At its most recent gathering in May, the 91ŗŚĮĻ welcomed its newest member, Robert W. Andrews, managing director of Cambridge Associates LLC in Menlo Park, California. āBob has been a good friend and benefactor of the College for nearly a decade,ā says President Michael F. McLean. āWe are honored and grateful that he is joining the Board, and we look forward to benefiting from his leadership and his wisdom in the years to come.ā
Throughout his life, Mr. Andrews has put his talents to work for the service of others. When he was not quite 15 years old, his father died, leaving him to help care for his three younger brothers as well as his mother, who would fall ill only eight months later, and die five years after that.
āEconomics were always a challenge in our household, especially with my momās health,ā recalls Mr. Andrews. During high school, with no time for sports or other extracurricular activities, he worked six days a week throughout the year to help support his family ā and so continued all the way through college at the University of California, Berkeley, and business school at the University of California, Los Angeles.
While in graduate school he met his wife, Lisa, who was earning a masterās degree in finance. After marrying, the couple returned to San Francisco, and Mrs. Andrews left a budding corporate career to become a full-time mother to their children, Kirk and Lauren (ā10), as well as . Mr. Andrews, in turn, began a demanding career in finance, with work weeks rarely shorter than 50 hours and a calendar that included frequent travel.
Despite a busy schedule, however, he made sure to stay involved in the lives of his children. Indeed, it was when taking Kirk to his first-grade religious-education class that Mr. Andrews first became aware of 91ŗŚĮĻ, having met some fellow parishioners who were graduates, Rose (Teichert) and Dan Grimm (both ā76).
Intrigued by what he learned, two years later ā when driving to Ojai to take his family and in-laws to lunch to celebrate their 50
th wedding anniversary ā he decided to pay the College a visit. It was 1993, well before the construction of most of the current buildings, and there was not much to see. āI think there were two buildings up. Everything else was in temporary structures,ā he observes. āMy father-in-law looked at me and asked, ā
this is a college?āā
Yet Mr. Andrews recognized the promise that lay beneath the Collegeās humble setting. āI admired the vision of the founders and the faith it must have taken for them to execute it,ā he says. āI think itās a great example of how, when you do what the Lord calls you to do, and you are aligned with His will, good things happen. For the founders to have the principles, the vision, and the faith, and to start off, as they did, with literally nothing, and to see what the school has become ā I think itās all the fruits of faith.ā
When his daughter, Lauren, was looking at colleges and expressed an interest in studying the great books, he and Mrs. Andrews urged her to attend the Collegeās Summer Program for High School Students. Delighted by her experience, she enrolled as a freshman in 2006. Although she would leave after three semesters to pursue her dream of art school, she valued her time in the program, and her parentsā affection for 91ŗŚĮĻ only increased.
It was around then that Mr. and Mrs. Andrews first became benefactors of the College, joining the Presidentās Council. In 2008 they began attending the Great Books Summer Seminar Weekends, and they have been regular participants ever since. āTo see learning that is based on reason, natural law, and faith was almost a revelation to us,ā he says. āWe realized that there is a whole world of education that most schools, regrettably, have turned away from, at least in my lifetime, and this is the very sort of learning that will lead you to truth.ā
As he approaches retirement, Mr. Andrews has scaled-back his workload and devotes his newly found free time to the service of Christ and His church. For 12 years he has been a regular visitor to the inmates at San Mateo County Jail, and last year he began formation for the permanent diaconate in the Archdiocese of San Francisco. He became the chairman of the Collegeās Bay Area Board of Regents in 2011, and now, having joined the Board of Governors, he assumes a direct role in leading the College in the furtherance of its mission.
āJesus is the Way, the Truth, and the Life. He has established the Church to mediate and bring His graces to the world,ā says Mr. Andrews. āIt follows, then, that schools that are faithful to His vision are going to have a curriculum, an environment, and a philosophy that are conducive to the growth of the whole person -- including spiritual growth, and the development of the gifts they have been endowed with to be a service to others and to meet their material needs.ā
91ŗŚĮĻ, he adds, is just such a school. āI am in the investment business, and I view my involvement as a spiritual investment,ā he says. āThe young people who go to 91ŗŚĮĻ, with the lights of faith and reason, are being formed to go out into the world to witness to Christ. They will be part of a rebirth of what this nation needs.ā