Authors Posts by Danielle Stotlz

Danielle Stotlz

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    50th Anniversary Campaign Going Strong, Preparing ORU for Greater Global Impact

    To The Uttermost Bounds of the Earth

    Oral Roberts University began with a big dream: “raise up your students to hear My voice, to go where My light is dim, where My voice is heard small, and My healing power is not known, even to the uttermost bounds of the earth. Their work will exceed yours, and in this I am well pleased.

    Fifty years later, the physical campus has expanded, enrollment is booming, alumni are serving God in an amazing 102 nations, and under the guidance of ORU’s fourth president, Dr. William M. Wilson, the university’s future looks brighter than ever.

    As the university approached its golden anniversary, the time was fitting to launch a 50th anniversary campaign, appropriately titled “To the Uttermost Bounds of the Earth.”

    “We are dreaming once again at ORU,” Dr. Wilson said, “and ready to become a leader among the world’s universities in technology, global learning opportunities and scholarship. Envisioning the next 50 years, I feel confident that the best is yet to come! Through this campaign, ORU will have the resources required to make Spirit-empowered Whole Person Education more accessible to a broader global audience.”

    The campaign’s four components—Globalization of Whole Person Education, Quest Whole Person Scholarship Program, Enhanced Physical Campus, and Strengthened University Endowment—have inspired alumni and friends to commit more than $40 million toward the campaign goals: $50 million for immediate growth and $20 million for the endowment.

    “This is a Year of Jubilee at ORU,” Wilson said. “While we celebrate the accomplishments of the past and honor those who built a solid foundation for this university, we are most excited to see what God is calling us to do around the globe in the 21st century.”

    The university is operating from a position of strength, with no long-term debt, no deficit, and no reliance on lines of credit. More than $100 million has been spent on campus improvements since 2008. Enrollment has been on the rise since 2009. ORU Online, utilizing a proprietary online learning portal, saw a 108 percent increase in enrollment this year, was named to Oklahoma’s Top Ten Online Colleges by BestSchools.com, and earned “Best Online Colleges in Oklahoma” accolades from AffordableCollegesOnline.com.

    “It’s incredibly exciting to be at ORU as we celebrate our 50th anniversary and to see ORU in a position where we are once again dreaming about the future,” said Wilson. “The mission that the university was founded on is alive and well. And we are looking forward to seeing what God has in store for the next 50 years.”

    As ORU looks outward, the technological infrastructure needed for two-way communication is being put into place on campus to create a seamless “ORU to the world, the world to ORU” experience. The new Global Learning Center, scheduled to open in the spring of 2016, is transforming the former Baby Mabee broadcast studio into a one-of-a-kind education hub, featuring video conferencing, a recording studio, distance-education classrooms, a and performance hall and a virtual augmented reality classroom. The latter is of special value because studies have shown that students who are immersed in virtual learning environments are 100 percent more engaged with the subject and see their test scores improve by 30 percent.

    Within the campaign are two mini-campaigns. One involves business professor Dr. George Gillen, who estimates that about 14,000 students have passed through his classroom in the past 50 years. To honor this professor for the very first class at ORU, the university is raising $500,000 in order to name the virtual reality/augmented reality classroom after Gillen.

    Coach Bernis Duke also arrived at ORU in 1965 and has impacted the lives of thousands of students, from the players on his early tennis teams to recent students in his badminton classes. ORU wants to honor his service by raising $500,000 to name the new Tennis Complex for him.

    Donors also have the opportunity to sponsor a Quest scholarship, individual tennis courts within the new tennis complex, the Global Learning Center, and the apartment-style residence for upperclassmen.

    “It’s wonderful to have the opportunity to leave a legacy for your family or a loved one, by naming a scholarship, room, court or building after them,” ORU Vice President of Development and Alumni Relations Laura Bishop added.

    Another campaign goal is to achieve 100 percent participation from ORU schools and departments—23 have joined to date, including the Board of Trustees, President’s Cabinet and the Alumni Board, “with more coming in every day,” Bishop said. Local businesses and ministries are also involved as they see the value that ORU alumni bring to the workforce and to faith-based careers.

    There’s plenty of evidence that the university is doing an excellent job of preparing students for post-college life. ORU graduates typically exceed the national average when it comes to licensing and field test scores and acceptance rates to law and medical schools. Engineering and business graduates are frequently offered jobs before they receive their diplomas. ORU has made The Princeton Review’s “Best of the West” list of colleges every year since 2012; ranked No. 5 on a “20 Healthiest Colleges” list; placed in the top 10 percent of U.S. News’ “Most Selective” category among 120 West-Regional universities; and rated high for “Return on Investment” by AffordableCollegesOnline.com. Along with academic preparation, ORU students get ready for ministry. In 2014-15, 604 students spent 10,020 hours doing weekly Tulsa-area outreach, and 44 teams (Spring Break, Music to the Nations, Summer Missions) with a total of 462 students ministered in 18 countries.

    “ORU’s DNA has always been to be able to send out Spirit-empowered leaders with a Christian worldview who are spiritually alive, intellectually alert, physically disciplined, socially adept and professionally competent—to tackle today’s problems,” Wilson said. “We know this is needed now more than ever. Our contribution to the next 50 years is to send out top-notch students prepared to make a difference in the world for today and for eternity.”

    To make a gift to the 50th Anniversary Campaign, go to oru.edu/give or call the Development office at 918.495.7220.

     

    Fog seldom slithers its way into Tulsa. Not real fog. Especially not the smoke-laced fog we had growing up in western Pennsylvania. The kind known for the dirty grey particulate it left behind on car windshields, house shutters and the forgotten lawn chair.

    On the cool Friday night before our class’ commencement, a thick, smothering but clean fog fell on Tulsa bringing with it a clarity one needs between the scary page turns of life’s chapters.

    It had been an evening of celebration with my family and fiancée. Nobody truly knew how thankful I was to graduate, or how close it had come to not happening – no one except my fiancée, Linda (Salisbury ’74), and my roommate, Randy (and a professor or two). After the fam headed back to their hotel, and I dropped Linda off at her home, I headed back to an increasingly foggy campus and my last night of dorm life.

    It was past midnight, still early by my college and even current standards. If ever ORU looked like a colony on a distant planet, it was that night. The lights around EMR and the parking lots emitted an eerie glimmer, and the thickness of the fog, so similar to a heavy snowstorm, created a spooky quietness on campus that was… uncharacteristic.

    Randy suggested we take a walk around campus. Enchanted by the fog and the idea of a last jaunt with my roomie, I immediately said, “Let’s go!”

    From our first step outside, sinking deeper into the fog, we were caught up in a nostalgic look back that nature seemed to spur on.

    We reflected on our four years at ORU, three of which we had been as roommates. We remembered several mischievous capers, which thankfully had never been traced back to us; the struggles to understand Number Theory and Abstract Algebra; our intramural championships highlighted by a 34-6 flag football win over the University of Tulsa in the first ever city championship game played at Skelly Stadium. Saga food. Girl problems. Career choices. People we would miss. People we would not miss.

    When we got to the Avenue of Flags, we stopped. I still remember the peculiar beauty of that assemblage of flags and how the hanging mist moved ever so slowly through the upward beam of each flag’s footlight. It was there our conversation changed and we stopped looking back and began to gaze forward. We considered the change, the growth, the mega-shift in every part of our lives that awaited us on the flip side of tomorrow’s festivities.

    We were both marrying ORU girls, but half a continent would separate us.

    We knew the close friendship we shared would change. It would never end, but it would also never be the same. We mused about our hopes and dreams. We wondered if we had what it took. We talked about being husbands and fathers. We were ready to go, but we weren’t ready to part. We blamed the water in our eyes on the fog. We talked and listened until the moment ended, as all moments do. Things seemed clear, even if unexplainable.

    We then resumed our victory lap, past the newly-opened Mabee Center, around the south end of the LRC, across the Fred Creek bridge, taking a detour through the Prayer Gardens, which had taken on an especially mystical look this night, and, lastly, back home to the dorm.

    Our last night to call EMR home.

    In some way or another, at one time or another, we alumni have all called ORU home. Our experiences before, during and since have been divergent. Our views, politics, beliefs and paths are varied and diverse, as they should be. But for a thin slice of our histories, ORU was home.

    This October will be a unique and special time of alumni coming home to celebrate the 50th anniversary of our alma mater. In the Hebrew tradition, there was a Year of Jubilee every 50th year. They didn’t teach us about Jubilee in Vector Analysis class, so please give me some grace on theological exactitude here. But, that 50th year was to be a year of debt forgiveness, a time for land to return to its original heirs. In many ways, it was a reboot for the economy and the nation of Israel.

    So, contact an old friend or two and make plans to visit your former home this fall. I can’t promise any fog, but it will be a Homecoming like no other. And who knows, maybe a chance to reboot.

    I wish we could re-enact that lap from decades ago this Homecoming, but as I write he is suffering liver failure and needs a transplant to live. I hope to visit him soon. And, if I don’t get caught, I may sneak a fog machine into his room.

    Epilogue: I traveled to San Diego in late July to visit Randy in ICU. I read him this article. We talked. We prayed. We remembered. Randolph Gibson Nolan II (’73) graduated to heaven August 15. Miss him I do.

      ORU School of Medicine alumni, friends serve in Nigeria

      The children sang joyfully amidst the trees, grateful to be safe from Boko Haram. They sang in Hausa, the language of the North, but they shouted “Hallelujah” to our delighted ears. These tiny refugees, singing their hearts out to us, remain among our most haunting memories of Africa.

      During its lifetime, the ORU School of Medicine produced many committed Christian doctors. Among this group are Mark Babo, M.D. and his wife Doreen Babo, BA, DPH, who have worked for nearly 30 years to bring modern health care to Africa.

      After 18 months in Kenya, they have spent 26 years in Nigeria, building three hospitals in different cities. They invited medical classmates from the Class of 1983 for a mini-reunion of service and gratitude.

      The party included Paul Davis, co-founder of the Family Medicine Residency at the University of Alaska and a veteran of the U.S. Public Health Service there; Nancy Wespetal, a full-time medical missionary in Russia and the Ukraine; Brian Kilpatrick, board certified in both internal medicine and pediatrics, now practicing in West Pawlet, Vermont; and Carla Stayboldt, pathologist at Scripps Mercy Hospital in San Diego. Non-ORU graduates included Davis’ son, Ian Davis, and Stayboldt’s husband, James Grisolia. The team was hosted by the Idahosa family, founders of Church of God Mission International in Benin City.

      The mission trip centered on the Faith MediPlex, the second-largest hospital in Benin City, built by Mark and Doreen Babo over 25 years ago, together with the Idahosas’ church. We enjoyed morning devotionals there, attended by doctors, nurses and staff.

      After singing and prayer, we toured the hospital and examined patients with the Nigerian doctors, providing Western insights while learning about local diseases, such as malaria. This hospital of up to 150 beds provides an expanding array of medical, obstetric and surgical services, with a kidney dialysis unit soon to open.

      In partnership with local doctors, we did medical outreach clinics, including to an outlying village that had not seen doctors in over 10 years. Among the villagers, we gave aid an elderly lady who was HIV positive, many new diabetics and people with high blood pressure.

      Most memorable was our outreach clinic to a camp for refugee children, orphaned by the terrorist group Boko Haram. Safely in the Christian South, these refugees from the Muslim North of Nigeria were traumatized but glad to be safe, with food, water and dry sleeping quarters. In the weeks prior to our visit, the camp rapidly doubled from 600 to 1,200 children. They sang and played joyfully, while we treated them for leprosy, scabies, malaria, filariasis and more common childhood diseases.

      We taught alongside our Nigerian colleagues in a national family medicine conference on varied topics including the neurological exam, breast cancer and colon cancer screening.  Our audience responded with Nigerian warmth and humor to our talks, and they presented each of us with traditional ebony carvings as mementos of our stay.

      We left with a warm feeling for the Nigerian people, vibrant and energetic, and a strong desire to return again soon.

        From the Desk of … Dr. Kim Boyd

        Dr. Kim Boyd serves as the Dean of ORU’s College of Education. The Harrisburg, Pennsylvania native has taught at ORU since 1989.

        1. Bible signed by Oral Roberts. Boyd traveled to Jamaica to do a practicum experience with education students from ORU. She gave away her ORU Bible to a local during her stay. Oral Roberts heard of Boyd’s generous deed and personally signed a new Bible as a gift to her. He wrote, “To replace the copy of my Bible you gave away in Jamaica in an unselfish act of love to the bus driver.”
        2. NCATE Accreditation Certificate. The College of Education is re-accredited for the next seven years by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. Boyd led the department to meet all of the requirements with excellence. She prides herself in directing a department of top-notch faculty members who propel her to grow as a professional. “I think as a leader, you have to surround yourself with people who are smarter than you,” Boyd said.
        3. Photos of Family Members. Dr. Kim Boyd is married to ORU’s Dean of Spiritual Formation, Dr. Clarence Boyd. Together they have four children, who are all ORU alumni. “Out of the six of us we have 13 post-high school degrees. Education is obviously very important, not only to me as a dean, but me as a wife and mother, as well,” Boyd said.
        4. Globe. Boyd has the opportunity to fulfil the vision of ORU as she goes into every person’s world. She joins faculty members and students from the College of Education to travel on mission trips and provide educational workshops to locations including Guatemala, Zimbabwe, Thailand and many others.
        5. NCATE Board of Examiners. Boyd currently serves the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education as member of the national Board of Examiners. She has led trainings and conducted site visits for educational institutions around the country.
        6. Kappa Delta Pi Chapter Program Awards for Outstanding Professional Development. The awards are attributed to ORU’s College of Education on behalf of Kappa Delta Pi, the International Honor Society of Education. “We have won this award for as long as we have been a part of Kappa Delta Pi—every time they have given it,” Boyd said.

          Dr. William M. Wilson with 2015 ORU graduate, Daniel Jones.

          May 2, 2015, Ravi Zacharias delivered a powerful address to ORU’s 48th graduating class during the university’s commencement ceremony.

          As more than 700 graduates prepared to walk across the stage of the Mabee Center and into a new chapter of their lives, the renowned Christian apologist and best-selling author reminded them that they were to go into every person’s world with the heart and mind of Christ.

          “How desperately we need wisdom in our time to learn how to tackle the socially, monumentally and divisive issues to be able to give an answer that is clear, but to do it in love so the person understands not just the conviction, but the compassion from which this voice comes and speaks to them,” Zacharias told the Class of 2015.

          Zacharias went on to remind the graduates that although they may not have known what lay ahead for them, that God has a plan and purpose for their lives.

          “You can be confident that if you follow His will, He will not only surprise you, He will enthrall you and show the glories of His anointing and the marvels of His power, as He will use you to bring honor to His name.”

          These graduates stepped into a new chapter of life, ready to change the world.

          “ORU gave me the tools and education necessary to step into my calling on a greater level,” said 2015 ORU graduate Katie Cole. “Upon graduating, I was equipped to pursue my passion with greater understanding and purpose.”




            ORU Athletic Director Mike Carter was recently honored with a Significant Sig Award for his professional achievements. Significant Sig Awards are one of the highest honors given by the Sigma Chi fraternity. The award recognizes “those alumni members whose achievements in their fields of endeavor have brought honor and prestige to the name of Sigma Chi.”

            “I am humbled and honored to be recognized through this award,” said Carter. “There are so many deserving people, particularly in the Tulsa area. I am exceedingly grateful for the opportunities my career has provided to serve the local community, as well as collegiate athletics.”

            Under Carter’s leadership, ORU has won 142 conference championships, made 79 NCAA appearances, produced 85 All-Americans and had 3 NCAA Track Champions. The overall GPA of the student-athletes has been 3.0 or higher for 16 of the last 17 years.

              Celebrating the Dance, Ministry and Life of Amy McIntosh

              With a passion for dance and a desire to live a life of purpose, Amy McIntosh danced into the hearts of everyone who knew her. Founding Director of Dance and Associate Professor at Oral Roberts University,

              McIntosh used her platform as an artist to minister and pour into the lives of other people. McIntosh was after being diagnosed with cancer in October 2014. On April 3, 2015 she took her last breath on earth surrounded by her husband and some of her fellow dancers from Living Water Dance Community, who danced for her one last time in her home. She was 37. She is survived by her husband Jacob McIntosh and sons Morgan and Justice.

              “Amy had this real concept of whole-person living,” said Communications, Arts and Media Chair and Professor Laura Holland. “She really lived to merge her faith with dance.”

              The Tulsa native received her B.F.A. in dance performance and choreography from Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri and her M.F.A in dance performance and choreography from the State University of New York in Brockport. She danced professionally with many well-known artists. McIntosh was the Associate Chair of Dance and a tenured faculty member at Belhaven University in Jackson, Mississippi from 2001-2006. She was also an adjunct professor at the University of Tulsa from 2006-2007.

              In the fall of 2007, McIntosh came to work at ORU. She became involved in the dance community in Tulsa and founded Living Water Dance Community, where she was the artist director. McIntosh was also involved with the praise and worship team at her church, West Tulsa United Methodist Church.

              “She was a genuine person,” said Holland. “She believed in truth in dancing and truth in herself.”

              McIntosh loved the vision and Whole Person education offered at ORU. Not only did she teach her students about Whole Person living, but she also was a living example of what it means to seek after wholeness. She believed marriage, motherhood and dance should all be integrated.

              “Amy was a whole person,” said dance and nursing major Jessica Collier. “She taught us about the vision of ORU, but more importantly, she lived it. She never let work interfere with her family life. In fact, she combined them. I remember being cast in one of her pieces, and her bringing Morgan and Justice to rehearsal and having them learn the choreography as well.”

              McIntosh’s legacy will continue to guide the ORU Dance Department. Her mission, vision and teachings will carry on for many years to come.

              The ORU Alumni Board vice president on how God’s continued call to ORU students and alumni

              April 1983. My local church was hosting four ORU students on a Lay Witness mission. They were so different—in a way that was undeniably captivating. Each was so full of life and seemed to clearly understand their calling. They were the coolest Christian people I had ever met, proclaiming their faith with boldness and love. I wanted to be like that.

              Two years and a season later, I was sitting in my parents’ living room in Hickory Ridge, Arkansas, a town of 400 people nestled securely amidst rice and soybean farms. My sole connection to Oral Roberts University was through a TV broadcast. I was so drawn to every aspect of the world-renowned school—its ideals, its magnetic student life and the power of God that was perpetually evident there. It was larger than me, and I needed to go there. I was undeniably certain that this small-town kid was, like Peter, being called to get out of the boat. I didn’t know how to make it happen, but God did.

              My story is not a unique one. There are so many of us—more than 40,000 ORU alumni—who didn’t find ORU; ORU found us. Many of us stepped onto campus, as I did at 18, and felt the presence of God so strongly, we couldn’t resist the call to come, to leave our families and to chase what we knew was His plan for our lives.

              Throughout our journeys, we found lifelong relationships with people from all over the world, professors who believed we could, even when we were unsure ourselves, and the ability to hear the voice of God through the power of the Holy Spirit.

              Today, God has not stopped calling those ready and eager to follow. Our locations may have changed. Our appearance has surely changed. Our responsibilities look much different. But the same God who led us to ORU is the same God who told Peter to “Come,” not because Peter was ever really able, but because we needed to see his dependence on the One who called him (Matt. 14:22-32). And with our eyes fixed on Him, the impossible becomes possible.

              It’s been 23 years since I graduated from ORU with my business degree, and there’s never been a day I regretted leaving that rice farm to follow God’s leading. He has never disappointed me. Not once. That simple decision was the first in a series that has led me to the place I am now.

              I invite you to step back on campus. The place we once called our “home away from home” is still permeated by the spirit of God. Thanks to the great leadership of Dr. Wilson, enrollment is at an all-time high, the campus is immaculate, and technology is cutting-edge. The Armand Hammer Student and Alumni Center is alive with student and alumni life. And the spiritual life on campus is like nothing I have ever experienced before!

              I invite you to step back on campus. The place we once called our “home away from home” is still permeated by the spirit of God. 

              After all these years, I can still hear Oral Roberts in chapel proclaiming with distinguishable passion and conviction: “Raise up your students to hear My voice, to go where My light is dim, where My voice is heard small, and My healing power is not known, even to the uttermost bounds of the earth. Their work will exceed yours, and in this I am well pleased.”

              And today my prayer is this: Lord, help me hear Your voice, to go when You say go. To spread Your light in my day-to-day business. To be Your voice when the world screams its obscenities so loudly. And that somehow I would be able to live a life worthy of Your calling.

              It started at ORU, and it’s still up to me to walk it out.

              I encourage you, my fellow alumni, whether you’ve kept your eyes on Jesus and are walking on water, or you looked into the vast bleakness of the world and are sinking, rise up! As alumni, we are part of an incredible legacy, and one that this world is in desperate need of. Our work will exceed Oral Roberts’, and in that God is greatly pleased.

                A senior reflects on how he has been tested at ORU—in the best way

                “The process of testing is a highly choreographed dance.”

                That’s what Frank Santoni, chief pilot of commercial planes for Boeing Test and Evaluation, said when I visited Boeing’s factory near Seattle, Washington. Touring the massive facility meant witnessing doorways large enough for 747s to go through. To ensure safety and durability, these airplanes must be tested thoroughly.

                Years before my tour at Boeing, my family and I escaped from Iran after my father’s life was threatened because he was a pastor. We soon made our home in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

                My father had yearned for his children to attend ORU before we ever left Iran, and his dream eventually came true. My journey at ORU has included plenty of late nights, great friendships and conversations where professors must have felt as though they were the Wright Brothers explaining the idea of flight for the first time. I’ve spent four years being told that folks in the world are walking, but God has called us to fly.

                As with many of my peers in modern day Christendom, I’ve been raised and encouraged to find God’s dream for my life and cooperate in bringing it to fruition. I’ve met and learned about folks who’ve caught the jet streams of God’s anointing on their lives and circled the globe in order to “go into every man’s world.” Like my fellow eager Golden Eagles, I began my time at ORU looking forward to finding my own jet stream, preaching God’s word, writing bestsellers that transform the way people perceive and experience Christianity and marrying the woman of my dreams.

                But soaring successfully, whether as a Golden Eagle or a Boeing 747, requires plenty of due diligence that one cannot afford to rush or overlook.

                One particular test I noticed during the Boeing tour was the “ultimate load wing and fuselage bending” test. This test involves suspending the airplane barely off the ground by attaching it to an infrastructure, which holds it completely still. Just about every difficulty a plane might face is emulated to see how it holds up. If planes could talk, they may point out the irony of being created to soar all over the world yet being kept seemingly stagnant for a time. “I was created to fly thousands of feet in the air!” the plane might say, “But you’ve forced me to remain still and now you’re throwing things at me.” Yet, the ultimate load wing test is conducted on every Boeing plane in order to determine the amount of load the airplane

                Planes don’t talk—but college students do. My time at ORU has been full of dreaming about the future and longing for the day where I take off and move people toward the heart of God. But these dreams remain untouchable when testing is delayed or skipped.

                My four years at ORU have been a highly choreographed dance, like Santoni described. I’ve found myself being tested time and time again for the purpose of ensuring that I won’t crash once I’m out on my own. Though I’ve been taught about my potential and God-given mandate to go into every man’s world, my journey at ORU has been about God making me still so that He could come and make His home in my world.

                My four years at ORU have been a highly choreographed dance, like Santoni described. I’ve found myself being tested time and time again for the purpose of ensuring that I won’t crash once I’m out on my own. 

                Whether a plane landing in Tulsa comes from Durham, North Carolina, Chicago, Illinois or Mashad, Iran, the passengers can’t help but be thankful for all those tests that took place long before they boarded. And whether it was a professor encouraging a tired freshman taking time out to have coffee with a beautiful girl or learning to be still and hear the voice of God, none of the tests of college life are in vain. I imagine there are alumni all over the world who, when they look back at their time at ORU, find themselves grateful for all the testing that took place here. I know I am.

                  ORU’s 50th anniversary campaign positions university for next generation of learners

                  To The Uttermost Bounds of the Earth

                  Across a thick-wooded area that spanned hundreds of acres, Oral Roberts walked, praying in the Spirit and envisioning a university with world-class academics and state-of-the-art technology, built on the Holy Spirit. Each day, Roberts surveyed the land and reflected on the words God had spoken to him:

                  “Raise up your students to hear My voice, to go where My light is dim, where My voice is heard small, and My healing power is not known, even to the uttermost bounds of the earth. Their work will exceed yours, and in this I am well pleased.”

                  Build Me a University. Build it on My authority, and on the Holy Spirit.”

                  With the foundation of God’s promise and His Spirit, the first soil was turned, and Oral Roberts University became a reality. In the fall of 1965, the first students came to the university seeking a whole-person education.

                  The school year began with 300 students and 30 faculty members, and ORU had yet to be accredited.

                  “We were kind of like pioneers, but at that point I was ready to grow academically, as well as grow spiritually,” Betty Ford-Hembree, a member of ORU’s Alpha Class, said. “I felt a stirring in my spirit and felt like God was calling me in a new direction.”

                   

                  First-Class University, State-of-the-Art Technology

                  From its beginnings, Chancellor Roberts set a high standard for the university.

                  “The president wanted academic excellence. It was the quality of the faculty that guaranteed the academic excellence that President Roberts demanded,” said former ORU provost Dr. Carl Hamilton. “And that excellence could then be seen in the students.”

                  Dr. William Jernigan was among those 30 first faculty members and recalls that standard applied to not only academics but every area of the campus.

                  “Oral Roberts believed we should not be second-class as an academic institution; we should be first-class,” Jernigan said. “The buildings and the equipment reflected that.”

                  Within a few short years, ORU had become a renowned education institution across the United States and the globe, with world-class academics and state-of-the-art technology.  In a Jan. 17, 1969 article, one newspaper described ORU as a “university that had teaching methods and equipment which are closer to the 21st century than any other campus in the U.S.”

                  The Learning Resources Center contained a library that had the capacity for 500,000 volumes, and each classroom had all of the electronics a professor or student needed. Jernigan recalls the addition of the Dial Access Information Retrieval System (DAIRS), which gave students on-demand access to lectures and lesson plans. He describes it as one of the most modern academic access systems in the country at the time.

                  “A student could listen to the professor’s lecture 24 hours a day. The professor would record the lecture, and the students could dial in and get the lecture,” Jernigan said. “Some of the lectures were videoed, and you could dial in and watch video.”

                  Chancellor Roberts also laid the foundation for TV evangelism and Christian media. After visiting Burbank, California and seeing the studio where Johnny Carson filmed The Tonight Show, Roberts returned to Tulsa and built the Baby Mabee to house his TV studio (which was even larger than Carson’s). Roberts’ Sunday morning show became the number one religious TV show aired on Sundays for the next 30 years.

                  The architecture, infrastructure and technology on campus attracted visitors from all over the world, and ORU’s reputation extended around the globe. However, no matter how many buildings were erected or how many technological advances were made, the mission remained the same—educating the whole person, mind, body and spirit, to be sent into every person’s world.

                  “The rich legacy of ORU is its mission and vision, and its dedication to that mission,” ORU president Dr. William M. Wilson said. “Our founder never swayed from the word the Lord spoke to him—ORU’s foundation was God’s authority and the Holy Spirit.”

                   

                  The Next 50 Years

                  Today, ORU has more than 40,000 alumni who have received that whole-person education, serving in 130 different countries. The 2014-15 school year drew 3,565 students from all 50 states and 84 countries. This year, ORU welcomed its 50th freshman class and will celebrate its golden anniversary over the course of the next three years.

                  State-of-the-art facilities like the engineering department’s 3D Fabrication and Visualization Lab and the school of business’s ONEOK Executive Boardroom provide students with access to some of the latest technology.

                  “We started being first-class technologically, and over the years we have stayed up-to-date, and today, I think we are in the forefront, significantly impacting Christian higher education with online learning,” Jernigan said.

                  With one half of a century in the books, ORU is now focusing on its future.

                  “Fifty years from now higher education will be exceptionally different than it is today,” Wilson said. “Technology, mobility, opportunity and the increase of knowledge will all affect higher education dramatically. Some universities will not make it through these changes, but I am confident that ORU will not only survives but thrives.”

                  The 2065 student will look much different than the student of 2015, ORU provost Dr. Kathaleen Reid-Martinez predicts.

                  “The up-and-coming learner is going to expect education to be located with him or with her,” she said. “It’s no longer ‘just-in-time learning.’ It’s no longer ‘just-for-you learning.’ It’s ‘just-with-you learning’—it’s following you and pushing you toward what you need to learn next and why you need to learn it.”

                  In the next decade, ORU is looking to expand access to whole-person education to students on every inhabited continent through globalization. Technology will play a major part in that, Reid-Martinez said.

                  “Technology is absolutely essential for a 21st century university,” Reid-Martinez said. “The technology is a major part of that thrust, especially as we go global, because that is how we are going to be able to harness together the learning from around the globe of professors and students, no matter where they are located.”

                  Wilson is passionate to make ORU the premier Christian university for Spirit-empowered students worldwide. He believes that the university is on strong footing as it leaps into the next 50 years.

                  “There are a lot of good colleges. We are an exceptional college with a great future. We have world-class academics, a unique focus on physical fitness, an amazing student body and faculty—all fused together in a vibrant spiritual environment. I am certain that we will be the top choice for Spirit-empowered Christians seeking a higher education.”

                  A world-class university built on the Holy Spirit, with state-of-the-art technology, distinguished academics and facilities superior to those of any other institution in the world, sending Spirit-empowered leaders into the world—that is the reputation of ORU. In the next 50 years, that legacy will continue.

                   

                  To the Uttermost Bounds of the Earth

                  “Moving into our 50 year anniversary, we want to set ourselves up to fully become the university that God intended us to be from the beginning, the university that Oral envisioned 50 years ago, so that our greatest days are ahead of us in the 21st century,” said Board of Trustees chair Rob Hoskins.

                  As ORU journeys forward into the next half of a century, the 50th Anniversary Comprehensive Campaign, “To the Uttermost Bounds of the Earth,” has been launched. The campaign calls for $50 million to be raised over the next three years to impact academic growth and expansion, with an additional $20 million in deferred giving. The campaign will fund four major areas:

                  – Globalization of Whole-Person Education

                  – Enhanced Physical Campus

                  – Quest Whole Person Scholarships

                  – Strengthened University Endowment

                  This campaign is set to position ORU to emerge into its next 50 years stronger and better than ever before, addressing the needs and demands of a multicultural, multidimensional, global university, Wilson said.

                  “We’ve been in a season for the past couple of years where we have been dreaming,” Wilson said. “As we dream, of course, we need resources to do what God is putting in our hearts. This $50 million campaign will help us start moving forward with the global strategy God has given us for the future.”

                  The 50th anniversary campaign provides opportunities for globalization, online and distance learning and campus improvements. The funds raised will also assist ongoing growth and continued financial stability of the university.

                  “It will let us fulfill that next stage of growth, but more than just ORU, it will allow us to meet our learners around the globe to the glory of Jesus Christ,” Reid-Martinez said.

                  The next 50 years lie ahead for students, alumni, faculty and staff. What the founder envisioned years ago is today’s reality, which Laura Bishop, ORU’s vice president of Development and Alumni Relations, said is exciting to her as an alumnus.

                  “I find it incredibly exciting to be dreaming, planning and preparing for the future of this great university. I believe in this so strongly that I left a job I loved in Fort Lauderdale and my family, and I moved to Tulsa to commit my services to help with the success of this special campaign. As we embark on our half century mark, I’m honored to share the word with our alumni and friends that the time is now to support ORU, ‘for such a time as this.’”

                   

                  The Future of ORU

                  “I felt like I was called to this university,” said graphic design major Jake Haynes. “There was a dream I had, and God was calling me here because that was how I was going to fulfill that dream.”

                  Just as in 1965, students are being drawn to ORU because they desire to receive an excellent education in a positive, spiritual environment.

                  “What we started in 1965 has not stopped; we are developing it in a greater way,” Jernigan said. “Oral’s vision was to have a first-class university. I think today we have a first-class university not only because of the academics, but also because we have followed the leadership of the Holy Spirit.”

                  Each year, thousands of Spirit-empowered leaders are sent into the uttermost bounds of the earth where they are impacting the Kingdom of God.

                  “We have an opportunity to carry forth (Chancellor Roberts’) vision in a greater way today than even when he was alive,” Jernigan said. “I think today the students that we have and the 40,000 alumni are doing more than he could have done.”

                  Through the anniversary campaign, ORU is honoring the past—our founder’s vision and the foundation of ORU—while looking to what God has on the horizon.

                  “The story of ORU is bigger than all of us,” Wilson said. “This is a God thing. God is at work He cares about this next generation. He cares about the Spirit-empowered movement around the world, and He wants us to provide global leaders within that movement. It is exciting to be a part of something that is bigger than all of us.”

                  To learn more about the campaign, visit oru.edu/50/campaign or call the development office at 918-495-7336.

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