead through a combination of common sense, empathy, and determination.
—Donna Smolens, FCRH ’79, GSAS ’81

Smolens has been a senior advisor at Insight Partners, a leading global private equity and venture capital firm, since 2015. Prior to joining Insight, she worked at Portfolio Advisors LLC, was a voting member on the investment committees of numerous Portfolio Advisors funds, and was on the advisory boards of 13 private equity funds. She previously worked at Crossover Ventures, DLJ Securities Private Fund Group, General Motors Investment Management, and New York Life Insurance Company. She graduated from Fordham University with both a B.A. and an M.A. in economics.

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Vin Scully Tells Graduates Dreams Do Come True https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/vin-scully-tells-graduates-dreams-do-come-true/ Sun, 07 May 2000 15:16:27 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=39479 NEW YORK (May 20) – Vin Scully, the “Velvet Voice” of the L. A. Dodgers regaled an audience of more than 10,000 at Fordham University’s 155th commencement with tales of his life at Fordham and encouraged students to “always make time for your dreams.” “I want to take this opportunity to announce am a candidate for the U.S. Senate representing the state of New York,” Scully joked, telling the audience that “it’s only me up here and I am one of you,” not an accomplished general, or philosopher, but “me, who was once you. I walked the halls you walked. I sat in the same classrooms. I took the same notes and sweated out the final exams. I played sports on your grassy fields. I hit a home run here – in Jack Coffey Field against CCNY, the only one I ever hit.” Fordham, he said, evokes three words for him: Home, love and hope. Home, because he spent eight years at Fordham both in the preparatory school and as an undergraduate. Love, because he made lifelong friends and hope, because Fordham is where his dreams thrived. He recalled a conversation with “In this world I urge all of you to take some time away from the craziness around you to foster the things that are important,” Scully said. “Don’t let the winds blow away your dreams or your faith in God. And remember, sometimes your wildest dreams come true.” Scully also received an honorary doctorate of human letters, honoris causa.. In presenting the award, Michael T. Gillan, dean of Fordham College of Liberal Studies, noted that when Jesuit schoolmasters developed their plan of studies in the 16th and 17th centuries, they defined “the goal of Jesuit education as eloquentia perfecta … which connotes a mastery of expression that is informed by good judgment and consistent principles. Those Jesuit schoolmasters of another age, if they had known anything about baseball, would certainly have approved the rhetorical gifts of the man who has been the voice of the Dodgers for the past 51 years, Vincent E. Scully.” Scully graduated from Fordham in 1949. Famous for his vivid, yet simplistic description of the Dodgers games, Scully thrills fans with his mastery of the English language. He has won numerous awards, including induction into the National Baseball Hall of Fame as the Ford C. Frick Award recipient in 1982. He was named Most Memorable Personality in L.A. Dodger history by Dodger fans in 1976; the country’s Outstanding Sportscaster four times and California Sportscaster of the Year 22 times by the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association. Also receiving an honorary degree was Brother Richard (Rick) Curry, S.J., founder and artistic director of the National Theatre Workshop for the Handicapped, who was presented with an honorary doctorate of fine arts. The Rev. Robert R. Grimes, S.J., dean of Fordham College at Lincoln Center, commended the National Theatre Workshop of the Handicapped, founded by Brother Curry in 1977, for pursuing “the greater glory of God in a highly original manner.” Through the program Curry and his colleagues “enable their students to overcome the barriers of stereotype that too often thwart the creative aspirations of the disabled,” Grimes said. “The astonishing growth of NTWH from the idea of a Jesuit graduate student to the growing conglomerate it has now become reflects the improbable combination of gifts, artistic and entrepreneurial, that Rick Curry brings to his Jesuit life and ministry: compelling advocate, imaginative stage-master, audacious fund-raiser and author.” Rose Marie Bravo, CEO of Burberry and Fordham alumna, class of 1971, received an honorary doctorate of humane letters. “When Rose Marie La Pila [Bravo] of Tenbroek Avenue in the Bronx and a graduate of the Bronx High School of Science arrived on the Rose Hill campus in February 1969, she was a young woman in a hurry,” said the Rev. Jeffrey P. von Arx, dean of Fordham College of Rose Hill. “Displaying the energy and sense of direction that have distinguished her business career, she took summer classes and received her Bachelor of Arts degree in 1971.” Bravo has not slowed since, said von Arx. “Fordham University is pleased that Rose Marie has returned from Burberry’s to the Bronx this Saturday in May so that her alma mater can salute her brilliant career by bestowing on her the degree of Doctor of Human Letters.” General John Keane, vice chief of staff of the Army and Fordham alumnus, class of 1966, received an honorary doctorate of laws. General Keane is an infantry officer who has commanded at every level, from company to corps. His commands include the XVIII Airborne Corps, the 101st Airborne Division and the Joint Readiness Training Center. “The Jesuit tradition of Fordham University summons its graduates to lead lives of service for others,” said Sharon P. Smith, dean of the College of Business Administration. “The military forces of the United States are asked to keep peace, enforce justice and defend freedom and human rights around the world. To respond to such challenges, the men and women of our armed services need leaders of integrity and honor, who care about the men and women under their command.” She said it was for “such leadership” that Keane was being presented with the degree of Doctor of Laws. Among Keane’s numerous honors and decorations include the Defense Distinguished Service Medal, the Distinguished Service Medal, the Silver Star, five Legions of Merit, three Meritorious Service Medals, the Army Commendation Medal and the Humanitarian Service Medal. Mary Ann Quaranta, dean of the Graduate School of Social Service, was awarded an honorary doctorate of humane letters for her service to the school. Calling Quaranta a “heroine,” Robert F. Himmelberg, dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, said, “a grateful University recognizes that under her leadership, the School is emblematic of the Jesuit tradition has not simply changed but has been transformed. Its stature of national leadership reflects in no small part the enormous respect that its dean commands from her colleagues in social work education throughout the country.”

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