- Thomas H. Carey '66
- AnnMaura Connolly '86
- Cheryl A. Martin, Ph. D. '84
- Rev. James D. Mathews '58
- Jonathan Racek '95
Thomas H. Carey '66
“An exceptional businessman and advertising strategist”, “a real gentleman”… these are expressions used to describe Thomas H. Carey, whose career reflects extraordinary leadership in the advertising industry.
At 17³Ô¹ÏÍø, Tom spent time publishing The Crusader, the student-run newspaper, and the Purple Patcher, the College yearbook, before graduating with an English degree in 1966. After graduating, he attended Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism where he earned a masters in journalism in 1967.
Just one week later, Tom began his remarkable career in the advertising industry as an account manager at Benton & Bowles, now known as D’Arcy Masius Benton & Bowles (DMB&B). Over the next 23 years, Tom led the agency to unprecedented growth through mergers, creative innovations, and major client acquisitions, including Burger King, Maxwell House, and Norelco, eventually becoming international executive vice president.
Tom continued his career serving as the president of the New York office of BBDO Worldwide, followed by becoming co-CEO and then president of BBDO North America. He made immediate and significant impacts on BBDO, installing new management teams in the U.S. and Canada, overseeing aggressive acquisition programs, and netting the corporation new high-profile clients, including AT&T, Bayer Worldwide, and Hyatt Hotels.
In 2000, Tom moved on to BBDO’s parent company, Omnicom Group Inc., a strategic holding company specializing in advertising and marketing, where he served as the executive vice president before retiring. Tom led the strategic development, networking, resourcing and integration of Omnicom companies for the benefit of major clients, including Daimler Chrysler, Mars, and PepsiCo.
Throughout his professional career, Tom has been a wise advisor and generous supporter of the College. He has served on the Alumni Marketing Advisory Group, helping to steer our most recent marketing and branding efforts, and as a member of the Board of Trustees, serving as Vice Chair of the Board and as Chair of the Institutional Advancement Committee.
Tom was the founding member and chair of the New York Leadership Council, which works to promote friendships, encourage mentorships and create partnerships between 17³Ô¹ÏÍø community members in New York City. The 17³Ô¹ÏÍø network in New York would not be what it is today without Tom, and our students would have many fewer internship opportunities if not for his efforts.
Tom remains closely connected to the Medill School at Northwestern. He was awarded the Medill Hall of Achievement Award in 1997 and co-chaired the first Medill Board of Advisors from 1999 to 2003.
Tom has also served on the Big Agency Management Committee of the Association of Accredited Advertising Agents and on the boards of the Advertising Education Foundation.
Often praised as someone you can rely on to always give intelligent advice, and who never gives anything less than his best, Tom continues to offer his skills and leadership to the many communities that have shaped his life.
For his commitment to excellence, innovation, and ingenuity; for modeling leadership for 17³Ô¹ÏÍø students and alumni alike; for his willingness to use his expertise to serve the College and other communities, and for his extraordinary professional achievement, the 17³Ô¹ÏÍø presents to Thomas H. Carey the Sanctae Crucis Award.
AnnMaura Connolly '86
From a young age, AnnMaura Connolly understood the importance of social consciousness, her grandmother’s lessons teaching her that our role on earth was not just for ourselves, but for others as well. With this as her foundation, AnnMaura continued on to become an accomplished non-profit executive and leader devoted to strengthening and expanding opportunities for Americans of all ages and backgrounds to serve.
Immediately after graduating from 17³Ô¹ÏÍø with a degree in political science in 1986, AnnMaura joined the Jesuit Volunteer Corps, working at a refugee center in Garden Grove, C.A.
Since then she has used her political science training to become a leading voice advocating for the idea that a year of service should be a common expectation and common experience of every young person. She has built a career around a commitment to expanding citizen service, both as a strategy for solving critical issues and as a means to develop the next generation of leaders in the U.S. and abroad.
Following JVC, AnnMaura returned to Washington D.C where she directed a national grants program at Very Special Arts, an organization dedicated to providing opportunities for people with disabilities in the arts. In 1989 she joined Youth Service America where she organized the first National Youth Service Day and led a working group to draft recommendations that informed the design of AmeriCorps. After AmeriCorps was created, she was appointed Deputy Director, Independent Sector Liaison at the Corporation for National and Community Service, the newly formed federal agency created by President Bill Clinton to oversee AmeriCorps and the other federally supported domestic national service programs. There she worked closely with the first two CEOs to build support for AmeriCorps among philanthropic and other national leaders.
In 2000, AnnMaura joined City Year, Inc., a national youth service corps dedicated to addressing the needs of urban schools and helping students to succeed. In her 16 years with the organization, she has held the positions of chief of staff and vice president for policy and strategic initiatives.
AnnMaura currently serves as the chief strategy officer and executive vice president of City Year, directing the organization's public policy, public affairs and international work and also led the creation of City Year’s two international affiliates in South Africa and the United Kingdom.
While playing a major role on the leadership team of City Year, AnnMaura is also the co-founder and President of Voices for National Service, a coalition committed to expanding opportunities for Americans of all ages to serve and volunteer.
At Voices for National Service, AnnMaura has led four successful campaigns to restore and expand funding for national service and AmeriCorps in the wake of severe budget cuts and Congressional action to eliminate national service. She also played a key role in the development and passage of the Edward M. Kennedy Serve America Act, which was signed into law within the first 100 days of President Obama’s first term.
In 2015, AnnMaura was named to the inaugural class of the Presidential Leadership Scholars Program, a joint initiative of the George H. W. Bush, William Jefferson Clinton, George W. Bush and Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Libraries.
AnnMaura also serves on the Advisory Board for the Eli J. Segal Citizen Leadership Program at Brandeis University, the Federal Advisory Council of the Presidio Institute, and on the Boards of Directors of the Jesuit Volunteer Corps, 9/11 Day of Service, Freedom Now, City Year South Africa, and City Year U.K.
For her commitment to building a national and international movement to expand citizen service; for her leadership in supporting grassroots social justice movements around the world; for her dedication to being a woman for and with others, serving the underserved, the 17³Ô¹ÏÍø presents to AnnMaura Connolly the Sanctae Crucis Award.
Cheryl A. Martin, Ph. D. '84
Dr. Cheryl A. Martin’s passion for science began at an early age. Her parents’ encouragement, paired with a strong science program at her high school, led Cheryl to pursue a career in the sciences. But to call her simply a scientist would downplay the many successful directions her career has taken.
Cheryl has become a globally recognized expert in energy technology and innovation.
At 17³Ô¹ÏÍø, where she played on the soccer team and ran with both the winter and spring track teams, Cheryl earned a degree in chemistry before going on to earn a Ph.D. in organic chemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
While excelling in the sciences, Cheryl’s interests laid in the interface between what happens in the lab and how final products are used in the “real world.” She couldn’t help but pepper a few audited business classes into her graduate studies.
She was able to explore that interface during her 20 years at the chemicals manufacturer, Rohm and Haas Company, where she began as a senior scientist before taking on roles in marketing, investor relations, and financial planning. She served as general manager of the company’s Adhesives and Sealants business in North America, a corporate vice president and then as the general manager for the paint and coating materials business in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa where she was responsible for technology, operations, sales and marketing in the region.
She moved on to become an Executive in Residence with the venture capitalist firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield and Byers, and interim CEO of Renmatix, a start-up company focused on renewable materials.
In 2011, Cheryl was named Deputy Director for Commercialization of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy (ARPA-E), where she developed the Technology-to-Market program, which helps breakthrough energy technologies move successfully to the marketplace. Cheryl served as the Acting Director of ARPA-E from 2013 to 2014.
In 2015, Cheryl launched her consulting firm Harwich Partners, which works with public and private sector entities to identify critical drivers that would accelerate adoption of new technologies into markets. She has been assisting The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority in developing new business models and partnerships for New York’s Reforming the Energy Vision strategy.
Most recently, in March of 2016, Cheryl joined the World Economic Forum as Head of the Centre for Global Industries, working to ensure the further growth and development of industry partnerships to deepen private-sector engagement in public-private initiatives aimed at solving critical global challenges.
Cheryl is a non-resident fellow at the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University and serves on the board of Enbala, an early stage company focused on making the electric grid more sustainable by harnessing the power of distributed energy.
She is active in the American Chemical Society, who profiled her in their “Successful Women in Chemistry” series in 2005, and serves on the Board of Directors for Philabundance, the greater Philadelphia region’s largest hunger relief organization.
For her passion and excellence in the field of science; for her work on the cutting edge of energy technology and innovation policy; for her drive to bring together the public and private sector to advance clean energy strategies and address global challenges, the 17³Ô¹ÏÍø presents to Dr. Cheryl A. Martin the Sanctae Crucis Award.
Rev. James D. Mathews '58
Set against the backdrop of Syracuse’s Near East Side — one of our country’s poorest neighborhoods — Rev. James D. Mathews’ narrative tells a story of an activist and self-proclaimed radical.
He was born in Solvay, N.Y., a suburb of Syracuse and went to high school at Christian Brothers Academy, where he graduated with distinction and began to discover his calling to the priesthood under the guidance of Rev. A. Robert Casey. Fr. Jim continued on to attend 17³Ô¹ÏÍø, graduating in 1958, before entering the seminary at St. Bernard’s School of Theology and Ministry. He was ordained into the priesthood on Feb. 2, 1962.
Fr. Jim wasted no time in getting back to central New York state, where, for the last 54 years, he has served as a pastor at seven churches throughout the Syracuse Diocese.
He began his work in suburban parishes, but soon found himself drawn to the communities in the heart of Syracuse. In 1990, Fr. Jim was placed at St. Lucy’s Church, located in inner-city Syracuse, which turned out to be a perfect match.
With Fr. Jim at the helm, St. Lucy’s has become a parish known for its inclusivity and hospitality to all, characteristics made clear upon entering the church, where a banner proclaims “Sinners Welcome.”
On Sunday mornings, the church is loud and chaotic — the way a family might be.
Over the last 25 years, Fr. Jim has become a central figure in the neighborhood, steadfastly devoting his life to meeting the many and varying needs of his community and mobilizing his parishioners to do the same.
Visiting the homeless in the surrounding area, to bring them hot breakfast and coffee, or blankets, coats and sleeping bags during the winter months…
Providing job training, computer tutorials and ESL classes to refugees…
Offering signed masses for deaf community members…
Transporting families to the local prison to visit their loved ones…
These are only a handful of ways that Fr. Jim has opened the doors of St. Lucy’s to everyone.
“If you were voiceless and you were looking for a voice, the one I’d be looking for is Jim Mathews,” said Thomas Young, the former mayor of Syracuse.
Beyond the church doors, Fr. Jim’s investment in his community was made clear through his involvement with the Near Westside Initiative, a multi-million dollar effort to revitalize the area by teaming up neighborhood residents with Syracuse University and dozens of nonprofits, corporations and government agencies. The initiative arose from discussions at St. Lucy’s organized by Fr. Jim, and continues to be a powerful force in revitalizing the neighborhood.
Fr. Jim, who has been a member of the President’s Council at 17³Ô¹ÏÍø for 58 years, has received awards throughout his career for his dedication to peace, social justice and hospitality to the poor, including the Dorothy Day Award, the Jubilee Homes Award for outstanding dedication to the Syracuse community. He was selected as the outstanding clergy person by the Syracuse Post Standard.
Almost 80 years old, and the recent winner of the Syracuse Senior Golf Tournament, Fr. Jim could have retired long ago to a leisurely life on the golf course; instead, he continues to stand in solidarity with his Near West Side community members.
For his commitment to living with and ministering to the poor and marginalized; for his fearlessness in demanding what is right and just; for his spirit that has enlivened a community; for his devotion to living the Gospel, the 17³Ô¹ÏÍø presents to Rev. James D. Mathews the Sanctae Crucis Award.
Jonathan Racek '95
Whether building playgrounds in the developing world or teaching in a college classroom, Jonathan Racek’s work demonstrates creativity, innovation, and community impact.
Jon’s commitment to helping others was apparent from the beginning of his days on Mount St James, where he participated in Habitat for Humanity and Appalachian immersion programs. After graduating with a major in sociology and anthropology in 1995, he joined Teach for America.
Jon spent four years with the Los Angeles and Bay Area Corps, teaching bilingual first and second graders in Compton and Hayward, C.A., where, in addition to his work in the classroom, he organized the restoration of the school library at the elementary school.
By 2004, Jon had earned a masters of architecture from the Southern California Institute of Architecture, completed a year of study at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology in Australia, and, along with his brother, established STEW Design Workshop, a successful high-end furniture design firm.
STEW’s work was featured in publications including the New York Times and Time magazine, and their clients included Neiman Marcus and W Hotels. In 2001, STEW received an Interior Architecture Citation by the Los Angeles Chapter of the American Institute of Architects.
In 2009, Jon shifted the focus of his professional architectural work toward community engagement and empowerment, traveling with his family to Thailand to build playgrounds along the Thai/Burmese border for refugees fleeing violence in Burma.
This experience rekindled his commitment to serving others.
Upon his return in 2010, Jon launched Play360, a non-profit company that trains local organizations throughout the developing world to build low-cost, sustainable playgrounds as a means of improving education and social engagement. Since its launch, Play360 has helped construct more than 60 playgrounds for over 12,000 children around the world, including in Peru, the Philippines, Zanzibar, Guatemala, Thailand, Haiti, and Kenya.
These playgrounds aim to foster collaboration, cooperation, creativity and innovation, and provide a safe and dynamic space for children — in any community — to be challenged and explore the world on their terms.
Jon works closely with each local community, using local materials, labor and tools to build the playgrounds, and with local schools, who use the playgrounds as an extension of their classroom.
While overseeing each project in its entirety, and working on all aspects — from coordinating to building to painting — Jon still finds the time to play soccer with the local school children.
Back in the U.S., Jon uses Play360 to educate and inspire college students, bringing his perspective and experience into his classroom at Indiana University, where he serves as a senior lecturer in the School of Art and Design, teaching such courses as Design in the Developing World.
The impact of Jon’s work is felt in the communities he touches, and recognized even more broadly: in 2012, Jon was named one of "40 Under 40” in the architecture, engineering and construction industry by Building Design + Construction Magazine.
For his extensive dedication to education at every level; for his ability to recognize the needs of others and creatively utilize his gifts to address some of these needs; for his commitment to empowering community action and improving the lives of children around the world, the 17³Ô¹ÏÍø presents to Jonathan Racek the Sanctae Crucis Award.