Features:
Medicine Men -- Grizzly
bear
He's cooking
Chancellor
Ferrari can sift and measure and strain like Chef Boyardee, but untimately
we are the ones who determine how tasty TCU will be.
By David
Van Meter
By
themselves, frittatas aren't much more than fancy omelettes.
But when
Chancellor Michael R. Ferrari dons a chef's hat -- as he did for "Frittatas
with Ferrari" during Homecoming Weekend -- you know you're in for more
than eggs with an accent.
A kitchen
whiz as it is -- the man dreams of pasta makers with the Kung Fu grip
-- Ferrari flipped his frittatas like other Italians make pizzas do pirouettes.
Of course,
our ninth Chancellor hasn't had much time to cook in the kitchen. He's
been helping build Habitat houses, meeting with community leaders, talking
with faculty and hanging out with students.
He's been
asking questions.
And he's
been listening to the answers.
At Fall
Convocation, he listed 10 steps to make the University that much better.
-- Sharpen
the mission statement.
-- Develop
a strategic plan.
-- Foster
a collegial working environment and improve salaries and benefits. --
Strengthen student life, including improvements in retention and evaluation
of learning outcomes, support for intercollegiate athletics, and enhancements
to the student center, recreation center and residence halls.
-- Increase
alumni involvement.
-- Implement
a technology agenda that places TCU in a leadership position in higher
education.
-- Build
stronger partnerships within the community.
-- Enhance
global education.
-- Promote
greater diversity among students, faculty and staff.
-- Enrich
the intellectual life of the University.
It reads
like a recipe for a university, and it is, except certain crucial ingredients
remain.
You.
Me.
The people
you'll read about in this issue of The TCU Magazine. Chancellor
Ferrari can sift and measure and strain like Chef Boyardee, but ultimately
we are the ones who determine how tasty TCU will be.
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