Chicago Sun-Times

Loyola names first female, non- cleric as new president

- BY JACOB WITTICH Email: jwittich@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ JacobWitti­ch Contributi­ng: Lynn Sweet

Staff Reporter

Jo Ann Rooney was tapped on Monday to become president of Loyola University of Chicago, the first female and non- cleric to lead the school, whose long resume includes a battle she lost to be undersecre­tary of the Navy.

“It’s a wonderful opportunit­y to be president of this university,” Rooney said after she was introduced at the university’s Mundelein Center for the Fine and Performing Arts, 1020W. Sheridan.

“Being lay adds a different perspectiv­e, but on the other hand it is energizing the community — even the Jesuit community who really feel at this point that this is helping them expand their mission. It really shows how much Loyola is positioned to be a part of that changing dynamic in higher education, Catholic higher education and Jesuit higher education,” she said.

Rooney will be the school’s 24th president when she starts her new job on Aug. 1. She replaces the Rev. Michael Garanzini, who resigned as president in June 2015 to become Loyola’s chancellor.

Rooney’s appointmen­t will run through 2021. John Pelissero, former provost of Loyola, has held the position on an interim basis since July 2015.

Rooney, a managing director at Huron Consulting in Chicago, is an attorney, a former Pentagon official and was president for eight years at Spalding University, a private Catholic school in Louisville, Kentucky. She also served briefly as the president ofMount Ida College in Newton, Massachuse­tts.

President Barack Obama nominated Rooney to be undersecre­tary on Sept. 11, 2013, but she never made it to a Senate vote because of a controvers­y over her testimony dealing with the prosecutio­n of rape and sexual assault in the military. That put her at odds with Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D- N. Y., who was pushing to have these cases handled outside the military chain of command. Gillibrand, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, jumped on Rooney when written testimony she presented to the committee said she was for continuing to let commanding officers decide whether to pursue sexual assault cases.

The Senate panel voted Rooney out of committee and sent her name to the full Senate in January 2014. But the Senate never called her nomination, and after almost a year in limbo, the White House announced on Nov. 12, 2014, that it was withdrawin­g her name from considerat­ion.

Rooney holds a doctorate in higher education from the University of Pennsylvan­ia as well as law degrees.

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Jo Ann Rooney

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