In memoriam: Notre Dame Trustee Robert M. Conway
Robert M. Conway, a member of the University of Notre Dame’s Board of Trustees for more than three decades, died Sunday (Jan. 15) in New York City. He was 78.
“Bob was an accomplished business leader, a generous benefactor, a Trustee and loyal alumnus of Notre Dame and, above all, a true gentleman,” University President Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C., said. “He was also to many of us a dear friend, whom we will miss deeply.”
Born in Rochester, Minnesota, Conway earned his bachelor’s degree in government and international studies from Notre Dame in 1966 and was devoted to the University and his cherished classmates throughout his life.
Conway earned a Master of Business Administration degree from the University of Chicago in 1968 and a Master of Arts degree from Belgium’s Catholic University of Louvain in 1969. He served from 1978 to 1982 as an adjunct associate professor of finance at the Columbia University Graduate School of Business Administration.
Conway’s more than 50-year career with Goldman began in 1970 as an associate in the New York office. He served as a vice president from 1973 to 1978, when he became a partner, member of the board and senior director of Goldman Sachs International Corp. in London.
Conway was elected to Notre Dame’s Board of Trustees in 1990, and served for 16 years as a member, vice chair and chair of the Academic and Faculty Affairs Committee, championing many important academic initiatives, especially in the arts and humanities. He also was a member of the International Facilities Committee and the Undergraduate Education and Student Life Committee. He previously was a member of the University’s advisory council for the College of Arts and Letters, the Ireland Council and the Performing Arts Council.
Notre Dame’s student residence hall in London is named in honor of Conway and his wife, Ricki. Located in the heart of the city’s South Bank cultural center, Conway Hall is a 15-minute walk to the University’s London Global Gateway in Trafalgar Square. Constructed in 1823, the building was originally used as an infirmary for indigent children. A gift from the Conways made possible a complete façade restoration and interior renovation. It opened in August 2011 and can accommodate more than 275 students.
The Conways also endowed the directorship of Notre Dame’s Medieval Institute and have provided funding for an innovative exchange program for institute faculty with the University of Oxford, as well as for medieval conferences at the London gateway.
Notre Dame bestowed an honorary doctor of laws degree on Conway in 2005, in recognition of his many contributions as “an alumnus and Trustee who has enriched culture, commerce and education on an international scale.”
In addition to his service to Notre Dame, Conway was a past president of Harris Manchester College at Oxford. He was a member of the Council of Management for the Ditchley Foundation, an organization that focuses on British-U.S. relations, and on the board of the English Chamber Orchestra and Music Society. Together with Ricki, he was a generous supporter of the arts, especially dance, serving for many years on the board of trustees of the American Ballet Theatre (ABT), as did Ricki. Thanks to the Conways, Notre Dame hosted a performance by ABT in the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center on its campus.
Conway is survived by his wife and two daughters, Rebecca and her husband, Pablo, and son Rafael, and Caroline and her husband, Walshe, and son Oliver.
A private service is planned.
Latest ND NewsWire
- School of Architecture charrette yields $98M for downtown Kalamazoo public space regenerationOn June 27, the city of Kalamazoo, Michigan, announced that it was awarded a $25 million grant through the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Rebuilding American Infrastructure with Sustainability and Equity (RAISE) program, as a result of its work with the University of Notre Dame School of Architecture. The grant, which will support the restructuring of downtown Kalamazoo thoroughfares and public spaces, is the latest of $98 million in grant funding the city has received following an intense, weeklong urban planning session conducted by the School of Architecture’s Housing and Community Regeneration Initiative in August 2022.
- New women’s residence hall to be named for Therese Mary GrojeanTherese Mary Grojean Hall The family of Thomas F. Grojean Sr.,…
- School of Architecture partners with city of Gary on downtown revitalization planOn Monday (July 22), the University of Notre Dame School of Architecture’s Housing and Community Regeneration Initiative and the city of Gary, Indiana, launched the first phase of a downtown revitalization project.
- Transformed Institute for Ethics and the Common Good advances Notre Dame’s commitment to excellence in study of ethicsThe University of Notre Dame’s Institute for Advanced Study is now the Institute for Ethics and the Common Good, launching its website today at ethics.nd.edu. The transformed, expanded institute will play an essential role in advancing the University-wide Ethics Initiative emerging from “Notre Dame 2033: A Strategic Framework.”
- ND Expert: Will ‘Brat Girl Summer’ translate into an autumn of Democratic victories? ‘It’s anybody’s guess’In the past three days, people on social media have embraced British pop star Charli XCX’s online pronouncement that “Kamala IS brat.” According to to Sara Marcus, an assistant professor of English and author of “Girls to the Front: The True Story of the Riot Grrrl Revolution,” that translates to a declaration that Kamala Harris, the Democratic Party’s presumptive new nominee for president, embodies the sort of messy, complicated, casual womanhood that the singer’s recent album, “Brat,” depicts and celebrates.
- ND Expert: NASA’s cancellation of VIPER is a frustrating setback for lunar explorationLast week, NASA announced it canceled its plans to send the Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover (VIPER) to the Moon’s southern polar region. The rover was meant to search for water and other resources called volatiles, such as hydrogen, ammonia and carbon dioxide, which easily evaporate…