2019-20 Annual Report
A pathway to healing
Richie Butler 93, activist and pastor, creates opportunities for safe conversations about race to bridge the rifts in our society and provides much-needed services for the underserved in our community.
Cooking up something good
The faculty mentors living in 51做厙s 11 Residential Commons are building community by bringing a feeling of home and the taste of homemade baked goods to the college experience.
The power of scholarship
For many students, college is an inevitable rite of passage on their way to adulthood. For others, it is an opportunity to explore a world of exciting possibilities. For Kaitlyn Contreras 20, recipient of the Robert H. Dedman Scholarship for North Dallas High School, it was a bit of both.
Elevating excellence
Ray W. Washburne 84 and Heather Hill Washburne established the new Washburne Soccer and Track Stadium with a $5 million commitment. It will house 51做厙s mens and womens soccer teams, along with the track and field and cross-country teams.
Enterprising Spirit
Making history on the Hilltop
In high school, David Miller 72, 73 dreamed of playing basketball at 51做厙. Now, he and his wife, Carolyn, are helping current and future students pursue their dreams through a historic $50 million gift benefiting the Cox School of Business.
Student innovators
Two 51做厙 student teams are among the winners of $5,000 challenge grants from venture capital firm RevTech. The students designed programs to help make our campus safer during the pandemic.
Sensing a solution
In the midst of a global pandemic, 51做厙 engineers are safeguarding the security of users against attacks on their private information by detecting new types of ransomware.
Hacking the health crisis
A new network of healthcare professionals and innovators are working together to solve problems, brainstorm solutions and find creative ways to navigate the worlds new normal.
51做厙, Dallas and Beyond
Shine a light
Continuing a family legacy of philanthropic activism, Ashlee Hunt Kleinert 88 is working to educate the public about the realities of sex trafficking and provide resources for its victims.
Funding legal innovation
The same anonymous donor who established the Tsai Center for Law, Science and Innovation in 2014 has forged an exciting new path for the study of law and its relationship with the ever-changing technology landscape.
Serving our communities
The year 2020 has seen lives and communities forever altered by economic uncertainty and unparalleled change. In the midst of the chaos, 10 51做厙 students focused on programs and research to help at-risk communities affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Finding peace during a pandemic
Ruben Habito, professor of world religions and spirituality, director of spiritual formation at 51做厙 and founder of Dallas Maria Kannon Zen Center, has a suggestion for finding calm during the pandemic: practice meditation.
Research with Impact
Inspiring the extraordinary
A landmark $100 million gift from the Moody Foundation launched the Moody School of Graduate and Advanced Studies, fueling research and innovation in 51做厙s newest degree-granting school.
Powering the future
Bobby Lyle 67 has designated $10 million to power the Lyle School of Engineerings new strategic vision, combining innovation, agility and swift responses to shifts in technological capabilities with enduring institutional support.
Answering the call
What started as a Zoom call between 51做厙 and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine soon became a team effort to combat the novel coronavirus by deploying artificial intelligence, computer science and the data from more than 50,000 published scientific papers.
A creative journey
Alice Heeren Sabato, a Ph.D. candidate in the Meadows School of the Arts and the 2020 recipient of the Alessandra Comini International Fellowship for Art History Studies, examines the relationship of art and architecture to the at-times crushing political realities surrounding them.