Y. Ping Sun
This rare homecoming queen attorney is a rock star at Rice University
It's almost impossible to walk across the Rice University campus with Y. Ping Sun, wife of Rice president David Leebron, without her being stopped by admiring students and faculty. She is so well-liked, in fact, that shortly after arriving in Houston in 2004, the students elected her homecoming queen.
She, being a serious-mined attorney and mother of two, thought it was surely a joke. Not so.
Nine years after moving to Houston from New York City, Ping describes herself as part-part-time lawyer (of counsel with Yetter Coleman, specializing in corporate securities law), part-time University Representative (her official title) and full-time mother to a 16-year-old son and 13-year-old daughter. Most in Houston know her as the ultimate ambassador for Rice — her charm, beauty and intellect a potent combination that sells.
Born in Shanghai, Ping moved to the U.S. to attend Princeton University where she graduated cum laude. She later earned a law degree from Columbia and was practicing law in New York when David accepted the position at Rice.
Hers is a familiar face to faculty and staff at the university where she serves on the boards of the Shepherd School of Music and the Kinder Institute for Urban Research. Invitations to her "Something New for Lunch at Rice University" are as coveted by faculty members as by the community leaders who are included in the popular series.
Off campus, Ping is equally admired for her verve, gentle wit and intelligence. A strong proponent of community involvement, she is a trustee of Texas Children's Hospital and holds board memberships with the Asia Society Texas Center, St. John’s School and the United Way.
For the record, we asked what the "Y" stands for. Moon, she said, explaining that the translation of her names is "Green Water Lily Under the Moon."