Brandies: I’m Brandies Dunagan, a social
media specialist here at i.c.stars. I’d just like to take a moment to introduce
Mr. Dave Edelstein. He’s the chair of the Chicago region for Syracuse, and we also
have Anthony Noble, he’s the head of the Syracuse efforts in DC. So I’d like to
start out with a question just to find out a little more about you. Dave, can
you tell us a little more about your background and the year that you commenced
from Syracuse?
Dave: Sure, I’d be happy to. I am a graduate
of Syracuse University’s class of 1978, where I earned a Bachelor of Science in
a field called Systems and Information Science from the School of Computer
Science, a lot of science in that. Along the way I had different positions in
computer programming, and then management of computer programmers and most
recently was the CIO for a division of Siemens. Back in October, I retired and
so now I’m living a very different life and having a good time with it. A
big part of my new life is spending a lot of time with Syracuse University. I’m
a trustee; I chair the Dean’s Advisory Counsel at the College of Engineering
and as you say, I’m running the Chicago Regional Council.
Brandies: That’s great. And Anthony, how about
yourself?
Anthony: I graduated from the Syracuse
College of Arts and Sciences in 1999. I majored in political science and
economics with minors in African American studies and history, and after
Syracuse I went on to the Woodrow Wilson school at Princeton where I received
my masters in public affairs and urban planning. And then I guess wanting more
knowledge, information, intellectual stimulation I decided to go to law school
at the University of Pennsylvania, graduated from the…
Brandies: Well, that’s quite intellectually
stimulating I’m sure.
Anthony: I graduated from the University of
Pennsylvania in 2005 and after graduation went to work in the real estate
department at a law firm named Holland and Knight, and I was there for about
two and a half years, and then I got a call from a client at another real
estate development company, the Louis Dreyfus property group. The head of the
Washington office called me and asked me to consider joining their group to
lead what’s now called capital crossing. It’s the development of air
rights above a section of interstate that runs through DC. So if you can
imagine there’s a tunnel that runs under the national mall, and that tunnel
daylights and then it becomes a tunnel again. At the portion where it
daylights, it’s about 6.5 acres of space, that 6.5 acres we’ve gotten entitled
for 2.2 million square feet, 2 million square feet of office and 200,000 square
feet of residential. So now I’m officially a real estate developer.
Brandies: Okay that sounds like quite the
journey. Okay so Dave, you were saying that you graduated with a computer
science degree and so where does that lead you? I know you said you ended up at
Siemens, but what kind of roles and positions have you had over time?
Dave: Sure, I started as a computer
programmer at IBM. They had invented a programming language called APL,
and I learned it at Syracuse and so that got me my first job. I don’t
think anybody knows what APL is anymore, but it was interesting at the time.
After a little while at IBM, I went to work for my dad who had a small business
in Paterson, New Jersey which sold office furniture, and while he enjoyed that
quite a bit, I really never did. So after about a year working there, I
said, “Dad, this has been fun; but it’s time for me to do something else.”
We parted ways, and we still very much love and respect each other but it
was an interesting experience.
I went back into computer programming at
Bristol-Myers in New York and then started climbing the ladder. Took a couple of
transfers within Bristol-Myers for more responsibility and then after a period
of time I realized my career probably wasn’t going in the direction I wanted it
to go, I wanted to be CIO and decided to look for a job somewhere else. My wife
is from Evanston Illinois, and I think we had a pre-nuptial agreement that at
some point we’d end up in Evanston and so that’s where we moved, and I’m very
happy here, so no problem.
I got a job up in Deerfield, Illinois called
Dade-Behring. We sold medical diagnostic equipment to hospitals around the
world, and I was their CIO. We were a small, relatively small company,
about a billion and a half in sales when I started and we went through some
interesting experiences, including a bankruptcy and then we went public and it
was really kind of cool. And then in 2007 we were acquired by Siemens,
and we became the Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics division, and I was still the
CIO of that group. And then after about four years of working for Siemens, in
an acquisition like that, sometimes the acquired company sometimes gets
absorbed into the acquiring company and my job got absorbed, and it just seemed
like the right thing to do is to take the opportunity to try something
different and so that’s what I did. So that’s kind of what my journey was.
Brandies: That’s really interesting. So how
did you end up being connected to Syracuse again?
Dave: It was, I guess about 10 years ago or
so, I wanted to start getting involved in things outside of work, volunteer
kind of things and stuff like that and one of the areas I wanted to get
involved in was Syracuse University. So when I decided to do that I got in
touch with the dean of the college of engineering which is where the school of
computer science now resides. I said I want to get involved and he said come to
a meeting, we’re having a board meeting come and see what it’s about and I got
involved with that and ultimately was asked to be on the board of the college.
And as I said, I’m now the chair of the advisory counsel, which is a lot of
fun. We kind of steer the direction of where the college is going, and along
the way as I got more involved with Syracuse University and had a stronger
desire to get even more deeply involved, people started to talk to me about my
interest in becoming a trustee and ultimately I said, “Yeah it’s something I’d
like to do.”
In November I was installed I guess you call
it as a trustee and then since I’m from Chicago, and Chicago is one of the
regions that Syracuse wants to raise its profile in, I was asked if I would
mind being the chair of the regional counsel here in Chicago, and I said, “Sure
I’d love to do that, so that’s how I acquired that responsibility.”
Brandies: And so Anthony you’re all the way
in DC and you’ve kind of traveled the globe a little bit in that area and
figured out where you’re going to be in Pennsylvania and DC and starting out in
Syracuse and going to a couple other universities, how can you get reconnected
with Syracuse in this capacity?
Anthony: Well actually as an undergrad I was
pretty involved at the university. I was a member of the Student Government
Association as a student representative and as a member of the finance board
within the Student Government Association, and the finance board is part of the
group that determines the budgets for the various student groups. And when I
left and went to Princeton, I was fairly involved in the student affairs and
also at Penn.
What I noticed was at Princeton, it was a
smaller group so you always had alums that were around and they were always
willing to offer help and guidance and then when I went to Penn there was an
interesting story. So what happened was I was looking around and there were no
African American, Latino or female judges on the walls. So in the law school
there are portraits of judges. So there was no diversity in the portraits that
were displayed in the law school and so a friend of mine, we got together and
we said well we’d like to have more diversity in the portraits, and we went to
the dean and told the dean that we had this idea that we would go and we would
raise money for at least one portrait and hopefully maybe two portraits. And so
the dean connected me with an alum who was a fairly active alum at the
University of Pennsylvania. They have a board of overseers, and he was a fairly
active member of that group and he really supported us in making sure that the
portraits on the wall were more representative of the student body at the
University of Pennsylvania law school, but also the world that we live in.
In seeing that and sort of interacting with
high profile individuals who still had a passion for, in that case for the law
school but for school in general made me feel like I wanted to be involved in
my undergraduate institution and hopefully help Syracuse in whatever way I
could. At the time I think I was probably 26 years old and I was at a Syracuse
event at the Greenberg house in Washington DC, and I had mentioned to Mary Anagnost
who is like one of the deans of the Greenberg house, and I said at some point
I’d like to be more involved in alumni affairs at the university, and she said
oh that’s great we need more young people who are interested in that, and she
connected me with Lil O’Rourke, who is now I believe the secretary to the board
of trustees. At the time she was the head of development at the College of Arts
and Sciences. And Lil and I got together; we had lunch sort of talked about the
things that I was interested in doing with the university. And at the time she
and I had lunch, I was the president of my law school class, so I had
interacted with a number of the members of the board of overseers and the dean
and so I understood kind of how alums interacted with the ongoing operations of
the university, and we talked about it and she recommended that the College of
Arts and Sciences Board of Visitors consider me for membership. And that was, I
think, in 2006 and so I joined the College of Arts and Sciences board in 2006
and sort of as part of that group have picked up other responsibilities and am
looking forward to continuing to grow the outreach efforts in Washington.
Brandies: That sounds really interesting. It
sounds like you and Dave have a natural progression and gravitation back to the
university, which is always good to hear. And so Dave if you could tell us a
little bit more about the local alumni here in Chicago, because Syracuse is not
based here: why is having such a connection to the university so important to
you and maybe something that other alumni might not be aware of?
Dave: Sure, I guess the short answer is I’m
proud of Syracuse University, I’m proud to be a graduate of Syracuse
University. I think that the university is doing some things that are important
for I think the Chicago area to learn about and participate in. We have this
theme of, we call it scholarship in action, and what that means is what our
students are learning is not only theory or ivory tower kind of things, which
there’s value in that, but it’s scholarship that people can act on. It’s
learning about the world and learning to help the world, and I think as I’ve
gotten involved in volunteer organizations in Chicago and Evanston, there’s
clearly an appetite for people to get involved and to help their communities
and help the areas they live in.
The kind of things that we’re teaching our
students at Syracuse prepares them for that, so I just find it’s very rewarding
when I think about the things that Syracuse is doing as a university that the
different colleges are doing, that the students are doing and I think about the
Chicago area and it’s a lot of areas where we can work together and where what
we’re learning at Syracuse and teaching at Syracuse can be of use here in
Chicago. And I’ll give you just a couple of examples of the things I’ve done to
try to raise awareness and some other people in the Chicago region have done.
For example, right here with you Brandies,
with i.c.stars, as we started to wrap up the Chicago region and try to raise
awareness, I thought a good way to do that would be through social media, so I
thought that by myself since I’m involved with i.c.stars, and i.c.stars has a
social media enterprise. I figured wouldn’t it be neat for i.c.stars to do the
social media for the Chicago region on behalf of Syracuse? And that’s what we’re
doing, and I think it’s working really well. I’ve also worked with a couple of
the local community colleges, the City Colleges in Chicago and Oakton where
we’ve created what’s called an articulation agreement so that students who
study in what’s called the STEM curriculum, science, technology, engineering
and math at the community colleges, if they decide they want to go to Syracuse
to get a four year degree, their credits will transfer completely.
So that’s a win for the student, it’s a win for the community college, it’s a win for the university. And finally one of my colleagues on the regional counsel works for a company called Gogo, and people who travel know that Gogo is the way that airplanes provide WiFi to airline passengers. They’re hiring many engineers here in Chicago, and so he’s working with the College of Engineering to see if there are people who are going to be graduating from Syracuse University who might want to work in Chicago. There’s all kind of ways to reach out, to connect, to show all the good things that Syracuse is doing, and make a difference here in Chicago.
So that’s a win for the student, it’s a win for the community college, it’s a win for the university. And finally one of my colleagues on the regional counsel works for a company called Gogo, and people who travel know that Gogo is the way that airplanes provide WiFi to airline passengers. They’re hiring many engineers here in Chicago, and so he’s working with the College of Engineering to see if there are people who are going to be graduating from Syracuse University who might want to work in Chicago. There’s all kind of ways to reach out, to connect, to show all the good things that Syracuse is doing, and make a difference here in Chicago.
Brandies: Those all sound really appealing,
especially considering in this economy ways to find employment and not just
employment, but meaningful employment that someone has an interest in and it
sounds like Syracuse employs really creative ways of creating partnerships and
engaging its alumni community in opportunity.
Dave: I think that’s right.
Dave: I think that’s right.
Brandies: And so Anthony, another role you
recently stepped into was a leadership role for the DC area, but can you talk a
little bit about the initiatives in DC and why staying connected to Syracuse is
important to you?
Anthony: Sure, we actually, so the DC
regional counsel was instrumental in fundraising activities in the campaign for
the endowment and during that time we had a number of events. One of the events
that I was fortunate enough to host with David Falk was basically a rooftop
event for alumni who were between 10 years and 20 years out of graduation. What
was great about that was you got to hear someone like David Falk, and I think
for folks in Chicago, I think he’s probably best known as Michael Jordan’s
agent, but to folks in my generation at the university he sort of was the
standard of sports agents and kind of his various involvement at the university
were things that we all looked up to and admired. So we had an event of about I
think it was probably 50 or 60 people at a rooftop in Washington that
overlooked the White House and that was well received, and then we started to
talk about the things that members of the regional counsel and alumni in
Washington kind wanted to see more of. And there were sort of three signature
events in Washington that we’ve started. One is the Paul Greenberg speaker
series, and the Paul Greenberg speaker series is really dedicated to current
topics in public policy. So for example I think about a month or two ago Paul
hosted a group of leading experts in health care at the national press club to
debate the affordable care act, and that was well attended. Had Uwe Reinhardt,
who is a professor at Princeton but is also a leading health scholar who
focuses on health care, and we had a few folks from the Cato Institute
participate as well, and that was well received. Back in March we had a community
partnership, and a community partnership was really an event that was sponsored
and facilitated by the Greenberg House, we have a great staff at the Greenberg
House. Ann Donahue Yockey leads that effort along with Mary Anagnost and Joy
Yoo, and what we did was we went to the Carmelo Anthony Center, which is based
in Baltimore, Maryland and we had an event called “Be healthy, Be fit, Be more,”
and a group of SU alumni including former stars of the Syracuse football and
basketball teams participated in the event. We got to sit in and teach kids who
were I guess between the ages of 6 and 13 about the benefits of being healthy,
being active and really focusing on trying to achieve whatever your goals are
and to set your goals high, and so that was a very good event and then we also
have something and I’m sure you have this in Chicago, Dave, is the SUccess in the City event.
Dave: Yeah we do that; we have that.
Anthony: Where young alumni come in and they
get to pick the brains of older alums and those older alums are typically
established in their careers, and the success in the city event also has
another component along with the networking and getting to know each other. It
also provides other tangible benefits like the resume review workshops, how to use
social media in your career and in your personal life and those types of
things, and so those are the three big events that we have going on, or should
I say signature events in Washington. And then of course being in Washington
we’re fortunate because of all of the reach of public policy in the various
industries. So we’ll have forensics panels, we’ll have panels focused on media,
panels focused on the law, etc, and I think those types of events help alumni
to be more engaged. And not only is it intellectually stimulating, but it also
allows alumni to reconnect with friends they have in the area but also to meet
new friends and to reestablish or to strengthen their connection to the
university.
Brandies: Okay I learned so much, I learned
about the alumni David Falk. I didn’t realize that he was a ‘72 alumni, and I
understand that Carmelo actually attended Syracuse for about a year before he
was drafted first round for the Denver Nuggets.
Anthony: That’s right, and I should mention, we mention David Falk, but also Paul Greenberg has been instrumental in DC. From donating the Greenberg House, which is kind of the center of activity in Washington and actually in mentoring other folks, I know that Paul Greenberg was a mentor, or is a mentor to David Falk and has been one of the reasons why David has been so involved in the university. I know that he was a member of the College of Arts and Sciences Board of Visitors, but also on the board of trustees with Dave, and when you have people like that who are around and engaged in affairs at the university it’s hard not to want to be a part of that and not to want to be a part of the university to make it a better place.
Anthony: That’s right, and I should mention, we mention David Falk, but also Paul Greenberg has been instrumental in DC. From donating the Greenberg House, which is kind of the center of activity in Washington and actually in mentoring other folks, I know that Paul Greenberg was a mentor, or is a mentor to David Falk and has been one of the reasons why David has been so involved in the university. I know that he was a member of the College of Arts and Sciences Board of Visitors, but also on the board of trustees with Dave, and when you have people like that who are around and engaged in affairs at the university it’s hard not to want to be a part of that and not to want to be a part of the university to make it a better place.
Brandies: Absolutely, it sounds like you have
really good models of how to give back. Paul Greenberg is giving back in a
substantial way by sponsoring localized space for initiatives to be
headquartered and just serving in multiple ways and because we do talk to
leaders here today from Syracuse, I just wanted to know what is in the turnpike
for you guys?
Dave: Well I know I’ll be at Syracuse this
weekend for graduation. So that’s the next stop on the turnpike, I’m looking
forward to building up Syracuse’s presence here in Chicago. We’ve got a big
event coming up in a couple of weeks for the graduates of the Newhouse School,
and that’s some of the things planned for later in the year and then reaching
out to the alums in the area to help do all the great things we can do on
behalf of Syracuse. Where I go from there, I’m sure the school has all kinds of
exciting things ahead. As a trustee it’s a really cool organization to work
with. The trustees are wonderful people and the university is really dynamic.
As a student you get one view of the university and when you work with one of
the colleges, as I had with the college of engineering, and now as a trustee I
get to see the whole university and it’s really fascinating. I think the
administration is very capable, trustees are very good, folks like Anthony
coming up and getting involved it’s really a lot of fun so I’m just looking to
keep wearing my orange clothes and bleeding my orange blood and maybe paint
Chicago a little tinge of orange if I can.
Brandies: Speaking of painting Chicago
orange, I think that you recently gave a cool stat that Syracuse beat out
Northwestern for the first time in history I believe.
Dave: Are we talking about women’s lacrosse
and the first time they were ranked higher than Northwestern? And since I run
around the Northwestern campus a few times a week, it’s very good to run with
Syracuse clothes these days.
Brandies: How about you Anthony? What’s on
the turnpike for you and maybe some of the things coming out of the DC region?
Anthony: Well actually I know that Dave
mentioned he’s going up to Syracuse for graduation. I’m headed down to Hampton
University for a relative’s graduation so that should be fun to participate in
those ceremonies. As far as with Syracuse, we have obviously the success in the
city event that’s scheduled for next month which should be well attended and a
lot of fun and beneficial to the attendants. But also going to, I think for me,
I’m going to focus on engaging some of the alums and alumni groups in
Washington who have probably participated in the events in Washington in the
past but for whatever reason, be it professional reasons or personal reasons
they have families now etc, to try to get them reengaged in the efforts in
Washington because what we want to focus on is we want to have a regional
counsel that is representative of the folks that are located in Washington and
plan events for those folks. And a lot of the things don’t have to be formal
events, but just making sure that people know that we’re around and that the
alumni network is there for those who want to participate in that and who want
to continue to be intellectually stimulated by the university.
Brandies: Those things sound great, and it sounds like the alumni benefit would be that there’s tremendous networking opportunities, there’s professional development, it sounds like there are opportunities to also give back in a very meaningful way to an organization or a university, I should say that has given so much and that it would be a natural progression to some of those relationships that they have built up to actually invest back into the organization. So I just wanted to thank you both for taking the time to give us a little insight into the great work you’re doing at both of the local initiatives here, and to say that I’m pretty sure that this message will get out to the alumni and they can get inspired to participate and figure out how to get active. And so until next time.
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