virginia tech foundation annual report

Transcription

virginia tech foundation annual report
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION
ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
and
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY
ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION INC.
Officers and Board of Directors
CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD
Gene A. James
CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER
AND SECRETARY-TREASURER
Raymond D. Smoot Jr.
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT
James A. Hyatt
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT
Elizabeth A. Flanagan
Robert A. Archer
John T. DeBell Sr.
Robert C. Lawson Jr.
Judith S. Strickler
Bridget R. Berman
Charles L. Eaton
Samuel L. Lionberger Jr.
James E. Turner Jr.
Richard D. Bishop
David R. Henderson
James E. Pearman Jr.
Horacio A. Valeiras
Willis P. Blackwood
Linda A. Hodges
Charles W. Pryor Jr.
Mr. Leo A. Vecellio Jr.
Geary G. Broadnax
William B. Holtzman
Jean DuPont Shehan
G. Truman Ward
John T. Bruce
Jerry L. Hulick
Margaret (Peggy) G. Skelton
Preston M. White Jr.
John D. Clary
Gene A. James
Garnett E. Smith
E. Carlton Wilton Jr.
Ben J. Davenport Jr.
Theodore E. King Jr.
James E. Smith
Kay M. Winzenried
Sandra C. Davis
William C. Latham
Charles W. Steger
COO and Secretary-Treasurer
Virginia Tech Foundation Inc.
Executive Vice President and COO
Virginia Tech
Vice President for Development
and University Relations
Virginia Tech
Board of Directors
On the cover: Burruss Hall
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
TABLE OF CONTENTS
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT
5 | Gene A. James | Chairman of the Board
7 | Raymond D. Smoot Jr. | Chief Operating Officer and Secretary-Treasurer
9 | Corporate Research Center Fosters Innovation
11 | Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center Continuing to Exceed Expectations
13 | WVTF Public Radio Expands to Serve More Listeners
15 | Center for European Studies and Architecture More Active than Ever Internationally
17 | Pete Dye River Course Convergence
18 | Financial Highlights Charts and Graphs
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT
27 | Elizabeth A. Flanagan | Vice President for Development and University Relations
29 | Private Giving Totals $75.3 Million in Fiscal Year 2005-2006
31 | Major Gift Highlights
36 | Designations, Uses, and Sources of Gifts
Giving Societies
39 | Ut Prosim Society
47 | Caldwell Society
50 | Legacy Society
57 | University Development Contacts
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
Fall leaves accent Virginia Tech’s gothic architecture.
TO OUR INVESTORS
Gene A. James | Chairman of the Board
Since its founding in 1948, the Virginia
Tech Foundation has played an active
and expanding role in advancing
the programs and initiatives of the
university.
During the most recent fiscal year, in response to the university’s
strategic research initiative, the foundation was engaged in
construction of three buildings in the Virginia Tech Corporate
Research Center: The National Surface Transportation Center
for Excellence, the Institute for Critical Technology and Applied
I wish to express appreciation to the many
alumni and friends of Virginia Tech who give
of their time, talent, and financial resources to
advance our university. It has been gratifying
to be involved with you in enhancing Virginia
Tech’s ability to serve our commonwealth,
nation, and world.
Science, and the Integrated Life Sciences Building. Acquisition
of a research building in the Ballston area of the National Capital
Region, close to the National Science Foundation and federal
research agencies, was initiated. Each of these projects leverages
the assets of the foundation to respond quickly and efficiently on
behalf of university priorities.
In June, the Pete Dye River Course and golf team practice facility
were dedicated on a beautiful morning along the New River.
Through the generosity of Bill and Alice Goodwin and the creative
vision of Pete Dye, the Virginia Tech golf team now has superb
practice facilities and our students, faculty, staff, and alumni have
access to our exceptional university golf course.
Virginia Tech’s updated strategic plan, approved by the board
of visitors, affirms the importance of private funding to attract
and sustain able students and distinguished faculty members.
Private giving to the foundation during the year totaled $81.8
million. The foundation funded additional development officers
and operating expenses in support of the university’s capital
campaign, which is increasing private funding and engaging
additional alumni and
friends with Virginia Tech.
As my term as chairman of
the board draws to an end, I
wish to express appreciation
to the many alumni and
friends of Virginia Tech who
give of their time, talent,
and financial resources to
advance our university. It
has been gratifying to be
involved with you in enhancing Virginia Tech’s ability to serve
our commonwealth, nation, and world.
Sincerely,
Gene A. James
Chairman of the Board
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
Reynolds Homestead, a property owned by the Virginia Tech Foundation
A MESSAGE FROM THE COO
Raymond D. Smoot Jr. | Chief Operating Officer and Secretary-Treasurer
The past year has seen the foundation
respond in significant ways to the
initiatives set forth in Virginia Tech’s
strategic plan.
Financial support of university programs totaled $75.5 million,
as compared to $71.4 million in the previous year. Revenues for
the year totaled $167.5 million, an increase of 10.3 percent over
the previous year. Net gains on investments accounted for $27.1
million of this increase. Total assets increased to $808.9 million,
which compares to $728.0 million the previous year. Total net
The continuing engagement and support of
alumni and friends of Virginia Tech in these and
other endeavors contributes immeasurably to the
advancement of Virginia Tech, and the entire
university community is grateful for all that you
do and make possible.
assets increased to $609.1 million from $544.4 million.
The value of the Virginia Tech endowment was $447.4 million
at the end of the fiscal year. The consolidated endowment
earned 11 percent for the year, which compares favorably with
university endowments of similar size and considerably exceeded
the 8.6 percent return of the S&P 500. During the past year, the
Investment Committee increased the allocation to marketable
alternatives to 20 percent and reduced the fixed income allocation
to 15 percent of the portfolio. Investments in real estate were
reduced during the year and an allocation to inflation hedged
assets was made. An emerging markets overlay was placed on
the international allocation early in the year and removed later as
emerging markets returned to fair value.
The foundation initiated or continued several real estate
development projects, including three new buildings in the
Virginia Tech Corporate Research Center; redevelopment of the
former Red Lion Inn property; construction of the University
Gateway Center, which will centralize Virginia Tech Foundation
and University Development offices at a location adjacent to
campus; completion of the Pete Dye River Course and golf team
practice facility; and acquisition of a research center close to
federal research agencies in the National Capital Region.
Continued growth of the Virginia Tech Corporate Research
Center and enhanced entrepreneurial activity in the region were
strengthened by several programs: The NEWVA Investment Fund,
an early stage venture fund
created by the Virginia Tech
Foundation and Carilion
Health System and managed
by Third Security LLC; VT
KnowledgeWorks,
which
nurtures very early stage
companies in the Corporate
Research Center; and the
Virginia Tech Business
Technology Center, which
provides assistance and
expertise to a variety of businesses both in the region and across
the state.
The continuing engagement and support of alumni and friends
of Virginia Tech in these and other endeavors contributes
immeasurably to the advancement of Virginia Tech, and the
entire university community is grateful for all that you do and
make possible.
Sincerely,
Raymond D. Smoot Jr.
Chief Operating Officer and
Secretary-Treasurer
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
The Corporate Research Center is home to more than 130 businesses.
CORPORATE RESEARCH CENTER
FOSTERS INNOVATION
The Virginia Tech Corporate Research
Center, a for-profit subsidiary
of the Virginia Tech Foundation,
continues to expand with more
than 130 research and development
businesses and research centers and
1,900 employees. The park consists
of 21 buildings containing more than
745,000 square feet.
The success of the tenants in the park has been
due in part to advantages offered by the CRC,
including a comprehensive business assistance
program, a low-cost telecommunications infrastructure, a financial assistance package, training
opportunities, and personnel assistance.
The 20th building in the park was completed in May. This 40,000square-foot building houses Virginia Tech’s Department of
Computer Science. In June, a 30,000-square-foot building called
the National Surface Transportation Center for Excellence was
completed for the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute.
One mission of the CRC is to advance Virginia Tech’s teaching and
research missions, so various student groups work with companies
at the park as part of their studies. CRC tenant companies sponsor
research at the university each year. Faculty members consult
with tenant companies as a means of remaining on the cutting
edge of new technology. This new knowledge is then put to work
in the classroom, where many students benefit.
The success of the tenants in the park has been due in part to
advantages offered by the CRC, including a comprehensive business
assistance program, a low-cost telecommunications infrastructure,
a financial assistance package, training opportunities, and
personnel assistance. The CRC is considered by employers and
employees to be an attractive location because of the quality
of work and home life that
Southwest Virginia affords.
The quality of life in the park
is enriched by numerous
recreational opportunities,
such as volleyball and
basketball leagues, hiking
trails, bike lanes, and an onsite 5,000-square-foot fitness
center. The CRC also has a
library that companies can
use for research.
The CRC has commenced design on Phase II of its campus. Phase
II will nearly double the current acreage of the park and provide
a growth path for the CRC for many years to come. This land,
currently owned by Virginia Tech, has been designated for the
growth of the CRC in the university’s master plan.
In addition, a 32,000-square-foot building is currently under
construction to house Tech’s Institute for Critical Technology and
Applied Science. This building is scheduled to be completed in the
early part of 2007. The 77,000-square-foot Integrated Life Sciences
Building is being designed and is scheduled for completion in about
a year. It is the result of a collaborative effort among the colleges of
Agriculture and Life Sciences, Science, Natural Resources, and the
Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine. This
building will provide high-quality research space supporting Tech’s
quest to become a top-tier research university.
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
10
The Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center welcomes visitors to the Roanoke Valley.
HOTEL ROANOKE & CONFERENCE CENTER
CONTINUING TO EXCEED EXPECTATIONS
The Hotel Roanoke & Conference
Center exceeded numerous financial
performance goals in Fiscal Year
2005-2006, including record-high
gross revenues, average daily rate,
and revenues per available room. The
total operating revenues for the Hotel
Roanoke & Conference Center in fiscal
year 2005- 2006 were $18.59 million,
The Regency Dining Room was again awarded
Wine Spectator’s Excellence Award in 2006.
The Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center also
finished each quarter of this past year as a Top
Ten CARE Cup finalist.
compared to $16.83 million in 20042005. Net operating income for the year
was $2.70 million compared to $2.41
million for 2004-2005. The average
daily rate was $108.97 in 2005-2006,
compared to $100.02 in 2004-2005, an
increase of almost 9 percent.
The total cash distributed for debt service and other obligations
was $3.1 million, with $1.25 million going directly to the Virginia
Tech Foundation. The hotel completely retired the Hilton loan and
is current on all of its other external debt obligations.
Other highlights of the year included hosting Doubletree Hotel’s
annual brand conferences for general managers and directors of
sales. These two conferences not only brought significant financial
benefits to the Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center, but they also
exposed the property to corporate executives and other associates
from all around the United States and Canada. The Regency Dining
Room was again awarded Wine Spectator’s Excellence Award in
2006. The Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center also finished each
quarter of this past year as a Top Ten CARE Cup finalist.
Improvements to Hotel Roanoke were started or completed
during the year with minimal interruption to guests. These
included complete refurbishment of the fitness center, renovation
of the Pine Room Pub, and addition of a new nightclub. The public
restrooms near the Regency
Room and the main elevator
cab interiors were refurbished
and all the guest beds were
replaced. Current projects in
development now include
renovation of the Regency
Dining Room and completion
of the model guest room for
the 2007-2008 renovation.
Virginia Tech’s colleges,
alumni groups, and continuing education programs are
consistently using the Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center for
events. These programs and gatherings bring together members
of the university community and alumni, as well as people
who had never before experienced the value of the university’s
educational and outreach resources. In 2005-2006, the university
accounted for 9,157 group room nights, or 23.4 percent of the
year’s group room volume. Overall group volume fell a little shy
of the budgeted target: 38,405 instead of 40,012.
The Hotel Roanoke & Conference Center’s executive management
team assumed responsibility for the university’s new Inn at
Virginia Tech & Skelton Conference Center in the summer of 2005.
Using the same executive team to manage both facilities provides
synergies between the two hotels and conference centers,
maximizes operational efficiencies, and provides more options
for the faculty and the university community.
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
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VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
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WVTF blankets western Virginia with news and music.
WVTF PUBLIC RADIO
EXPANDS TO SERVE MORE LISTENERS
During fiscal year 2005-2006,
WVTF Public Radio’s achievements
demonstrated its importance and value
to the community it serves.
HD radio has two distinct advantages over traditional analog
transmissions. First, it has better sound quality and no signal
distortion, and second, the FM HD broadcasts can carry more
than one program stream on the same frequency. HD expands
the coverage area of our RADIO IQ service, and it also adds a third,
new service to the WVTF signal.
Listener donations to WVTF topped $1 million for the fifth
consecutive year and remained the station’s largest source of
revenue to sustain broadcast. Listener-sensitive revenue was
nearly $1.8 million.Financial support for RADIO IQ also showed
steady growth. Most of its audience are heavy users of WVTF and
the majority of these listeners donate to both services. But there
is a growing response rate from donors who wish to designate
RADIO IQ also began showing meaningful audience figures
in the Arbitron Inc. ratings for both Roanoke-Lynchburg and
Charlottesville. These figures indicate the growing importance of
WVTF’s all-news, -talk, and -information broadcast service.
The addition of HD radio digital broadcasting
to three more transmitters in our broadcasting
infrastructure is the highlight of this past year’s
engineering and technical accomplishments. In
fiscal year 2004-2005 we added HD transmissions
to our two Charlottesville signals, and this past
year we continued this project.
and recognize RADIO IQ as their primary or favorite service.
This past year WVTF hired its first major gifts officer. The major
gifts program for the radio station is being created from the
“ground up” and expectations are that the program will begin
bringing substantial support to the station toward the end
of fiscal year 2007. WVTF’s major gifts officer reports directly
to University Development but maintains a full-time office at
the WVTF broadcast center in Roanoke. This position is also
responsible for securing planned gifts for WVTF.
The addition of HD radio digital broadcasting to three more
transmitters in our broadcasting infrastructure is the highlight
of this past year’s engineering and technical accomplishments.
In fiscal year 2004-2005 we added HD transmissions to our two
Charlottesville signals, and this past year we continued this
project by adding HD signals to WVTF (89.1 FM) in Roanoke, WFFC
(89.9 FM) in Ferrum, and WWVT (1260 AM) in Christiansburg.
Another engineering accomplishment was the addition of three new
translators, which were approved by the Federal Communications
Commission this past year.
These new signals will help
areas that experience some
signal problems on 89.1 FM.
The Lexington and Orange
translators are operational,
and the Lovingston site was
completed by early 2007.
WVTF’s dedicated news
department continued its
mission to broadcast relevant
regional news and public affairs content for area citizens, airing
more than 300 hours of local and regional programming,
including newscasts, in-depth series and feature reports, listener
essays and commentaries, and special legislative reports from the
Virginia General Assembly. Most notably, Evening Edition, the
weekly public affairs discussion and call-in production, explored
hundreds of important topics of significance and relevance to our
region’s citizens, including industrial waste in Virginia, regional
growth and expansion, Southwest Virginia as a “technology
corridor,” and biofuel technology in the commonwealth.
The final numbers were not available as of this printing, but total
audience in all markets served by WVTF should once again be in
the 150,000 to 160,000 range. This places WVTF in the top tier
of stations nationwide not serving a major metropolitan market,
and positions the station for continued strong financial support
from listeners and corporate underwriters.
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
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VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
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Villa Maderni is the center of Virginia Tech’s European hub.
CENTER FOR EUROPEAN STUDIES AND ARCHITECTURE
MORE ACTIVE THAN EVER INTERNATIONALLY
The Center for European Studies and
Architecture (CESA) continues to
provide major advancements to the
university’s international agenda
through regular academic programs
by the College of Architecture and
Urban Studies, the Pamplin College of
Business, and the College of Liberal
Arts and Human Sciences, and through
CESA continued to develop new programs and
host recurring events in summer 2006. In May,
13 faculty members representing all colleges
participated in the second International Faculty
Development Program, a 10-day intensive
international experience to develop faculty
expertise and leadership in the global arena.
its strong presence as a “regional
community citizen” and as Virginia
Tech’s European hub.
Late in 2005, CESA hired an assistant director of student support
services, whose primary responsibilities include brokering and
developing stronger opportunities, bonds, and programs for
faculty members and students throughout the town and the
local region. This has already resulted in local service work,
broader participation in musical and cultural events, and shared
participation in local sports, recreational activities, and programs
in the area schools.
CESA’s facility received new furniture and improved lighting in
the entry hall and fireplace room, creating a warmer and more
homelike quality for student and adult program participants.
CESA continued to develop new programs and host recurring
events in summer 2006. In May, 13 faculty members
representing all colleges participated in the second International
Faculty Development Program, a 10-day intensive international
experience to develop faculty expertise and leadership in the
global arena. The faculty members overlapped with 10 graduate
students participating in a new program, Preparing the Future
Professoriate, focusing on international issues in higher
education. Another exciting new program for K-12 teachers,
principals, and school superintendents studied comparative
approaches to primary and
secondary education in the
three major language areas
of Switzerland – French,
German, and Italian.
Recurring student programs
included the hospitality and
tourism management undergraduate program and biology undergraduates studying
botany of the alpine regions.
And finally, a Virginia Tech Deans’ International Retreat based in
Lugano offered programmatic activities at Villa Maderni.
A visionary, long-range master plan for the evolution of CESA
has evolved significantly. Designed by our local architects, this
plan will dramatically improve services and program facilities.
Organized around a central campus theme, it will better utilize
the extraordinary Villa Maderni complex. This project will include
a phase to renovate the stables into large multipurpose lecture
and presentation spaces. A new dining space will allow a singleseating option for meals. Through realization of this master plan,
CESA will enable future generations of students and faculty
members to enjoy even higher-quality experiences and additional
opportunities for program development.
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
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VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
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The Pete Dye River Course offers breathtaking views and golf.
PETE DYE RIVER COURSE AT VIRGINIA TECH
CONVERGENCE
The commitment of Bill and Alice
Goodwin, the vision of Pete Dye, and
the teamwork of the River Course
professional staff converged during the
past two-and-a-half years, resulting
in one of the most beautiful and
challenging golf courses in the nation.
The golf course and adjoining turf care
center and golf team complex were
“Virginia Tech will now have the potential
to host championship golf tournaments on a
regional and national level. The golf course
gives us the potential to have one of the
nation’s finest intercollegiate golf programs.”
Jay Hardwick, Tech golf coach.
dedicated on June 5, 2006, with Bill
Goodwin, Pete Dye, President Charles
Steger, and other Tech supporters and
golfing enthusiasts participating in the
inaugural golf event.
“Virginia Tech will now have the potential to host championship
golf tournaments on a regional and national level,” said Jay
Hardwick, Tech golf coach. “The golf course, along with the team
complex containing the most modern facilities for teaching and
practice, give us the potential to have one of the nation’s finest
intercollegiate golf programs.”
Daily play along with special events increased significantly
as golfers became aware of the unique and challenging
characteristics of the course. Several club events were held during
the season, including championships for men and women,
member-guest tournaments, a junior golf camp, and a Blue Ridge
Junior Golf Tour event featuring 80 young golfers from three
states. In addition, Head Professional and General Manager John
Norton planned and hosted 15 private events for area chambers
of commerce, businesses, and civic/social organizations.
Maintaining 42 acres of bent grass tees, fairways, and greens
along with 120 bunkers, two waste areas, 78 acres of rough,
the seven-acre driving range, and $250,000 worth of support
equipment is the task of course superintendent Mark Cote,
a graduate of the Virginia
Tech turf grass program.
His previous experience at
The Homestead and The
Greenbrier served him
well as he carefully and
consistently improved the
new and immature turf.
Kris Bales was named
business manager in
February. She holds a
master’s degree in accounting from Indiana University and has
several years of experience with small and large businesses.
At the dedication event, Steger announced a major gift from
the Williams-Berry Charitable Trust to support the construction
of the new clubhouse. The gift honors Harry and Patsy Williams
for their long-time support of Virginia Tech and their interest in
golf. Clubhouse planning continues with the goal of beginning
construction in early 2007.
“The convergence continues,” said David Lowe, chairman
of the operating board. “Caring and committed Hokies
are providing the resources and we have a professional
management team dedicated to delivering the very finest
overall golfing experience.”
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
17
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
CHARTS AND GRAPHS
The foundation’s managed funds increased by $80.9 million, ending the year at a value of $808.9 million. Private giving remained strong,
and foundation net revenues totaled $167.5 million, while expenditures supporting various university projects and programs totaled
$102.4 million.
REVENUES, GAINS, AND OTHER SUPPORT
B
C
D
A
E
G
A.Contributions.............................$81,815,223................. 48.7%
B.Investment income......................12,143,002................... 7.2%
C.Net gains on investments.............27,064,846................. 16.2%
D.Rental income..............................10,652,897................... 6.4%
E.Hotel Roanoke revenues..............18,586,741................. 11.1%
F. Other income...............................16,192,219................... 9.8%
G.Golf Course Revenue......................1,003,532................... 0.6%
Total.................................... $167,458,460...............100.0%
F
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
18
300
30
200
100
20
10
VALUE OF TRUSTS | TOTALS IN MILLIONS
60
30
40
20
2005: $97.8
20
2006: $102.4
40
2004: $86.6
80
2003: $95.1
50
2002: $88
100
10
0
0
CONSOLIDATED ENDOWMENT PERFORMANCE
12
10
8
TEN YEAR: 7.5%
0
FIVE YEAR: 6.8%
2
THREE YEAR: 12.5%
4
ONE YEAR: 11%
6
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
19
2004: $45.1
FOUNDATION EXPENDITURES | TOTALS IN MILLIONS
2003: $44.3
0
2002: $44.7
0
2006: $81.8
40
2006: $48.4
400
2005: $71.6
50
2005: $47.1
500
2004: $53.9
60
2006: $808.9
600
2005: $728.0
70
2004: $670.4
700
2003: $613.5
80
2002: $601.3
800
2003: $47.3
FOUNDATION CONTRIBUTIONS | TOTALS IN MILLIONS
2002: $49.1
FOUNDATION ASSETS | TOTALS IN MILLIONS
EXPENDITURES BY COLLEGE OR PROGRAM
PROGRAM
SUPPORT
COLLEGE/UNIVERSITY PROGRAM
STUDENT
FINANCIAL AID
Agriculture & Life Sciences................................. $3,889,833 ....................................... $502,788 ..................................... $3,387,045
Architecture & Urban Studies.................................. 961,484 ......................................... 163,141 .......................................... 798,343
Science................................................................. 2,124,885 ......................................... 274,557 ....................................... 1,850,328
Business............................................................... 2,852,540 ......................................... 749,930 ....................................... 2,102,610
Engineering......................................................... 9,088,285 ...................................... 3,033,437 ....................................... 6,054,848
Natural Resources................................................ 1,636,647 ......................................... 238,559 ....................................... 1,398,088
Liberal Arts & Human Sciences............................. 2,753,638 ......................................... 301,761 ....................................... 2,451,877
Veterinary Medicine............................................. 1,488,201 ......................................... 380,004 ....................................... 1,108,197
Athletics............................................................. 16,269,832 ...................................... 5,000,778 ..................................... 11,269,054
Extension................................................................ 862,432 ............................................. 8,331 .......................................... 854,101
Corps of Cadets........................................................ 898,877 ......................................... 650,854 .......................................... 248,023
General Scholarship............................................. 2,199,551 ...................................... 2,199,551 ..................................................... University Development....................................... 8,438,277 ..................................................... - ....................................... 8,438,277
Alumni Affairs...................................................... 6,559,364 ..................................................... - ....................................... 6,559,364
Bioinformatics........................................................... 23,936 ..................................................... - ............................................ 23,936
Outreach.............................................................. 1,090,627 ..................................................... - ....................................... 1,090,627
Research.............................................................. 3,664,340 ..................................................... - ....................................... 3,664,340
Student Affairs........................................................ 676,043 ..................................................... - .......................................... 676,043
4-H Centers............................................................. 674,330 ................................................ 400 .......................................... 673,930
Center for European Studies & Architecture............. 668,927 ..................................................... - .......................................... 668,927
WVTF Public Radio............................................... 2,508,225 ..................................................... - ....................................... 2,508,225
FOUNDATION OPERATIONS
COLLEGE OR PROGRAM
TOTAL
Hotel Roanoke.................................................... 16,735,644 ..................................................... - ..................................... 16,735,644
Corporate Research Center................................... 6,866,823 ..................................................... - ....................................... 6,866,823
River Course, LLC.................................................. 1,579,654 ..................................................... - ....................................... 1,579,654
Real Estate........................................................... 2,579,912 ..................................................... - ....................................... 2,579,912
Administrative . ................................................... 1,944,915 ..................................................... - ....................................... 1,944,915
Other.................................................................... 3,400,145 ..................................................... - ....................................... 3,400,145
TOTAL.................................................... $102,437,367 ............................. $13,504,091 .............................. $89,933,276
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
20
EXPENDITURE BY FUNCTION
CATEGORY
DESIGNATION OF CONTRIBUTIONS
EXPENDITURES
(IN MILLIONS) ALLOCATION
COLLEGE/PROGRAM/OTHER CONTRIBUTIONS ALLOCATION
A.Support to University Programs........$44,231 ........... 43.3%
B.Student Financial Assistance...............13,504............ 13.2%
C.University Capital Outlay.......................8,800.............. 8.6%
D.Fundraising...........................................8,930.............. 8.7%
E.Corporate Research Center....................6,867.............. 6.7%
F. Hotel Roanoke....................................16,736............ 16.3%
G.Management and General....................1,789.............. 1.7%
H.River Course..........................................1,580.............. 1.5%
TOTAL...........................................$102,437......... 100.0%
G
H
F
A
E
D
Agriculture & Life Sciences................$2,983,553...............3.6%
Architecture & Urban Studies..............3,216,205 ..............3.9%
Science................................................3,278,068...............4.0%
Business..............................................3,156,376...............3.9%
Engineering......................................18,197,270.............22.2%
Natural Resources...............................1,053,126...............1.3%
Liberal Arts & Human Sciences............3,409,252...............4.2%
Veterinary Medicine............................2,028,520...............2.5%
Alumni Affairs.....................................3,341,700...............4.1%
Athletics............................................26,750,093.............32.7%
Extension...............................................606,345...............0.7%
Academic Affairs.................................1,386,195...............1.7%
Information Systems................................76,120...............0.1%
International Programs............................93,780...............0.1%
Research and Graduate Studies..............438,899...............0.5%
Student Affairs.......................................435,978...............0.5%
Corps of Cadets....................................1,596,628...............2.0%
WVTF Public Radio..............................2,270,710...............2.8%
4-H Centers............................................905,252...............1.1%
Real Estate..........................................1,869,622...............2.3%
Trusts...................................................$295,306...............0.4%
Future Designations............................1,358,295...............1.7%
Pledges Receivable................................886,980...............1.1%
Gift Annuities.........................................226,797...............0.3%
Other...................................................1,954,153...............2.4%
TOTAL....................................... $81,815,223......... 100.0%
C
B
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
21
ENDOWMENT PURPOSE
ENDOWMENT HIGHLIGHTS
Category
Market Value Allocation # of Funds
A.Scholarships.......... $212,836,432.........48.0%......... 1,886
B.Professorships........... 66,144,708.........14.9%............ 168 C.Other...................... 168,423,608.........37.1%............ 722
TOTAL....................$447,404,748 .....100.0%........ 2,776
The June 30 allocation of the foundation’s pooled endowment fund
consisted of 32.1 percent domestic equity, 14.8 percent foreign
equity, 8.1 percent real assets, 20.3 percent marketable alternative
assets, 7.2 percent non-marketable alternative assets, 17.4 percent
U.S. bonds, and .1 percent cash and cash equivalents. The fund
achieved an 11 percent return over the trailing one-year period and
an annualized return of 7.5 percent over the trailing 10-year period.
B
A
C
ENDOWMENT VALUE PER STUDENT
Fiscal
Year
Endowment Market Value
Students as of
Fall Semester
As of June 30, 2006, the market value of all endowments held by the
Virginia Tech Foundation Inc., including pledges to endowments, totaled
$447.4 million, an amount that was held in 2,776 individual accounts. Of
the total endowment, $423.3 million is invested in the foundation’s pooled
consolidated endowment fund, while $24.1 million is held separately
in real estate partnerships, notes, deeds of trust, and contributions
receivable, as well as other corporate securities. Endowment value per
FTE student was $16,447 for the same time frame.
$ per
Student
1990............ $120,170,954 ..................23,320 . ............... $5,153 1991.............. 131,195,712 ..................23,937 . ................. 5,481 1992.............. 147,933,178 ..................24,548 . ................. 6,026 1993.............. 168,058,641 ..................24,337 . ................. 6,905 1994.............. 169,304,165 ..................24,504 . ................. 6,909 1995.............. 205,138,585 ..................24,405 . ................. 8,406 1996.............. 244,537,663 ..................24,123................. 10,137 1997.............. 285,704,195 ..................24,952 . ............... 11,450 1998.............. 331,013,180 ..................25,977 . ............... 12,743 1999.............. 340,243,732 ..................26,343 . ............... 12,916 2000.............. 368,196,579 ..................26,558 . ............... 13,864 2001.............. 359,527,534 ..................26,199 . ............... 13,723 2002.............. 328,679,928 ..................26,561 . ............... 12,375 2003.............. 331,311,105 ..................26,456 . ............... 12,523 2004.............. 370,811,010 ..................26,558 . ............... 13,962 2005.............. 408,560,308 ..................26,686 . ............... 15,309 2006.............. 447,404,748 ..................27,202 . ............... 16,447
The overriding principle of the foundation’s consolidated endowment
program is simple: funds should be managed so that a gift today will
fund a donor’s objective in perpetuity. For example, if a benefactor
wants to endow a scholarship, the money is managed to maintain
the real value of the endowment and keep pace with inflation.
Each gift entering the consolidated endowment fund purchases units
analogous to shares in a mutual fund, and a payout-per-unit (or
dividend) is paid quarterly. In an effort to maintain the endowment’s
purchasing power, the payout rate is adjusted annually to reflect the
change in the Consumer Price Index over the preceding calendar year.
Historical investment return data is used to determine upper and
lower boundaries for total spending. A three-year average is used
to smooth out the unit values when determining if spending falls
between the upper and lower boundaries. Without this moving
average, funding might dramatically rise in one year, then fall
drastically the next, leaving the beneficiaries of the endowments
vulnerable to increased volatility in the capital markets.
Decisions on how to manage the foundation’s consolidated
endowment pool are made by its Investment Committee, whose
main focus is the asset allocation of the fund. Over 80 percent of a
fund’s return is determined by its asset allocation versus individual
money managers. An endowment consultant is retained to assist the
Investment Committee and VTF staff with asset allocation decisions,
the selection and retention of managers, performance monitoring,
and related endowment policy issues. To completely diversify its
portfolio, the foundation employs more than 60 management firms
offering a wide variety of asset classes and investment styles.
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
22
ENDOWMENT MARKET VALUE
COLLEGE OR AREA
Total
Scholarships
Professorships
Other
Agriculture.....................................$20,512,590............................ $9,668,006.............................$4,476,148......................$6,368,436
Architecture.....................................10,468,267.............................. 2,476,355...............................3,027,443........................4,964,469
Science.............................................12,077,883.............................. 5,436,960...............................4,328,067........................2,312,856
Business...........................................52,556,761............................ 21,076,015.............................15,168,179......................16,312,567
Engineering.....................................65,160,549............................ 30,049,432.............................25,023,353......................10,087,764
Natural Resources............................12,815,649.............................. 3,080,088...............................4,374,751........................5,360,810
Liberal Arts & Human Sciences.........11,095,475.............................. 5,101,329...............................2,524,291........................3,469,855
Veterinary Medicine.........................18,186,516.............................. 8,680,899...............................3,683,939........................5,821,678
Athletics...........................................32,142,756............................ 31,563,295............................................. -...........................579,461
Extension...........................................8,421,670.............................. 1,434,662...............................1,438,270........................5,548,738
General..........................................126,172,514............................ 50,611,508...............................2,100,267......................73,460,739
Other Agency.....................................8,149,822................................. 100,151............................................. -........................8,049,671
Pratt/Animal Nutrition.....................20,908,410............................ 11,938,873............................................. -........................8,969,537
Pratt/Engineering............................20,078,165............................ 16,915,854............................................. -........................3,162,311
Quasi-Endowment...........................12,971,214.............................................-............................................. -......................12,971,214
Corps of Cadets.................................15,686,507............................ 14,703,005............................................. -...........................983,502
TOTAL.................................... $447,404,748.....................$212,836,432.......................$66,144,708...............$168,423,608
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
23
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY
ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
26
Torgersen bridge and the Pylons welcome visitors to campus.
FROM THE VICE PRESIDENT
Elizabeth A. “Betsy” Flanagan | Vice President for Development and University Relations
For several years, Virginia Tech’s friends
and alumni have been supporting the
university at an extraordinary level. This
year was no different. In fiscal year 20052006, Virginia Tech raised $75.3 million.
Though that is a slight dip from the
previous year’s record $76.5 million, it is
enough to be ranked as the second highest
private giving total ever at the university.
Everything that happens at Virginia Tech —
from pioneering research to inspired teaching
to engagement with the larger community —
is made possible by the university’s dedicated
alumni and friends.
Perhaps the most impressive thing about fiscal year 2005-2006
is the devotion that Virginia Tech’s alumni showed — donating
nearly $33 million dollars. That’s an increase of more than $7
million over 2004-2005. This year, alumni accounted for 43
percent of all giving to the university. When you add giving from
parents, friends, university employees, and family foundations,
the share increases to 68 percent. Unrestricted giving also saw an
impressive increase of 37 percent over fiscal year 2004-2005.
The job of our university has always been to educate, but how we
do so changes as we strive to meet the needs and expectations of
a world that reaches far beyond the boundaries of our campus.
We need to prepare students to live and work in a diverse and
global marketplace. That’s why we are continually seeking better
ways to teach our students, conduct forward-looking research,
and reach out to a broader community.
Now, more than ever, private giving fuels our quest. Everything
that happens at Virginia Tech — from pioneering research to
inspired teaching to engagement with the larger community —
is made possible by the university’s dedicated alumni and friends.
Private support is an essential component of our continued
success and, we hope, a reflection of the pride and confidence
that Virginia Tech’s family
and friends have in this great
university. We look forward to
renewing and sustaining that
trust in the years ahead.
It’s this kind of private support that is helping Virginia Tech’s eight
colleges provide innovative teaching and research opportunities
for students and faculty members. This year revenue for Virginia
Tech’s colleges grew by 16 percent, and two colleges, the College
of Engineering and the College of Architecture and Urban Studies,
saw their highest private giving totals on record.
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
27
Elizabeth A. “Betsy”
Flanagan
Vice President
for Development
and University Relations
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
28
Students cross the Drillfield on the way to and from class.
PRIVATE GIVING TOTALS $75.3 MILLION IN FISCAL YEAR 2005-2006
REMARKABLE LEVELS OF PRIVATE SUPPORT
Virginia Tech’s friends, alumni, and
corporate partners once again showed
their unwavering support for the
university by contributing $75.3 million in
2005-2006, marking the second highest
private giving total ever at the university.
Private support helped the College of Engineering raise a record
$16.8 million. Also raising a record amount was the College of
Architecture and Urban Studies, with $2.85 million. Several other
colleges benefited from significant increases in private funding.
The College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences raised 48 percent
more in private funds than they did in 2004-2005, and the
Pamplin College of Business saw an increase of nearly 17 percent.
Intercollegiate Athletics, Fine Arts, University Honors, and the
Graduate School also saw strong increases in their giving totals.
One of the most significant gifts this year is a joint venture by
two fraternity brothers — John Lawson and Ross Myers. The
two men, both successful businessmen, pledged $10 million
to create the Myers-Lawson School of Construction. The school
will enhance Virginia Tech’s position of national leadership in
construction education and research. The teaching and learning
that takes place at the Myers-Lawson School of Construction will
also focus on values-based leadership and the development of an
ethical community of construction personnel.
Corporations and foundations also provided generous
support for Virginia Tech initiatives:
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation donated $1.75 million to
support Virginia Tech’s Institute for Cultural Policy and Practice
(ICPP) to fund the ongoing work of The Orchestra Forum.
Micron Technology Inc. donated $600,000 for the Micron
Technology Semiconductor Processing Laboratory in the Bradley
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Several corporations are also noteworthy for increasing
the giving power of their employees through matching
gifts programs.
Matching gifts from our four top matching gift companies totaled
$440,000. They are ExxonMobil Foundation, Fidelity Investments,
The GE Foundation, and Norfolk Southern Foundation.
Year in and year out, much of what we accomplish at Virginia
Tech is made possible by remarkable levels of private support.
Thanks to our many friends, alumni, parents, and partners, this
university, and those who benefit from all we do here, can look
forward to a future filled with enhanced learning experiences,
deeper and broader discoveries, and an unparalleled degree of
engagement with our region, our nation, and the world.
Another alumnus made a significant gift, this one to the College
of Agriculture and Life Sciences. The generosity of William Latham
and his wife Betty led the university to name the new agriculture
and life sciences building the William C. and Elizabeth H. Latham
Agriculture and Life Sciences Building. The Lathams, whose
gift will provide lab equipment and financial aid, hope to see
their generosity pay dividends for young Virginia Tech scholars,
allowing them enhanced opportunities for hands-on research.
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
29
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
30
Winter at the Duck Pond
MAJOR GIFT HIGHLIGHTS
OUTRIGHT GIFTS OF $100,000 OR MORE GIVEN TO THE UNIVERSITY IN FISCAL YEAR 2005-2006
INDIVIDUALS | $1 MILLION +
From Michael J. Quillen and Sherwood
Payne Quillen of Bristol, Va., supporting
the Quillen Scholarship Endowed Fund,
the Institute for Critical Technology and
Applied Science (ICTAS), the College
of Engineering, and Virginia Tech
Athletics. From Eleanor D. Davenport
of Richmond, Va., providing
scholarship support in the College
of Engineering through the Eleanor
Davenport Leadership Fund.
From the estate of the late George A.
Stewart of High Point, N.C., endowing
the George A. Stewart Engineering
Endowed Scholarship and the George
A. Stewart Scholarship in Athletics.
From the estate of the late William
B. Webber of Tigard, Ore., for the
William B. Webber Electrical and
Computer Engineering Unrestricted
Fund Endowment.
From William B. Holtzman of Edinburg,
Va., for the Alumni and Conference
Center Campaign.
From William H. Goodwin Jr. and Alice
T. Goodwin of Richmond, Va., in support
of the River Course reconstruction.
From John R. Lawson of Newport
News, Va., providing funding for the
Myers-Lawson School of Construction
and Virginia Tech Athletics.
From the Eugene V. Fife Family
Foundation of Charlottesville, Va., for
future designation.
From Norris E. and Laura A. Mitchell of
McLean, Va., for the Norris E. and Laura
A. Mitchell Endowed Professorship
benefiting the College of Engineering.
INDIVIDUALS | $500,000+
From Robert B. Pamplin of Portland,
Ore., in support of the Pamplin Scholars
Endowment, the Pamplin Foundation
MBA Endowment, and the Virginia Tech
Corps of Cadets Pamplin Endowment.
An anonymous gift in support of
the Alumni and Conference Center
Campaign.
From W.S. White Jr. of Columbus,
Ohio, in support of the College of
Engineering’s Unrestricted Fund and
the Institute for Critical Technology and
Applied Science.
From Vicki and Robert L. Freeman Jr.
of Newport News, Va., supporting the
renovation of the River Course and for
future designation.
From John R. Jones III of Dublin, Ohio,
in support of Virginia Tech Athletics and
the John R. Jones III Faculty Fellowship
in the College of Engineering.
From Willis P. and Mary N. Blackwood
of Midlothian, Va., in support of
Virginia Tech Athletics, the Willis P.
Blackwood Endowed Scholarship in
Entrepreneurship for the Pamplin
College of Business, and the Blackwood
Junior Faculty Fellowship in the College
of Science.
INDIVIDUALS | $250,000+
From the estate of the late Ralph L.
Price of Blacksburg, Va., supporting
the Ralph L. and Katherine W. Price
Endowed Scholarship in Athletics, the
Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets Ralph
L. and Katherine W. Price Scholarship
Fund, and the Ralph L. and Katherine
W. Price Business Scholarship.
From William A. Hazel of Broad Run,
Va., to benefit the Building Construction
Facility Fund.
From Nicholas and Fay Street, Lauren
Street, and David Street of Bristol, Va.,
for the Lane Stadium expansion.
From the estate of the late Peter D.
Pruden Jr. of Suffolk, Va., for the Peter
& Phyllis Pruden Endowed Scholarship
Fund, providing scholarship support to
the College of Engineering.
From Marvin L. Johnson of Huntington
Beach, Calif., to support the Marvin L.
& Susan Johnson Graduate Fellowship
in the Bradley Department of Electrical
and Computer Engineering.
INDIVIDUALS | $100,000+
From the estate of the late Ralph
G. Roop of Richmond, Va., to benefit
the College of Liberal Arts and Human
Sciences.
continues...
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
31
MAJOR GIFT HIGHLIGHTS
CONTINUED
From Alfred E. Knobler of New
York, N.Y., in support of the Alfred E.
Knobler Graduate Assistantships in
the departments of Materials Science
Engineering and English.
From George and Michele Nolen
of Centreville, Va., benefiting the
Institute for Critical Technology &
Applied Science, the Pamplin College of
Business, and Virginia Tech Athletics.
From Leon and Beverly Harris of
Roanoke, Va., to support the collaboration
with the Art Museum of Western Virginia,
the Lane Stadium expansion, the Virginia
Tech Corps of Cadets Leon Harris ‘64 &
Beverly Harris Scholarship, the VT Class of
1964 Fund for the Alumni and Conference
Center, and the College of Engineering.
An anonymous gift in support of an
endowed dean’s discretionary fund
benefiting the College of Engineering.
From Charles M. Neviaser of
Jacksonville, Fla., in support of the
Charles “Buddy” Neviaser Scholarship
for the Pamplin College of Business.
From June Oblinger Shott of Bluefield,
W.Va., benefiting the Lane Stadium
south end zone expansion.
From R. Gregory and Rebecca
G. Porter III of Lynchburg, Va., to
establish three Virginia Tech Corps of
Cadets scholarships named for Robert
G. Porter Jr. ‘29, R. Gregory Porter III ‘62,
and Joseph Milton Greene ‘32.
From Chester A. Waldron of Sarasota,
Fla., in abiding support for the Chester
A. & Anne H. Waldron Endowed
Athletics Scholarship.
From Thomas and Daisy Byrd of
Richmond, Va., establishing the
Thomas R. Byrd Endowed Scholarship in
Accounting and Information Systems.
From the estate of Patrick J. Flanagan
of Richmond, Va., in support of the
Pamplin College of Business and the
Patrick J. Flanagan Athletic Scholarship.
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
32
From the Grover L. Wilson and
Elizabeth H. Wilson Trust of
Bradenton, Fla., providing continuing
support for the Elizabeth & Grover
L. Wilson Endowed Scholarship, a
university-wide scholarship.
From Mr. and Mrs. Bertram R. Firestone
of Upperville, Va., a gift providing funds for
diagnostic equipment at the Marion duPont
Scott Equine Medical Center in Leesburg, Va.
From Freda Bullington Johnson and
W. Stuart Johnson of Keswick, Va.,
providing continuing support for the
German Club Alumni Account, Virginia
Tech Corps of Cadets immediate
needs, and the Freda Bullington
Johnson & W. Stuart Johnson Animal
Compassion Fund, benefiting the
Virginia-Maryland Regional College of
Veterinary Medicine.
From Cliff and Agnes Lilly of
Chesterfield, Va., a gift to the
Department of Physics and the Dr. A.C.
Lilly Jr. Faculty Fellowship in the College
of Science.
From the estate of the late David
W. Francis of Pilot, Va., funding the
David W. & Lillian Francis Memorial
Scholarship, providing financial aid to
the Graduate School.
From Dr. Hilda Meth of Richmond, Va.,
establishing the Rebeka Becks Fund in
Human Development.
From John W. Bates III of Richmond,
Va., in support of the Alumni and
Conference Center Campaign.
From Georgia A. Snyder-Falkinham
of Blacksburg, Va., in enduring support
for the Lane Stadium expansion, the
Building Construction Facility Fund,
the Solar Decathlon, and men’s and
women’s basketball.
From Edsel H. Lester and his daughter,
Kimberlee W. Lester, of Roanoke, Va.,
for the Lane Stadium expansion.
From William E. Hassinger Jr. of
Greensboro, N.C., endowing the Hassinger
Graduate Fellowship in Physics.
From Dr. Charles W. Schiffert and
Dolores S. Schiffert of Blacksburg, Va.,
in the form of a charitable remainder
unitrust to endow the Charles W. and
Dolores S. Schiffert Scholarship, which
will provide financial aid to pre-medical
and pre-dental students.
From Ray D. and Violet T. Frith of
Bassett, Va., to the Biological Systems
Engineering Lab renovation.
From David B. Osborne of Charlotte,
N.C., for the David B. Osborne Endowed
Scholarship to provide financial aid to
engineering students.
From William C. and Rennie M. McAllister
of Richmond, Va., continued support for the
William C. McAllister Leadership Scholars
Fund in the College of Engineering, the
Engineering Science and Mechanics
Leadership Fund, and the VTCCA William C.
McAllister Endowed Scholarship.
From Jerry L. Hulick of Fairfax, Va.,
creating the Serving Spirit Graduate
Fellowship endowment to provide
support for students pursuing a career
in serving special needs individuals.
From William and Beverly Southworth
of Milford, Va., in support of the Lane
Stadium expansion.
From Kelso S. Baker of Sewickley, Pa.,
for civil and environmental engineering
laboratory renovation projects.
From Hiram J. Howard of Fredericksburg, Va., for the River Course clubhouse
construction.
From Dr. William Grossmann of
Heidelberg, Germany, in support of the
Charlie L. Yates Scholarship for Leaders
in Aerospace and Ocean Engineering.
An anonymous donation to the
Department of Hospitality and Tourism
Management.
continues...
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
33
MAJOR GIFT HIGHLIGHTS
CONTINUED
From James R. Burruss of Lynchburg,
Va., a gift of real estate to benefit the
Lane Stadium expansion.
From Steven T. Conner of Appomattox,
Va., establishing the Steven T. Conner
Athletic Scholarship Endowment.
From John Grado of Marco Island, Fla.,
for the Grado Department of Industrial
and Systems Engineering and the ISE
Scholarship Fund.
From W. Vernon McClure Jr. of
Chesterfield, Va., a gift of real estate
supporting the River Course renovations.
From Judith S. Strickler of Harrisonburg,
Va., a gift to the Minnis E. Ridenour
Faculty Fellowship in Architecture and
Urban Studies.
From Frank W. Webber Jr. of
Midlothian, Va., endowing the Webber
Family Scholarship in the Pamplin
College of Business.
From Mildred C. Weidemann of Fort
Collins, Colo., to establish the Mildred
Crawford Weidemann Scholarship in
the College of Liberal Arts and Human
Sciences.
$600,000 from Micron Technology
Inc. of Boise, Idaho, for the Micron
Technology Semiconductor Processing
Laboratory in the Bradley Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering.
$506,000 from PPD Inc. of Richmond, Va.,
the value of a gift of two mass spectrometers
housed in the Department of Biology.
$407,500 from Reynolds American Inc.
of Winston-Salem, N.C., in support of
the RJ Reynolds Internship in Statistics
and the RJRT Postdoctoral Fellowship in
the College of Science.
From Frank A. Perna Jr. of Vienna, Va.,
providing funding for the Patricia C.
Perna University Honors Endowment.
From Peggy and T. Marshall Hahn Jr.
of Blacksburg, Va., for the creation of
the Meadow Garden at the Peggy Lee
Hahn Garden Pavilion.
An anonymous gift in support of
the Alumni and Conference Center
Campaign, the Pamplin College of
Business MBA Program, the Department
of Accounting and Information Systems,
the Ora G. Roop Endowed Scholarship,
the Wayne E. Leininger Endowed
Professorship in AIS, the Konrad W.
Kubin Endowed Professorship in AIS,
and Alumni Association Programs.
From James R. and Augustine D.
Smith of Roanoke, Va., a matching gift
in support of the horticulture gardens.
CORPORATIONS, FOUNDATIONS,
AND ORGANIZATIONS
$1.75 million from the Andrew W.
Mellon Foundation of New York, N.Y.,
supporting Virginia Tech’s Institute for
Cultural Policy and Practice to fund the
ongoing work of The Orchestra Forum.
$1.6 million from the Via-Bradley
College of Engineering Foundation
of Roanoke, Va., in support of the
H.L. Bradley Endowment in Electrical
Engineering and the Charles E. Via Civil
Engineering Endowment.
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
34
$338,000 from Pulte Homes Inc. of
Bloomfield Hills, Mich., in support of the
Pulte Homes Endowed Professorship
and the Building Construction General
Scholarship.
$300,000 from Aspen Technology Inc.
of Cambridge, Mass., providing funding
to the Computer-Aided Design program
in chemical engineering.
$216,850 from Microsoft Corporation
of Redmond, Wash., benefiting the
Teaching with Technology and the
Assessing the Effectiveness of Tablet
PCs research programs in the Bradley
Department of Electrical Computer
Engineering.
$200,000 from Transportation
Technology Center Inc. of Pueblo,
Colo., in support of the Railway
Technologies Laboratory in mechanical
engineering.
$146,000 from Tektronix Inc. of
Beaverton, Ore., the value of cash
gifts and electronic equipment
benefiting the Mobile and Portable
Radio Research Group in the Bradley
Department of Electrical and
Computer Engineering.
$139,000 from the National Wooden
Pallet & Container Association
of Alexandria, Va., to benefit the
Department of Wood Science and
Forest Products in the College of Natural
Resources.
$127,500 from Willard Construction
of Roanoke Valley Inc. supporting the
W.E. Skelton 4-H Educational Conference
Center at Smith Mountain Lake, the
River Course clubhouse construction,
the Lane Stadium expansion, and
Virginia Tech Athletics.
$150,000 from SunTrust Mid-Atlantic
Foundation of Richmond, Va., for the
Richard E. Sorensen Professorship in
Finance.
$150,000 from the Decade Charitable
Lead Annuity Trust of Miami, Fla.,
providing an endowment gift to the Jean
Ellen Shehan Professorship Endowment
and the Marion duPont Scott Equine
Medical Center in Leesburg, Va.
$125,000 from the Harvey W. Peters
Research Center of Roanoke, Va.,
in support of the Harvey W. Peters
Research Center for the Study of
Parkinson’s Disease and Other Central
Nervous System Disorders.
$118,000 from Blueprint Automation
Inc. of Colonial Heights, Va., the value
of robotic equipment donated to the
Grado Department of Industrial and
Systems Engineering.
$110,000 from Electrical Distribution
Design Inc. of Blacksburg, Va.,
benefiting the Distribution Analysis
and Economic Evaluation Program in
the Bradley Department of Electrical
and Computer Engineering.
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
35
$102,000 from Texas Instruments Inc.
of Dallas, Texas, contributions to the
Mobile and Portable Radio Research
Group and the Cognitive Radio Research
programs in the Bradley Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering.
$100,000 from Comcast Cable of
Philadelphia, Pa., providing funds to
the Grant A. Dove Professorship in
Electrical and Computer Engineering.
$100,000 from the Williams-Berry
Charitable Foundation Trust of Bristol,
Va., for the Building Construction
Facility Fund.
OUTSTANDING MATCHING
GIFT PROGRAMS
$149,000 from ExxonMobil Foundation
providing matching gifts to 34 various
designations.
$112,000 from Fidelity Investments
in donor-advised funds to 27 programs,
departments, and colleges.
$95,000 from GE Foundation in
matching gifts benefiting 44 different
Virginia Tech funds.
$84,000 from Norfolk Southern
Foundation for 17 colleges and fund
designations.
DESIGNATION OF CONTRIBUTIONS
a
W Y
UV X
ST
A
B
Z
C
D
R
E
L KJ
QPONM
A.College of Agriculture & Life Sciences............ $ 2,763,722....... 3.67%
Includes Middleburg Agricultural Research & Extension Center...............$118,716
B.College of Architecture & Urban Studies........2,854,110........3.79%
C. Pamplin College of Business..........................3,013,640........4.00%
D.College of Engineering.................................16,811,426......22.32%
E. College of Liberal Arts & Human Sciences.....3,055,471........4.06%
F. College of Natural Resources.............................881,446........1.17%
G.College of Science...........................................2,875,582........3.82%
H.College of Veterinary Medicine......................1,579,457........2.10%
Includes Equine Medical Center................................................................. $759,985
I. Administration/Other....................................2,318,752........3.08%
J. Alumni & University Conference Center........2,567,372........3.41%
K.Alumni Programs..............................................101,782........0.14%
L. Corps of Cadets.............................................1,240,166........1.65%
M.Financial Aid......................................................403,951........0.54%
N.Fine Arts............................................................218,477........0.29%
O.Graduate School................................................222,776........0.30%
P. Honors Program................................................540,500........0.72%
I
H
G
F
Q.Independent Centers..........................................91,941........0.12%
R.Intercollegiate Athletics...............................24,745,023......32.81%
S. Library...............................................................154,623........0.21%
T. Multicultural Programs.......................................99,133........0.13%
U.Parents’ Fund.....................................................354,426........0.47%
V. Skelton 4-H Center at Smith Mountain Lake....302,155........0.40%
W.Student Affairs..................................................494,211........0.66%
X.University Unrestricted.....................................544,103........0.72%
Y. Virginia 4-H Foundation......................................61,777........0.08%
Z. WVTF Public Radio.........................................1,771,370........2.35%
a. Private Grants . .........................................5,262,608........6.99%
Total....................................................... $75,330,000... 100.00%
Administration/Other listing includes cumulative projects and designations, such as Information
Technology, Reynolds Homestead, gifts to be designated, etc.
Equine Programs (MARE Center and Equine Medical Center) total $878,701 or 1.17% of overall
fiscal year 2006 private gift income
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
36
USES OF GIFTS
SOURCES OF GIFTS
A.Alumni..............................$32,668,939..................... 43.36%
Alumni...................................32,651,388........................43.34%
Students........................................17,551.......................... 0.02%
B.Parents..................................2,345,288....................... 3.11%
C.Friends................................13,565,305..................... 18.01%
D.Faculty/staff..........................1,012,491....................... 1.35%
Active..........................................916,694.......................... 1.22%
Retired.........................................957,970............................. 13%
E.Corporations.......................13,729,278.................... 18.23%
Direct Gifts And Grants.............8,303,615........................11.02%
Matching Gifts..........................1,602,602........................ 2.13%
Private Grants...........................3,823,061.......................... 5.08%
F. Foundations..........................7,447,827....................... 9.89%
Direct Gifts And Grants.............4,244,616.......................... 5.64%
Personal/Family Fdns...............1,763,664.......................... 2.34%
Private Grants...........................1,439,547.......................... 1.91%
G.Other Organizations..............4,560,872....................... 6.05%
A. Current Operations...........$38,290,275......................50.83%
B. Endowment........................17,227,772......................22.87%
C. Capital Facilities..................14,549,345......................19.31%
D. Private Grants...................... 5,262,608........................6.99%
TOTAL..............................$75,330,000.................100.00%
D
C
TOTAL................................75,330,000................ 100.00%
A
G
F
B
A
E
D
C
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
37
B
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
38
The Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets produces military and civilian leaders.
THE UT PROSIM SOCIETY
Lifetime membership in the Ut Prosim Society, Virginia Tech’s most distinguished recognition society, is available on
an individual or joint basis to alumni and friends whose lifetime giving totals $100,000 or more. The society has four
giving levels: Benefactor, Senior Benefactor, Distinguished Benefactor, and President’s Circle. The following is the
membership list as of April 2006.
THE PRESIDENT’S CIRCLE
The President’s Circle constitutes the highest level of
membership within the Ut Prosim Society, and is reserved for
a select group of individuals whose exceptional contributions
to Virginia Tech total $1 million or more. The President’s Circle
Charter Members (denoted in maroon below) were the first
Ut Prosim members to be recognized for reaching this level of
giving in 2002.
Maroon = President Circle Charter Members | Bold = New and Advancing Members | * = Ut Prosim Charter Members (1987) | LS = also Legacy Society Members
Horace E. Alphin LS
Mary Elizabeth Francis*
Richard D. and
Kristen S. Bishop
Clifton C. Garvin Jr.* LS
Dr. Charles S. and
Millicent P. Brown LS
Dale C. Carter LS
T. A. and Jeanette Carter* LS
Alyce R. Cheatham*
James H. Cochrane Jr. and
Beverly H. Cochrane * LS
Joseph H. and
Barbara G. Collie
Anne Heth Connor
Ann W. Cutchins LS
Eleanor and
Bill Davenport
William C.
and Sandra C. Davis* LS
John and Constance
DeBell LS
Eugene V. Fife
and Anne L. Fife
Mr. and Mrs.
William H. Goodwin Jr.
Corrie J. and
John Grado* LS
Samuel and Lorinda
Lionberger
Mike and Sherry Quillen
Jean D. Shehan LS
Mr. and Mrs.
E. Morgan Massey
June Oblinger Shott
John P. McConnell
Bill and Peggy Skelton* LS
Mrs. Paul Mellon*
Barbara B. and
Donald G. Smith
Peggy Lee Hahn and
T. Marshall Hahn Jr.* LS
Floyd W. Merryman Jr. and
Frances T. Merryman* LS
Dr. and Mrs.
Luther J. Hamlett LS
Floyd W. Merryman III and
Lynn W. Merryman
Wendy Smith
Charles J. “Mickey”
Hayes Jr. LS
Dorothy A. Metcalf
Mr. and Mrs.
Nicholas D. Street
Bill and Ann Holtzman
Ruth C. Horton* LS
Laura and Norris Mitchell*
Ben F. Morgan Jr. LS
Doris Neviaser*
Garnett E. and
Patsy T. Smith LS
Mr. and Mrs.
Nicholas F. Taubman
Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Turner Jr. LS
Mr. and Mrs.
William E. Jamerson*
Dixie L. Noffsinger LS
Mrs. Ethel C. Kelly LS
Robert B. Pamplin* LS
G. Truman and
Margaret Hall Ward* LS
William C. and
Elizabeth H. Latham*
Robert B. Pamplin Jr.*
W.S. White Jr.
Frank D. Porter III and
Beverly V. Porter
Wesley T. Worsham* LS
John R. Lawson LS
Mr. and Mrs.
Edsel H. Lester*
William Pulte
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
39
continues...
DISTINGUISHED
BENEFACTORS
Mary B. and
Spencer W. Morten
Hugh T. Adams LS
Nancy B. and
Samuel H. Nixon Jr. LS
R. T. and Brenda Avery
Ed and Barbara Norwood LS
Fred T. and
Jane Burns Campbell
Mr. and Mrs.
R. Sidney Barrett LS
Dr. JoAnne S. O’Brien LS
Mrs. W. John Campbell Jr.
John E. Peterson Jr. LS
Carol Rector Capaldi
Robert T. and
Ruby N. Priddy
John F. Carroll Jr.
Dwight E. and
Carolyn R. Houff
Vinod and Ranjana Chachra
Jerry and Linda Hulick
Mr. and Mrs.
F. Richard Quible LS
Blakeslee Nettleton Chase
Mr. and Mrs.
George R. Irvin Jr. LS
Willis P. and
Mary N. Blackwood LS
Gordon D. Bowman II * LS
David H. Burrows * LS
Patricia A. Caldwell LS
Mitchell O. and Iris T. Carr
Mr. and Mrs.
G. Robert Quisenberry LS
Mr. and Mrs.
William S. Cross
Sondra and
William E. Reiser Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
Ben J. Davenport Jr.
Inez Roop LS
George and
Josephine DeSerio LS
Chet and Dorothy Duke LS
Mr. and Mrs.
Charles L. Eaton LS
Mrs. Edward R. English
Edward B. and
Barbara R. Scruggs LS
Mrs. Barbara Brugh
LS
Mr. and Mrs.
W. Jackson Burrows* LS
David S. and
Kryssa Jeannette Cooper
William C. Cranwell *
Madelyn and
Raymond G. Curry Jr.
Mrs. Ralph B. Davis
Leon and Beverly Harris
Shirley and Jack Harris LS
Martha B. and
Lawrence C. Heiskell LS
J. Stephen and
Audrey E. Hill*
Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip C. Jamerson
Barbara and Jim Johnson
Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin L. Johnson
Henry J. Dekker* LS
Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph L. Jones Jr. LS
J. Mark Sowers and
Deborah K. Sowers
Lois W. Dickerson LS
Thomas H. Jones* LS
Neahyba Dickinson*
Arthur A. and Marie L. Kirk
Miss Beverly R. Steinman
Robert H. Digges and
Dr. Kathleen Grega Digges
Mrs. Joel Krisch*
James M. and
Eleonore E. Stevens
Dr. Thomas G. Digges Jr.
and Lana Ingram Digges
Jean M. Lane
Patrick M. and
Nancy R. Lathrop
Georgia Anne SnyderFalkinham and Joseph O.
Falkinham III
Alphonse J. Stroobants *
Robert J. and
Julia N. Styne LS
L.H. Dixey Jr.
Mrs. Grant A. Dove LS
Richard S. and
Judy L. Foster
Robert T. and
Carolyn L. Lawson
Irwin W. Uran
Shelley L. Duke LS
Dawn H. and Gary D. Lerch LS
Mr. and Mrs.
Leo A. Vecellio Jr.
Walter W. Duncan LS
David Richard Lincicome
Edward B. Via*
Ray W. and
Sallie A. Edwards
Alan T. Lingerfelt
Chester Waldron LS
E. Ralph English Jr.
Joseph F. Ware Jr.
Mrs. W. Curtis English
Stewart B. West LS
Leona Evans
F. Adele McComas White
Howard Feiertag LS
E. Carlton Wilton Jr.
J. Gray and
Janet A. Ferguson
SENIOR BENEFACTORS
Lucy S. Ferrari LS
Ross and Beth Myers
Mr. and Mrs.
Bertram R. Firestone
William F. and
Dorothy A. Newman LS
Mrs. Charles O. Gordon Sr.* LS
Mr. and Mrs. Troy A. Peery
Dr. Frederick C. Grant LS
Douglas C. Petty Jr.
and Elizabeth M. Petty LS
Vicki L. and
Robert L. Freeman Jr.
Ray D. and Violet T. Frith
Hope M. Greiner
William A. and
Eleanor C. Hazel
F. Staley Hester Jr. LS
Dr. Tomas Hudlicky and
Dr. Josephine W. Reed
W. Stuart Johnson LS
John R. Jones III
Alf Knobler
Kelso S. and Vera M. Baker
Betty J. Leisy
Margaret T. Baldock LS
Dr. and Mrs. Clifton Lilly Jr. LS
Mrs. Laurie C. Battle LS
William C. McAllister LS
William E. “Ping” Betts Jr. *
Sara L. and
Samuel H. McGhee III LS
Lavinia A. Blick LS
Mr. and Mrs. E. George
Middleton Jr. LS
Gail Boggs LS
Harriet and Bill Miller
Michael J. Bogese Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
Elmon T. Gray*
Mr. and Mrs.
J. Wesley Hall Jr.
Mrs. Cecil W. Bolling
Harold D. and
June M. Hankins
Mrs. John L. Breeden *
Leo and Melva Harris
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
40
Harriette H. Marocchi LS
Cecil and Shirlee Maxson LS
Jack W. Miller Jr.
Richard E. Moody LS
Audre H. Moore LS
Sandy J. and Anne V. Moore
Cecil and Nancy Hall Pruitt
Glenn and Dixie Reynolds
Robert and
Nancy Richards LS
Mrs. Florence K. Roberts
Kent and Shirley Roberts
John G. Rocovich Jr. and
Sue Ellen Butler Rocovich* LS
F. Robert and
Judith L. Armentrout
Michael and Julie Boyer
William M. Brackney
George Cartledge III ‘86
and Barbara Cartledge
Malcolm M. and
Diane M. Rosenberg
H. Pat and Nancy E. Artis LS
Jerry and Sally Brammer
John Gordon Casali LS
James P. Baker and
Pat O. Baker
James A. Branscome
Ruth Groves Chaney
Louis M. Briel LS
E. Tyree Chappell
Flavius Brinsfield
Michael and
Susan Cheatham
Neville A. and
Mary H. Rowland LS
Jerry H. Ballengee
Alex Schaerer
Tommy and Laura Balzer
Eric and Wendy Schmidt
Donald J. Balzer Jr.
Marvin H. “Skip” Schuelke Jr.
Charlie and
Stephie Broadwater
Martin J. Bannon III
John G. and Bernice S. Brooks
Randy and Patricia Chrisley
Mr. and Mrs.
William C. Scruggs LS
Mr. and Mrs.
James M. Barnhardt III
D. Perry and Sharon C. Brown
Mr. and Mrs.
J. Leonard Clagett
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert H. Shultz Jr. LS
Paul B. Barringer
T. Frank Smith Jr.
Hobart Speegle Jr.*
Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas G. Stewart LS
Mr. and Mrs.
John W. Bates III LS
Wesley L. and
Bette M. Baum LS
John and Mary Jean Brown
Robert E. and
Lynne A. Brown
Don S. Cherry
Thomas R. and Ann M. Clark
Tom and Nancy Clark Jr.
Thomas C. Broyles and
Betty F. Broyles
George B. Clarke IV
Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn A. Bryant Jr.
Margie C. Clevinger
James O. and Kay Bunn
Mr. and Mrs.
J. Harwood Cochrane*
Richard O. Claus
Mrs. Charles O. Strickler*
Mr. A. Bill Beach and
Dr. Sylvia Garcia Beach
Jack and Judy Sweers LS
Frank and Cheryl Beamer
Hazel C. and Lee C. Tait LS
V. Max and Felicia G. Beard
Edwin H. and
Melinda P. Talley LS
Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas L. Beavers LS
Suzanne Parker Thornhill
Ron and Gwen Beck
William and Rita Thornton LS
Richard and Leslie Benson
James R. and
Valerie B. Burruss
Mace T. Coleman
B.E. Upton and
Grace T. Upton
Jim and Pat Berry
Mrs. Robert S. Burruss
Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel G. Bickford Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Roland H. Coles
T. Norman Bush and
Carolyn B. Bush
Steven Thomas Conner
Richard L. and
Marie Bidwell
Tom and Daisy Byrd
Tracy D. Wilkins
Ron and Kris Willard
Dorothy G. Wiss LS
Robert G. Burleson* LS
Mr. Thomas C. Burns and
Dr. Sharon Lord
Roy and Audrey Burrows
John Cairns Jr.
Rick and Bobbie Cobaugh
Mai and Charlie Coffey LS
Stanley and
Frances Cohen* LS
Ronald L. Coleman Sr.
Thomas E. “Sonny”
and Nancy Conner
C. Peter Cooley and
Christine K. Cooley
Elaine W. and
Andrew J. Young Jr. LS
Daniel “Danny”W. Bird Jr. LS
BENEFACTORS
Thomas J. Blair III*
William J. Callis
Doug Coons and
Lori Wauters Coons
Erv and Betsy Blythe
Nicholas T. Camicia LS
William P. Copenhaver LS
Mrs. Walter G. Adams
Jeanne and Deane Blythe LS
L. Clay Camp*
Ed and Linda Cord
William A. and
Nancy E. Aden
Patricia J. Boinest LS
S.V. Camp III and
Gail B. Camp
Gary D. and Laura B. Cornwell
Ben H. Adkins Jr.
and Patricia H. Adkins
Anne Eaton Bonsack LS
Mr. and Mrs.
William M. Camp Jr.*
Doyle C. Counts LS
Daniel C. and
Linda H. Booker Jr. LS
Dan and Vickie Canada
Maria Radoslovich Cox
J. David and
Cynthia W. Craig
The Honorable and
Mrs. C. Richard Cranwell*
Fred R. and Carla S. Adkins
Wilson P. Bishop and
Alice B. Bishop
Jeff Bolton
Lucille G. Calhoun LS
Brian and Melissa Callaghan
Michael L. and Lee A. Aliff
Edward T. Bowles
John D. and Annette Ambler
Maj. Gen. (Ret) and
Mrs. Archie S. Cannon Jr. LS
Wesley R. and
Mary Lou Bowles
Ray and Beulah Carmines
C.E. Andrews and
Jean Andrews
Preston H. Andrews LS
Leonard C. Angle Jr.
and Mary Lou Angle LS
L. Allen and
Marilyn Bowman LS
Mr. and Mrs. A.P. Boxley III
Charles L. and Joanne Boyd
Don and Caroline Carrigan
Clement D. Carter and
Georgia B. Carter
Dean and Rosina Carter
Regine Archer
George Costan
Frank N. Cowan
Robert M. Cranwell*
Shannon L. and
Corinna W. Crawford
continues...
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
41
BENEFACTORS, CONT’D
George K. Eberwine Jr.
Eustace Frederick
Jay and Becky Guynn
Robert V. and
Susan A. Eckert
George L. Freeman Jr.
Harvey and Brenda Hales
Robert L. Freeman*
Mr. and Mrs.
George H. Edmiston Jr.
Mrs. Monroe E. Gardner Jr.*
Franklin “Mack” Halsey
and Robin Halsey
Mrs. Edward V. Garthright
Francis N. Hamilton LS
H. Gilford and
Cheryl T. Edwards
Dr. Ray A. Gaskins LS
Marcellus Hampton
Lois B. Gaunt
Marvin L. Crutchfield
John N. and
Patricia K. Edwards
Thomas J. and
Barbara F. Hampton* LS
Lester B. and Pat Cundiff LS
Willena K. Elmore
Jim and Diana George Jr.
Dell and Sonya Curry
John and Angie Emery
Alexander F. Giacco* LS
John W. Cutler Jr.
and Betsy Cutler
Thomas and
Emma Lou Hanks
The Honorable and
Mrs. Dudley J. Emick Jr.
Dan and Linda Gilbert
Cardwell F. Hannabass
Donald V. Dalton LS
R.W. and Frances H. Engel
Anna May Wheeler Gillett LS
Patrick L. and Cathy J. Daly
David and
Marianne Hardey
John Engelberger
Kathy Dargo
Ralph L. and
Marion B. Givens
J. Daniel and Ann M. Hardy
Jesslyn J. Etgen LS
Scott A. Darnell
Bill Evans LS
Harold and Betty Glass LS
Kendley J. Davenport LS
Wolter and Luba Fabrycky
August F. Davis LS
John W. Failes
John C. and
Lydia Rice Glenn LS
Charles L. and
Florine H. Harowitz
Mary Ellen Deemer*
Gilbert L. and
Jewel Cowan Faison
Jeffrey L. and
Sara B. Glesner LS
John O. and
Mary Lou Harrison
Randall W. DeHart
Charlotte and Gary Farrar
David Jefferson Dempsey
R. Paul Farrell Jr. LS
Colonel Walter P. Glover
and Mazie L. Glover LS
William H. and
Polly C. Harrison LS
Gary and Heidi Derby
Paul and Evelyn Farrier LS
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gonsa
Chuck and Ellen Hartman LS
Nicholas H. DesChamps, Ph.D.
Robert B. Fetter LS
George Royden
Goodson Jr.* LS
James H. Hatch LS
William S. and
Carolyn T. Dewhirst
Larkin Watson Fields
Mary R. Goodykoontz*
Neil A. and Celia K. Finn LS
Douglas S. Divers Jr.
Alixe Gordin
James R. Fisher
C. Bailey Dixon*
Charles E. Gordon
James P. Fitzgerald
John C. Dixon
Charles O. Gordon Jr.
John and Cassell Fitzhugh
Mr. and Mrs.
James F. Hayes III
Jack and Liz Donehower
Elizabeth H. Gordon
Norman and
Joyce Fitzwater
Mrs. Jane K. Hearn
Lucy Gordon
Eddie F. and
Dawn D. Hearp LS
Steven R. Crawford
William G. Cridlin Jr. and
Cary G. Cridlin
Bud Crockett LS
Alvin Q. and Lucy S. Croy LS
Robert and Lucille Cruise
C.Y. and Carole Davis
Kerry and Mary Donnelly
Bob Dorey
Joseph W. Drewry
Mrs. Thomas W. Drewry
J.B. and Ruth Drinkard
Buford L. Driskill Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
H. Windley Dunbar
Elizabeth A. Flanagan and
H. Michael Mitchell LS
Dr. E. Scott Geller
Richard A. Girard LS
Floyd D. and
Elizabeth S. Gottwald
R. Philip and Charlotte Hanes
James H. Haren*
Joe and Gayla Harris
Alfred W. Hauser LS
Marie Hawkins
Buddy and Laura Haycox
Shelley Hearp Cooper and
Todd F. Hearp
Fred and Charlotte Fletcher
C.T. “Red” Graves and
Anne Hutcheson Graves LS
Carolyn Foreman
Dorothy N. Graves
Douglas and
Margaret Heath
Tim Foreman
Howard E. and
Mary E. Gray LS
Davis G. and
Sharolyn B. Heatwole LS
James M. and
Margaret L. Grayson
Robert A. Heller and
Agnes S. Heller LS
Lee Thomas Helms, M.D.,
and Sandra Rice Helms
Mr. and Mrs. Watt R. Foster Jr.
Gaynell S. Fowler
Dennis and Susan Duncan
Andrew E. and Sandra K. Fox
James Michael and
Ann Duncan
Mr. and Mrs.
W. Heywood Fralin
Mr. and Mrs. David Gribbons
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Duncan
Peggy H. Frank and
Marshall J. Frank
Mr. and Mrs.
Vernon D. Grizzard
Philip and Rae Frankfort
Lila M. Groseclose
C.T. and Moira H. Hill
Margaret M. Franklin LS
Lucian Y. Grove LS
Paul H. Hill
Dr. Robert L. Durfee
Charles and Eleanor Easter
Elmer R. Easton
Lucille and Gary J. Griffin
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
42
David and Ruth Henderson
John B. Higginbotham
James E. and
Lynn M. Hines Jr.
Joseph R. Jenkins
Wayne and
Barbara Hinman
Dr. Eileen Hitchingham LS
Milton E. and Cecelia H. Hite
Charles H. Jennings
N. Robert and
Helen K. Kopecko Jr. LS
Gordon Asher Mapp and
Sarah McKenney Mapp
Joanne Joe
Kurt J. Krause
Ronnie and Faye Marcum
Benjamin C. Johnson and
Janice K. McBee
John H. Kroehling LS
Donald and Jan Marks
George R. Kuhn Jr. and
Christa A. Kuhn
Irvin Marshall LS
Carol and Ray Martin
William H. Hobbs
Chris and Starlette
Johnson LS
Emory and Kristin Hodges
Janet and Jim Johnson LS
Lawrence J. and
Carolyn Jones Kyle
Stan and Linda Hodges
Joseph A. Johnson Jr. LS
Charles and Patricia Lamb
William and Shirley Hoeck
Matt and Patti Johnson LS
G. Haden Lane
Evanne Loh Hoehn-Saric
and Rudolf Hoehn-Saric
Mr. and Mrs.
Steven E. Johnson
James W. Lark Jr. and
Betty O. Lark
Joseph H. Hoge III*
A. Harrison Jones Sr. and
Eleanor P. Jones
O. Kent LaRoque III
Thomas L. and
Mattie Mason Jr.
Roland E. Latta
Alexander B. Massie
Marian and
Oren E. Hopkins Jr.
Clark and Betty Jones
Bill and Peggy Lavery
Gregory B. Jones
Mrs. John L. Lawrence *
William W. and
Nan E. Massie
Carolyn and Charlie Horner
J.B. Jones and
Jane Hardcastle Jones
Barry and Melissa Lawson LS
Peggy Cecil Matney
Benton R. Leach
Marjorie S. Maupin
Mr. Wayne and
Dr. Claire Horton LS
James L. Jones Jr.
Mary Leach * LS
Brian and Susan McCall
Doug and Sue Juanarena
Gene and Helen Justice
Tien Min Lee and
Ling Yan Lee LS
Sam and Priscilla McCall LS
Steve and Cathi House LS
Chip and Susan Houston
James C. “Jim” Justice II
Frank L. Leonard
Chuck and Terri Lynn Howard
James C. “Jay” Justice III
Lacy Hartwell McClain and
Ann Phillips McClain
H. Jefferson Howard
Dennis M. Kamber and
Sherry L. Kamber
John C. “Jack” Lester Jr.
and Leta A. Lester LS
Charles F. Holden III
Mrs. Irvin G. Horner
Bob and Nancy Hubble
Steve and Ginny Marshall
Darrell D. and Betty R. Martin
Debra and Michael Martin
F. Wayne Martin and
Lynn H. Martin LS
Joann D. McCauley LS
Kimberlee Lester
W. Vernon McClure Jr.
and Tammara McClure
Robert A. and
Beverly W. Hudson Jr.
David S. Kantor
Paige Galt Lester
Jim and Kay McCormick
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kass
Wallace L. Huff and
Emogene G. Huff
Ashok N. and
Sudha N. Katti LS
Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Lewis Jr.
Reese O. and
Nancy W. McCormick Jr.
Janice B. Litschert
Gene and Peggy Huffman
H.A. “Bud” Keever
D. Joe Long
Peter J. and
Nancy Cupp McDonald
Dr. Owen F. Hughes
J. Michael and Candi Kelly
Eric A. and Dorothy B. Long
Mary Ellen and
Harry H. Hunt III
Jan Kennedy
Marcus H. Long Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Kit C. Kennedy
William F. Hyde
Nancie R. Kennedy
William R. Long and
June Hall-Long
Patricia B. and
Michael W. Hyer
Lee M. Kerley III
Colonel Irvin Luther Hylton Jr.
W. Christian Killorn and
Virginia Killorn
Don and Brenda Irons
Bill and Sue King
Thomas D. Irvin LS
George W. and
Dorothy S. King
Jessica Bolling Ison
Joseph R. Loring and
Sheila D. Johnston *
Richard J. Louden and
Evelyn Pulley Louden
Joe and Patty Love
David and Sharon Lowe
Charles P. and
Cheryl H. McElheney
Jack McKenney
Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph A. McKenzie
Bruce L. and
Shawn E. McKinley
Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur W. McKinney
John S. McLellan
Leo M. McMahon
Timothy E. and
Kristina C. Jackson
Huston W. Kitts Sr. and
Sarah S. Strauss
Robert E. Lucas Jr. and
Rebecca P. Lucas
Jeff and Natalie Jaffe LS
Arthur C. Klages*
Mr. and Mrs.
Rieman McNamara Jr. LS
Gene A. and Ina M. James
Paul L. Knox and
Lynne Taylor Knox
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert M. Lynch Jr.
Coleman and Sandra Lyttle
Mark G. McNamee and
Carole M. McNamee
Mr. and Mrs. Kent James
Dorothy G. Jeffress LS
Debbie Koller and
Kent Koller LS
Nancy J. and
Kenneth G. Malm
Donald J. McNamara
continues...
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
43
BENEFACTORS, CONT’D
Lorenz Moser and
Rengin Holt LS
Drs. Elizabeth and
Arthur Parker
Leo A. Rapoport* LS
Dorothy Moss
Charles H. Parkerson
Ellen Reck
Geraldine M. Meador
Robert F. Moss Jr.
Mrs. Harry J. Parrish
Dr. and Mrs.
Arthur G. Meakin LS
The Honorable and
Mrs. Thomas W. Moss Jr. LS
Mrs. Benjamin L. Partlow LS
Mr. and Mrs.
Charles W. Rector Jr.
Cordell and Nancy Parvin
Mr. Coleman G. Rector
Mrs. Irene F. Meigs LS
Jack M. Patteson
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Reed
Kenton and Liliana Meland
Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth L. Motley
Lucille Mulky
Dorothy Rollins Pauly
Litz B. and Ruth M. Reed LS
Joseph and Catherine Merola
R.W. “Bill” and
Diane Mullins Jr.
William N. Paxton LS
A. Patricia Merryman
Raymond E. and
Peggy C. Reed LS
Mary McVay and
Ted Rosenberg LS
Miles L. Merwin
Peggy S. and
Alex L. Meszaros
Kent A. and Cheryl P. Murphy
Tom and Sue Murray
James E. and
Brenda K. Pearman Jr. LS
Bob and Jean Perdue
Frank A. Perna Jr.
Ted and Brenda Rappaport
Charles J. and
Constance S. Reid
Robert Reuter and
Katherine Downs-Reuter
Donna W. and
Stephen W. Michael LS
Reginald H. and
Phyllis G. Nelson IV
G. Leonard Michon Jr.
and Carmen Q. Michon
Burga F. Nestora
Matthew J. and
Donalyn W. Mikulich
Beverly Johnson Nicely
and Hiawatha Nicely Jr.
Don Nicewonder*
Vincent S. and
Carolyn A. Phelps
Inez Truluck Ripley LS
John and Camille Milks
Mr. and Mrs.
William T. Miller Jr.
J.D. Nicewonder*
Thomas L. Phillips*
S.J. and Elizabeth A. Ritchey
J. Kevin Nicewonder
David P. Minichan Jr., M.D.,
and Tosca G. Minichan
Lawrence Cox Phipps and
Jane Brooks Phipps
Mrs. James A. Rives* LS
K.R. Nicewonder
James M. and
Marilyn K. Pollard
Jack and Charlotte Roberts
Evelyn L. Mitchell* LS
Doris B. Newell
Sheldon and Betty Nichols
Jeffrey A. and
Suzanne D. Perry*
John V. and Helen T. Perry Jr.
Lawrence E. and
Joanne S. Perry Jr. LS
Keith A. Reynolds and
Jan Vaughan Reynolds
Don and Sheila Richardson
Minnis and Louise Ridenour
Richard T. Ripley
Mrs. Allan W. Roadcap * LS
James K. Mitchell
Jerome and
Ruth Anne Niles LS
A.A. Modena
Vaughan and Ruth Noble LS
Nancy and Nick Moga LS
Jay and Shelly Poole LS
Edwin T. and
Norma B. Robertson
Ellis P. Monroe* LS
George and
Michele Nolen
Jeanette and Don Poole
Richard D. Robertson LS
James A. Monroe Jr. LS
W. Ernest Norcross*
Louis Popp
B. Barnett Montague LS
Jim and Cathy Nyfeler LS
W. Thomas and
Barbara Robertson
J. Kyle Montague*
Lynn A. Nystrom
R. Gregory and
Rebecca G. Porter LS
Marvin L. and
Lelia W. Pollard LS
Richard W. and
Jamie H. Roberts
Cindy M. Robinson
John B. and
Joann P. Obenchain LS
Bittle W. Porterfield III
Mrs. J. Kenneth Robinson
W. Reginald Powell LS
Dr. Craig A. Rogers
Charles G. O’Brien
Hal G. Prillaman*
Wayne N. and Nancy R. Root
W. Jefferson and
Paula P. O’Flaherty
Nick Prillaman Jr.*
Mrs. Elizabeth K. Rosenbaum
Scott D. Prince LS
Newman R. Ogden Jr.
Mrs. Joseph L. Rosenbaum
Jimmy T. and
Betty D. Moore LS
Phyllis Stancill Pruden
Jacqueline L. Ohrstrom
Mr. William O. Ross LS
Joe and Mille Moore LS
William W. Old LS
Kristen S. and
John E. Pruitt
Robert Anthony Ruberti
Larry and Suzanne Moore
Dr. Charles W. Pryor Jr.
The Honorable and
Mrs. Thomas Davis Rust
Robert Morris
Dr. John Olver and
Lisa Olver
James M. Pyne
Phil and Glenda Rutledge LS
Bill F. Morrisette Sr.
Bill Ortega
David Welch Morrisette
Sara Ortega
Eugene and
Michaele Rackel LS
Susan Bull Ryan and
Dr. J. Thomas Ryan
Joseph F. Morrissette
Joseph F. and Millie Outten
George B. Ragsdale
Ann and Jerry Samford
William Ward and
Patricia S. Moseley LS
Mr. Leo A. Padis Jr. LS
Charles J. and
Mary N. Rainero
George Sampson LS
John W. Montague Jr.
Ms. Pauline O. Montgomery
William J. and Elizabeth H.
Montgomery LS
David Moon
David and Sharon Parcell
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
44
Mrs. H. Robert Sanders Jr.
William G. Sandy
Paul M. and
Tatum N. Saunders
Dr. and Mrs.
Charles W. Schiffert
James R. and
Augustine D. Smith
Morris V. Stowers
Frances G. Trent LS
David A. Street
Hyde Tucker LS
Robert H. Smith
Jimmie A. and
Beckie K. Street
Margaret C. Tucker*
Lauren Fay Street
James C. and
Allison B. Turk Jr.
Robert Mark Smith and
Jacquelyn Hart Smith
Ute and Ed Tucker LS
Harold W. Schneikert Jr. LS
Raymond D. and
Jean N. Smoot
Charles S. and
Mary R. Strickler
Harry and Penny Schwarz
Michael E. Snyder
J. Patrick Strickler
Richard E. and
Carol A. Sorensen
Mr. and Mrs. Steve W. Turner
Reed and Gail Schweickert LS
Robert H. Strickler*
Phillip W. Unger
Lloyd R. Sorenson Jr.
Donald and
Joanna Sunshine
Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas L. Souders
E. Francis, Susan S., and
Suzanne Y. Updike
Chris and Jane Swan
Phil and Eve Urick
James D. Swan Jr.
John A. Urquhart
Tony and Phyllis Syme
Mary Jane Talbot
Nicholas P. and
Margaret P. Valdrighi
John and
Rosemarie Tamminen
Donald C. and
Moira Vaughn
Dr. Terry F. Tanner*
Jay and Cheryl Taustin
Mr. and Mrs.
William P. Vinyard Jr.
William P. and
Dorothy Taylor
Joseph H. and
Patricia Beasley Vipperman
Mrs. J. Landon Short LS
Robert E. Spencer and
Carole T. Spencer LS
Leila B. and Kirk E. Spitzer
Pat and Mary Terry
Charlotte O’Hara Vorhauer*
Dr. Jean Snyder Renner Short
Mr. and Mrs.
John C. Spracher
A.F. Teske Jr. and
Betty A. Teske
L. Preston Wade*
Samuel E. and
Judith J. Shrader
Dalton B. Shumate LS
Helen D. and
Frank A. Spurr Jr. LS
Mr. and Mrs.
Richard T. Thatcher
W. Fred St. John
C. Stephen and
Elaine B. Thomas LS
Robert G. Scogin Jr.
and Lauri A. Scogin
David S. and Jane N. Scott
Rodney M. Sedwick and
Regina R. Sedwick
Carlton M. Southworth Sr.
Mr. and Mrs.
James W. Severt LS
William R. and Beverly
M. Southworth
Francis A. and
Marianne Shane
Don and Beverly Sowder
Daniel Sheets
E. Ann Spencer and
P. Scott Roop
Sylvia L. and
M. Dwight Shelton Jr.
Stuart Shumate and
Mary Shumate
Bernard Silverman
Howell and Ann Simmons
John and Cheryl Simon
R. Mason and
Cheryl R. Simpson
Ridge Sink
Amenta R. Sjogren and
the late Robert W. Sjogren
Jean W. Skelton
John K. and
Bonnie M. Skelton
Mr. and Mrs. O.A. Spady
William M. “Bill” Stafford
and Mary K. Stafford
David R. Stanton *
Lee R. and
Regina Aultice Steeneck LS
David T. Thomas II and
JoAnn Spangler LS
John W. Thomas Jr.*
Joseph C. Thomas*
Robert L. Turner
George and
Catherine Walker
L. Dudley Walker
Doug and Pat Wall
J. Robert and
Marion L. Walton
Charles W. Wampler Jr.
and Dorothy L. Wampler
William D. and
Bonnie Lou Wampler
Charles and Janet Steger
Margaret Allen Thomas LS
Cynthia and Bill Sterrett Jr. LS
Sally B. and
Robert I. Thomas Jr.
David Ward
Mr. and Mrs.
Stuart C. Thomas
Eric and E.C. Warren
Donald and
Madeline Stewart LS
Mrs. George A. Stewart LS
Jeffrey R. Stewart LS
Curtis A. Thompson
Dr. and Mrs. O.W. Ward Jr.
James G. Watkins Jr. and
Martha Watkins
Harry J. Skinker
Dewey L. Stinson Jr. LS
Joseph L. and
Lois J. Thompson
Lynn E. and
Yvonne S. Slonaker
William L. Stinson
Ronald W. Thompson
Mr. and Mrs.
Charles J. Watson Jr.
J. Conley and Nancy W. Stone
Thomas T. Thompson LS
Mrs. W.A. Watson III
Bruce B. Smith
Walter E. Story
Randy and Karen Thurman
Charles R. and Janet K. Smith
Jeanne H. Stosser
Thomas C. Tillar Jr. LS
Hobart Ayres Weaver and
Mollie Little Weaver
George R. Smith Jr. LS
Jeffrey P. Stosser
Deborah and Daniel Tillotson
Jack W. Webb LS
James E. and
Carolyn H. Smith
Scott Alan Stosser
Paul and
Dorothea Torgersen LS
Nick Wehrmann
Bill and Roberta Stover
Jerry and Merle Watkins LS
continues...
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
45
BENEFACTORS, CONT’D
Mildred Crawford
Weidemann and
Alvin C. Weidemann LS
Sidney and Ann Weinstein*
Norma Wells
Robert H. and Janice G. Wells
Roger P. Wells
R.G. West LS
Dr. T.G. Westmoreland
Carolyn Pearsall White
P.J. and Betty T. Wright
Jim Young
Patti Young*
Ray and Kathy Yount
H.C. Yu and Terry Yu
Dr. Bernard Harold Zeavin
Gina and Tom Zehmer
Mark S. Zitz LS
IN MEMORY
Jeffrey K. White
Alvin V. Baird Jr. LS
Linden L. White*
Laura Morris Burrows
Preston M. White and
Catharine M. White
Gary P. Clisham
William I. White Jr. and
Carol S. White
Donald M. Cox
Paul Whitehead Jr.
Tom and Diane Whitehead
Margaret W. and
L. Wayne Whitlock
Gladys Costan
Col. Robert B. Cox LS
Madelon Crockett
Virginia M. Currie LS
Lloyd G. Doxey
Thomas and
Sanda Wilburn
Virginia H. Doxey LS
Rhoda A. Wilkerson LS
Richard B. Gillett LS
Colonel (USA, Ret.) and
Mrs. Richard F. Wilkinson LS
William H. Jeffress LS
Ronald L.. Willard II and
Sara C. Willard
Joy E. Jones LS
Edward V. Garthright
Stuart Johnson LS
David H. Williams Jr.
Duncan C. Kennedy III
Jesse A. Williams Jr.
Robert E. Leisy
Richard L. Williams
William B. McSpadden
Verne C. and
Jewel N. Williamson
Charles M. Neviaser*
Beverly A. Willis
Mrs. Russell V. Oliver LS
Mark and Helen Wilson LS
J.W. Pamplin* LS
Kay and Peter Winzenried LS
Colonel Harry J. Parrish
Col. and Mrs.
Calvin S. Wisman
W. Thomas Rice
Robert L. and
Betty K. Wolfe
Mrs. E.B. Wood Jr.
Oliver and Reese Woody
Hal G. and Thornie Worley LS
Glenn R. Noffsinger LS
Ralph G. Roop
Jane F. Simmons
Anne Waldron
Muriel Walts
Henry Wise Wood Jr., M.D.
Robert W. Worley Jr. and
Barbara G. Worley
Beverly and
David Worthington
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
46
CALDWELL SOCIETY
Supporters of Virginia Tech whose lifetime giving to the university totals $50,000 up to $100,000 qualify for the
Caldwell Society, which carries the name of William Addison Caldwell, the first student to enroll in Virginia Tech.
Bold = New Members ‘05-’06 | * = Charter Members | LS = also Legacy Society Members
Floyd W. Abernathy Jr. and
Brenda G. Abernathy
Charles and
Ann Dobson Catlett
Lorene Hudson Evans and
Stephen F. Evans
Gerald L. Alderson *
Dwight R. Chamberlain and
Marylynn Chamberlain* LS
James A. and
Karen B. Everett
Vincent J. Cilimberg Jr.*
Edwin J. Ewing* LS
S. Kendall and
Ame G. Anderson
David Clark
Alex P. and Nita Fekas
John D. and Kathryn T. Clary
William R. and
Janet W. Anderson
Otto R. and Anita R. Claus
E. Ritchie and
Ernestine L. Fishburne
Joseph K. and
Janice S. Allen
W. Bane and
Margaret R. Atkinson
John H. Bartko Jr.
Jesse B. and
Judith A. Coleman
James A. Collins Jr.
Stewart Baynum
Benjamin G. and
Rachel Ann Cottrell
Andy Beach
Jennifer J. Crawford
J. D. and Nancy Berlin
Mary Jones Berry
John P. Black* LS
Arlene Critzos and
John Critzos II
John T. and
Betty L. Blanks LS
Warren Nathaniel
Dannenburg Jr. and
Rhonda A. Dannenburg
David R. Bogese
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bowen Jr.
Don S. and Sarah P. Hayes
Homer H. Hickam Jr. and
Linda Hickam
L. Ralph Hicks Jr. and
Donna F. Hicks
Michael C. and
Susan C. Hildebrand
John and Sharen Hillison
Marion Maxwell
Fitzgerald and Suellen B.
Fitzgerald
Thomas E. Hilts LS
William H. Flannagan
Irvin G. Horner Jr. and
Laurie Horner
P. Marshal and
Katherine P. Fleming
Charles “Chuck” Fontana
Louise P. Ford*
William G. Foster Jr. and
Judith A. Foster
Ronald E. and Melissa
Kipp Holsinger
Donald W. and
Collene J. Huffman LS
Thomas N. Hunnicutt III
and Ann N. Hunnicutt LS
Cecilia M. Hylton
Dave and Sue Ann D’Antoni
Kindy French and
Emanuel Friedman
George R. Janosko and
Wanda Callis Janosko*
Scott D. Dawson Sr. and
Cheryl B. Dawson
Kenneth W. and
Gayle Gallier
William R. Jebson Jr.
Elizabeth D. Degges LS
S. Cary Gill
Richard C. and
Diane W. Jennell
Robert B. and
Martha Webb Delano* LS
James N. and
Sandra S. Gillum
Miles C. Johnston and
Mary Garland Johnston*
Rebecca Sue DeShazo LS
Robert S. Gilmore* LS
John W. and Theresa Kelley
Jeff Brandmaier
Page Dickson LS
Marijane Gosnell* LS
Patrick E. Kerr
Warren L. and Lillian Braun
Thomas W. di Zerega
Stephanie P. Key and
David Lee Key Jr.
Parke C. Brinkley* LS
Joseph M. Donnelly Jr.
Bruce C. Gottwald Jr. and
Kimberly C. Gottwald
Julian G. Duncan
Jerome F. and
Leslie S. Gough
Theodore W. Kheel
Alan and Delores Brogan
John A. and
Paula S. Brothers LS
William E. and
Dorothy H. Durham LS
George W. and
Dianne W. Gray*
Thomas A. Carpenito *
Jasper R. and Allyn G. Eanes
C. Hill Carter Jr. and
Helle Klingemann Carter*
Glenn C. and
Renee Edwards*
William and
Judith Grossmann
Robin D. Kinser and
Michael T. Johnson
William A. Caruthers Jr.
and Becky Caruthers
Michael S. and
Vicki B. Eggleston
Theodore S. Hanson and
Linda Alschbach Hanson
Alan I. Kirshner and
Deborah Mihaloff LS
Lawrence Castellani
William Arthur Ellenbogen and Janet Keith LS
Richard E. Harman Sr. and
Peggy Harman
John Knott Jr. and
Mary Jo Knott
Robert B. and
Shelby Bowles*
Ted A. and Ann W. Boyer
Suzanne E. Brammer
and Charles R. Brammer
Charles H. Hatcher III
and Linda K. Hatcher
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
47
William D. Kilgore Jr.
and Christa Kilgore
Theodore E. King Jr. LS
continues...
CALDWELL SOCIETY, CONT’D
Wallace J. Nelson Jr. and
Heather G. Nelson
Ann Elliott Randall*
Thomas K. and Lisa
Valentine Kopecko
Thomas C. Newbill Jr.
and Sallie P. Newbill
Charles A. Read II and
Harriet Schwartz Read*
Noel R. Krieg*
David M. and
Jane D. Newkirk
James R. and Emily
Farmer Reames
John A. Lansing
George W. Norton and
Marjorie J.T. Norton
Beauton Lawson*
Kenneth L. and
Martha J. Reifsnider
Ann M. Oliver LS
Burton P. and Doris Lee
J.C. and Roberta Rice
Marcus L. Oliver LS
A.H. and Nina Mae Lemmon
Robert B. and
JoAnne H. Oliver
Henry E. and
Constance J. Richeson
Louis J. Lancaster
Gregory H. and
Sharon Lester
Mayer G. and Susan Levy
Norris E. and Judy G. Lewis
John K. Light
H.C. and Margaret E. Love* LS
C.J. Luczak
Ernie and Jane Lyle
Sharon Magness*
Michael P. Markowitz
Charles W. and
Hollace C. Martin
William E. Martin Jr. and
Frances E. Martin LS
E.M. and Helen M. Pace*
Louis K. Palmer Jr. and
Karen B. Palmer
Bruce C. and
Christine D.M. Parker
John I. and Diane L. Riffer
Randolph P. and
Susan L. Rivinus LS
W.E. and
Rhoda Farmer Roberts
Brant D. Robertson
Regina M. Parkerson and
Arthur L. Parkerson
James I. Robertson Jr. and
Elizabeth G. Robertson LS
W. Stuart Patterson Jr.
and Josephine L. Patterson
Ray A. and Leah B. Robertson
James E. Pearman Sr. and
Lorene S. Pearman*
James D. and
Pamela J. Penny
Tass E. Robertson
Thomas L. and
Sue Robertson*
Harry E. and Sarah J.
Burrell Robson LS
Steve L. and Pam C. Massie
Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Perry* LS
William H. and
Barbara J. May
James G. and
Deborah M. Petrine
Sue B. Mays LS
John P. and Linda S. Phillips
Charles M. Rotgin Jr.*
John and Nancy McCord LS
Daniel M. Phillips Jr. and
Alice C. Phillips
Edwin W. and
Suzanne C. Ruark
John D. and
Nancy J. Philpott*
John A. Ruffin III and
Betty Ruffin*
Barry S. and Mary V. Pillow
Donald L. and
Mary E. Sage LS
Ronald J. and
Darlene K. McGinnis
Renell Y. Meeks
J.F. Merz Jr. and
Lida W. Merz*
Harry M. Meyers Jr. and
Lois H. Meyers LS
Michael G. and
Rene H. Miller
Thomas C. Moore
J. Kenneth Morgan Jr.
and Sally Morgan
Timothy H. and
Michele M. Mullins
Raymond H. and
Sharon C. Myers
Edwin A. and
Lelia W. Myrick LS
Anne Pinkard
Brenda H. and
George W. Rohe
Stephen H. Rosenoff
Sue C. Pipes
Mark L. and
Nancy D. Scheffel
William and
Linda Poorbaugh
Emily Schultz
Don M. and
Dorla Sue Powers
George R. and Betty J. Preas
John Quigley Jr. and
Patricia Quigley
Cecil D. Quillen Jr. and
Vicey C. Quillen
James G. and
Janet G. Rakes
Jack J. and
Michael J. and
Deborah Sciarrino
Charles F. and
Judith Loope Sears
Robert L. Sendelbeck
and Sara Lee Richardson
Sendelbeck LS
Patrick N. and
Patricia A. Shaffner
Louis H. and
Diane E. Sharpe*
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
48
Daniel G. and
Jessie Lee Shawhan
Gloria B. Turley
Edwin A. Sheridan IV
Pleasant C. and
Hazel P. Shields LS
Anne M. Wachtmeister
and Hans F.E.
Wachtmeister
James K. Skipper III
and Kelly Skipper
Jimmie L. and
Ellen Ertz Wade
John F. and
Laurie M. Skipper
Norman O. Wagenschein LS
Stephen J. and
Valerie S. Skripak LS
Robert F. Warren Sr. and
Joyce W. Warren
David W. and Linda Smith*
R. Lee and Judy Smith
Alfred B. and
Fonda P. Warwick LS
Robert R. Smith III and
Sarah Smith LS
Hunter R. and
Llewellyn S. Watson
William S. Spears
Daniel L. and
Regan C. Westra
William B. and
Anne E. Squire
John J. Stahl III and
Margaret A. Stahl
Benjamin Z. and
Kimberly A. Stallings
William C. Staples Jr. and
Barbara Lash Staples
James T. Stephens LS
Michael Vick
J.M. and Ethel H. Waldron
Charles K. Whitescarver Jr.
and Mary Ann M.
Whitescarver
Charles M. Whittington III
and Brenda
Whittington LS
David M. Wilberger Jr.
and Kay H. Wilberger
Marianne S. Stern*
George A. Williams Jr. and
Deborah R. Williams
Craig R. and
Belinda Stevens
Gordon C. and Jean H. Willis*
Brian Storrie and
Muriel Lederman
Maryanne H. Wood
Karen H. Sublett*
Remire L. Sutherland Jr.
and Paula L. Sutherland
Theodore J. and
Judy P. Sutton
John T. Sutton Jr. and
Carol H. Sutton
Richard M. Swink Sr. and
Nancy N. Swink
Larry T. Taylor
Gene A. “Bull” Teel and
Sue Teel
Stephen M. Thamasett
Shirley Wolfson*
Jack F. Wright Jr. and
Barbara Wright*
Michael A. and
Caroline O. Young
Revelle M. and
Barbara L. Young
James N. and
Melanie Youngblood
Kurt A. and Celeste
Browning Zuch
IN MEMORY
Nick Thomas
Gail Thompson
Catherine H. Carpenito*
Kathryn F. Trice* LS
Fred A. Gosnell Jr.
Douglas L. and
Nina K. Trott LS
L. Jeanette Hamlin
Joseph C. Turley III and
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
49
Henry L. Moore*
LEGACY SOCIETY
The Legacy Society was established to recognize alumni and friends who have provided for Virginia Tech through their
estate plans or other deferred gifts. The following is a list of members as of June 30, 2006.
Bold = New Members ‘05-’06 | UP=Also Ut Prosim Society Members | CS = also Caldwell Society Members
Frank L. Abbott
Mrs. Laurie C. Battle UP
Louis M. Briel UP
Hugh T. Adams UP
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Baum
Parke Brinkley CS
Dr. and Mrs. Harley P. Affeldt
Wesley L. and
Bette M. Baum UP
William and Emily Brittle
George E. Aker
Wayne W. and
Dawn M. Campbell
Andrea S. and
Brian L. Camper
W. Morgan and
Joyce M. Allen Jr.
Alan E. Bayer
Dr. and Mrs.
J.A. “Fred” Brothers CS
Susan W. and Guy O. Beale
Richard G. Broun
Horace E. Alphin UP
Mrs. Ralph A. Amos
Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas L. Beavers UP
Dr. Charles S. and
Millicent P. Brown UP
Dr. Linda M. Anderson
Elizabeth Anne Bedinger
Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson R. Anderson
Doris Craig Belak
Col. and Mrs. James
Mandly Brown Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Belcher
Dr. Nancy Brown
T.A. and Jeanette Carter UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Preston H. Andrews UP
Dr. and Mrs. James B. Bell
Barbara Brugh UP
Dr. John G. Casali UP
Dr. and Mrs.
Paul M. Bertsch
Ellen A. Bryant
Shirley W. Casali
J. Fletcher Bryant
Rosa J. Castiel
Daniel “Danny”W. Bird Jr. UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip Hoge Buchanan
Dr. Anthony J. Cataldo II
Mrs. Walter A. Buchanan
Dr. Wayland D. Andrews
L.C. Angle Jr. and
Mary Lou Angle UP
Jerome S. Antel Jr. and
Shellie Frosh Antel
H. Peter and
Patricia J. Bisschop
Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald C. Canaan II
Maj. Gen. (Ret.) and Mrs.
Archie S. Cannon Jr. UP
Robert Bronough Carter Jr.
Susan Graybill Carter
Jason A. Cecil
John P. Black UP
Anne M. Burford
Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight R. Chamberlain CS
Willis P. and
Mary N. Blackwood UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Jeffrey Allen Burkett
Mr. and Mrs.
Alpheus J. Chewning III
Joseph W. Arnold
Mr. and Mrs.
John T. Blanks CS
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Burkey
Reginald and
Bettye Childers
Dr. and Mrs. H. Pat Artis UP
Lavinia A. Blick UP
William and Candida Clark
Diane Clevenger Aukland
and Duncan D. Aukland
Jeanne and Deane Blythe UP
Robert G. and
Beverly B. Burleson UP
John J. Bodo
David H. Burrows UP
John S. and Audrey F. Autry
Gail and Berda Boggs UP
Mrs. Richard M. Bagley
Patricia J. Boinest UP
W. Jackson and
Lee T. Burrows UP
Mrs. Velt E. Bailey
Roger E. Bonney
Kenneth E. Baker
Anne E. Bonsack UP
Margaret T. Baldock UP
Daniel C. and
Linda H. Booker UP
Michael and Jane Anzilotti
Emmett H. and
Kathleen S. Apffel
Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph H. Barlow
Mr. and Mrs.
Glynn D. Barranger
Mr. and Mrs.
William H. Bowen Jr.
Betsy Conway Busch
Patrick H. Butler III
Dr. David W. Byrd
Dr. and Mrs.
Mitchell A. Byrd
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Caceci
Gordon D. Bowman II UP
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Cahoon
Mr. and Mrs.
R. Sidney Barrett UP
L. Allen and Marilyn B.
Bowman UP
Patricia A. Caldwell UP
Jo Anne Barton
Ray and Diann Boyd
John Wythe and
Beverly Bates III UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Glenn Breeden Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
Nicholas T. Camicia UP
Lucille G. Calhoun UP
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
50
Mr. and Mrs.
Michael W. Clarke
Thomas Hal Clarke III
Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas P. Claud
Joan G. and
James R. Clements Jr.
Winford and Eva Clifton
Mr. and Mrs. James H.
Cochrane Jr. UP
Charles and Mai Coffey UP
Stanley and
Frances Cohen UP
John Michael and
Mary Helen Collins
Carlton E. Combs Jr.
Carrie Wilmer Comer
George and
Josephine DeSerio UP
Georgia Willis Fauber
Rebecca Sue DeShazo CS
Marguerite E. Favrao
Lois W. Dickerson UP
Howard Feiertag UP
Nancy K. Cook
Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis M. Dickison
Mrs. G. Stanley Feild Jr.
William Rand Cook and
Laura N. Cook
Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar F. Dickson Jr.
Robert Keith Cope
Page M. Dickson CS
Mr. and Mrs.
E.H. Copeland Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
Shawn Preston Dikes
W.P. Copenhaver UP
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne A. Dixon
Charles Cornelison
Mrs. E.C. Compton
Mr. and Mrs.
William L. Connellee
Drs. Dale W. and
Sherry L. Conrad
Matilda T. Faulkner
Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin S. Feldenheimer
Mrs. J. Robert Ferguson
Robert Stanley Hamilton
Gilmore CS
Mr. and Mrs.
Richard A. Girard UP
J.E. Givens
Harold and Betty Glass UP
John C. and
Lydia Rice Glenn UP
Lucy S. Ferrari UP
Jeffrey L. and
Sara B. Glesner UP
Robert B. and
Audrey Lillard Fetter UP
Colonel Walter P. Glover
and Mazie L. Glover UP
Christopher Dominick
George A. Fiebelkorn Jr.
and Patricia A. Reslock
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Goldsten
Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Corr
Annice Brame Dorsey
Mr. and Ms. Kevin F. Finn
Jimmie and Lovis Countiss
Margaret B. Dove UP
George and
Patricia Goodson UP
Neil A. and Celia K. Finn UP
Doyle C. Counts UP
Elizabeth T. Downing
Sara Farley Goodwin
Phyllis R. Cragle
Mrs. Charles O. Gordon Sr. UP
William R. Craig
Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew M. Dreelin III
Elizabeth A. Flanagan and
H. Michael Mitchell UP
Larry E. Creekmore
C. Ramsey Duck
Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas A. Fletcher
John Dallas Gordon
Alvin Q. and Lucy S. Croy UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Duke M. DuFrane
Elliott and Temple Fox
Marijane Gosnell CS
Richard L. Francis
Chet A. Duke Jr. and
Dorothy H. Duke UP
Margaret M. Franklin UP
Rosemary Carucci Goss
and Robert Goss
W. Alvin Cruise and
Beverly A. Myers
Beverly L. Cullen
Philip J. and Shelley Duke UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Alex Justin Fritz
Ann W. Cutchins UP
Walter W. and
Mary Ruth Duncan UP
Dr. and Mrs.
Malcolm Cutchins
Clifford A. Frohn Jr. and
Beth C. Frohn
Peggy McCormick Dunham
Mr. and Mrs.
Mahlon Funk Jr.
Lester B. and Pat Cundiff UP
Kendley J. Davenport UP
William T. Dunkin and
Linda S. Walsh
August F. and
Virginia C. Davis UP
Victor and Barbara DuPont
William Vincent Gargiulo
Mr. and Mrs.
William E. Durham CS
Dr. and Mrs. Ron Garret
Dr. Gilbert P. Davis Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James T. Davis
Mr. and Mrs.
William C. Davis UP
James C. De Jarnette IV
John and
Constance DeBell UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Charles L. Eaton UP
Nick Economy
Robert E. and
Christina T. Edwards
Mr. and Mrs.
George B. Garrott III
Robert E. Garst
Mr. and Mrs.
Clifton C. Garvin UP
Dr. Ray A. Gaskins UP
Carolyn Gough
Corrie J. and John Grado UP
Dr. Douglas S. Graham
James B. and
Ellen W. Graham
C.T. “Red” Graves and
Anne Hutcheson Graves UP
Howard E. and
Mary E. Gray UP
James P. H. Green
Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald B. Gridley
W.W. Griggs III
Mr. and Mrs.
Lucian Y. Grove UP
Leslie C. and Anneva Gates
Dr. and Mrs.
T. Marshall Hahn Jr. UP
James and
Diana George UP
Dr. and Mrs.
Don A. Halperin
Dr. and Mrs. L. Leon Geyer
Francis N. Hamilton UP
William Douglas Evans UP
Alexander F. Giacco UP
Edwin Jester Ewing CS
Richard G. Gibbons
Dr. and Mrs.
Luther J. Hamlett UP
Christopher B. DeMay
R. Paul and
Jane Brooks Farrell UP
Gary R. and
Patricia H. Gilbertson
Mr. and Mrs.
Branch R. Hammock
Edward J. Dempsey
Paul and Evelyn Farrier UP
Anne Hayes Giles
Nina Vince Farthing
Anna May Wheeler Gillett UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Bryan Leonard Deege
Elizabeth D. Degges CS
Mr. and Mrs.
Henry J. Dekker UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert B. Delano CS
Bill Ellenbogen and
Janet Keith CS
Herman W. Gabriel
Deanna and Ed Gordon
Elizabeth H. Ellett
Mr. and Mrs.
W. Robert Epperly
continues...
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
51
LEGACY SOCIETY, CONT’D
Donald W. and
Colleen J. Huffman CS
Mr. and Mrs.
Ashok Nagar Katti UP
Leslie P. Langley
Mr. and Mrs. David L. Keeney
Hugh Latimer
Harry P. Hancock Jr. ‘50
and Martha Price Hancock
Thomas N. Hunnicutt III
and Ann Nordholdt
Hunnicutt CS
David A. and Janice E. Keitz
Barry and Melissa Lawson UP
Harriet Handsfield
Anne Hunter
Ethel Cross Kelly UP
Mr. and Mrs.
John R. Lawson UP
Shirley and Jack Harris UP
LeGrand P. and
Susan C. Hyde III
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Kelly
Mrs. Herbert W. Kelly
Mary Leach UP
Mr. and Mrs.
George R. Irvin Jr. UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Michael T. Kender
Tien Min Lee and
Ling Yan Lee UP
Thomas D. Irvin UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas P. Kennerly
E. Baxter Lemmond
Dianne B. Kesterson
Edwin P. Ketchum Jr.
Dawn H. and
Gary D. Lerch UP
John C. “Jack” Lester Jr.
and Leta A. Lester UP
Laura Lew and
Christopher Kehde
Thomas J. and
Barbara F. Hampton UP
William H. and
Polly C. Harrison UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Charles F. Hartman UP
Mr. Robert Z. Haskins Jr.
James H. Hatch UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel W. Jackson
Paul M. Large
Alice S. Leonards
Mrs. James F. Hatfield Jr.
Wilbur H. Jacobus ‘45 and
Florence S. Jacobus
Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred W. Hauser UP
Jeff and Natalie Jaffe UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Crawford F. Kidd
Michael R. Jamison
Martha McCarty Kimmerling
Charles J. (Mickey)
Hayes Jr. UP
Dorothy G. Jeffress UP
Angela S. and Joseph F. King
Floyd E. Jennings
Mr. and Mrs.
M. Frederick King
Drew Lichtenberger
Eddie F. and
Dawn D. Hearp UP
Davis G. and
Sharolyn B. Heatwole UP
Janet and Jim Johnson UP
Stephen E. and Linda J. King
Theodore E. King Jr. CS
Clovis E. and
Rosa H. Linkous
Florence Kinnear
G. Karr Linkous Jr.
Alan I. Kirshner and
Deborah Mihaloff CS
Garland M. Linton and
Hilda G. Linton
William E. and
Emily K. Kitchen
James and Bonita Little
Deborah W. and
Mark G. Klein
Charlotte Lomax
Vicki Heilig
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Johnson
Joseph A. Johnson Jr. and
Karen L. Johnson UP
Martha B. and
Lawrence C. Heiskell UP
Mary Ann H. Johnson
Robert A. Heller and
Agnes S. Heller UP
Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs.
Joe S. Henderson
Mr. and Mrs.
L. Calvin Henderson
Sara H. and Austin Henry
Matt and Patti Johnson UP
Pete and Frances Johnson
William C. and
Kylie H. Johnson
W. Stuart and Freda
Bullington Johnson UP
Mr. and Mrs.
William D. Klink
Mr. and Mrs. Graham C. Lilly
Anna and D. Frederick Lohr Jr.
Lorraine G. Lordi and
Milt Davis
Mark A. and June M. Kohler
Mr. and Mrs.
H. Clarence Love CS
F. Staley Hester Jr.
William F. and
Margie P. Johnston
Thomas E. Hilts
Debbie Koller and
Kent Koller UP
Patricia Lewis Lucas and
John M. Lucas
Debra G. Jones
Dr. Eileen Hitchingham UP
Glenna and Michael Kolvek
Mr. and Mrs. C. Daniel Lynes
E. Lindsay Jones
Ellen and Mike Hoadley
Mr. and Mrs.
N. Robert Kopecko Jr. UP
Vernelle Lytton
Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph L. Jones Jr. UP
Capt. and Mrs.
E. Thomas Hodnett Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
J. Davis Hodsden Jr.
Dr. Robert H. Jones and
Dr. Jeryl C. Jones
Gaye MacBrair Kostinas
and John E. Kostinas
David M. and Elizabeth
Crawford Mack
Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas S. Maddock
Thomas H. Jones UP
Robert H. and
Linda C. Kramer
Mrs. Edward R. Hoehl
Dr. Helen E. Jordan
Alfred H. and Jean E. Krebs
Robert and Nancy Holland
Harriette H. Marocchi UP
Robert A. and Diana Jordan
Robert E. Hord Jr.
Irvin Marshall UP
Bernard S. and
Carol A. Jortner
Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Kroeling UP
Ruth C. Horton UP
Mr. Wayne and
Dr. Claire Horton UP
Steve and Cathi House UP
Mark S. Journell
James Randolph Joyce Jr.
and Glenda S. Joyce
Page Johnston Karling
Mr. and Mrs.
William H. Kucheman
Christopher J. Mallin
Mr. and Mrs.
F. Wayne Martin UP
Madge T. Landis
John W. Martin and
Patricia R. Martin
Thomas Langhorne III and
Deidre Kravitz
William and
Frances Martin CS
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
52
Cecil and Shirlee Maxson UP
Michael P. and
Georgia E. Maxwell
Stephen and
Donna Michael UP
Dr. Sue B. Mays CS
Dr. and Mrs.
Max R. Mickey Jr.
William C. and
Rennie M. McAllister UP
E. George Middleton Jr. and
Elizabeth F. Middleton UP
Sam and Priscilla McCall UP
Nicholas M. and
Elaine M. Mihalas
Dragan Nikov
Drs. Jerome and
Ruth Anne Niles UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur W. Perry CS
David Samuel Perry Jr.
Nancy B. and
Samuel H. Nixon Jr. UP
Lawrence E. and
Joanne S. Perry Jr. UP
Mr. and Mrs.
B. Vaughan Noble UP
Dr. Norma J. Peters
Dixie L. Noffsinger UP
Mr. and Mrs. John E.
Peterson Jr. UP
Faye C. Miller
Gordon A. Noffsinger UP
Mary Todd Peterson
Evelyn L. Mitchell UP
Richard E. Norman
Dougles C. Petty Jr. UP
Mr. and Mrs.
William D. McClellan Jr.
Constance Moehring
Dr. Johann A. Norstedt
Nancy and Nick Moga UP
Edward L. and
Sandra P. McClelland
Mr. and Mrs.
Christopher Molden
Ed W. and
Barbara Norwood UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Maurice R. Phillippi
Aaron L. and
Christina McClung
Ellis P. Monroe UP
Margie B. McClung
William J. and Elizabeth H.
Montgomery UP
Joann D. McCauley UP
Elizabeth A. McClanahan
and Byrum L. Geisler
Martha Q. McCollum and
William Chris McCollum
B. Barnett Montague UP
Richard E. Moody UP
Dr. and Mrs.
Quinton J. Nottingham
John B. and
Joann P. Obenchain UP
Glenn F. Phillips
Helen Eckert Phillips
Marvin L. Pollard and
Leila W. Pollard UP
JoAnne S. O’Brien, D.V.M. UP
Jay S. and
Michelle L. Poole UP
R. Gregory and
Rebecca G. Porter UP
Nancy and John McCord CS
Audre H. Moore UP
Mr. and Mrs.
William W. Old UP
Mr. and Mrs. Harry McGehee
Edward L. Moore
Marcus L. Oliver CS
William A. and Betty Potts
Sara L. and
Samuel H. McGhee III UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Jimmy T. Moore UP
David B. Osborne
Bernard L. and
Kate L. McGinnis
Joe and Mille Moore UP
David J. and
Peggy A. Oshinski
Mr. and Mrs.
W. Reginald Powell UP
Vicky L. Moore
Rebecca K. Ottinger
Scott D. Prince UP
Robert W. and
Wanda McHone
Monica Moran
Frederick A. and
Margaret S. Overly
Mr. and Mrs.
F. Richard Quible UP
O. Wayland and
Dee Dee Overstreet
Mr. and Mrs.
G. Robert Quisenberry UP
Leo A. Padis Jr. UP
Eugene and
Michaele Rackel UP
Mr. and Mrs.
William D. McLaughlin Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
Ben F. Morgan Jr. UP
Ernest C. McLeod Jr.
T. Darin and Lisha P. Morton
Mr. and Mrs.
George E. McMichael Jr.
William Ward Moseley and
Patricia S. Moseley UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Rieman McNamara Jr. UP
Lorenz Moser and
Rengin Holt UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Frank R. McNeice
The Honorable and Mrs.
Thomas W. Moss Jr. UP
Mary McVay and
Ted Rosenberg UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Harold J. Muddiman
Dr. and Mrs.
Arthur G. Meakin UP
Edwin A. and
Lelia W. Myrick CS
Stuart Mease
William A. Nash II
E.B. Peter Meekins and
Caddy Rowan Meekins
Paul Nekrasov
Irene F. Meigs UP
A. Patricia Merryman UP
Dewey L. and
Lorene H. Newman
Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd W. Merryman Jr. UP
William F. Newman ‘40
and Dorothy A. Newman UP
Harry M. and
Lois H. Meyers Jr. CS
James R. Nichols
Mr. and Mrs. Craig E. Nesbit
Carol B. Nikov
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert B. Pamplin UP
Mr. and Mrs.
McIvor L. Parker Jr.
Martha Gregg Price
Leo A. and
Lois M. Rapoport UP
Mrs. John C. Reece
Dr. W. Dale and
Mrs. Boots F. Parker
Raymond E. and
Peggy C. Reed UP
Charles Alan and
Barbara R. Parrish
Ruth M. Reed UP
Shirley Virginia Parrish
Richard Parsons and
Linda Harrison-Parsons
Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn W. Rehberger
Mrs. Malcolm J. Reid
Hilda G. Partlow UP
Eugene H. Reilley Jr. and
Frederica Reilley
Susan D. Pastore
Mac E. Rein
Martin W. and
Sharon H. Patterson
Paula Diane Relf
William N. Paxton UP
Robert and
Nancy Richards UP
Mr. and Mrs. James E.
Pearman Jr. UP
Lois C. Reynolds
continues...
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
53
LEGACY SOCIETY, CONT’D
Patricia A. Ridgway
Dr. John B. Riley
Inez T. Ripley UP
Mr. and Mrs.
K. Reed Schweickert Jr. UP
F. George and
Wanda W. Scott
Dr. Louis P. Ripley
Edward and
Barbara Scruggs UP
Mrs. James A. Rives UP
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Scruggs
Mr. and Mrs.
Randolph P. Rivinus CS
Mr. and Mrs.
William C. Scruggs UP
Mrs. A.W. Roadcap UP
Pat Moore Seawell
Dr. and Mrs.
James I. Robertson Jr. CS
Mark S. and
Georgia S. Seiler
Richard D. Robertson UP
Mrs. Richard G. Robertson
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Sendelbeck CS
Mr. and Mrs.
C.M. “Kip” Robinson Jr.
James W. and
Eliza H. Severt UP
Harry and Sarah Robson
Jean duPont Shehan UP
John G. Rocovich Jr. and
Sue Ellen Butler Rocovich UP
Lilly W. Shen
B. Fielding and
Joyce Rolston
Inez G. Roop UP
William O. Ross UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Pleasant C. Shields CS
Mrs. J. Landon Short UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert H. Shultz Jr. UP
Neville A. and
Mary H. Rowland UP
Dalton B. Shumate UP
Dr. James A. Rule Jr. and
Ms. Jeanne M. Welch
Mr. and Mrs.
Roger W. Simmons
Carolyn Adele Russell
Robert Curtis Sinclair Jr.
Philip T. and
Glenda J. Rutledge UP
Margaret Groseclose
Skelton UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Donald L. Sage CS
William E. Skelton UP
George and
Barbara Sampson UP
William W. Sauer
Virginia F. Saunders
Sandra Lee Siegrist
Stephen and
Valerie Skripak CS
Garnett E. and
Patsy T. Smith UP
Robert W. Scates Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
George R. Smith Jr. UP
Mrs. Charles E. Schaaf
James C. and Linda F. Smith
Charles W. Schiffert, M.D.
and Dolores Schiffert UP
Robert and Sarah Smith
B. June and
Richard E. Schmidt
Virginia Teske Smith
Harold W. Schneikert Jr.
‘65 UP
George P. Schrader
Cyrus Gregory Schwab
III and Judith Kincaid
Schwab
Susie Smith
William E. and
Molly H. Snizek
Ralph M. Snyder
Katherine E.G. Solters
Sandra Speiden
Roger W. and
Sandy P. Spence
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
54
Robert E. and
Carole T. Spencer UP
William and Rita Thornton UP
Jill S. Tietjen
Jerry D. and
Merle M. Watkins UP
Mrs. Wayne E. Spitler
Ruth W. Tillar
Diane Dillon Weaver
Frank Arthur Spurr Jr. and
Helen Dessin Spurr UP
Thomas C. Tillar Jr. UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Jack W. Webb UP
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Stark
H. Gordon Tiller Jr. ‘56 and
Margie L. Tiller
Lee R. and Regina
Aultice Steeneck UP
Mr. and Mrs.
William R. Tise
James T. Stephens CS
Dr. and Mrs.
Robert H. Tolson
Mark S. Zitz UP
Michael T. Zuravel
IN MEMORY
Kevin S. Weekley
Mildred Crawford
Weidemann and
Alvin C. Weidemann UP
Alvin V. Baird Jr.
Marjorie K. Wells
Margaret Burgess
Richard G. West UP
Col. Robert B. Cox UP
Virginia M. Currie UP
Mrs. Frances G. Trent UP
Rev. and Mrs.
Stewart B. West UP
Mrs. William A. Trice Jr. CS
Frank Rex and Nadine White
Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas L. Trott CS
Mark and Molly Whitehouse
E. Donald Trotter
C. Hyde Tucker UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Charles M. Whittington CS
Ute K. and
William E. Tucker UP
James and
Juanita Wightman
Rhoda A. Wilkerson UP
Joy E. Jones UP
Dewey L. Stinson Jr. UP
Col. and Mrs.
William H. Tucker Jr.
Alice Latimer
Lisa Ann Storms and
David W. Roberts Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Turner Jr. UP
Col. and Mrs.
Richard F. Wilkinson UP
Mr. and Mrs. Jody L. Williams
Arlene Oliver
Mr. and Mrs.
W. Alexander Stuart Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Turner
Col. and Mrs. T.O. Williams III
Frances Long Oliver
Mark and Helen Wilson UP
Robert J. and
Julia N. Styne UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur H. Tusler Jr.
J. William Pamplin UP
Virginia Peters Wilson
Ralph G. Roop UP
Jack and Judy Sweers UP
Mrs. William B. Umberger
Richard S. Winstead
William H. Speiden
William J. Sweet
Virginia White Taylor
Hazel C. and Lee C. Tait UP
Patricia Y. Ames-Urie andDavid Milton Urie Jr.
Kay Moody and
Peter Winzenried UP
Edwin H. and
Melinda P. Talley UP
Dr. and Mrs.
Edwin W. Vaughan
Robert W. and
Elizabeth Anne Tallgren
Norman O. Wagenschein CS
Ronald D. and
Irene A. Stephens
Edward O. Sternberg
Mr. and Mrs.
William M. Sterrett Jr. UP
Susan V. Stevens
Donald W. and
Madeline H. Stewart UP
Douglas and
Catherine Stewart UP
Jeffrey Stewart UP
Mrs. George A. Stewart UP
J. Richard Tawes
Orren K. Tench Jr. and
Helena P. Tench
Mr. and Mrs.
C. Stephen Thomas UP
David T. Thomas UP
Margaret Allen Thomas UP
Maj. Gen. and Mrs.
Thomas T. Thompson UP
Paul M. and
Martha A. Thorn
Mr. and Mrs.
David L. Thornton
Dorothea and
Paul E. Torgersen UP
Mr. and Mrs.
W. Barry Wagner
Chester A. Waldron UP
Michael A. and
Charlotte Anne Walker
Randolph and
Lucinda Walker
Kenneth J. and
Joan Ross Walsky
George Truman Ward and
Margaret Hall Ward UP
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Ward
Richard C. Ward
Alfred B. and
Fonda P. Warwick CS
John B. Whitt
Dorothy G. Wiss
C.B. and Louise Wood
Mr. and Mrs.
Morton Wood Jr.
Hal G. Worley UP
Wesley T. and
Janet C. Worsham UP
Howard I. and
Sharon R. Wright
Howard L. Wright Jr. and
Joyce K. Wright
Steven M. and
Cheryl H. Yates
Mrs. Comer V. Yeatts
Elaine W. and
Andrew J. Young Jr. UP
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert B. Younger Jr.
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
55
Dr. Robert S. Burford Jr.
Lloyd G. Doxey UP
Virginia H. Doxey UP
Richard B. Gillett UP
Fred A. Gosnell Jr. CS
Dr. Frederick C. Grant UP
William H. Jeffress UP
Stuart Johnson UP
Glenn R. Noffsinger
Dr. R.B. Thomas
Anne Waldron UP
Muriel Walts UP
Wilfred Wells
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
56
The Inn at Virginia Tech & Skelton Conference Center -- a new home for alumni.
UNIVERSITY DEVELOPMENT CONTACTS
Elizabeth A. Flanagan
Vice President
for Development and
University Relations
540/231-7676
[email protected]
Thimothy Corvin
Associate Vice President
for University
Development
540/231-2801
[email protected]
Rhonda Arsenault
Associate Vice President
for Advancement
Services
540/231-2833
[email protected]
Mary Grace Theodore
Campaign Director
540/231-6234
[email protected]
Salinda Arthur
Assistant Vice President
of Development
for Colleges
540/231-8673
[email protected]
Bruce Landis
Assistant Vice President
of Development for
University Programs
540/231-7223
[email protected]
Samuel Albimino
Director of Corporate
Relations
Pamplin College
of Business
540/231-4524
[email protected]
Wallace Allen
Associate Director of
Corporate Relations
Virginia-Maryland
Regional College of
Veterinary Medicine
540/231-3729
[email protected]
Mark Armagost
Director of
Corporate Relations
540/231-3737
[email protected]
Robert Bailey
Senior Director of
Regional Major Gifts
540/231-2873
[email protected]
Max Bales
Director of Development
College of Agriculture and
Life Sciences
540/231-1987
[email protected]
Matt Banks
Director of Development
College of Science
540/231-2551
[email protected]
Kim Christopoulos
Director of Donor
Relations
540/231-2827
[email protected]
Carl Fowlkes
Director of Annual
Giving and Special Gifts
540/231-3171
[email protected]
Steven Clark
Director of Gift Planning
540/231-2813
[email protected]
Thomas Giffin
Director of Development
Honors Program
540/231-2898
[email protected]
Tracy Cooper
Director of Development
College of Architecture
and Urban Studies
540/231-7562
[email protected]
Tammy Crosson
Director of Development
Student Affairs and
Parents Support
540/231-5111
[email protected]
Otis “O.T.” Crowther Jr.
Director of Development
Pamplin College of
Business
540/231-5662
[email protected]
Erin Edwards
Director of Development
College of Engineering
540/231-4066
[email protected]
Cynthia Ann Gray
Resources Officer
WVTF Public Radio
540/231-8900
[email protected]
Hunter Q. Gresham
Director of
Special Events
540/231-4853
[email protected]
Deborah Hamilton
Associate Director of
Corporate Relations
College of Engineering
540/231-6648
[email protected]
Timothy Howland
Associate Director of
Corporate Relations
College of Science
540/231-8739
[email protected]
continues...
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
57
CONTACTS, CONT’D
Tysus Jackson
Director of Development
College of Liberal Arts
and Human Sciences
540/231-8734
[email protected]
Vernon Meacham
Associate Director of
Corporate Relations
College of Agriculture
and Life Sciences
540/231-3071
[email protected]
Nancy Parsons
Director of Development
College of Natural
Resources
540/231-8859
[email protected]
E. Frank Pearsall II
Director of Development
Virginia-Maryland
Regional College of
Veterinary Medicine
540/231-4259
[email protected]
Kylie Johnson
Director of Development
for the Arts
540/231-3751
[email protected]
J. Douglas McAlister
Director of Development
W.E. Skelton 4-H
Educational Conference
Center at Smith
Mountain Lake
540/231-6913
[email protected]
Michael Kiser
Director of Development
Communications
540/231-4733
[email protected]
Lucius Merritt Jr.
Director of Development
Intercollegiate Athletics
540/231-6618
[email protected]
Miya Simpson
Director of Development
Graduate School
540/231-6529
[email protected]
Catherine Larmore
Director of Development
Equine Programs
540/687-3521
[email protected]
Elizabeth Moore
Director of Development
University Libraries
540/231-1886
[email protected]
David Spracher
Director of Development
Corps of Cadets
540/231-2806
[email protected]
VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
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VIRGINIA TECH PHILANTHROPY ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
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VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION INC. | WWW.VTF.VT.EDU | WWW.GIVINGTO.VT.EDU
VIRGINIA TECH FOUNDATION ANNUAL REPORT | 2005-2006
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