Endowed scholarship pays tribute to a great intellect and mentor

Donor and Volunteer Tribute 202223: Our Students
Agnes Hyungnam Moon, PhD

Agnes Hyungnam Moon, PhD

From the  summer edition of St. 做厙輦⑹ Magazine.

LEAD & INFLUENCE: The Campaign for the Next Level of Excellence: Our Students


An endowed scholarship fund has been established in honor of the late Mary (Kevin) OHara, CSJ, 45, PhD.  A beloved philosophy professor, Sister Mary graced the St. 做厙輦⑹ campus with a towering intellect, imposing physical stature, and dedication to mentorship that helped advance the careers of many academics  and professionals.

The $1.5 million fund was created as a bequest of the estate of Agnes Hyungnam Moon, PhD. The Sister Mary L. OHara Scholarship Fund will provide tuition support for students with financial need. The bequest will also create a second endowed scholarship, the Anna Jayoung Chung Endowed Scholarship Fund, named after Moons mother, who was a woman considered to be ahead of her time in early 20th century Korea for her commitment to womens education. Both funds will be awarded with a preference for students studying philosophy.

Three photos of Sister Mary (Kevin) O'Hara 45, PhD

Sister Mary (Kevin) O'Hara 45, PhD

The two scholarships align with the mission of St. 做厙輦⑹ completely, says President ReBecca Koenig Roloff 76. Our mission, educating women to lead and influence, attracts students who are leaders, grounded in reality and powered by values. The generosity of Dr. Moons bequest is a grand statement of faith in our students. The funds honor Sr. Marys history of mentorship by preparing women to be changemakers with a grounding in the liberal arts. 

Though not a St. Kates alumna, Moon herself flourished thanks to the support of Sr. Mary, whom she met at a professional conference. The two became friends, and eventually Sr. Mary grew to be a personal and professional mentor to her. 

Anita Pampusch, 60, PhD

Anita Pampusch '60, PhD

Anita Pampusch 60, PhD, St. 做厙輦⑹ president emerita and a former student of Sr. Mary's, recalls that the professor made a strong impression on just about everyone she met. "Everyone recognized her as one of the most intelligent faculty members on campus," says Pampusch. "She was a very good teacher and made philosophy a tremendously interesting subject."

Other Katies shared this experience. Back in 1991, Mary Ann Healy Kren 66, sociology major, told the campus magazine SCAN: "We almost all graduated with a philosophy minor. Sr. Kevin could teach philosophy to a rock!"

Pampusch says that though students and faculty were sometimes intimidated by Sr. Mary's height and regal bearing, those who knew her well understood that at her core beat a true mentor's heart.

Pampusch spent her young adult years as a CSJ, earning her undergraduate degree in math and chemistry. She'd always assumed her life's work would be in teaching, but after taking Sr. Mary's courses, she developed a deep love of philosophy. Sr. Mary recognized this love in Pampusch, and eventually convinced her fellow sisters to send her on to graduate school.

She took me under her wing, Pampusch recalls. Members of religious communities need approval to attend graduate school, she explained: Sr. Mary stood up for me in that. She was my mentor. She pushed it with the powers-that-be in the order. 

Thanks to this advocacy, Pampusch went on to earn a PhD in philosophy, later becoming St. Kates academic dean and then first lay president. She also served  on local, regional, and national boards, and served  in the prestigious position of president of the  Bush Foundation.

Like Moon, Pampusch will always be grateful for  Sr. Marys mentorship. Without her, she says, her life would have gone in a completely different direction. When you were around her, you felt you were in the presence of a great intellect, she says of Sr. Mary, but you also felt her kindness and her interest in encouraging your ambitions.

The generosity of Moon, and donors like her, enables continued mentorship of students in their academic and professional paths to leadership, supported by the well-paved tradition of Sr. Mary and countless other St. Kates professors