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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, March 13, 2006

Ex-judge to take reins of Saint Louis School

By Beverly Creamer
Advertiser Education Writer

Kirimitsu

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SAINT LOUIS SCHOOL FACTS

2006-07 Tuition

Lower School (Gr. 4-6) — $6,500

Middle School (Gr. 7&8) — $8,600

Upper School (Gr. 9-12) — $9,200

Teaching requirement for Saint Louis School

Master's degree preferred, bachelor's degree required, teaching certificate preferred

STUDENTS ENROLLED IN ADVANCED PLACEMENT COURSES

AP Calculus 9

AP Government 12

AP U.S. History 10

AP Psychology 21

AP Literature & Composition 17

Students attending Chaminade University after graduating

2005 2

2004 6

2003 4

2002 0

Saint Louis Students taking college courses their senior year

Kapi'olani Community College: 2

Chaminade University of Honolulu: 0

Enrollment

1995-'96 876

1996-'97 885

1997-'98 868

1998-'99 896

1999-'00 820

2000-'01 780

2001-'02 817

2002-'03 771

2003-'04 752

2004-'05 753

2005-'06 760

Source: Saint Louis School

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WALTER S. KIRIMITSU

Age: 64

Education: Law degree from University of Michigan Law School, Ann Arbor, Mich.; B.A. from the University of Hawai'i; Saint Louis School graduate.

Nickname: "Judge"; from 1995 to 1999 he was an associate judge of the Intermediate Court of Appeals.

Current employment: Vice president for legal affairs and University of Hawai'i general counsel.

Past employment: From 1976 to 1995, officer and director of Shim, Tam,

Kirimitsu & Chang; from 1970 to 1976, general partner in Kirimitsu & Dewa.

Fun fact: When he entered Saint Louis School he was a Buddhist, but was so impressed by the teachers that he converted to Catholicism, and at one point considered the ministry.

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Former judge Walter Kirimitsu, chief legal counsel for the University of Hawai'i system, will take over leadership of Saint Louis School July 1 — the first lay president of the 160-year-old school that has roots deep in the Island community.

With the official announcement — expected during a school assembly Wednesday morning — Kirimitsu also will open the door to expanding the school's enrollment to create a K-12 continuum for students, and begin consideration of whether the Saint Louis community wants the school to become coeducational.

Currently the school begins at fourth grade.

"We have to have input to make sure everyone is in support," Kirimitsu said. "My style is to listen and work with a group of advisers better than I am, and work as a team.

"My first 90 days will be to talk, to talk, to talk and to listen, listen, listen to the faculty and the alumni and see what direction they want the school to take."

When Kirimitsu, 64, takes over the reins of the Catholic boys' school founded in 1846 by the Marianist brotherhood, he will take on the task of raising almost $10 million as the new leader of his own alma mater, reversing the school's downward enrollment spiral and refurbishing some of the institution's aging facilities.

He expects to launch an aggressive capital campaign to raise $9.5 million for two major projects:

  • A $4.5 million renovation of Hale Hoaloha to turn the former Chaminade University dormitory into a Saint Louis classroom building.

  • Construction of a $6.7 million arts complex next to Mamiya Theater to expand drama, arts and music classes.

    The school has received a pledge of $1.7 million from the Clarence Ching estate and foundation to launch the latter project but needs to raise the rest to make it a reality.

    A third project — renovation of the athletic facilities, primarily the locker rooms — will follow once the first two are complete. There is no cost estimate as yet.

    Kirimitsu expects to bring together a leadership team of people already at the school to help him guide it. But he also said he will be consulting with the Saint Louis community before moving forward on any initiatives.

    Kirimitsu said this is an "exciting venture to raise the school to higher expectations and higher standards and build on what our predecessors have done."

    He has agreed to a three- to five-year contract at an undisclosed salary. But he said it's less than what he makes at the University of Hawai'i, which is $256,248.

    University of Hawai'i president David McClain said he will miss Kirimitsu at UH as the latter retires from the public sector.

    "I've benefited daily from Walter's always wise and often witty counsel," McClain said in a statement, "and feel fortunate to know him not only as a colleague but also as a friend."

    Kirimitsu was chosen after a yearlong national search and was one of three finalists, all lay people. There were 27 applicants for the position, most of them also lay people.

    Saint Louis board of trustees chairman Dr. Reginald Ho said a survey of Saint Louis alumni and faculty had pointed the search committee toward opening the school to lay leadership, which he said is a nationwide trend. Two-thirds of the 28 Marianist schools are now headed by nonclerics. And only three members of the Saint Louis faculty are clergy.

    "They wanted to see a person who had vision, leadership and was a good communicator," Ho said. "Regardless of religious or nonreligious, they wanted the best person."

    The board also discussed the possibility of a nonclerical leader with the school's Marianist province leadership in St. Louis, Mo., receiving permission to select the "best person" for the school, without regard to whether the person is a member of the clergy or not, Ho said.

    "Historically we've always had a clergy as leader," said Kirimitsu, who served as student body president of Saint Louis in his graduating year of 1958 and has been a trustee of the school since 1988 and its chairman from 1996 to 2002.

    "This is very significant historically," he said. "But more important, the core mission of the Marianist Catholic school will not change. The parents and community need to know the core mission will never change."

    Ho and Kirimitsu said that both the religious and educational standards of the school will continue, with a focus on educating the "whole person" and developing young people with strong character.

    Current president Father Allen DeLong, 72, who had announced his intention to retire last year, remained an additional year while the search was under way. He intends to retire, travel and then go back to school at Chaminade with the idea that by December he may again be available to take another post. He has been an educator for 50 years, with his first teaching position at St. Anthony's school on Maui.

    In his six years at the school DeLong has strengthened the academic standards as well as the campus ministry and religious retreat program.

    "All of the structure will enable the transition to lay leadership," he said.

    Under DeLong the numbers of both Advanced Placement and Honors courses have increased. As well, Saint Louis students take some advanced courses at Chaminade. Kirimitsu hopes to expand that.

    Kirimitsu praised DeLong's leadership and said he will continue to build high academic expectations among the students — and launch a K-20 initiative to encourage more Saint Louis graduates to attend Chaminade University.

    Acting Chaminade University president Brother Bernard Ploeger said he would welcome working more closely with Saint Louis.

    "Already we do several things cooperatively, and to build on that and find ways that are beneficial to the students would be very advantageous," Ploeger said. "We're very interested in recruiting their students."

    Since 2003, only 12 Saint Louis students have enrolled in Chaminade, compared with about 10 students per year from Kamehameha Schools, according to school records.

    When DeLong first became president in 2000, there wasn't a single Saint Louis graduate attending the Marianist college that adjoins the Saint Louis campus and shares some facilities. Chaminade also offers generous scholarships to local students.

    But Kirimitsu said Saint Louis graduates also attend top Mainland schools, including Harvard, Yale and Stanford. Last year, 98 percent of the graduates went on to college, DeLong said.

    Reach Beverly Creamer at bcreamer@honoluluadvertiser.com.