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Top 10 Tips for Getting an Internship

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UConn Foundation

2 min read

2 minutes to read

These days, getting an internship (or two or three) is almost a prerequisite for getting a job after graduation. Here are some tips from UConn’s Center for Career Development and students who’ve done an internship or two.

1

Start looking early. Companies start looking for interns as early as January—or earlier. Searching sooner will increase your chances of finding the best option. Some companies welcome first-year students and sophomores—so begin applying and exploring fields early in your college career.

2

Visit UConn’s Center for Career Development in Wilbur Cross. Through career coaching sessions, they can help you identify a career field, set up a LinkedIn profile, and much more.

3

Go to a résumé-writing lab at the career center. They’ll show you how to write strong, tailored bullet points and generally help you polish your résumé to a professional sheen.

4

Schedule a practice interview at the career center. If you think you might be interviewing soon or already have one scheduled, reach out for a 30- or 60-minute practice interview. You’ll not only get feedback on your answers, you’ll get the chance to ask questions about what to expect so you can work out some of those interviewing nerves before the real thing.

5

Use a networking tool, such as LinkedIn or the Husky Mentor Network, to connect with alumni and members in your network working at the organization where you’d like to intern. The Husky Mentor Network also lets you connect with alums for one-on-one career conversations, résumé critiques, and practice interviews.

Take your career to the next level. Recruiters, entrepreneurs, and career experts who happen to be UConn alums are holding workshops across the country.

6

Check the huskycareerlink database where companies post internships and co-op opportunities. Through HuskyCareerLink, you can even apply for positions that are interviewing right on campus.

7

Attend an internship workshop, presentation, or the annual Internship & Co-op Fair at the career center. These events allow you to connect with employers without even leaving campus.

8

Go on informational interviews and try job shadowing to practice interviewing skills and learn about different career fields.

9

Join a club or activity or get a job on campus to get out of your comfort zone and start exploring your interests. Join a committee or take on a leadership role to start building experience.

10

Consider earning credit for your internship through one of the 70 academic courses that UConn offers in different departments.

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Engineering Her Future

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UConn Foundation

8 min read

5 minutes to read

UConn’s School of Engineering sets the national standard for closing the gender gap.
Women make up 24.3 percent of UConn’s engineering graduates–tops among public institutions nationally.

How does UConn do it? It’s all about programs and outreach for aspiring female engineers, some of which starts well before college. These include:

  • Multiply Your Options, an all-day conference for eighth grade girls
  • A five-week intensive summer program called BRIDGE that prepares underrepresented freshmen students for the engineering curriculum.
  • An active chapter of the Society of Women Engineers, which helps support students’ professional interests, and,
  • A female-focused Living and Learning Community called WiMSE (Women in Math, Science and Engineering), a residential experience for female STEM majors at the Peter J. Werth Residence Tower.

“The good news is that we have made strides in all majors, but significant work remains to be done,” said Dr. Daniel D. Burkey, Professor-in-Residence in Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering and Associate Dean for Undergraduate Education and Diversity.

“Alumni and philanthropic support is a critical piece,” Burkey said. “By providing scholarships and other financial incentives and making it easier for underrepresented students to choose UConn, we increase our success at getting and retaining those students here.”

Burkey’s advice to young women is to pursue their passion and find a mentor or other female STEM role model. We found three who shared their stories.

A photo from UConn’s School of Engineering SPARK summer program, which gives young women in middle school and high school access to week long learning programs that focus on different engineering disciplines.

Jeanine Armstrong Gouin ’87 (ENG)

Vice President and Managing Director, Milone & MacBroom, Inc.

The moment she was hooked on engineering
I was in my junior year studying fluid mechanics. I have an image of Dr. Paul Bach flying across the front of the lecture hall like he was a particle of water and then abruptly stopping, throwing his arms up, and exclaiming “AH!” just before he unveiled the central point of the lesson. His energy and passion for engineering was contagious in a way I never knew possible, and my love for the subject matter was the final hook.

Her UConn experience
My UConn professors demanded a lot from us and there were times when I struggled. But my professors cared. They knew me by my first name, helped me, hired me as a student, and later helped me get my first job. They inspired me to work hard and stay determined.

Her advice for future women engineers
I distinctly recall being 17 years old, sitting across from my high school guidance counselor, and telling him that I wanted to be an engineer. He said, “You know, you might want to go into something more on your level, like nursing or teaching.” In his defense, it wasn’t that common for young women to study engineering in the early 1980s. But when I came home in tears later that day, my wise and wonderful parents told me with absolute certainty that I could be an engineer, that they would support me every step of the way. Every young woman should be so lucky to have someone in their lives who debunks the old stereotypes and outdated ideas of what a modern-day engineer looks like. Be your own champion and remember to support fellow future women engineers.

The moment she was hooked on engineering
I was in my junior year studying fluid mechanics. I have an image of Dr. Paul Bach flying across the front of the lecture hall like he was a particle of water and then abruptly stopping, throwing his arms up, and exclaiming “AH!” just before he unveiled the central point of the lesson. His energy and passion for engineering was contagious in a way I never knew possible, and my love for the subject matter was the final hook.

Her UConn experience
My UConn professors demanded a lot from us and there were times when I struggled. But my professors cared. They knew me by my first name, helped me, hired me as a student, and later helped me get my first job. They inspired me to work hard and stay determined.

Her advice for future women engineers
I distinctly recall being 17 years old, sitting across from my high school guidance counselor, and telling him that I wanted to be an engineer. He said, “You know, you might want to go into something more on your level, like nursing or teaching.” In his defense, it wasn’t that common for young women to study engineering in the early 1980s. But when I came home in tears later that day, my wise and wonderful parents told me with absolute certainty that I could be an engineer, that they would support me every step of the way. Every young woman should be so lucky to have someone in their lives who debunks the old stereotypes and outdated ideas of what a modern-day engineer looks like. Be your own champion and remember to support fellow future women engineers.

Jeanine Armstrong Gouin ’87 (ENG)

Vice President and Managing Director, Milone & MacBroom, Inc.

The moment she was hooked on engineering
I was in my junior year studying fluid mechanics. I have an image of Dr. Paul Bach flying across the front of the lecture hall like he was a particle of water and then abruptly stopping, throwing his arms up, and exclaiming “AH!” just before he unveiled the central point of the lesson. His energy and passion for engineering was contagious in a way I never knew possible, and my love for the subject matter was the final hook.

Her UConn experience
My UConn professors demanded a lot from us and there were times when I struggled. But my professors cared. They knew me by my first name, helped me, hired me as a student, and later helped me get my first job. They inspired me to work hard and stay determined.

Her advice for future women engineers
I distinctly recall being 17 years old, sitting across from my high school guidance counselor, and telling him that I wanted to be an engineer. He said, “You know, you might want to go into something more on your level, like nursing or teaching.” In his defense, it wasn’t that common for young women to study engineering in the early 1980s. But when I came home in tears later that day, my wise and wonderful parents told me with absolute certainty that I could be an engineer, that they would support me every step of the way. Every young woman should be so lucky to have someone in their lives who debunks the old stereotypes and outdated ideas of what a modern-day engineer looks like. Be your own champion and remember to support fellow future women engineers.

Stephany Santos ’12 (ENG) ’16 MS

Graduate Researcher/Doctoral Student; Co-Head, Engineering Ambassadors

The moment she was hooked on engineering
Growing up, I was encouraged to pursue a career that was “appropriate for women,” meaning something that allowed me to make taking care of my family my priority. I initially chose engineering, knowing that my father worked for Pratt & Whitney making airplane engines. In my first year at UConn, my eyes were opened not only to all the different branches of engineering, but to the limitless opportunities engineers have to help people and change the world.

Her UConn experience
My favorite professor and mentor is Kevin McLaughlin, who believes in student leadership and exposing student potential more than anyone I’ve previously met. Through multiple opportunities to teach for the BRIDGE Program, Pre-Engineering Program, and Engineering Ambassadors, he has helped foster my love of teaching and lifelong learning.

Her advice for future women engineers
First and foremost, do not undermine your intelligence and your accolades. Second, speak up for yourself and your ideas. Third, advice from my mother: Do your best. Don’t settle for less. Fourth: find mentors who truly care about you.

Stephany Santos ’12 (ENG) ’16 MS

Graduate Researcher/Doctoral Student; Co-Head, Engineering Ambassadors

The moment she was hooked on engineering
Growing up, I was encouraged to pursue a career that was “appropriate for women,” meaning something that allowed me to make taking care of my family my priority. I initially chose engineering, knowing that my father worked for Pratt & Whitney making airplane engines. In my first year at UConn, my eyes were opened not only to all the different branches of engineering, but to the limitless opportunities engineers have to help people and change the world.

Her UConn experience
My favorite professor and mentor is Kevin McLaughlin, who believes in student leadership and exposing student potential more than anyone I’ve previously met. Through multiple opportunities to teach for the BRIDGE Program, Pre-Engineering Program, and Engineering Ambassadors, he has helped foster my love of teaching and lifelong learning.

Her advice for future women engineers
First and foremost, do not undermine your intelligence and your accolades. Second, speak up for yourself and your ideas. Third, advice from my mother: Do your best. Don’t settle for less. Fourth: find mentors who truly care about you.

Kristin Morico PE, BCEE, CSP, D. WRE, ENV SP, F. ASCE ’90 MS, ’04 MBA

EHS Strategic Management Executive Director, AECOM

The moment she was hooked on engineering
My grandfather, a toolmaker, had a profound influence on me at an early age. When I was 7 or 8 years old in his home workshop, he taught me great skills. He showed me how to use a variety of woodworking and engineering devices, including tape measures, micrometers, planes, saws, and drills. I excelled in math throughout grade school and high school. When I was in my early twenties, I worked on my own car, performing preventative maintenance activities like oil changes, gas/air filter changes, and even rebuilding a carburetor. From an academic and experience perspective, engineering was so exciting to me.

Her UConn experience
I have the fondest of memories of my UConn engineering days. Every time I walk into the Castleman building, it brings me right back! My advisor, Domenico Grasso, was very supportive and influential. We are good friends to this day. I recently joined him on a professional webinar session on engineering leadership.

Her advice for future women engineers
Don’t let anyone deter you from aspiring to achieve your goal of becoming an engineer. When I was first going to school more than 30 years ago, I was told “you will NEVER find a job in environmental engineering.” I’m living proof of proving all of them wrong. Persevere and follow your goal. You are unstoppable!

Kristin Morico PE, BCEE, CSP, D. WRE, ENV SP, F. ASCE ’90 MS, ’04 MBA

EHS Strategic Management Executive Director, AECOM

The moment she was hooked on engineering
My grandfather, a toolmaker, had a profound influence on me at an early age. When I was 7 or 8 years old in his home workshop, he taught me great skills. He showed me how to use a variety of woodworking and engineering devices, including tape measures, micrometers, planes, saws, and drills. I excelled in math throughout grade school and high school. When I was in my early twenties, I worked on my own car, performing preventative maintenance activities like oil changes, gas/air filter changes, and even rebuilding a carburetor. From an academic and experience perspective, engineering was so exciting to me.

Her UConn experience
I have the fondest of memories of my UConn engineering days. Every time I walk into the Castleman building, it brings me right back! My advisor, Domenico Grasso, was very supportive and influential. We are good friends to this day. I recently joined him on a professional webinar session on engineering leadership.

Her advice for future women engineers
Don’t let anyone deter you from aspiring to achieve your goal of becoming an engineer. When I was first going to school more than 30 years ago, I was told “you will NEVER find a job in environmental engineering.” I’m living proof of proving all of them wrong. Persevere and follow your goal. You are unstoppable!

Rita Matta ’16 (ENG)

Yale University doctoral student

With her family struggling with medical bills, Rita Matta got the help she needed when she received a scholarship for her senior year as an undergraduate at UConn.
“I was concerned about paying for my next year of college. It was a huge relief to me. I remember calling my mom and crying for hours. I felt infinitely blessed by being able to pursue my education with less financial burden.”

Rita Matta ’16 (ENG)

Yale University doctoral student

With her family struggling with medical bills, Rita Matta got the help she needed when she received a scholarship for her senior year as an undergraduate at UConn.
“I was concerned about paying for my next year of college. It was a huge relief to me. I remember calling my mom and crying for hours. I felt infinitely blessed by being able to pursue my education with less financial burden.”

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My Go To: Midnight Snack

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UConn Foundation

2 min read

 
By Christina Jackson
2 minutes to read

Freshman year, I was notorious among my friends for ordering pizza from Sargent Peps at or after midnight—and falling asleep before it arrived.

– Amanda Davis

When we were in the “small dorms,” each dorm had its own chef who made breakfast to order, along with lunch and dinner. During finals, he would leave extra sandwiches, cookies, and brownies (and fruit!) for us in the fridge.

– Karen (Coligan) Davis ’79

When we were in the “small dorms,” each dorm had its own chef who made breakfast to order, along with lunch and dinner. During finals, he would leave extra sandwiches, cookies, and brownies (and fruit!) for us in the fridge.

– Karen (Coligan) Davis ’79

When I was a freshman, Domino’s pizza had $5 cheese on Thursdays. I would buy two or three and eat them until Sunday. My other go-to was D.P. Dough’s Buffalo chicken calzones.

– David Akkara ’01

Peanut butter and bacon wings from Randy’s Wooster Street Pizza.

– Jesse Cohen ’12

Peanut butter and bacon wings from Randy’s Wooster Street Pizza.

– Jesse Cohen ’12

One night freshman year, we were doing our traditional order from Wings Over when someone had the bright idea to mix it up a bit. Instead of the usual go-to of honey BBQ, we ordered the hottest flavor – “After Burner.” When the wings arrived, my nose started burning and I immediately regretted this decision. Two of my friends who absolutely LOVE spicy food dug in right away and somehow managed to stay smiling as their faces turned bright red and tears began rolling down their cheeks. I, on the other hand, took one bite and was confined to laying on the floor for the next few minutes until my newly ordered D.P. Dough arrived.

– Andrew Taylor ’12

Nothing was better than Ted’s Grinders, but for a late-night emergency there were only two places to go: Wawa or Store 24.

– Beth Lockwood Cunningham ’92

Nothing was better than Ted’s Grinders, but for a late-night emergency there were only two places to go: Wawa or Store 24.

– Beth Lockwood Cunningham ’92

The Students First Fund helps students experiencing a crisis or hardship by providing resources in a time of need.

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Sculpting with Wind and Fog

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UConn Foundation

3 min read

4 minutes to read

You really have to see a video of a Ned Kahn sculpture to understand its mystical genius. A photo just won’t work.

Then, you appreciate how a building facade magically ripples in ever-changing patterns to reveal the hidden force of the blowing wind. Or you feel meditative as you watch a large steel ring mysteriously breathe out fog. Or feel soothed by the way the wind ripples through field of thin aluminum panels, making them bend and sway like long grasses on the plains.

Kahn ’82 (CLAS) is an environmental artist from northern California. While most sculptors work with hard substances like bronze or marble, he uses ephemeral elements like fog, mist, and wind that condense, move, and disappear and re-appear to define and animate his sculptures.

“Even though I’ve built the structure, it’s actually nature—the wind or the light or some other natural force or flow pattern—that does the sculpting of it.”

His most spectacular piece so far is a huge, water vortex skylight in a Singapore shopping mall. Jets of water kick up a powerful whirlpool in a huge acrylic bowl. Then the water hurdles through a hole at the bottom of the bowl and drops down two floors into another pool.

Kahn, who grew up in Stamford, Conn., has made more than 100 pieces around the world, though none in Connecticut yet. The closest example is a kinetic skin that resembles shark skin that wraps about the New York Aquarium’s new building on Coney Island.

He first became interested in building kinetic artwork out of bearings and springs at age 10, encouraged by his mother, Renee, a painter who taught at UConn’s Stamford branch.

“There was this great junkyard in Stamford where I grew up called Vulcan Surplus that has all kinds of interesting industrial leftovers,” he said. “I would just fill the back of the car with weird stuff.”

Kahn went on to major in environmental science at UConn and has fond memories of his days in Storrs.

 

“UConn was a perfect school experience for me. If I had gone anywhere else I would have been a different person. I have a lot of gratitude for the couple of amazing teachers who were profound influences on me. I also just loved the nature around there.”

He says he was exposed to Buddhism in one of his classes at UConn, and many of his pieces possess a Zen-like quality.

Upon graduating, he headed across the country to San Francisco, where he eventually became the artist in residence at the Exploratorium science museum. Ten years later, he opened his own studio and began to bid on large-scale, public art pieces and his business grew.

He now lives with his wife and their 4-year-old son and 13-year-old stepdaughter about an hour north of San Francisco in Sonoma County, on a mountain top looking down towards the ocean. He also has two adult children with his first wife.

Some might say he’s living the dream. And while he’s deeply appreciative of being able to live in such a beautiful place and make a living doing his art, he says it can be stressful dealing with the tight budgets, politics, and lengthy approval processes that come with it.

“It’s not the ideal image of the artist creating in his studio that most people imagine, although I do get to do that too, and I’m very appreciative of that time and space,” he said.

The Ecology and Evolutionary Biology endowment provides critical resources for UConn students and faculty as they work to discover, understand, and protect biodiversity around the world.

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Two Chances to Make a Difference in April

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UConn Foundation

< 1 min read

UConn Cares. For the month of April, join alumni, friends, and families to get involved in community service with your local alumni network.

UConn Gives, UConn’s first-ever giving day.

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A New ‘Promise’ for Hartford Scholars

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Tiffany Ventura Thiele

3 min read

Endowed law school scholarship a first for Hartford Promise students

Since 2016, the Hartford Promise scholarship fund has helped open doors for hundreds of Hartford students to attend college.

Now, thanks to Rick ’78 (LAW) and MaryEllen Thibodeau ’85 (LAW), a new scholarship will help these scholars pursue a graduate degree from UConn’s School of Law.

The couple, School of Law alums and longtime Connecticut residents, recently established the Richard E. Thibodeau and MaryEllen Thibodeau Scholarship Fund. It is the first UConn graduate school scholarship that will primarily benefit Hartford Promise scholarship recipients. The first year for eligible recipients for law school will be in the 2018-19 academic year.

“We feel very strongly that certain institutions and professions that provide a public service, such as the armed forces, government, and law, should generally reflect the population that they serve,” MaryEllen said. “We hope our gift will give some young men and women the ability to attend the UConn School of Law, to have a successful career in Connecticut, and provide future opportunities for the generations to follow.”

The Thibodeaus set up their endowment via an IRA charitable rollover, combining convenience with tax advantages. Donors who are 70½ and older can make a gift that fulfills their required minimum distribution, but is not treated as taxable income. Even donors who don’t itemize can benefit from this opportunity. Donors can distribute up to $100,000 a year to a charity.Learn More

This gift could help make a difference for Hartford Promise scholars. A recent report by the National Association for Law Placement shows a slow pace in growth of diversity among law firms. Additionally, the School of Law notes that pipeline programs, which provide access to students who might not otherwise consider law as a profession, and financial support are critical in opening doors for underrepresented students.

“We want young people to understand that it is possible to get through high school, go to college, and thereafter enroll in law school,” said Karen Demeola, Assistant Dean for Enrollment and Students, UConn School of Law and President, Connecticut Bar Association. “Removing barriers to success, in particular the financial obligation, is so important to students’ academic achievement.”

“We’re deeply grateful for Rick and MaryEllen’s most generous support of the School of Law,” said Dean Timothy Fisher, UConn School of Law. “This scholarship will help Hartford students further their education as they prepare for a lifetime of fulfilling service in the legal profession. We thank Rick and MaryEllen for their transformative gift, and look forward to welcoming recipients.”

Rick and MaryEllen have given to UConn for more than 30 years, inspired by their parents’ example of paying it forward.

“While neither of our parents had much money, they gave what they could of both money and time to the organizations that were important to them and we observed that,” Rick said.

The two credited the School of Law as the foundation for their successful careers. Rick owned his own tax and investment services practice for almost 20 years, and MaryEllen worked as a transactions lawyer for several Connecticut companies.

“I enjoyed the intellectual challenge and rigorous academic atmosphere, and learned the importance of considering various points of view and the need to be prepared,” MaryEllen said. “UConn Law opened up the opportunity for me to have a challenging and interesting career.”

Rick and MaryEllen enjoy the opportunity to help future legal scholars and hope others will follow their lead.

“We would encourage potential donors, whether a UConn Law graduate or not, to reflect on the importance of having a first-class state University with a first-class law school,” Rick said. “Education is the door that opens opportunities and breaks down barriers to success.”

Inspire Future Legal Scholars

For more information about the Hartford Promise scholarship program, visit www.hartfordpromise.org.

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Impact in Action: Future Entrepreneurs Share Ideas with Philanthropist Peter J. Werth

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Tiffany Ventura Thiele

2 min read

UConn’s future entrepreneurs had the unique opportunity to pitch their businesses to someone who knows what it takes to create a company from scratch: Peter J. Werth, philanthropist and innovator in generic prescription medication.

Werth, who recently made a historic commitment of $22.5 million to UConn, met with students in a private setting at NextGen Residence Hall (now known as the Peter J. Werth Residence Tower). Each presentation had a common thread. The UConn Entrepreneurship and Innovation Consortium’s members provided the critical funding, mentorship, and guidance to help them enter the business world.

“UConn has played a big part in allowing me to establish myself and establish my business,” said Jaclyn Paride ’17 (BUS) (CLAS), co-founder of Zapployment, an application allowing employers to fill no-show slots with qualified workers. “I would never see myself where I am right now and working on my own business. I have all these mentors that I’ve gained.”

Thanks to Werth’s incredible generosity, entrepreneurial activities at UConn will now operate as part of the Peter J. Werth Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation. Under University leadership, the Institute will continue to bring together student and faculty programs fostering entrepreneurship and innovation that potentially have commercial application and can be used to create new companies.

a photo of Peter J. Werth listening to a presentation during entrepreneurship and innovation huddle on December 4, 2017.
Peter J. Werth listens to a presentation during an entrepreneurship and innovation huddle on December 4, 2017. (Photo / Peter Morenus, UConn)

This University-wide collaboration is already producing groundbreaking business ideas, including 3D printing for personalized medicine; a certification program for farms that promote farmers’ health; and a musculoskeletal loading device for sit-to-stand maneuvers for patients suffering from lower limb injuries. Werth provided valuable feedback gained from years of experience as the founder of his company, ChemWerth, Inc. In turn, the students were grateful for his support and advice.

“Thank you for your time and for your dedication to the University,” said Ryan Ouimet ’14 (ENG), Ph.D. student and CEO of MediSense Technology, which is developing a breathalyzer device to help diabetics manage their condition without invasive testing. “We greatly appreciate it.”

“It’s invaluable for these students to meet with Peter – someone who’s been in their shoes and knows what it takes to be successful,” said Dr. David Noble, Assistant Professor-in Residence at the School of Business. “We’re grateful for Peter’s tremendous support of entrepreneurial programming here at UConn. We believe we’ve only scratched the surface of innovation at the University, and his most generous commitment will help us go even further. I’m amazed that he is most excited about getting other entrepreneurial leaders to join his efforts with their time and money to make UConn the premier academic institution in the world, with regard to entrepreneurship and innovation.”

As Werth asked questions and interacted with students, one piece of advice stood out for all of the young CEOs in the room.

“Stay focused and execute,” Werth said. “The hardest part of business is to stay focused and execute.”

Support future start-ups and entrepreneurs

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UConn Receives Second Largest Gift in its History

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Philanthropist Peter J. Werth Commits $22.5 Million to Entrepreneurship and Innovation

The UConn Foundation has received a $22.5 million commitment from Peter J. Werth, ensuring a legacy of innovation and entrepreneurship for generations of students to come.

“Peter’s transformative and historic commitment cements his legacy as a most generous friend to UConn,” said Josh Newton, President and CEO, UConn Foundation. “As a steadfast UConn supporter for many years, Peter has previously given very generously to our athletic programs. We’re grateful that his generosity has expanded to include academics, especially into an area that supports the economy of our state: entrepreneurship and innovation. We hope he will inspire others to follow his lead.”

Announced today at a press conference at NextGen Residence Hall on the main campus in Storrs, Werth’s commitment is the second-largest in University history, behind Ray and Carole Neag’s $23 million pledge in 1999.

$2.5 million will be paid over the next five years to establish the Peter J. Werth Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation. The Institute, under University leadership, will bring together student and faculty programs fostering entrepreneurship and innovation that potentially has commercial application and can be used to create new companies. In addition to nurturing innovation, the Institute will facilitate entrepreneurship speaker forums and host an entrepreneur-in-residence to instruct students.

The remaining $20 million is an estate gift, providing ongoing support for the Werth Institute in perpetuity and ensuring Werth’s legacy at UConn for generations to come. In recognition of this historic commitment, the NextGen Residence Hall will now be known as the Peter J. Werth Residence Tower.

“An investment in UConn is an investment in the University’s spirit of innovation,” said Werth, CEO, President, and Chairman of ChemWerth, Inc. “While I didn’t attend UConn, I have come to believe in its mission, and see the importance of creating opportunities for innovation at our state’s flagship university. I’m delighted and honored that I could make this gift in support of young entrepreneurs, as they create innovative solutions for today’s unique challenges.”

rendering of the Peter J. Werth Residence Tower

Peter earned his bachelor’s degree from Fort Hays State University in Kansas and his master’s degree from Stanford University, beginning his professional career as an R&D scientist in the early 1960s. Working from a room above the garage in his Woodbridge, Conn. home, he established ChemWerth Inc., a full-service generic drug and development and supply company, in 1982.

His vision was to produce U.S. FDA-quality active pharmaceutical ingredients in China, which would make generic drugs more accessible and affordable. He immersed himself in the local Chinese market and worked alongside manufacturers to achieve the necessary quality of ingredients. Today, sourcing active pharmaceutical ingredients from China is an industry norm, providing a significant cost savings on medication for millions.

His dedication to improving the lives of people through affordable generic medicine is matched by his most generous philanthropic spirit. Werth’s previous commitment provided the lead gift for the Werth Family UConn Basketball Champions Center, a world-class facility for the UConn women’s and men’s basketball teams. In addition to his numerous charitable donations to UConn, he is the president of The Werth Family Foundation, Inc., which was established in 2001 to support Connecticut communities, with a focus on higher education, children’s services, human services, the arts, and the environment. Werth is also a 2015 honorary Doctor of Science degree recipient from UConn.

“Words cannot express how thankful we are to Peter for his extraordinary gift,” said UConn President Susan Herbst. “This incredible gesture will transform student lives, supporting their entrepreneurial spirit as they create the businesses of the future. Peter is a remarkable individual and wonderful friend to UConn. We are deeply grateful for his generosity.”

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Tough Engineering Classes Forged These CEOs

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Grace Merritt

5 min read

Was there something in the water in Castleman?

Joking aside, the School of Engineering’s main classroom building produced an unusual number of CEOs from chemical engineering in the early ’80s.

At least three have become leaders of industry. Two are CEOs and one is a managing partner in a large law firm. That’s a relatively large percentage of their graduating class.

Why so many?

Well, Mark Vergnano ’80, Frank Bergonzi ’83, and Michael Cantor ’80, ’83 JD say it was the combination of UConn’s top-notch engineering professors, a rigorous course load, and the discipline to handle it.

So You Wanna Be A CEO
Tips from the experts about how to get there

  • Take every opportunity you can
  • Don’t be afraid to try new things
  • Get experience leading people early in your career
  • Expose yourself to many businesses and markets
  • Familiarize yourself with the private equity world
  • Have as many jobs and positions as possible
  • Don’t be afraid to fail
  • Have faith in your thinking and reasoning

“What led to my success was the opportunity to take a lot of different types of engineering courses: physical, chemical, organic, thermodynamics, and civil. And you’ve got to be proficient in math. It was a great foundation for a lot of the things that go into running a business,” said Bergonzi, CEO & President of Azelis Americas.

The three leaders remember the chemical engineering curriculum being so difficult that their entering class of 100 whittled down to 34 by the time they graduated.

Bergonzi remembers the first day in his chemistry class in a big hall full of students.

“The professor said, ‘Look to your left. Look to your right. One of you won’t be here in a year,'” he said.
They got through the four years by forming study groups, spending a lot of time in the library, and dedicating themselves to studying.

“Engineering to me is a discipline about discipline. It’s about logic, and running a business is very logical,” said Vergnano, President and CEO of The Chemours Co., a global chemistry company.

Cantor, who went into law after graduating and now heads the intellectual property law firm Cantor Colburn LLP, agreed.

“I had to learn how to be a disciplined problem-solver. That skill set—discipline and problem-solving—is transferable,” said Cantor, who went into patent law and helped grow his Hartford-based firm from half a dozen attorneys to more than 100 today.

Bergonzi joined Union Carbide in Danbury, Conn. after graduating and became a regional manager at age 28. He said his decision to get into management early and hold a series of management jobs and positions in various companies gave him the experience he needed to become a CEO.

The three leaders have something else in common. They each married UConn grads. Vergnano and Bergonzi met their wives in college. Cantor met his wife, Shari, a CPA, who is today the mayor of West Hartford, Conn., shortly after graduating when they were both working in Hartford.

“There is no question in our minds that we are who we are because of UConn,” Cantor said of himself and his wife. “Socio-economic diversity at UConn was a really important part of that. Everybody felt that they could do as well as their peers at Ivy League schools. There was a hunger to achieve in their respective fields.”

All three leaders are pleased with how far the Engineering School has evolved since their days in the 80s when slide rules were just being replaced by calculators and students still programmed in Fortran.

The school, which just celebrated its 100th anniversary, has greatly expanded its faculty and undergraduate enrollment. It just opened a $62 million engineering and science building and is a key player in the new Connecticut Technology Park under construction in Storrs.

“I could not be prouder of UConn Engineering,” Cantor said. “It’s becoming a global powerhouse.”

The Path to CEO

Here’s a closer look at the path each took.

photo of Mark Vergnano '80

Mark Vergnano

President and CEO, the Chemours Co.

Vergnano landed a job at DuPont after graduating and quickly became interested in the business side of the operation. He enrolled in an evening program at Virginia Commonwealth University to earn his MBA. He built his resume by taking various manufacturing, technology, sales, and marketing assignments at DuPont around the United States and Switzerland, running progressively more complex business units.

When DuPont decided to spin off Chemours as a start-up in 2015, he jumped at the chance to run it. Chemours has more than 7,000 employees and generates $6 billion in revenues.

He and his wife, Betsy (Reddington) Vergnano ’81 (CLAS), live in West Chester, Pa., and have two adult daughters.

photo of Frank Bergonzi '83

Frank P. Bergonzi Jr.

CEO & President of Azelis Americas

Upon graduating, Bergonzi took a job in chemical sales at Union Carbide in Danbury, Conn., and became a regional manager there five years later. He steadily worked his way up through the ranks by taking a series of important positions at other Fortune 100 companies, eventually becoming President and CEO of KODA Distribution Group in 2012. In 2015, KODA was acquired by Azelis Americas, a chemical distribution company based in Stamford, Conn., and Bergonzi became CEO and President.

Bergonzi lives in Westport, Conn., with his wife, Mary-Lisa (Shukis) Bergonzi ’84 (ENG), also a chemical engineering major, and they have three adult children. When he’s not working, he likes to go boating and perform occasionally as lead singer in a Bruce Springsteen tribute band.

photo of Michael Cantor '80, '83 JD

Michael A. Cantor

Co-Managing Partner, Cantor Colburn LLP

When he was still at UConn, Cantor befriended some grad students in chemical engineering who told him about the field of intellectual property law. After graduating, Cantor decided to enroll in law school and specialize in patent law, using his expertise in chemical and materials engineering. He then joined a small patent law firm where he worked for Dave Fishman ’61 JD, who became his mentor. Cantor eventually became co-managing partner of the firm together with a colleague, Phil Colburn. They built the firm into the fastest growing patent law firm in the country. Cantor is also an Adjunct Professor at UConn Law. He is on the advisory boards of the schools of law and engineering, and he was inducted into UConn Engineering’s Hall of Fame.

Cantor and his wife, Shari (Granow) ’81 (BUS), live in West Hartford, Conn. and have four adult sons, two of whom are UConn grads. Besides being the Mayor of West Hartford, Shari is also a UConn Trustee. Outside of work, he enjoys spending time with his family at their summer house on Cape Cod.

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Scholarship Relieves Pressure for Biomedical Engineer

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Grace Merritt

2 min read

When Rita Matta heard the news, she cried for hours.

The relief was that intense.

Matta ’16 (ENG) had just been told she would be getting a scholarship from UConn alum Russ St. John to help pay for her senior year at UConn.

After spending three years juggling babysitting and tutoring jobs, Matta felt the pressure melt away.

“I was concerned about paying for my next year of college. It was a huge relief to me,” she said. “I remember calling my mom and crying for hours.”

Matta’s mother had been diagnosed with aggressive ovarian cancer. Besides the emotional drain of dealing with the disease, the family was swamped with medical bills.

The scholarship relieved the pressure on her then and is still making an impact today. It’s allowed Matta, 22, to continue her education and pursue a career in biomedical engineering that will likely save lives.

Now, as a doctoral student at Yale, Matta is helping to develop a minimally invasive, innovative treatment that could help stroke victims recover.

She decided to pursue bioengineering as a career field because she had been impressed that a robot was used to perform the cancer surgery on her mother.

photo of Rita Matta ’16 (ENG):
Rita Matta ’16 (ENG) in the lab at Yale

“It was performed so accurately,” she said. “She had little to no scar tissue. That was really awesome to me because I had no exposure to or any knowledge of robotic technology before that,” she said.

Articulate, serious, and driven, Matta feels lucky to be chosen as a doctoral student to work on this innovative stroke treatment. She is humble, but to anyone who knows her, there’s no denying that she’s proved herself more than worthy. She’s an academic powerhouse who works extremely hard and has an insatiable scientific curiosity.

Her supervisor and mentor at Yale describes her as open-minded, persistent, and willing to take a risk.

“Scientifically and also personality-wise, she is very kind and engaging,” said Anjelica Gonzalez, associate professor of biomedical engineering at Yale. “She has an excitement and enthusiasm to learn about science and she is willing to challenge paradigms.”

Matta attributes her success to her family’s deep-seated appreciation of education. Her mother and aunts and uncles all are immigrants from war-torn Beirut who successfully graduated from college.

“I have a hard time saying no,” Matta said. “I set high standards for myself and for my work. It’s just the way that I was raised—to keep aiming for the best and not settling for anything but my full effort.”

Life has turned the corner for her mother, too. She is in remission and Matta has a new hope. Inspired by St. John, ’80 (ENG), ’85 MBA, she hopes to one day pay it forward and help another UConn student further their education.

Meanwhile, she is helping in another way. She volunteers for an outreach program that encourages middle-school-aged girls in the New Haven region to enter STEM careers. When it comes to giving back, there’s no doubt she’s just getting started.

Meet Donor Russ St. John

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Students Inspire Alum to Give Scholarship

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Grace Merritt

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During a recent visit back to UConn’s School of Engineering, Russ St. John ’80 (ENG) ’85 MBA met several remarkable students he supported with a scholarship donation.

One in particular stood out.

“I remember a young lady who said she wanted to help provide clean water in Latin America. She was talking about taking her education and using it to help lots of people. It was inspiring,” he said.

Russ was so impressed, he decided to give a permanent scholarship to the School of Engineering as part of his legacy. With help from the UConn Foundation, he arranged to leave a gift to the School of Engineering to create the scholarship in his will.

“What better a way to leave a legacy?” he said. “It really attached to my heart right away. I decided this is what I want to do.”

photo of Russ St. John ’80 (ENG), ’85 MBA takes a break while hiking in Nepal
Russ St. John ’80 (ENG), ’85 MBA takes a break while hiking in Nepal

Russ, who was raised in Southington, Conn., was the first in his family to go college. He didn’t receive a scholarship and paid his way through school, balancing his heavy academic load with weekday jobs in a University lab and weekend shifts at a local Howard Johnson’s restaurant. His scholarship will pave a smoother path for other promising engineering students for decades to come.

When he first decided to leave a gift to the University in his estate, he wasn’t sure how to do it. He said the UConn Foundation staff was helpful in outlining his options and explaining the tax benefits of planned gifts, such as IRAs.

“I’d also encourage anyone who is thinking about it to go to the school they graduated from for a tour. Go meet the students and talk to them. It’s inspiring,” he said.

Russ double-majored in mechanical engineering and material science and immediately got a job designing jet engines at GE, where he worked for 21 years. He was then recruited for a job in Minneapolis for Katun, a technology provider for the printing industry. He later joined Entrust Datacard as chief marketing officer.

In their free time, he and his wife, Elaine, a nurse, like to volunteer at a local alternative high school, helping students earn their GEDs. Russ also makes time for travel. In April, he enjoyed a two-week trek in Nepal, hiking up to 15,300 feet in the Himalayas.

“It was quite strenuous,” he said. “It was just a great experience, meeting Buddhist monks, spending time with kind and loving people, and just living very lean.”

Wherever he has gone, his UConn education has been a great passport to success, he said.

“UConn is a great enabler because it offers a superb education that’s cost-effective. But there are students who still need help. Scholarships provide the assistance they need,” he said.

Learn More about Planned Giving

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Sisters’ Bond Even Stronger Through UConn and Philanthropy

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Grace Merritt

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Sisters Lori and Treacy Riiska may as well be twins.

They have the same mannerisms, the same voice, and they finish each other’s sentences.

They’re both accountants, love golf, and take vacations together.

Warm and outgoing, Lori ’84 (BUS) and Treacy ’89 (BUS) are both loyal Husky fans, active alums, and burgeoning philanthropists.

Naturally, they signed up right away when they heard that the UConn Foundation formed a Women and Philanthropy group to raise scholarships for female students.

“Lori and I had been talking about starting a scholarship but we couldn’t agree on what type,” Treacy explained. “It’s just one of those lightbulb moments when all of a sudden you know exactly how to best help. All of a sudden, with this new initiative with Women and Philanthropy, we had a common goal. It was just so obvious.”

They donated $50,000 to set up a need-based, endowed scholarship for female UConn students through the UConn Women and Philanthropy initiative. They said they want to give other women the same opportunity they had to go to college and pursue their dreams.

“If you can better one person, two people, it’s empowering,” said Lori, who sits on the UConn Foundation’s board of directors. “You can get them in the door so they can become the successful person that they want to be.”

Both sisters have a strong, independent ease about them, qualities they attribute to their mother, Beverly.

“She just always had an independent side to her and passed that trait on to us. She’d tell us ‘be strong, be brave’ and ‘you’re responsible for yourself,’ ” Lori said.

In addition to an independence streak, accounting runs in the family as well. Their dad was a CPA, and so is their brother, Lori’s daughter, and Treacy’s son.

Both sisters have been math whizzes ever since they were kids.

“That side of my brain works better,” Lori explained. “It was an easy choice for me I just knew it was a better fit for me because I was good at it and comfortable with it.”

Lori partnered with her father, Oscar J. Riiska CPA, for many years and took over his Winsted-based firm when he died. She recently expanded the business, adding branches in Granby and Canaan. Treacy lives in Stamford, where she is a tax accountant and is currently developing a program to help people manage their finances.

Lori compares accounting to the mental challenge of solving a puzzle.

“You put together a puzzle every time you sit down at your desk,” Lori said. “Someone brings in their material. You take everything they gave you, use your knowledge, and you put it together. It’s a challenge.”

Lori has been involved alum for years, serving as president of the former Alumni Association and a member of the UConn Athletic Club Board. Treacy has become involved more recently and is excited about getting more involved with UConn’s Stamford branch.

Now in its second year, UConn Women and Philanthropy is focused on recruiting sustaining members who donate $500 each year for five years.

Learn more about Women and Philanthropy

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