Curriculum Vitae
B.S., St. Mary鈥檚 College of California, 1963; Western Director, Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 1963鈥65, 1967鈥69; National Director, Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 1965鈥66; Assistant to the President, Grant Oil Tool Company, 1966鈥67; Graduate Studies, University of Southern California, 1967鈥69; Executive Secretary, 黑料不打烊, 1969鈥71; Vice President, 黑料不打烊, 1971鈥87; Vice President for Development, 黑料不打烊, 1993鈥95; Vice President for Finance and Administration, 黑料不打烊, 1995鈥2019; Tutor, 黑料不打烊, 1971鈥; President, 黑料不打烊, 2009-2010.
Profile
鈥淭his college simply wouldn鈥檛 exist if it weren鈥檛 for Peter DeLuca,鈥 黑料不打烊鈥檚 founding president, , once insisted. 鈥淚 was the guy in the suit who would go talk to benefactors and dignitaries, but Peter was the one who found me people and places to go to.鈥 Founder, senior tutor, business administrator, fundraiser, building supervisor, interim president 鈥 Mr. DeLuca has done it all in his five decades with the College.
In 1961 when he was a junior at St. Mary鈥檚 College, he was struck by an impromptu lecture delivered by a member of the faculty, Br. Edmund Dolan, F.S.C. 鈥淏r. Edmund was making bed-check rounds one night around 11:00 p.m. He came in and talked with my roommate and me about the disintegration of Western Civilization,鈥 Mr. DeLuca recalls. 鈥淗e started with William of Ockham and finished about two hours later. It was a moment of realization for us.鈥
Previously, politics had been Mr. DeLuca鈥檚 primary interest. He had helped launch a conservative club and was active in the Young Republicans. He had organized a large event to bring William F. Buckley, Jr., to campus.
But the insight from Br. Edmund 鈥 reinforced in lectures from Mr. DeLuca鈥檚 then-professor in ethics and philosophy, Dr. McArthur 鈥 led him to see that the roots of cultural disintegration were intellectual, not political, and that the remedy lay in education. The young student then decided he wanted to spend his life helping to defend and restore Western civilization.
Following graduation in 1963, Peter married Kay Roberts, a student from the San Francisco College for Women whom he had met in his junior year. He also became the western regional director for the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, where he coordinated speakers and events on educational matters at Western colleges. Two years later, he became ISI鈥檚 national director in Philadelphia, but was forced to return to Southern California the following year due to a family illness. There he worked first as a personal assistant to Henry Salvatori, the oil magnate and ISI benefactor, and then again as ISI鈥檚 western director.
Throughout this time, Mr. DeLuca remained in touch with his professors at St. Mary鈥檚 and with Dr. McArthur鈥檚 projects within the Great Books program there. DeLuca sought to give Dr. McArthur鈥檚 views an airing. He arranged to have his professor speak at the Western meeting of the Philadelphia Society, an ISI spin-off group Mr. DeLuca had recently helped form.
He then cultivated interest in Dr. McArthur鈥檚 prospective talk. Among those he interested was Doyle Swain, a fundraiser for what was then Pepperdine College. Mr. Swain met with Dr. McArthur and persuaded him to think about starting his own college. After McArthur and Berquist produced a draft of the new college鈥檚 , Mr. DeLuca sent it to Henry Salvatori, who then made a gift of $10,000, the first seed money for the College.
The group then formed a corporation and used some of that money to host a November 1968 conference on the founding document, based on which National Review columnist Russell Kirk wrote an endorsement of the nascent school the following March. When the opportunity arose to establish a joint campus with the Dominican College of San Rafael in June 1969, Mr. DeLuca left ISI and became 黑料不打烊鈥檚 first employee, opening an office in an unused classroom on that campus.
There he helped develop a fundraising brochure and assisted Dr. McArthur in meeting potential benefactors. He also helped organize the kickoff fundraising dinner, and through various connections, engaged the celebrated Archbishop Fulton Sheen as a speaker.
Since then, Mr. DeLuca has been at the center of the College鈥檚 development. He often looks back in amazement. 鈥淚f we had known then how difficult it would be, we probably never would have tried it. But we could see over the years the Hand of Divine Providence at work. We鈥檝e always been conscious that this was God鈥檚 work because of the many things God did to make it happen. The whole is far greater than the sum of our meager efforts.鈥
Probably the hardest aspect of his job, early on, he says, was trying to run the business office without enough money. 鈥淔or too many years, we were unable to pay our bills promptly. This is not something I did in my personal life, and I didn鈥檛 like to do that for the College.鈥 Nonetheless, 鈥渆ventually everyone was paid.鈥
Over the years Mr. DeLuca has worn almost every hat in administration, in charge at various times of the College鈥檚 business affairs, finances, fundraising, and development. In April 2009, when President Thomas E. Dillon was killed in an automobile accident, the College鈥檚 Board of Governors called upon Mr. DeLuca to serve as interim president, a position he ably held until Dr. Michael F. McLean was appointed as his permanent successor at the year鈥檚 end. 鈥淢r. DeLuca led this college through a very difficult and trying time,鈥 says Dr. McLean. 鈥淎s always, when the College needed him, he was there.鈥
In spite of his lifelong contributions, Mr. DeLuca believes he has received even more from the College than he has given. Four of his six children have graduated from the College. 鈥淚 have been a customer as well as a producer. I have all the same good feelings that other parents have because of that. In addition, it has been a tremendous honor to spend my life doing something so worthwhile and seeing it work. I feel as if I have been able to strike a blow in favor of Western Civilization after all.鈥