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P acifc is co m m itted to providi ng a superior educati on in both the liber al arts and pr ofessional f elds th at w ill pre p are stu d en ts fo r a lifeti m e o f m e a n i n g f u l a c h i e v e m e n t a n d l e a d e r s h i p in th eir c are ers an d i n th eir co m m u nities. The Pacific Experience Pacifc is committed to providing a superior education in both the liberal arts and professional fel ds that w ill pre p are stude n ts fo r a lifetim e of m ea n i ng f ul a c h ie v e m en t a n d l ea d e rsh ip in th eir c areers and in their com m unities. President’s Report 2015

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Page 1: President's Report 2015

Pacif c

is committed

to providing a superior education in both the liberal arts and professional f elds that will prepare students for a lifetime of meaningful achievement and leadership in their careers and in their communities.

The Pacific Experience

Pacif c

is committed

to providing a superior education in both the liberal arts and professional f elds that will prepare students for a lifetime of meaningful ach ievement and leadership in their careers and in their communities.

President’s Report 2015

Page 2: President's Report 2015

3 | THE PACIFIC EXPERENCE

Pacific’s Vision: We will be a leading California university preparing

graduates for meaningful lives and successful careers

Pacific’s Mission: Our mission is to provide a superior, student-centered

learning experience integrating liberal arts and professional education and

preparing individuals for lasting achievement and responsible leadership in

their careers and communities

Three cities, one university

Committed to student success

Building reputation through academic excellence

Facts and fgures

28

2028

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PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2015 | 1

Since its founding more than 160 years ago, University of the Pacific has been transforming the lives of students, enhancing the vitality of our three regions and bringing a pioneering spirit to how we educate and serve.

In 2015, we made great strides in crossing boundaries to expand

Pacific’s presence in our three cities — movement that is necessary

for us to meet the pioneering future laid out for the university in our

strategic plan, Pacific 2020.

In the following pages, I am pleased to be able to share with you

highlights of our year and the steps we took toward meeting our

ambitious goals.

You’ll read about our new academic programs in Sacramento and

San Francisco that span disciplines and strengthen our unique

three-city identity and position. You’ll see tremendous examples of

our students’ achievements, underscoring the commitment we make

to their success in both their careers and lives. You’ll also learn how

we are building our reputation in our communities through academic

excellence. A milestone in reaching this initiative was achieved last

year with the adoption of the university’s academic plan, Crossing

Boundaries for Academic Excellence. This important and collaborative

plan recognizes the need to cross boundaries to reach our goals of

enhancing the relevance, excellence and value of a Pacific education.

Please enjoy this look at Pacific in 2015.

Sincerely,

President’s Letter

Becoming a three-city university is a bold vision — one that cannot be achieved without crossing boundaries to embrace new student populations, new opportunities and our communities.

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5 | THE PACIFIC EXPERENCE

Pacif c

is committed

to providing a superior education in both the liberal arts and professional f elds that will prepare students for a lifetime of meaningful achievement and leadership in their careers and in their communities.

Three cities, one universityPacific is a multi-campus university shaping the future

of higher education in Northern California

2 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Page 5: President's Report 2015

PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 6

Stockton

San Francisco

Sacramento

Page 6: President's Report 2015

StocktonPacific’s Stockton Campus is renowned for its idyllic beauty, breadth of outstanding

academic programs and vibrant and supportive campus life. Built in 1924, the campus is home to College of the Pacific, the liberal

arts and sciences school, and five other schools. Serving more than 5,000 students,

the campus is closely connected to the Stockton community, drawing area students who are seeking a superior

university education.

San FranciscoHome to one of the premier dental schools in the nation, the Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry,

Pacific’s new high-tech campus in the heart of one of the world’s most exciting

cities is building its reputation as a place for high-quality and relevant

programs in health, technology and arts and culture.

SacramentoFor more than 90 years, Pacific has been a force in one of the nation’s

most influential capital cities. Complementing the legal studies

offered at the McGeorge School of Law, new academic offerings will help

address critical issues at the intersection of law, policy, business and health.

Pursue new student markets that capitalize on the strengths of Pacific’s academic programs and multiple locations — Pacific 2020

4 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

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Pacifc has been offering academic programs in three cities for more than 50 years, so what is different now? A lot. Specifically, the launch of six new academic programs, with many more set to begin in the near future, at Pacific’s Sacramento and San Francisco campuses.

There is a clear intention behind those new offerings:• To give students in each of Pacific’s cities diverse academic programs and

learning experiences that are important to them• To create robust campuses in each city that offer programs from a breadth

of Pacific’s schools and the college that reflect the university’s strengths

And they’re a crucial part of Pacific’s bold vision for its future: to be recognized as a leading Northern California university with vibrant campuses and a strong reputation in these three important cities.

A historic dayPacific welcomed more than 65 students eager to become data scientists, food studies experts, audiologists and music therapists this summer at its San Francisco Campus. The inaugural students of Pacific’s San Francisco programs joined the new class of dental students on the university’s campus in the prime South of Market district.

PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2015 | 5

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William J. EllerbeeDeputy Superintendent,California Department

of Education ’02 EdD, ’16 MSL

Sacramento Campus Started fall 2015Master of Business Administration (general and health care tracks)Doctor of Education in Educational and Organizational Leadership

Starting fall 2016 Master of Public PolicyMaster of Public AdministrationMaster of Arts, Education (concentration in Organizational Learning and Effectiveness)

Starting spring 2017Master of Physician Assistant Studies Master of Science, Analytics

San Francisco CampusStarted fall 2015Doctor of Audiology Master of Science, AnalyticsMaster of Arts, Food StudiesEquivalency Program, Music Therapy

Pacifc’s academic breadth is reflected on each of its campuses with new programs that span disciplines: business, law, policy, health, engineering and education.

New programs designed to provide the kind of professionals our regions need for a changing 21st century workforce:

See more @ Pacific.edu/Sacramento and Pacific.edu/SF

William J. Ellerbee (at podium) was one of the featured speakers at Pacific’s June 26 event celebrating the expansion of its Sacramento Campus. Joining him were (from l to r) Bill Mueller, CEO of Valley Vision, Pacific’s Board of Regents Chair Kathleen Lagorio Janssen, President Pamela Eibeck, Provost Maria Pallavicini and Assemblymember Kevin McCarty (D-Sacramento).

6 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

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Two degrees, two Pacifc campuses, and one Pacifc experience

In June, Pacific announced its ambitious plans to expand in the Sacramento region.Joining community, business and political

leaders at a celebration was William J. Ellerbee ’02, ’16, a deputy superintendent for the California Department of Education. On his way to completing a Master of Science in Law degree from McGeorge in Sacramento, Ellerbee previously earned an EdD from the Gladys L. Benerd School of Education in Stockton. And he is a champion of what he has found at both campuses. “It would be fair to say that the faculty at both campuses significantly stretched my thinking, never to return to its original dimension,” he said. “This is what I find so exciting about the expansion of the Sacramento Campus programs. There is now a bigger opportunity for more students, especially working adults, to interact with great faculty in learning that will make a difference in their lives.”

Voices

PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2015 | 7

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11 | THE PACIFIC EXPERENCE PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 12

Pacif c

is committed

to providing a superior education in both the liberal arts and professional f elds that will prepare students for a lifetime of meaningful achievement and leadership in their careers and in their communities.

Committed to student successPacific is preparing students for success in their careers and lives

8 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Page 11: President's Report 2015

11 | THE PACIFIC EXPERENCE PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 12

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Pacifc’s commitment to its students allows them to soar to new heights.

Prepare students for tomorrow’s careers and for lifelong success — Pacific 2020

This photo of Earth was captured at about 100,000 feet from a tiny satellite

carrying a payload designed by Pacific’s Society of Women Engineers Team Tech (of course, a Pacific tiger was on board).

The satellite, called a “CubeSat” because of its size and shape, was attached to a high-altitude balloon and took photos of Earth before returning safely to firm soil. One day it could be used to monitor volcanic activity in Mexico or fly to the International Space Station.

The CubeSat was launched on a chilly November morning in Lovelock, Nevada, by Pacific engineering students and faculty, students from Universidad Popular Autónoma del Estado de Puebla in Mexico, Tierra Luna Engineering and JP Aerospace. Tierra Luna is a Stockton-based engineering firm founded by Pacific Regent José Hernández ’85, a former NASA astronaut.

For Delia Davila ’16, a bioengineering major, and the other members of Pacific’s SWE Team Tech, results from the project have already

hit home. The team won second place for its CubeSat research at the Society for Women Engineers conference in Nashville in October.

“My passion is helping and mentoring others, and especially encouraging girls to go into STEM careers,” Davila said. “I’m so lucky that I’ve had strong role models and that I’ve been able to meet women who have done this career, and I’d like to show my community how amazing science is.”

See more @ go.Pacific.edu/WeAreSOECS

10 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

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“With a research project like this, students

learn how to work with people in industry,

how to work with a team, and how to create a

functioning product. These are all skills that

employers and graduate schools are looking for

when our students finish at Pacific.” —Louise Stark, professor emerita of engineering who was one of two faculty advisers to the project

Keeping the Pacifc tiger company on its ride into space are items from other project partners — Stockton-based Tierra Luna Engineering (left) and the Universidad Popular Autonoma del Estado de Puebla in Mexico (right)

PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2015 | 11

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High scorersNew data in the White House College Scorecard shows that Pacific ranks No. 8 among California’s 119 public and private nonprofit universities in alumni salaries.

Pacific alumni earn a median salary of $66,400 ten years after starting classes, more than their peers from USC, UC Berkeley or UCLA, the data show. The scorecard also shows that Pacific’s student body is among the nation’s most socio-economically diverse.

The College Scorecard provides data on cost, graduation rate,

debt at graduation, and the percentage of students whose annual family incomes are below $40,000 and receive federal Pell grants, among other information.

“The scorecard confirms that Pacific offers its students an excellent return on investment,” said President Eibeck. “It also underscores the importance of Pacific as an engine for social mobility in California.”

Eibeck has made improving graduation rates a top priority of the university.

The White House College Scorecard can be found at collegescorecard.ed.gov

Career Resource Center• Spring Career Fair

- 105 companies - nearly 450 students

Pacific students explored career opportunities, set up interviews and had the chance for face-to-face networking at this day-long event designed to open doors to a successful future.

• Meet Your Future Mock InterviewsMore than 210 students tested and flexed their interview skills with real employers and got career and job search advice from employer panels.

Thomas J. Long School of Pharmacy and Health Sciences • Employer Showcases

- More than 30 employers - 350 students

Pharmacy, physical therapy, and speech language pathology students had the opportunity to explore different career paths and settings, while employers had a valuable recruiting opportunity.

Eberhardt School of Business • Fall Meet the Firms

- 40 employers, professional organizations and nonprofits

- 232 students

This meet-and-greet with prospective employers resulted in 83 interviews that led to 30 job and internship offers to Pacific students.

• A future of success Students in the new bachelor’s of accounting and Master of Accounting programs have plenty to smile about. With two graduating classes under their belts, the programs boast a 100 percent job placement rate, with some graduates going on to the “Big 4” (the top four international accounting firms) and large regional accounting firms.

Off to a great start

12 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Page 15: President's Report 2015

Boosting student SUCCESS

Some 200 first-generation, low-income or disabled students will have help

attending Pacific thanks to a $1.4 million, five-year grant recently awarded to the university by the U.S. Department of Education.

The grant will help fund Pacific’s SUCCESS program, which works to increase retention and graduation rates of eligible students and helps them to pursue advanced degrees. Of students who

enter the SUCCESS program as freshmen, 92 percent make it to graduation and 97 percent maintain a C average or better. The overall GPA for SUCCESS students is 3.04.

Pacific is one of only five private universities statewide to receive one of the Department of Education’s TRiO Student Support Services grants in 2015. Since it was established in 1979, Pacific’s SUCCESS program has served nearly 7,000 students.

Cheyanne Harris ’17, a civil engineering major, has won two prestigious awards to study in Japan: the U.S. Department of State’s Critical Language Scholarship, a summer language immersion program, and the U.S. Department of Defense’s Boren Scholarship, which supported four months of study at a Japanese university. It was the first time a Pacific student received the Critical Language Scholarship.

“Because of the program’s support I have

been able to develop a strong foundation

in difficult courses, while also gaining

the confidence to consider a career in

academia. As a first-generation college

student, SUCCESS has encouraged me to pursue my dreams.”

—Cheyanne Harris ’17

An example of SUCCESS:

SUCCESS Program Stats: 92% graduation rate | average GPA 3.04 | nearly 7,000 students served

PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2015 | 13

At Pacific, we are adjusting

to meet the needs of today’s employers and assembling

new programs and initiatives to provide our students

with exceptional job readiness across

all disciplines.

Page 16: President's Report 2015

Students in Pacific’s Community Involvement Program (CIP) will get additional support through a new scholarship established in memory of a Stockton business leader, William K. Chase.

The William K. Chase Memorial Endowed Scholarship was established by Chase Chevrolet in Stockton to honor the local business owner, leader and patriarch.

The family-owned auto dealership’s gift of $250,000 was matched dollar-for-dollar by the university’s Powell Match opportunity, bringing the

total value of the endowed scholarship to $500,000.

The Chase Scholarship will be awarded each year in perpetuity to two CIP students who exhibit a strong work ethic and noteworthy achievements despite socio-economic challenges. 

Pacific’s CIP is a comprehensive, need-based scholarship program for first-generation college students from the Stockton area who have demonstrated the potential for sustainable leadership, community awareness and involvement. 

Jimmy Suliman ’16

is a biology major with a goal of attending dental school. The son

of Syrian immigrants, he is the youngest of four children and the frst in

his family born in the United States.

Illiana Abarca ’18

is an exploratory major with interests ranging from art and dance to mathematics

and social justice. A Stockton native, Abarca works several jobs and is striving

to improve the reputation of and conditions in her

hometown.

“One of the most distinctive things about

Pacific is the deep sense of community.

Year after year, CIP students — many of

whom never thought a Pacific education

was within reach — have their lives forever

changed by this experience.”

—Allison Dumas, CIP director

The inaugural William K. Chase Memorial Community Involvement Program Scholars

14 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Learn more about CIP @ go.Pacific.edu/CIP

A wise investment

Page 17: President's Report 2015

Student scholars Nahid Kadirzada ’16, an economics major who is fluent in English, Farsi, Pashto and Spanish, received the 2015 Thomas R. Pickering Undergraduate Foreign Affairs Fellowship. This prestigious award is given to just 10 undergraduate students nationally who aspire to careers in the United States Foreign Service. Pickering Fellowships include funds for two years of school, two 10-week internships with the U.S. Department of State, and a commitment to work in the Foreign Service for five years after graduation.

Marcos Beltran-Sanchez ’16, a chemistry major, received the Department of State-funded Gilman Scholarship to support intensive language study in Japan. He aspires to work in government or private research on drug development for neurological diseases and disorders.

Alea Freeman ’15, an English and philosophy double major, received a summer research scholarship from Leadership Alliance, a national consortium of colleges, universities and private industry. She researched

American literature under the guidance of a faculty mentor at Princeton during the summer. Freeman is the first Pacific student to win the Leadership Alliance award.

Jesse Herche ’16, a violin performance and biology double major, received the Amgen Scholarship to conduct biochemistry research at MIT during the summer. After graduation, Herche plans to pursue an MD-PhD dual degree in neurophysiology with a goal of becoming a physician-researcher who studies the processing of music in the brain.

Courtney Bye Says Hello to Washington, D.C.

Courtney Bye ’16, an applied economics major with a minor in Chinese studies, knows that following her passion to become successful in the fast-paced field of global economic

development requires more than just textbook smarts.

Thanks to the newly established Nathan Scholars program, Bye gained real-world experience last summer through an internship at a top international economics consulting firm, Nathan Associates Inc.

She is one of the first students to be named a Nathan Scholar, a distinction made possible by the support of the firm’s chairman John C. Beyer ’62. His generous gift funded the scholars program, in addition to creating an endowed chair and fellowship in economics at Pacific.

Verdict: McGeorge law students

McGeorge students proved their legal skills couldn’t be argued with as they collected a bevy of individual awards in moot competitions this fall and advanced to the final rounds in the National Moot Court Competition.

Ian McGlone ’16 captured the Best Speaker Award in the Thomas Tang Moot Western Regional held in October. Jenifer Gee ’16 and Kimberly Van Spronsen ’16 headed to the finals of the New York City Bar Association’s National Moot Court Competition after a victory at the Northern California regional competition. Gee was also named the top oralist in the regional competition, and Van Spronsen and Gee were recognized for second-best brief.

Karly McCrory ’16 and Chris Maloney ’16 were recognized for second-best brief and advanced to the quarterfinals of the Chicago Bar Association’s competition. Jessica Melgar ’16 and James Ward ’16 made the octofinals. Lauren Ngo, Hasan Shaik and Amanda Ryan, all class of 2016, received the best respondent brief at Pepperdine’s 18th Annual National Entertainment Law Moot Court Competition.

“This summer has been a fantastic opportunity

for me not only to get real experience in the

world of consulting, but also to expand my

career horizons and gain exposure to different

industries and business practices. Internships

are a critical way for a student to apply the knowledge and skills taught at

school in a hands-on environment.” —Courtney Bye ’16

PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2015 | 15

Learn more about CIP @ go.Pacific.edu/CIP

Page 18: President's Report 2015

Teeing off to a bright futureMen’s golfer Byron Meth ’15 finished his masterful career at Pacific with his eyes still on the fairway. With an impressive list of team wins and individual titles — including a second- round finish in the 2015 Master’s competition — Meth is realizing his plans to pursue professional golf.

By 2014, his junior year, Meth solidified his above-par athletic status by becoming the 2014 West Coast Conference champion and competing in the NCAA regional tournament. That summer he won the U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship, which effectively secured his spot in the Master’s competition.

On the famed greens of Augusta in April, Meth, a business administration major with a minor in economics, eventually relaxed into the game like a pro.

“I’m just out here having fun,” he told CBS Sports News.

Healing handsFormer Pacific Men’s Volleyball player Dan Hammer ’07, ’11 is continuing to use his hands for good, currently helping America’s wounded warriors.

Hammer, a graduate of the College of the Pacific and the Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry, is winding down a four-year stint with the U.S. Navy that has seen him work with the Wounded Warrior Project.

Based at the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland, he is specializing in oral surgery and facial reconstruction for soldiers who have been injured while serving.

In working with the Wounded Warrior Project, Hammer appears to have found his calling. The former student body president at the Dugoni School of Dentistry has just become the president of the Resident Organization of the American Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons, a nonprofit association serving the specialty of oral and maxillofacial surgery, which governs 1,100 residents throughout the country.

“It really makes you take a second to be thankful for what you have and not take things for granted,” he said. “You might get angry or frustrated during the day for something as small as not having your cell phone charged, but you think about what these people are going through and you realize your small problems are not really that significant.”

Tiger strong

Pacific’s Rugby Club used its tiger tenacity to become national champions last spring when the team scored a comeback victory against Northern Colorado.

After fighting as underdogs through the ranks of sectional and divisional battles and triumphing over schools with long-established teams, the Pacific team earned its first match on the national stage. 

The game got off to a slow start for both teams, but by halftime, Northern Colorado pulled ahead with what looked like a plan for victory. In the end, Pacific’s players fought harder and seized the 39–32 win, an impressive feat considering the team has only been practicing since 2008.

Celebrations and media coverage ensued. On CBS’s Good Day Sacramento, President Pamela Eibeck shared her pride: “They represent the very best of University of the Pacific. They’re committed, ready to pull together to do their best and reach success against all odds.”

16 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Page 19: President's Report 2015

Hannah Ludwig ’14 (right) and Yelena Dyachek ’13 (left), appearing in the award-winning

2013 Pacific Opera Theatre production of

Merry Wives of Windsor.

Hannah Ludwig ’14 and Yelena Dyachek ’13 are vying for a place in opera history as they advance in the 2015

Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. Andrew Dwan ’13 and Ted Pickell ’14 were also winners in their districts and advanced to the regionals, where they each were recognized with honorable mention distinction.

Dyachek, as a regional winner, has already secured one of only 20 spots in the national semifinals. Ludwig, as winner of the Puerto

Rico District, will be competing to determine if she will join Dyachek on the Metropolitan Opera stage as a national semifinalist in March.  

These four Pacific opera alumni are used to hitting high notes. All were in the cast of the 2013 Pacific Opera Theatre production of The Merry Wives of Windsor, which received a first place award in that year’s Opera Production Competition sponsored by the National Opera Association.

The stage is set

“To have four Pacific-trained artists recognized

in four different districts as winners so early in

their careers is phenomenal. This is the most

prestigious voice competition in the world, and

this competition has been the defining step in

the careers of some of the greatest opera stars.” —Daniel Ebbers, interim dean of the

Conservatory of Music and a professor of voice

Hear them sing @ go.Pacific.edu/MetOpera

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UGGs. If you haven’t worn them, you’ve certainly seen them— the shearling boots that come in

trend-setting colors and styles. And that’s because of Connie Rishwain ’79, who catapulted the UGG boot into a global brand with more than $1.5 billion in revenues. Serving as president of UGG Australia from 2002 through 2015, she led the brand’s growth from a niche surfer boot to an award-winning, must-have lifestyle footwear brand sported by celebrities and featured several times on “Oprah’s Favorite Things.”

She took her story of success to the stage in October, when she was a featured speaker at the second Advancing Women’s Leadership Forum at Pacific. The sold-out event was designed to inspire and empower future leaders, especially disadvantaged youth and youth from the San Joaquin region.

Connie Rishwain ’79

former UGG president and newly elected member of

Pacifc’s Board of Regents

Hall of Fame CIO

It’s been quite a run of success for Rebecca Jacoby ’83. Within the last year, she assumed one of the top posts at Cisco — the worldwide leader in IT — when she was named the new senior vice president of operations. She also received Hall of Fame status (one of only five CIOs in the country to be named so by CIO magazine) for her previous role as Cisco’s chief information officer.

Yet Jacoby still remembers being a high school student from the East Bay visiting Pacific for the first time. She had come with a friend from their hometown of Hayward where, as she remembers, not a lot of people had the opportunity to go away to college.

She also remembers it was springtime in April. “I just fell in love with the campus,” she said. “I loved the brick and rose gardens, and this whole sense of a small community. You felt like you were coming home.”

18 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Embrace our students and alumni as lifelong Pacificans — Pacific 2020

Creating a billion – dollar brand

Page 21: President's Report 2015

George R. Moscone ’53 is best remembered as a state senator and San Francisco mayor who

spurred landmark legislation and fought for the rights of the LGBT community and other minorities.

For more than 35 years after his assassination in 1978, however, Moscone’s legacy went largely unexamined. His papers — a wealth of materials that give a firsthand account of one of the most transformational eras in California politics — had spent decades tucked away in a San Francisco storage facility. The collection was recently unearthed by his family, who decided to donate this historical treasure trove to Pacific.

Today his papers have a new purpose at Pacific, which will proudly house Moscone’s papers, together with a vast compilation of video interviews, in the Holt-Atherton Special Collections on the Stockton Campus. Now in the process of being catalogued, the Moscone Collection will be open to scholars and the general public, and Moscone’s legacy will be preserved for generations to come.

At Pacific’s San Francisco Campus on March 26, George R. Moscone’s contributions to California, San Francisco and his alma mater were celebrated. The event included a panel discussion moderated by California State Librarian Greg Lucas, and included four people who knew him well:

* Willie L. Brown Jr., former speaker of the California Assembly and former mayor of San Francisco

* John L. Burton, chairman of the California Democratic Party and a former California assemblyman and U.S. congressman

* Belva Davis, journalist and longtime host of This Week in Northern California on KQED, San Francisco’s PBS affiliate

* Jonathan Moscone, artistic director for the California Shakespeare Theater and son of the late mayor

From l to r: Greg Lucas, Willie L. Brown Jr., John L. Burton, Belva Davis, Jonathan Moscone.

A tribute to a pioneering public servant

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23 | THE PACIFIC EXPERENCE PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 24

Pacif c

is committed

to providing a superior education in both the liberal arts and professional f elds that will prepare students for a lifetime of meaningful achievement and leadership in their careers and in their communities.

Building reputation through academic excellence

Build the strength, relevance and reputation of Pacific’s academic programs — Pacific 2020

20 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

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23 | THE PACIFIC EXPERENCE PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 24

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22 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

New Academic Plan:

Offering new public administration and public policy degrees within the McGeorge School of Law will allow the program and its students to take full advantage of our proximity to the nation’s most important state capital.

The new Public Policy Programs build on the strengths of Pacific’s Center for Business and Policy Research and the Capital Center for Public Law and Policy.

The Center for Business and Policy Research, which has informed public policy through its

economic forecasts and other studies since 2004, recently opened an office on the Sacramento Campus. In the Legislative and Public Policy Clinic taught by faculty affiliated with the Capital Center for Public Law and Policy, students gain practical experience in researching, drafting and pursuing adoption of California legislative and regulatory changes. In 2015, four student-authored bills that had been passed into law took effect.

Both centers will provide opportunities for students to participate in rich multidisciplinary research and collaboration.

A perfect place for public policy: a law school in SacramentoPublic Policy

John J. KirlinFounding director of

Public Policy Programs and Distinguished Professor of Public Policy

John Kirlin is renowned for four decades of experience in policy analysis, administration and fnancing. His expertise includes state-local fscal

relationships, regional governance, land use and environmental and species protection policies. As an elected fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration, Kirlin has served as an environmental policy advisor to the

U.S. Congress and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Crossing Boundaries for Academic Excellence guides the university over the next five years as it works toward a critical end goal: to prepare students for success in a complex world.

It’s a world where we must cross the boundaries of disciplines, professions, cultures and nations to find solutions to our most pressing challenges.

Analyzing the data

Rising from the School of Engineering and Computer Science based in Stockton, Pacific’s new graduate program in analytics will help provide this high-demand skill set to employers in San Francisco and Sacramento.

Pacific’s program is custom-built by both experienced program faculty and industry professionals and offers students the best of both worlds, including instructors from industry leaders such as Google.

This program is currently being taught at Pacific’s campus in San Francisco to help fill the growing need for data scientists with deep knowledge of analytics. Pacific will soon be offering this program in Sacramento to meet demand in that region.

The combination for success

Students with a strong liberal arts education— gained from a combination of arts, humanities, and natural and social sciences — possess skills that are indispensable for personal and professional success in our rapidly changing world. That’s why Pacific is committed to championing the liberal arts, which have been a foundation of the university and our graduates’ success for nearly 165 years.

Liberal Arts and InnovationMixing food, history, society and business

Pacific’s new food studies master’s degree program — the first on the West Coast — serves up a variety of topics for students to explore.

Students learn about the ways people have grown, prepared and profited from food through history and across cultures, from professors who combine a range of disciplines (including business, history, sociology, anthropology and English).

And with classes held at Pacific’s San Francisco Campus, they are studying food in one of the world’s greatest food cities.

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PRESIDENT’S REPORT 2015 | 23

Health

Pacific’s Doctor of Audiology Program in San Francisco welcomed its inaugural class last fall. The university’s AuD program is the first in Northern California, and has clinics in San Francisco and Stockton, where Pacific’s nationally recognized programs in speech-language pathology are well respected.

Pacific’s new Physician Assistant Program* will be located on the Sacramento Campus and administered by the Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry in San Francisco.

As such, the program will tap into the resources in the Sacramento region and the reputation of Pacific’s highly regarded health-related schools: the Dugoni School and the Thomas J. Long School of Pharmacy and Health Sciences. It will be the first physician assistant program in the nation administered by a dental school.

Students pursing this fast-growing field of health care at Pacific will have a variety of inter-professional opportunities through the university’s programs in dentistry, pharmacy, physical therapy, audiology and other health sciences areas.

*Pending accreditation

Tapping into Pacific’s resources and reputation

Helping to hear

Mark ChristiansenFounding program director of the Master of Physician

Assistant Studies Program and associate professor

Mark Christiansen previously served on the faculty at the University of California, Davis, Medical Center in Sacramento. Most recently, he was the program director of the Physician Assistant Master’s

Degree Program in the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing at UC Davis. Christiansen has been a practicing physician assistant in family medicine and emergency medicine for more than 35 years.

The water and environmental concerns of California, a major supplier of the world’s food, stretch beyond state and national borders. As the premier university located in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta region, Pacific is compelled to build on the growing interdisciplinary expertise of its faculty to educate leaders and partner with communities to develop innovative solutions to water-related and other environmental challenges.

Jennifer Harder Assistant professor of lawyering skills

Jennifer Harder is a lead faculty member for water law and practice at McGeorge. She brings to the classroom a decade of experience as a water attorney and partner with Downey Brand LLP, one of the

region’s largest law frms, representing public agencies on water and environmental matters.

Water and Environment

With expanded access to health care (think the Affordable Care Act), an aging population and other economic factors, the demand for health care professionals will only continue to grow. Pacific is poised to leverage its strength in health to prepare the next generation of leading health care practitioners and other health-related professionals to be successful in this critical and dynamic industry.

Emily Whelan ParentoAssociate professor of law and the

Gordon D. Schaber Health Law Scholar

Emily Whelan Parento was the principal health policy adviser to Kentucky Governor Steven L. Beshear as the state successfully implemented the Affordable Care Act. Parento has written on both national and

global health law and policy, examining issues such as the impact of the Affordable Care Act on health disparities, legal strategies to strengthen health equity, and global trends in obesity-related regulations.

Karrigan BörkVisiting assistant professor of environmental sciences and visiting assistant professor of law

Karrigan Börk, who holds joint appointments in Pacifc’s liberal arts college and its law school, is crossing boundaries of disciplines. His new position allows for the integration of law students into some of his science courses.

Page 26: President's Report 2015

Thanks to innovations in oral health developed by the Pacific Center for Special Care at the Arthur A. Dugoni

School of Dentistry, the poor, the elderly and uninsured children in California will have greater access to dental care. 

Pacific’s model to improve access, called “virtual dental home,” made major strides forward last year in reaching the state’s neediest populations by bringing dental care directly to them. With the advancements, California continues as a national leader in teledentistry.

Last summer, Pacific began training dental hygiene educators from dental hygiene schools around the state to place interim therapeutic restorations, or ITRs in patients. These educators — the first to be trained in California — are then able to teach the technique to their students. ITRs require no drilling or anesthesia and can delay tooth decay and the need for a traditional filling for several years or more.

The training was made possible by a new teledentistry law, AB 1174, which was informed by the work of Paul Glassman, a professor of dentistry and director of the Pacific Center for Special Care, and the efforts of center staff.

The law took effect last January and authorizes hygienists to become certified to decide which dental X-rays to take before a new patient sees a dentist. It also empowers hygienists to apply ITRs after being directed to do so by a dentist using cloud-based electronic health records.

In another initiative of the virtual dental home project, senior housing residents of Kingsley Manor in Southern California who face financial or other barriers to traditional care began receiving routine diagnostic and preventive dental services, including ITRs, right where they live.

The initiative will expand to underserved residents at other senior housing communities and centers in Southern California in the months ahead. The care is made possible by a three-year, $275,000 grant from the California Wellness Foundation to Pacific.

“Today is ground zero, where dental hygiene educators are

trained to do ITRs [temporary fillings] on live patients. From

there, they will take that back to their classrooms and their

respective colleges to train their students... with the ability of

hygienists to do these ITRs, after being directed to do so by a

dentist, countless Californians will have access to this care.” — Nabeel Cajee ’11, ’15, a College of the Pacific and Dugoni School graduate who

participated in the training with Glassman

For more information about the virtual dental home project, visit www.VirtualDentalHome.org

Pioneers in teledentistry

Paul Glassman,professor of dentistry and director of the Pacifc Center for Special Care, during

the frst training of dental hygiene educators in the state in teledentistry

24 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Page 27: President's Report 2015

Teacher-scholarsA roadmap to safer energy productionWilliam T. Stringfellow, professor of engineering

Stringfellow was part of a team of distinguished scientists commissioned by the state Natural Resources Agency to chart a road map for sustainable

energy production in California. Stringfellow holds a dual appointment at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where he directs the Environmental Measurements Laboratory. The report focuses on oil well stimulation treatments, or fracking, offshore and onshore.

Looking at foster youth success in school Ronald Hallett, associate professor of education

Only 3 in 100 students who have lived in foster care graduate from college, among the lowest rates of any demographic group in the country. In a study presented at the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association, Hallett predicted that this rate is unlikely to improve without formal programs to assist foster youth both financially and academically.

Dinosaur DiscoveryDesmond Maxwell, associate professor of biological sciences

Maxwell was part of a team of scientists who discovered a new dinosaur. And not just any dinosaur — the

oldest horned dinosaur species in North America. This one was about the size of a large crow and lived in Western North America. The finding, published in the prestigious journal PLOS One, made headlines around the world. Maxwell and his fellow scientists named the dinosaur Aquilops americanus, or “American eagle face.”

Digitizing Coptic textsCaroline Schroeder, associate professor of religious and classical studies

Schroeder won a $192,500 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, which will support creation of new technologies to study and publish online texts that are important in understanding the Bible and the history of Christianity. The texts also offer a window into the cultural heritage of an important religious community in the Middle East, Coptic Christians. Schroeder is collaborating with colleagues at Georgetown University and two German institutions: the University of Göttingen and the University of Münster. The latest grant builds on $100,000 in NEH funding Schroeder received in 2014 for her groundbreaking digital Coptic studies work.

Fulbright grant will aid field research in Mexico Analiese Richard, associate professor of anthropology

Richard was awarded a prestigious Fulbright U.S. Scholar grant to conduct ethnographic field research in Mexico. Richard, who is fluent in Spanish, will examine how Mexican scientists participate in public life, with a goal of gaining new insights

into the role of experts in democratic society. Richard is the author of book chapters on Mexico’s food sovereignty movement and democratic change in Mexico, and has published papers on agriculture and rural development in Mexico.

Quadcopter to the rescueElizabeth Basha ’03, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering

Disasters such as bridge collapses may happen, but Basha wants to make sure they don’t happen because of a dead battery. Basha is completing research funded by a $100,000 National Science

Foundation grant that examines how unmanned aerial vehicles could be used to recharge batteries on wireless sensor networks, such as those that track potentially devastating structural changes on bridges. Basha began working with wireless sensor networks while a PhD student at MIT, impressed by their potential to solve human problems.

Giving peptides a longer lifeMamoun Alhamadsheh, assistant professor of pharmacy

Alhamadsheh led a team of faculty and graduate students from the Thomas J. Long School of Pharmacy and Health Sciences and the Department of Chemistry in developing a biochemical trick that can significantly extend the lifespan of peptides, smaller cousins of proteins. The finding opens up new possibilities for creating peptides to treat cancer, infertility and other conditions. The discovery was published in the scientific journal Nature Chemical Biology and hailed in Nature Reviews Drug Discovery.

Helping Pacific become a leader in audiology

A partnership between Pacific and a worldwide leader in hearing aid solutions, ReSound US, is allowing the new Doctor of Audiology program in San Francisco to hit the ground running. A gift from ReSound is equipping the onsite clinic with state-of-the-art instruments and providing experiential learning opportunities for students.

The only audiology doctoral program in Northern California enrolled its first class in August 2015. The program is expected to educate nearly half of the estimated 55 new audiologists needed each year to keep pace with anticipated statewide

demand. The program’s patient clinics will offer diagnostic and rehabilitation services to both adults and children.

In the coming year, ReSound’s gift will also provide scholarships to attract and support talented students and establish a leadership academy led by the company’s president, Kim Lody. ReSound’s support in educating well-trained audiologists and increasing patient care is vitally important not only to Pacific but to the profession and our communities.

PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 25

Page 28: President's Report 2015

Engaging our Communities

Stockton: Advancing Women’s LeadershipU.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor shared her rise to success from a challenging childhood and touted the value of a liberal arts education before a sold-out crowd at the Advancing Women’s Leadership Forum in October. Sotomayor spoke from the stage for just a few moments before venturing onto the floor of Pacific’s Alex G. Spanos Center to shake hands with audience members. She then climbed the stadium stairs to answer questions from among the 2,000 or so middle school, high school and college students whose attendance at the event was made possible through generous donations.

Sacramento: Region Rising Pacific lent its voice to a regional conversation about the future of California’s capital region during an innovative new conference in November. Representatives from schools and departments across the university were part of the dialogue.

The “Region Rising” event at the Sacramento Convention Center drew more than 1,000 community and business leaders from throughout Sacramento and northern San Joaquin County to network, collaborate and brainstorm ideas to help shape the region’s present and future.

“To see Pacific so well represented among our region’s institutions of higher education and to hear what the university is doing to help us meet the needs of our communities in the decades to come was a crucial part of our conversation.” – Bill Mueller, CEO of Valley Vision

San Francisco: ForecastSF Pacific was front and center at the 2015 ForecastSF event, which brought together political, community and business leaders last summer in the City by the Bay. Rick Hutley, the program director for Pacific’s new graduate program in analytics, gave an engaging presentation about “Building the Talent Pool for The Data Era.” He joined John E. Silvia, a chief economist at Wells Fargo, and Kim Majerus, area vice president, U.S. Public Sector, Cisco, in presenting at the event.

“College,” Sotomayor responded when one of the public school students in the audience asked the secret to achieving dreams. “It’s called a liberal arts education.”

A leading voice for regional growth and developmentThe Center for Business and Policy Research in the Eberhardt School of Business is a primary go-to resource for media across the region and the state. The center produces economic, planning and policy studies, and research and analysis on current issues, and provides triannual economic forecasts for California and 10 metropolitan areas in Northern and Central California. With the center’s expansion in 2015, which included adding two new research analysts and opening a second office in Sacramento, the center has further broadened its scope and influence, including launching a new annual North San Joaquin Valley index.

Pacific’s total economic impact by region (FY 2015, in millions)*:

Stockton: $374Sacramento: $51.1San Francisco: $153.3* the effect of university-related spending in the communities

For more information, go.Pacific.edu/CBPR

U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor (above), Connie Rishwain ’79, the former president of UGG Australia, and Amy Purdy, a 2014 Paralympic bronze medalist and motivational speaker, were speakers at the event that seeks to inspire and empower future leaders.

26 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Serve our communities and visibly engage each city through our educational, research and outreach activities— Pacific 2020

Page 29: President's Report 2015

Health care and community service (2014-15 academic year)

Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry• Provided $10 million in

uncompensated dental care to 14,000 patients in Northern California

• Provided health services to more than 4,000 people at community events

• More than 150 students, faculty, staff and alumni helped bring dental care to more than 2,000 underserved patients at the California Dental Association’s CDA Cares event in Sacramento

Thomas J. Long School of Pharmacy and Health Sciences• Students volunteered an estimated

30,000 hours in efforts ranging from children’s health to evaluating elderly prescription drug costs

• Provided more than 3,600 hours of free services to approximately 150 children with speech and language difficulties at the Stockton Scottish Rite Language Center

• Provided free hearing screenings to more than 500 children and seniors during the San Francisco Audiology Clinic’s first semester

McGeorge School of Law• Provided more than 140 clients with

legal services and information through its immigration clinic

Stockton Campus• More than 7,600 hours of community

service contributed by students

Pacific’s total economic impact by region (FY 2015, in millions)*:

Stockton: $374Sacramento: $51.1San Francisco: $153.3* the effect of university-related spending in the communities

For more information, go.Pacific.edu/CBPR

Going Beyond Our GatesPacific is working strategically and collaboratively to improve the social and economic vitality of Stockton and San Joaquin County. That’s at the heart of the Beyond Our Gates initiative President Pamela Eibeck launched in 2010.

The Beyond Our Gates initiative unites some 50 community partners — including school districts, the public library, businesses, nonprofits and faith-based groups — in an effort to improve early literacy.

• The fourth annual San Joaquin Literacy Report Card showed that nearly three in four San Joaquin County students left third grade last year without having mastered the reading skills they need for future academic success.

• More than 3,600 San Joaquin Valley youth in grades 3–12 participated in Tomorrow Project academies and educational enrichment programs of the Beyond Our Gates initiative

• The BizEd Summit held on the Stockton Campus in June brought local and national business leaders to Stockton to make the case for investment in early childhood education. Investing in literacy and learning benefits not just young children, but the local economy as well.

Serving our Communities

Find out more @ BeyondOurGates.org

Rajul Patel ’01, ’06, associate professor of pharmacy practice, received a "hero" award from the American Red Cross in recognition of his student-run Mobile Medicare Clinics program, which has helped more than 3,665 Medicare benefciaries throughout Northern California save more than $3.3 million in out-of-pocket drug costs.

PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 27

Page 30: President's Report 2015

Pacif c

is committed

to providing a superior education in both the liberal arts and professional f elds that will prepare students for a lifetime of meaningful achievement and leadership in their careers and in their communities.

Facts and FiguresPacific is preparing students for success in their careers and lives

28 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Page 31: President's Report 2015

The Power of the Powell Match

Just as Pacific has a gift for transforming individual lives, the Powell Match transforms a philanthropic commitment into a gift with enormous impact.

Funded from late Regents Bob and Jeannette Powell’s historic $125 million gift to Pacific, the Powell Match provides an extremely rare opportunity to double new endowment gifts of $50,000 or more at the university’s three campuses in Stockton, Sacramento and San Francisco. Donors can create or build upon inspiring philanthropic legacies while directly influencing scholarship and academic programs students want, need and deserve. This is a premier opportunity for visionary philanthropists to leverage their giving and change lives — more dramatically than ever before.

MORE THAN $14.3 MILLIONin gifts and commitments that qualify for the Powell Match

81 15ACADEMIC PROGRAM ENDOWMENTS

ENDOWEDSCHOLARSHIPS

as of 12/31/2015

PRESIDENT’S REPORT | 29

Find out more about the Powell Match @ go.Pacific.edu/PowellMatch

Page 32: President's Report 2015

Fast Facts (2015–2016)

• Stockton 5,151 | Sacramento 554 | San Francisco 576

• Female 52% | Male 48% (undergraduates)

• Freshman applications 14,449 | Acceptance rate 65%

• Average SAT 1150 | Average high school GPA 3.45

• Degrees conferred (2014–2015): Bachelor’s 864 Master’s 367 | Doctoral 60 | Professional 591

Student Body 6,281 students

Undergraduate 3,735

Professional 1,596

Graduate 950

Undergraduate Demographics

Ethnicity

• 35.6% Asian/Pacific Islander

• 27.3% White, non-Hispanic

• 17.9% Hispanic

• 2.7% Black, non-Hispanic

• 0.5% Am. Ind./Alaskan Native

• 5.6% Multi-ethnic

• 6.7% International

• 3.7% Unknown

Region

• 29% San Joaquin County

• 68% Northern California (including S.J. County)

• 17% Southern California

• 7% Out of state

• 7% International

• 1% Unknown

125+Pacific offers more than 80 undergraduate majors including a

broad range of minors and a number of accelerated programs and nearly 45 graduate and professional programs and degrees

The Pacific Difference• Four-year graduation guarantee:

If students do their part, Pacific ensures they graduate on time

• California’s first chartered university, founded in 1851

• One of the 50 most beautiful college campuses in the country The Best Colleges

• A “Cool School” Sierra Club

• #108 Top National Universities, #6 among California privates U.S. News & World Report

• Best 380 Colleges Princeton Review

• #20 Nationally in international law U.S. News & World Report

• #8 Best undergraduate business schools in California Bloomberg Businessweek (2014)

Best in the West Princeton Review

Top 15 Nationally For Campus Ethnic Diversity U.S. News & World Report

Student To Faculty Ratio13:1

2014–2015 FACULTY768 total faculty

436 full time

30 | THE PACIFIC EXPERIENCE

Page 33: President's Report 2015

125+Pacific offers more than 80 undergraduate majors including a

broad range of minors and a number of accelerated programs and nearly 45 graduate and professional programs and degrees

Annual Budget (in millions)

Pacific’s generous scholarship and financial aid policies help bring out-of- pocket costs to levels that are competitive with most public institutions

more than

Unrestricted (includes financial aid and auxiliaries) FY 2015 $340 | FY 2014 $332

* Undergraduate students

University and donor-sponsored financial aid for academic year 2014 – 2015 awarded university-wide

$61 millionAverage annual financial aid award per student

$26,000*

83.9of Pacific students receive financial

aid

PERCENT

#3Best Value in

California—The Economist and the

Brookings Institution

Source: National Association of College and University Business Officers endowment survey 2015

Beyond ExpectationTop 10 schools that exceed expected earnings

Institutions Expected Earnings* Median Earnings Difference

Harvard University $58,000 $87,200 $29,200

Georgetown University $54,400 $83,300 $28,900 University of Colorado-Denver $47,200 $73,800 $26,600 MIT $65,800 $91,600 $25,800 Stanford University $55,400 $80,900 $25,500Bentley University $49,900 $74,900 $25,000 University of Pennsylvania $53,600 $78,200 $24,600 Duke University $52,400 $76,700 $24,300

Washington and Lee University $54,600 $77,600 $23,000

University of the Pacific $45,700 $66,400 $20,700

Earnings Comparison

Source: Georgetown University Center on Education and the Workforce analysis of data from the U.S. Department of Education’s College Scorecard, 2015. *Based on the composition of undergraduates’ majors at the institution.

Tuition and Financial Highlights

Comparable Privates Fall 2015 Fall 2014

Pepperdine University $48,090 $46,440 Chapman University $46,500 $44,710 Santa Clara University $45,300 $43,812 University of Redlands $44,550 $42,836 University of San Diego $44,000 $42,330 St. Mary’s College of CA $42,780 $41,230 University of the Pacific $42,414 $40,822 University of San Francisco $42,180 $40,996 Loyola Marymount $41,876 $40,680

Tuition Comparison (undergraduate)

Comparable Institutions FY 2015 FY 2014

Santa Clara University 884.7 875.1

Pepperdine University 805.2 788.6 University of San Diego 470.0 468.8 Loyola Marymount 437.8 454.2 University of the Pacific 385.0 386.4 University of San Francisco 314.3 237.3 Chapman University 301.3 273.8 St. Mary’s College of CA 170.1 166.5 University of Redlands 125.7 127.5

Endowment Comparison (in millions)

*

Page 34: President's Report 2015

Schools of University of the Pacific

College of the Pacific (1851)

Conservatory of Music (1878)

Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry (1896)

Pacific McGeorge School of Law (1924)

Gladys L. Benerd School of Education (1924)

Thomas J. Long School of Pharmacy and Health Sciences (1955)

School of Engineering and Computer Science (1957)

Eberhardt School of Business (1977)

School of International Studies (1987)

CPCE — Center for Professional and Continuing Education

Stockton Campus

San Francisco Campus

Sacramento Campus

Page 35: President's Report 2015

University Leadership 2015–2016

Offcers of the Board of RegentsKathleen Lagorio Janssen Chair

Kevin P. Huber Vice Chair

Susanne Stirling Secretary

Richard H. Fleming Treasurer

MembersNorman E. AllenFawzi M. Al-SalehRonald A. BerberianCharles P. BerolzheimerD. Kirkwood (Kirk) Bowman Virginia ChanEvan DreyfussPamela A. EibeckNoël M. FerrisArmando B. FloresClark GustafsonRandall T. Hayashi

Executive TeamPamela A. Eibeck President

Maria G. Pallavicini Provost

Ken Mullen Vice President for Business and Finance

Patrick Day Vice President for Student Life

G. Burnham “Burnie” Atterbury Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations

Arthur M. Sprecher Vice President for Technology and Chief Information Officer

Mary Lou Lackey Vice President and Secretary to the Board of Regents

José M. Hernández Andrea Lynn Hoch Eve M. Kurtin James D. MairKathleen T. McShaneDiane D. MillerGary M. MitchellFredric C. NelsonDianne L. PhilibosianBarry L. RuhlDonald H. Shalvey Janet Y. Spears

Produced by the Office of CommunicationsEditor: Katie E. IsmaelArt direction and design: Michelle Baty and Clayton SpowartContributors: Sheri Grimes, Claudia Morain and Keith Michaud

Sacramento Campus

Page 36: President's Report 2015

“Just as ripples spread out when a single

pebble is dropped into water, the actions of

individuals can have far-reaching effects.” —Dalai Lama

• S A C R A M E N T OS T O C K T O N • S A N F R A N C I S C O

• S A C R A M E N T OS T O C K T O N • S A N F R A N C I S C O

• S A C R A M E N T OS T O C K T O N • S A N F R A N C I S C O

• S A C R A M E N T OS T O C K T O N • S A N F R A N C I S C O

Pacific.edu

Stockton Campus

3601 Pacific Avenue, Stockton, CA 95211

Sacramento Campus

3200 5th Avenue, Sacramento, CA 95817

San Francisco Campus

155 Fifth Street, San Francisco, CA 94103