00 Virginia Tech Foundation Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report To Our Investors “The...

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2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

Transcript of 00 Virginia Tech Foundation Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report To Our Investors “The...

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

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Virginia Tech Foundation Inc. Officers

Gene A. James | Chairman of the Board

Raymond D. Smoot Jr. | Chief Operating Officer and Secretary/Treasurer

Elizabeth A. Flanagan | Executive Vice President

James A. Hyatt | Executive Vice President

Robert A. Archer

Bridget A. Berman

Richard D. Bishop

Willis P. Blackwood

John T. Bruce

John D. Clary

Ben J. Davenport Jr.

Sandra C. Davis

John T. DeBell Sr.

Charles L. Eaton

William B. Holtzman

Gene A. James

Joseph R. Jenkins

Theodore E. King Jr.

William C. Latham

Robert C. Lawson Jr.

Samuel L. Lionberger Jr.

Mary F. McVay

James E. Pearman Jr.

Charles W. Pryor Jr.

Jean DuPont Shehan

Margaret G. Skelton

Garnett E. Smith

James E. Smith

Charles W. Steger

Judith S. Strickler

James E. Turner Jr.

Leo A. Vecellio Jr.

G.T. Ward

E. Carlton Wilton Jr.

Kay M. Winzenreid

Contents

Gene A. James | Chairman of the Board .......................................................... 5

Raymond D. Smoot Jr. | Chief Operating Officer and Secretary/Treasurer ....... 7

Corporate Research Center Adds Facilities and Companies ............................ 9

Hotel Roanoke Continues a Tradition of Excellence ....................................... 11

WVTF Introduces News and Technological Innovations .................................. 13

CESA Enhances Its Presence ........................................................................... 15

Pete Dye River Course Near Completion ....................................................... 17

Financial Highlights ..................................................................................... 18

Elizabeth A. Flanagan | Vice President for Development and University Relations ......................................... 27

Private Philanthropy 2005 | A Record-breaking Year ................................... 29

Major Gift Highlights ................................................................................... 30

Designations, Uses, and Sources of Gifts .................................................... 32

Giving Societies

Ut Prosim Society ........................................................................................ 35

Caldwell Society .......................................................................................... 40

Legacy Society ............................................................................................ 41

University Development Contacts .................................................. Back Cover

Officers

Board of Directors

cover photo: The Pylons at War Memorial Chapel [Jack Mellott]

Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

University Philanthropy Annual Report

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

To Our Investors“The generosity of our alumni and friends and the leadership of volunteer capital campaign workers are making a difference in Virginia Tech’s ability to respond in new and meaningful ways to the challenges and needs of our state, nation, and world.”Gene A. James | Chairman of the Board

The past year has been active and successful in advancing financial and programmatic support of Virginia Tech. The construction of major academic and athletic facilities was made possible, financial support to students and faculty reached record lev-els, and funding and logistics support of the capital campaign assisted in reaching a new high in pri-vate contributions to enhance university programs.

The Holtzman Alumni Center, Skelton Conference Center, and Inn at Virginia Tech neared completion, helped by $16 million in private funds through the Virginia Tech Foundation. Constructed in Hokie Stone and reflecting a contemporary statement of traditional campus architecture, these gateway facilities present a welcoming and improved impression of the university to returning alumni, conferees, and perspective students and their families.

Research and entrepreneurship were advanced through construction of an additional building at the Smart Road for the Virginia Tech Trans-portation Institute and the Virginia Tech KnowledgeWorks building in the Corporate Research Center. Expansion of Lane Stadium to provide additional spectator seating options, athlete academic support facilities, and staff office space neared completion, as did rebuilding of The River Course by Pete Dye and construction of a golf team and course manage-ment facility. All of these facilities will enhance a variety of university programs. They compare favorably with similar facilities at leading universities across the country.

Able students and distinguished faculty members are crucial to academic quality and reputation. The Virginia Tech Foundation provided $32.3 mil-lion for student financial assistance and faculty support during the year. This support enabled Virginia Tech to recruit and attract the most able stu-dent body ever as reflected by high school performance and national test scores. Strengthened faculty recruiting and retention were also supported.

Substantial and increasing private support is characteristic of the best pub-lic universities across the country. The generosity of our alumni and friends and the leadership of volunteer capital campaign workers are making a difference in Virginia Tech’s ability to respond in new and meaningful ways to the challenges and needs of our state, nation, and world.

It is appropriate to recognize and express appreciation for the exceptional contributions of Minnis Ridenour upon his retirement from a 30-year career as a senior university administrator and officer of the Virginia Tech Founda-tion. Minnis has personified the spirit of Ut Prosim in his service to Virginia Tech, and I extend my appreciation and best wishes to him.

Sincerely,

Gene A. James | Chairman of the Board

< The Holtzman Alumni Center under construction [Rick Griffiths]

A Message from the COO“The consolidated endowment earned 10.5 percent for the year, which compares favorably with university endowments of similar size, and considerably exceeded the 6.3 percent return of the S&P 500.”Raymond D. Smoot Jr. | Chief Operating Officer and Secretary/Treasurer

Support of university programs totaled $97.8 mil-lion as compared to $86.6 million in the previous year. Revenues for the year totaled $152 million, an increase of 11.8 percent over the previous year. Net gains on investments accounted for $25.9 million of this increase. Total assets increased to $728 million, which compares to $670.4 million the previous year. Total net assets increased to $544.3 million from $489.4 million.

The value of the Virginia Tech endowment was $408.5 million at the end of the fiscal year. The consolidated endowment earned 10.5 percent for the year, which compares favorably with university endowments of similar size, and considerably exceeded the 6.3 percent return of the S&P 500. During the past year, the Investment Committee increased the allocation to non-marketable investments with commitments to six venture capital and private equity partnerships totaling $21 million. New commitments will be reviewed and added yearly until the fund’s 15 percent allocation to non-marketable investments is achieved.

In 1972, the Virginia Tech Foundation leased 12 acres at the edge of the campus to a private party for construction and operation of a motel. In recent years, the financial return of this arrangement became unattractive compared to the likely return from other uses of the property. Mutual agreement was reached with the lessee to close the motel and terminate the lease. Late in the fiscal year, the foundation issued a public request for proposal for the redevelopment of the property in a manner anticipated to significantly increase income, which will enhance the foundation’s ability to respond to financial needs of the university.

The growth of the Virginia Tech Corporate Research Center continues with construction of two additional buildings owned by the foundation; one for the new Virginia Tech KnowledgeWorks program and another for the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute. KnowledgeWorks will house a new corporate research center initiative to accelerate the creation and successful growth of start-up companies by providing facilities, coaching, and early access to capital. Since KnowledgeWorks opened in April, 18 start-up companies have joined the program. The Virginia Tech Transportation Institute building will support the continuing growth of research at the Smart Road research site.

During the year planning moved forward for an office building to house foundation and University Development offices. Upon completion in late 2006, these offices, currently housed in six locations around Blacksburg, will come together to facilitate collaboration and communication in their common work to maximize private support to Virginia Tech through asset management and fundraising.

Reconstruction of The River Course by Pete Dye is finished and construction of a golf team teaching and practice facility and maintenance building near completion. Planning and fundraising were initiated for a clubhouse to support The River Course and serve as a venue for a variety of university events. The reconstruction of the golf course and team and maintenance facility were made possible by the generosity of Bill and Alice Goodwin.

It continues to be a pleasure to work with our alumni and friends, as well as colleagues within the university and foundation, to advance the programs and mission of Virginia Tech. Your support is invaluable and ap-preciated by all who take pride in the contributions Virginia Tech makes to the commonwealth, the nation, and the world.

Sincerely,

Raymond D. Smoot Jr. | Chief Operating Officer and Secretary/Treasurer

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

< Newman Library [Bob Veltri]

Corporate Research Center Adds Facilities and CompaniesThe Virginia Tech Corporate Research Center (CRC), a subsidiary of the Virginia Tech Foundation, con-tinued its successful expansion in 2004-05. The park has more than 130 research and development businesses and research centers, and employment is more than 1,830.

The CRC now has 19 buildings containing more than 685,000 square feet. The 19th building, partly funded by a $2 million grant from the Economic Development Administration, was completed in May 2005 and houses VT KnowledgeWorks, the CRC’s incubator program. VT KnowledgeWorks facilitates the start-up of new companies based on intellectual property developed by Virginia Tech and others, with the expectation that it will develop a new generation of companies at the CRC. More information can be obtained at www.knowledgeworks.com.

Two additional buildings are under construction. The Virginia Tech comput-er science department will occupy a 40,000-square-foot building adjacent to VT KnowledgeWorks, and a 30,000-square-foot facility adjacent to the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute building will house transportation research. Both buildings will be complete in mid-2006.

In addition, planning is underway for a 32,000-square-foot building to house Tech’s Institute for Critical Technologies and Applied Sciences. This building is scheduled to be completed in the early part of 2007. The CRC also has an option on another parcel of land for a private company head-quartered in Texas.

One mission of the CRC is to advance Virginia Tech’s teaching and research missions. Various student groups work with companies at the park as part of their studies, and tenant companies sponsor research at the university each year. Faculty members consult with the companies and the knowl-edge they gain is put to work in the classroom to benefit students.

The success of the tenants in the park has been due in part to advan-tages offered by the CRC, including a comprehensive business assistance program, a low-cost telecommunications infrastructure, and a financial as-sistance package. The CRC is also attractive because of the quality of work and home life that Southwest Virginia offers. This quality of life is enriched at the CRC by numerous recreational opportunities, such as volleyball and basketball leagues, hiking trails, bike lanes, and an on-site 5,000-square-foot fitness center. The park also recently opened a library that companies can use for research and recreation.

With room to expand, the CRC will continue supporting university programs by providing quality infrastructure for growth of high-tech, high-quality companies and jobs in the region.

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

The CRC is also attractive because of the quality of work and home life that Southwest Virginia offers. This quality of life is enriched at the CRC by numerous recreational opportunities.

< The Corporate Research Center [Rick Grifiths]

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< Hotel Roanoke [Michael Kiernan]

Hotel Roanoke Continues Tradition of ExcellenceThe Hotel Roanoke, celebrating its 10th anniver-sary after reopening in 1995, exceeded numerous financial performance goals in 2004-05, including record-high gross revenues, occupancy rate, aver-age daily rate, and revenues per available room.

Total operating revenues for the Hotel Roanoke were $16.84 million for fiscal year 2005, compared to $15.8 million in 2004. Net operating income for the fiscal year was $2.47 million, up from $1.9 million in 2004, and the occupancy rate for 2005 was a record 76.5 percent, compared to 75 percent in fiscal year 2004. The average daily rate set another record at $100.02, nearly $6 more than in 2004.

The total cash distributed for debt service and other obligations was $3 million, with $1.195 million going directly to the Virginia Tech Founda-tion. The foundation used this money to address all past HUD loan accruals and all current obligations for the $6 million loan. This enabled the foundation to be current on all external debt obligations, which is another significant milestone for hotel operations.

Other highlights of the year included hosting the 24th Annual Conference of the International Association of Conference Centers. Attendees rated the facility the best conference center and experience in the past five years. The Regency Dining Room was awarded Wine Spectator’s Excellence Award and the DiRoNa Award as one of the top restaurants in North America. The hotel was one of 10 Doubletree facilities to win a Pride Award and it also finished second as the best full-service Doubletree Hotel in the United States. It finished first in 2004.

Virginia Tech’s colleges, alumni groups, and continuing education programs are making good use of the hotel and conference center to bring together members of the university community and alumni, as well as people who had never experienced Tech’s educational and outreach resources. During the year, approximately 9,156 room nights were associated with the university group market, which was approximately 10 percent of the total 92,772 room nights and 23 percent of the 39,177 total group market room nights. In addition, the university business segment accounted for 19,348 day-meeting participants and Tech’s COTA program supported other association and company meetings.

Hotel Roanoke’s executive management team assumed responsibility for the university’s new Inn at Virginia Tech and Skelton Conference Center, which replaced the Donaldson Brown Hotel and Conference Center in the summer of 2005. This dual management arrangement maximizes opera-tional efficiencies and provides more options for the university community.

The 332-room Hotel Roanoke, which first opened in 1882, was given to the Virginia Tech Real Estate Foundation in late 1989 by the predecessor of the Norfolk Southern Corporation (Norfolk and Western Railroad). The foundation, along with local companies and citizens of the Roanoke Valley, raised $6 million for the $28 million refurbishment. The City of Roanoke funded construction of the $12 million conference center as well as street and other improvements related to the renovation project.

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

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Attendees rated the facility the best conference center and experience in the past five years.

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...the station is optimistic that its public service programming will continue to grow in importance and value for the residents of Southwest and Central Virginia and bordering communities.

< The WVTF broadcast facility [Rick Griffiths]

WVTF Introduces News and Technological InnovationsIn fiscal year 2004-05, WVTF made important advances in programming, engineering, and development, and it continued to enhance the region’s quality of life by offering an important and substantive public service to nearly 20 percent of Virginia’s residents.

WVTF organized the inaugural meeting of Virginia’s largest public radio stations to form the Virginia Public Radio News Bureau. This collabora-tion of stations now supports a part-time news reporter in Richmond. The reporter enhances public service programming with in-depth stories that focus primarily on important developments in Virginia’s govern-ment and politics.

WVTF’s Radio Reading Service helped nearly 2,000 visually impaired individuals in the station’s coverage area. Volunteers read local newspapers and magazines over special radios.

The addition of HD Radio digital broadcasting to WVTF’s Charlottesville signals (88.5 and 89.3 FM) was the highlight of this past year’s engineer-ing accomplishments. This new technology is the first step in offering two different public radio program streams (WVTF and RADIO IQ) to all areas of coverage. WVTF is the first radio station licensed in Virginia to transmit an HD Radio “multicasting” signal. The station plans to add HD Radio to the main 89.1 FM transmitter in Roanoke during the next year, pending a federal grant to help finance this expensive equipment upgrade.

Financially, the station had another strong showing. For the fourth year in a row, listeners donated more than $1 million to WVTF. More than 9,600 individuals contributed more than half of the station’s total revenue, with the average gift setting a high mark of just under $112. A $164,000 gift from a long-time listener was the largest single planned gift ever received by the station. Total listener-sensitive revenue was nearly $1.8 million and corporate underwriting accounted for close to $545,000 of that support.

Grants are an important source of revenue for WVTF, and last fiscal year the station received important awards for major programming and technical projects. These grants totaled nearly $665,000, including $473,000 from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and $155,000 from the Common-wealth of Virginia.

The news department produced over 300 hours of local and regional news programming, including newscasts, in-depth series and feature reports, documentaries, listener essays and commentaries, special news and public affairs programs, and reports from the Virginia General Assembly. The flagship public affairs program, Evening Edition, featured guests and listener call-in participation that explored such topics as Virginia’s Freedom of Information Act, federal funding of public radio and television, state transportation issues, charter universities, and gangs in Virginia.

Last year was an excellent year for WVTF, and the station is optimistic that its public service programming will continue to grow in importance and value for the residents of Southwest and Central Virginia and border-ing communities.

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

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CESA Enhances its PresenceThe Center for European Studies and Architecture (CESA) helped advance the university’s interna-tional agenda in 2004-05 through its continuing and new programs.

Regular semester-long academic programs offered by the College of Architecture and Urban Studies, Pamplin College of Business, and College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences continued to be highly competitive and well-attended. In addition, a number of other programs from Tech and the surrounding region used the center, including the Symposium for Computational Drug Design, sponsored by Virginia Tech’s National Capital Region; a visit by Swiss ambassador to the United States and Mrs. Christian Blickenstorfer; and a visit by the Executive MBA Program from Falls Church. The center also hosted numerous town and community functions. All of these have solidified the role of the center as a regional community citizen and as the university’s European hub.

CESA hosted seven special summer programs in 2005, an all-time high. An initial International Faculty Development Institute brought together 13 Virginia Tech faculty members to actively cultivate new research, academic, and outreach partnership possibilities across Europe. The Virginia Tech Board of Visitors planning retreat at CESA, a historic first, allowed the board to meet key European academic partners and Virginia Tech alumni and students in Europe. A College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences interdis-ciplinary program brought arts, language, and classical studies together, while a new program in civil and environmental engineering explored traditions and new developments in Swiss bridge design.

In the coming year, a long-range master plan will be created for academic programs and the development of CESA’s physical property. Providing on-site housing for all CESA students and faculty members, renovating existing spaces, and providing additional program space will allow for even greater opportunities for growth and development.

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

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CESA hosted seven special summer programs in 2005, an all-time high.

< The Virginia Tech Center for European Studies and Architecture in Switzerland [Bob Veltri]

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Pete Dye River Course of Virginia Tech Near CompletionIn October 2002, the Virginia Tech Foundation acquired The River Course, an 18-hole golf course with bent grass greens, fairway, and tees. The gorgeous three-year-old layout, designed by Ault, Clark, and Associates and constructed by Blue Ridge Golf, borders more than 2.5 miles of the beautiful New River.

But the foundation and Bill Goodwin ’62 had even higher aspirations for the course.

At Goodwin’s request, world-renowned golf course architect Pete Dye visited the course in the summer of 2003 to evaluate the potential for transforming it into an acclaimed university course capable of hosting national intercol-legiate championships. Dye was immediately struck by the natural beauty of the New River setting with its bold rock outcroppings, hints of whitewater, and natural framing provided by the mountains.

Goodwin and his wife, Alice, commissioned Dye to transform the course with the unique creativity that characterizes his other work, such as The Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, Harbor Town at Hilton Head, and Whistling Straits in Wisconsin. Recognizing that a successful golf course and col-legiate golf program required more than a course, the Goodwins included in their gift a new, completely equipped turf-care facility and a state-of-the-art golf team complex with indoor/outdoor hitting stations, video teaching/training capability, equipment repair area, team room, and locker rooms. The Goodwin’s gift also included money for the operating losses that would occur while the course was closed for reconstruction.

Reconstruction of the golf course and construction of the turf-care and team facilities began in late 2003. All 18 greens were totally rebuilt, more than 400,000 cubic yards of earth was moved, and thousands of yards of sod was either moved or added. Dye’s three initial objectives – reducing the green-to-tee distance to make walking the course easier; lengthening the course for championship-level play while maintaining an enjoyable layout for average golfers; and enhancing the natural beauty of the setting – were achieved. The course reopened for play in late August 2005 while finishing work and grow-in for some areas continued. The turf care and team facilities were scheduled to be ready for full use by November 2005. Dye was so satisfied with the result that he agreed to let the course be renamed the Pete Dye River Course of Virginia Tech.

The course will provide championship-caliber golf for university students, faculty, and staff and the university golf team, while filling the void cre-ated by the closing of nine holes of the campus golf course for the new hotel and conference center. River Course LLC – with the foundation as the sole member – was created to own and operate the property.

John Norton, general manager and PGA professional; Mark Hall, golf course superintendent; and Jay Hardwick, director of golf operations, have many years of successful golf course management experience. They, along with River Course LLC operating board members Ray Smoot (chairman), David Lowe, Bill Sterrett, Buddy Russell, Betsy Gordon, Tom Gabbard, Chris Wise, and Bill Snizek, are committed to attaining and maintaining the vision of Pete Dye, the expectations of Bill and Alice Goodwin, and the winning traditions of Virginia Tech.

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

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< The Pete Dye River Course of Virginia Tech [Michael Kiernan]

Dye was immediately struck by the natural beauty of the New River setting with its the bold rock outcroppings, hints of whitewater, and natural framing provided by the mountains.

Revenues, Gains, and Other Support

Foundation ContributionsTotals in millions

Value of TrustsTotals in millions

80

70

60

50

40

30

20

10

0

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

75.4

49.1 47.353.9

71.6

50

40

30

20

10

0

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

39.2

44.7 44.3 45.1 47.1

Foundation AssetsTotals in millions

Foundation ExpendituresTotals in millions

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

Financial HighlightsThe foundation’s managed funds increased by $57.3 million, ending the year at a value of $727.6 million. Despite up-and-down trends in the investment markets, private giving remained strong at $71.6 million. Foundation net revenues totaled $152 million, while expen-ditures supporting various university projects and programs accounted for $97.8 million of foundation spending.

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

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A B

C

D E

F

G

A. Contributions .............................$71,585,686 ............47.1%B. Investment income ......................10,013,585 ..............6.6% C. Net gains on investments ............25,916,183 ............17.1%D. Rental income................................9,522,517 ..............6.3% E. Hotel Roanoke revenues ..............16,828,705 ............11.1%F. Other income ...............................17,424,431 ............11.4% G. Golf course revenue ..........................577,570 ..............0.4%

Total .............................................$151,868,677 ..........100.0%

800

700

600

500

400

300

200

100

0

624.5 601.3 613.5670.4

728

100

80

60

40

20

0

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

76.4

88.095.1

86.6

97.8

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

Consolidated Endowment Performance

12

10

8

6

4

2

0

One Y

ear

Thre

e Yea

r

Five Y

ear

Ten Y

ear

10.5%9.9%

3.6%

8.1%

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

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............................................................................................................................Student .............................. Program College or Area ......................................................... Total ................................Financial Aid ............................Support

Agriculture & Life Sciences ........................................ $3,441,727 .................................. $486,485 .............................. $2,955,242 Architecture & Urban Studies ......................................... 623,686 .................................... 168,801 ................................... 454,885 Science ........................................................................ 1,809,145 .................................... 241,381 ................................ 1,567,764 Business ...................................................................... 2,687,949 .................................... 849,446 ................................ 1,838,503 Engineering ................................................................ 8,276,604 ................................. 2,235,518 ................................ 6,041,086 Natural Resources ....................................................... 1,457,978 .................................... 281,823 ................................ 1,176,155 Liberal Arts & Human Sciences .................................... 1,976,632 .................................... 254,622 ................................ 1,722,010 Veterinary Medicine .................................................... 1,960,453 .................................... 507,628 ................................ 1,452,825 Athletics .................................................................... 12,634,101 ................................. 4,565,082 ................................ 8,069,019 Extension ....................................................................... 605,684 ...................................... 20,209 ................................... 585,475 Military Affairs ................................................................875,878 .................................... 658,720 ..................................... 217,158 General Scholarship .....................................................2,370,039 ................................. 2,370,039 .................................................. Development ...............................................................7,592,613 .................................................................................... 7,592,613 Alumni .........................................................................9,264,133 .................................................................................... 9,264,133 Bioinformatics ...................................................................88,643 ......................................................................................... 88,643 Outreach ......................................................................2,623,255 .................................................................................... 2,623,255 Research ......................................................................3,459,904 .................................................................................... 3,459,904 Student Affairs ................................................................524,148 ....................................................................................... 524,148 4-H Centers ................................................................. 1,844,320 ........................................ 2,800 ................................ 1,841,520 European Studies Center .................................................647,626 ....................................................................................... 647,626 WVTF Public Radio .......................................................2,296,193 .................................................................................... 2,296,193

Hotel Roanoke ............................................................15,115,279 .................................................................................. 15,115,279 Corporate Research Center ...........................................6,229,506 .................................................................................... 6,229,506 River Course LLC ...........................................................1,301,295 .................................................................................... 1,301,295 Real Estate ...................................................................2,320,638 .................................................................................... 2,320,638 Administrative .............................................................1,492,917 .................................................................................... 1,492,917

TOTAL ...................................................................... $97,774,960 ............................. $12,642,554 ............................ $85,132,406

Expenditures by College or Program Designation of Contributions*

Coll

ege/

Unive

rsity

Prog

ram

Foun

datio

n Ope

ratio

ns/

Gene

ral

College/Program/Other Contributions Allocation

Agriculture & Life Sciences ................... $3,079,586.00 ...............4.3% Architecture & Urban Studies ............... $1,679,661.00 ...............2.3% Science ................................................. $2,374,571.00 ...............3.3% Business ............................................... $2,092,782.00 ...............2.9% Engineering ......................................... $8,862,992.00 .............12.4% Natural Resources ................................... $908,979.00 ...............1.3% Liberal Arts & Human Sciences ............. $1,593,358.00 ...............2.2% Veterinary Medicine ............................. $2,576,538.00 ...............3.6% Alumni Affairs ...................................... $3,615,980.00 ...............5.1% Athletics ............................................. $22,854,151.00 ................32% Extension ............................................. $1,926,398.00 ...............2.7% Academic Affairs .................................. $2,504,669.00 ...............3.5% Information Systems ............................... $142,500.00 ...............0.2% International Programs ........................... $335,201.00 ...............0.5% Research & Graduate Studies .................. $366,922.00 ...............0.5% Student Affairs ........................................ $345,344.00 ...............0.5% Corps of Cadets ..................................... $1,871,158.00 ...............2.6% WVTF Public Radio ............................... $1,999,050.00 ...............2.8% 4-H Centers .......................................... $1,722,154.00 ...............2.4% Real Estate ........................................... $3,472,213.00 ..................5% Trusts ................................................... $2,969,991.00 ...............4.2% Future Designations ............................. $1,259,263.00 ...............1.9% Pledges Receivable ................................. $903,260.00 ...............1.3% Gift Annuities .......................................... $399,517.00 ...............0.1% Other .................................................... $1,729,448.00 ...............2.4%

Total ................................................... $71,585,686.00 ..............100%

Expenditure by Function

Category ..........................................Dollar Figure Percentage

A. Support to university programs ........... $39,059,678 ...........39.9% B. Student financial assistance .................. 12,642,554 ...........12.9% C. University capital outlay ........................ 11,941,390 ...........12.2% D. Fundraising ............................................. 7,693,541 .............7.9% E. Research park .......................................... 6,229,506 .............6.4% F. Hotel Roanoke ........................................ 15,115,279 ...........15.5% G. Management and general ....................... 1,492,917 .............1.5% H. River Course ........................................... 1,301,295 .............1.3% I. Impairment loss on intangibles* ............. 2,298,800 .............2.4%

Total ...................................................... $97,774,960 .........100.0%

* Relates to the decrease in value of intellectual property gifted to the foundation.

A B

C

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G H I

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

Endowment HighlightsAs of June 30, 2005, the market value of all endowments held by the Virginia Tech Foundation Inc., including pledges to endowments, totaled $408 million held in 2,689 individual accounts. Of that total, $384.5 million was invested in the founda-tion’s pooled consolidated endowment fund, while $24.1 million was held separately in real estate partnerships, notes, deeds of trust, and contributions receivable, as well as other corporate securities. Endowment value per full-time student was $15,941 for the same time frame.

The June 30 allocation of the foundation’s pooled endowment fund consisted of 34.5 percent domestic equity, 15.8 percent foreign equity, 6.4 percent real estate, 16.1 percent marketable alternative assets, 4.2 percent non-marketable alterna-tive assets, 21.2 percent U.S. bonds, and 1.8 percent cash and cash equivalents. The fund achieved a 10.5 percent return over the trailing one-year period and an annualized return of 8.1 percent over the trailing 10-year period.

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 are used to determine upper and lower boundaries for total spend-ing. A three-year average is used to smooth out the unit values when determining if spend-ing 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. The single most significant determinant of a fund’s return is 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 50 management firms offering a wide variety of asset classes and investment styles.

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Endowment Purpose

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Endowment Value Per Student

................... Endowment ........... Students as of Year ............ Market Value ............ Fall Semester $ per Student

1990 .................$120,170,954 ................... 22,922 ...................$5,243 1991 ...................131,195,712 ................... 23,365 .....................5,615 1992 ...................147,933,178 .................... 23,912 .....................6,187 1993 ...................168,058,641 ................... 23,637 .....................7,110 1994 ...................169,304,165 ................... 23,865 .....................7,094 1995 ...................205,138,585 ................... 23,873 .................... 8,593 1996 ...................244,537,663 ................... 23,674 ...................10,329 1997 ...................285,704,195 ................... 24,812 ...................11,515 1998 ...................331,013,180 ................... 25,213 ...................13,129 1999 .................. 340,243,732 ................... 25,608 ...................13,287 2000 .................. 368,196,579 ................... 25,783 ...................14,281 2001 .................. 359,527,534 ................... 25,643 ...................14,021 2002 .................. 328,679,928 ................... 25,912 ...................12,685 2003 .................. 331,311,105 ................... 25,819 ...................12,832 2004 .................. 370,811,010 ................... 25,737 ...................14,408 2005 .................. 408,560,308 ................... 25,629 ...................15,941

Endowment at Market Value

Total Scholarships .... Professorships Other

Agriculture & Life Sciences ..............$18,936,042 ........................$8,632,062 .......................$4,207,952 ....................... $6,096,028 Architecture & Urban Studies ..............5,826,679 ..........................2,296,671 .........................2,890,629 ............................ 639,379 Science ..............................................10,703,759 ..........................4,534,334 .........................4,058,662 ......................... 2,110,763 Business ............................................49,083,518 ........................19,697,255 .......................13,408,935 ....................... 15,977,328 Engineering ......................................57,453,979 ........................25,845,056 .......................22,924,477 ......................... 8,684,446 Natural Resources .............................11,941,325 ..........................2,720,630 .........................4,209,295 ......................... 5,011,400 Liberal Arts & Human Sciences ..........10,322,195 ..........................4,682,410 .........................2,387,520 ......................... 3,252,265 Veterinary Medicine ..........................17,090,016 ..........................8,147,836 .........................3,418,445 ......................... 5,523,735 Athletics ............................................29,408,526 ........................28,803,483 .......................................0 ............................ 605,043 Extension ............................................7,288,796 .............................881,193 .........................1,383,659 ......................... 5,023,944 General ...........................................117,122,566 ........................47,821,466 .........................2,027,166 ....................... 67,273,933 Other Agency ......................................7,951,069 ...............................96,349 .......................................0 ......................... 7,854,720 Pratt/Animal Nutrition ......................20,114,522 ........................10,660,696 .......................................0 ......................... 9,453,826 Pratt/Engineering .............................19,090,826 ........................18,086,649 .......................................0 ......................... 1,004,177 Quasi-Endowment ............................12,073,108 ........................................0 .......................................0 ....................... 12,073,108 VTCCA ................................................14,153,382 ........................13,363,319 .......................................0 ............................ 790,063

Total .............................................$408,560,308 ....................$196,269,409 ..................... $60,916,740 ................... $151,374,158

Category ................... Dollar Figure Percentage # of Funds

A. Scholarships ............ $196,269,409 ........... 48.0% ................ 1,837 B. Professorships ...............60,916,740 ........... 14.9% ................... 158 C. Other ..........................151,374,158 ........... 37.1% ................... 694

Total ........................... $408,560,308 ..........100.0% ................ 2,689

Colle

ge or

Area

2005 Virginia Tech Foundation Annual Report

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2005 Virginia Tech Philanthropy Annual Report

Virginia Tech does not discriminate against employees, students, or applicants for admission or employment on the basis of race, gender, disability, age, veteran status, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, or political affiliation. Anyone having questions concerning discrimination should contact the Office for Equal Opportunity.

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2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

From the Vice President“It is a privilege for all of us at Virginia Tech to work in the field of higher education and witness the transformative power these acts of philanthropy have on the university. “Elizabeth A. Flanagan | Vice President for Development and University Relations

Private giving to Virginia Tech in the past year broke all records. University friends and alumni donated more than $76.5 million dollars, proving once again that they are among the most loyal and generous supporters to be found anywhere in the country.

As ever, private philanthropy makes it possible for Virginia Tech to support leading-edge research, attract top faculty to Blacksburg, reach out to our various communities, and continue to enhance the quality of educa-tion available at the university. Unrestricted gifts give us the freedom to capitalize on unforeseen opportunities, ranging from equipment purchases to hiring renowned faculty from around the world.

Private support for capital projects is also essential to Virginia Tech. A pro-ductive and distinguished research team is critical to putting theory into practice and drawing important research funding to the university. Such distinguished researchers want to do their work in cutting-edge facilities. Private support can help the university build the advanced research facili-ties that are vital as we attract these individuals and deliver innovative research to the world.

This year also saw the completion of a different kind of capital project funded largely through private donations — the Holtzman Alumni Center, Skelton Conference Center, and the Inn at Virginia Tech. The complex provides a home for alumni and a state-of-the-art conference facility that will host guests from around the world. Its construction has allowed the university to turn the Donaldson Brown Hotel and Conference Center into a graduate life center that provides much-needed graduate housing, learn-ing labs, counseling services, and more.

True to its land-grant mission, Virginia Tech is committed to delivering a qual-ity education to qualified students regardless of their means. Donors continue to support this objective through their gifts of scholarships and endowments in support of the educational enterprise. In many cases, a scholarship opens doors that would otherwise be closed for many of our students.

Private philanthropy enriches life throughout the university. Donors help the university to provide multicultural initiatives, offer greater opportuni-ties for honors students, fund study-abroad opportunities, and support student athletes. What our students experience at Virginia Tech will help them to discover the value of the principles we all hold dear — responsi-bility, self-discipline, community service, and the understanding of others. We have the chance to introduce them to new cultures, to provide them opportunities for leadership, to present new ways of viewing the world around them, and to create avenues for them to become involved in the creation of new knowledge through research.

Everyone at the university benefits from the generosity of supporters. Private giving plays an indisputable role in furthering the university’s goal of achieving exceptional results in research and scholarship. It is a privilege for all of us at Virginia Tech to work in the field of higher educa-tion and witness the transformative power these acts of philanthropy have on the university.

Elizabeth A. Flanagan | Vice President for Development and University Relations

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< The Duck Pond at Virginia Tech [Bob Veltri]

“True to its land-grant mission, Virginia Tech is committed to delivering a quality education to qualified students regardless of their means. Donors continue to support this objective through their gifts of scholarships and endowments in support of the educational enterprise.”

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Virginia Tech’s friends and alumni have always been known for their loyalty and generosity to the university. But they have truly surpassed themselves this past year. Private giving reached $76,548,695 in 2004-05, an increase of more than 14 percent over the previous year. Individuals contributed more than $28 million, while corporations and foundations donated nearly $48 million.

The Hokies’ successful inaugural year in the ACC certainly contributed to our fundraising success, with athletics raising $24,093,687. However, it wasn’t athletics alone that saw significant increases in private support by donors. The College of Agriculture and Life Sciences raised $5,064,087, an increase of almost 70 percent over fiscal year 2004. Private support of multicultural programs in 2005 was five times greater than in 2004. The W.E. Skelton 4-H Center at Smith Mountain Lake and the College of Engineering also saw significant increases.

This year’s increase shows just how much pride Virginia Tech’s alumni and friends have in the impact Virginia Tech has on students, on advancing knowledge, and on economic development in the commonwealth and beyond. Such steadfast and continuous support assures Virginia Tech’s place as one of the nation’s great universities.

Private Philanthropy in 2004-05: A Record-Breaking Year

2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

Some gift highlights from the year include:

An anonymous gift establishing a professorship in support of Cooperative Extension in the Col-lege of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

A gift from the estate of Harold C. Wright of Abingdon, Va., for the Wright Family scholarships, which benefit students across the university.

A gift from Patricia A. Caldwell of New York, N.Y., establishing the Patricia A. Caldwell Unrestricted Endowment to benefit the College of Science.

A donation from Alfred Knobler for the Alfred E. Knobler Graduate Assistantship in English.

A generous gift from the estate of Samuel Jones of Norfolk, Va., to the General Unrestricted Fund.

Corporations and foundations also generously supported Virginia Tech initiatives.

Pulte Homes Inc. made a gift of $337,000 to provide continued support to the Pulte Homes Endowed Pro-fessorship in the Building Construction Department.

Microsoft Corporation donated $112,626 to benefit the computer science department in the College of Engineering.

The Helen Whitaker Fund donated $100,000 to support the Department of Theatre Arts in the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences.

In addition to an increase in overall private giving, several corporations increased the giving power of their employees by providing matching gifts to Virginia Tech.

Altria Group Inc. donated $120,616 in matching gifts benefiting 25 different Virginia Tech funds.

The ExxonMobil Foundation donated $167,122 in matching gifts supporting 37 different designations.

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< The Duck Pond gazebo [Gary Colbert]

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From June O. Shott of Bluefield, W.Va., for the Lane Stadium expansion.

From Georgia A. Snyder-Falkinham of Blacksburg, Va., for the Lane Stadium expan-sion, the Building Construction Facility Fund, and men’s and women’s basketball.

From the estate of Edgar B. Boynton of Richmond, Va., a gift to the Edgar B. Boynton Endowment providing aca-demic support to the College of Engineering.

From Hugh T. Adams of New York, N.Y., a gift representing continued support for the Hugh Trumbull Adams Endowed Fund for the McCormick Homestead and Gristmill.

From Jay Taustin of Berlin, Md., a gift in-kind to benefit the Department of Animal and Poultry Sciences.

From Sheldon C. Nichols of Collinsville, Va., to benefit the Lane Stadium expansion and the Building Construction Facility Fund.

From John R. Lawson of New-port News, Va., contributing to the Lane Stadium expansion.

From Michael and Susan Bogese of Richmond, Va., to the Lane Stadium expansion.

From James S. Goodwin of New York, N.Y., a gift to benefit the Konrad W. Kubin Endowed Professorship in Accounting and Information Systems.

From the estate of Samuel G. Jones Jr. of Norfolk, Va., a gift to the General Unrestricted Fund.

From Garnett E. Smith and Patsy T. Smith of Moneta, Va., for the Garnett and Patsy Smith Research Productivity Fund in Veterinary Medicine, the Library Excellence Fund, the W.E. Skel-ton 4-H Educational Conference Center at Smith Mountain Lake, the Art Museum of Western Virginia, and the Marion DuPont Scott Equine Medical Center.

An anonymous gift benefiting the Department of Physics and the Robert C. Richardson Endowed Scholarship in Physics.

From William E. Reiser of Doylestown, Pa., support for the Dean’s Fund for Advancement in the College of Architecture and Urban Studies, and for the Lane Stadium expansion.

From Nicholas and Virginia Camicia of Greenwich, Conn., for the Nicholas T. Camicia Professorship in Mining Engineering.

From Carolyn Pearsall White of Blacksburg, Va., a gift in honor of her parents to establish the Carolyn Pearsall White Science and Technology in Society endowed fund, which provides program support for research in the Science and Technology in Society Department and support for the Family Therapy Center at Virginia Tech.

From William A. Hazel of Broad Run, Va., to benefit the Building Construction Facility Fund.

From Kenneth G. and Nancy J. Malm of Bethesda, Md., providing scholarship support to students in the Building and Construction Department through the Malm Family Scholarship.

From Ralph M. Simpson of Vero Beach, Fla., for the Lane Stadium expansion.

From J. Anthony Syme of Chantilly, Va., a gift to benefit the Cave Automated Virtual Environment, the Department of Aerospace and Ocean Engineer-ing, and research support to the College of Engineering.

From the estate of William H. French of Warsaw, Va., for the VTCCA Class of ‘24 Scholarship.

From Amenta Robeson Sjogren of Locust Grove, Va., in support of the Department of Physics.

Corporations and Foundations

$1.6 million from the Via-Bradley College of Engineer-ing Foundation of Roanoke, Va., for continuing support to the H.L. Bradley Endowment in Electrical Engineering and the Charles E. Via Civil Engineering Endowment.

$1.2 million from the JOCO Foundation of Blacksburg, Va., in support of extension opera-tions and capital projects at the W.E. Skelton 4-H Educational Conference Center at Smith Mountain Lake and for the Alumni and Conference Center.

$500,000 from the Harvey W. Peters Research Center of Roanoke, Va., in support of the Harvey W. Peters Research Cen-ter for the Study of Parkinson’s Disease and Other Central Nervous System Disorders.

$337,000 from Pulte Homes Inc. of Bloomfield Hills, Mich., to provide continued support to the Pulte Homes Endowed Professorship in the Building Construction Department.

$244,380 from CONSOL Energy Inc. of Pittsburgh, Pa., in sup-port for the Department of Mining and Minerals Engineer-ing, and a gift of maps from the archives and working collections of Consol Energy Inc. to benefit the Library Excellence Fund.

$200,000 from Willard Construc-tion of Roanoke Valley Inc., Va., to benefit the W.E. Skelton 4-H Educational Conference Center at Smith Mountain Lake and the Virginia Tech Athletic Fund.

$175,000 from Aerojet Corp. of Gainesville, Va., a gift to the Center for Turbomachinery and Propulsion Research in the Department of Mechanical Engineering.

$165,000 from Marshall Con-crete Products of Christians-burg Inc., Va., in support of the Lane Stadium expansion.

$130,000 from Transportation Technology Center Inc. of Pueblo, Col., in support of the Railway Technologies Laboratory in mechanical engineering.

$119,916 from the National Wooden Pallet & Container As-sociation of Alexandria, Va., to benefit the Department of Wood Science and Forest Products in the College of Natural Resources.

$117,854 from the W.R. Winslow Residuary Trust of McLean, Va., for the W.R. Winslow Agriculture Scholarship and the W.R. Winslow Veterinary Scholarship.

$115,000 from the HITT Foundation Inc. of Fairfax, Va., in support of the Building Construction Department.

$112,626 from Microsoft Cor-poration of Redmond, Wash., to benefit the Department of Computer Science in the College of 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 Vecellio Family Foundation Inc. of Beckley, W.Va., in continuing support of the Vecellio Leadership Scholarships and Fellowships and the Vecellio Lecture Series in the College of Engineering.

$100,000 from the Decade Charitable Lead Annuity Trust of Miami, Fla., providing gifts for the Marion duPont Scott Equine Medical Center Endowment Fund at the Equine Medical Center in Leesburg, Va.

$100,000 from the Helen Whitaker Fund of Mechan-icsburg, Pa., supporting the Department of Theatre Arts in the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences.

$100,000 from the Williams-Berry Charitable Foundation Trust of Bristol, Va., for the Harry & Patsy Williams Masters Studio in Bishop-Favrao Hall for the Building Construction Department.

Outstanding Matching Gift Programs

$120,616 from Altria Group Inc. in matching gifts benefiting 25 different Virginia Tech funds.

$167,122 from ExxonMobil Foundation providing matching gifts to 37 various designations.

Major Gift HighlightsOutright gifts of $100,000 or more given to the university in fiscal year 2004-05

Individuals $1 Million+

From William H. Goodwin Jr. and Alice T. Goodwin of Rich-mond, Va., providing funding for The River Course reconstruction.

From the estate of the late Charles William Smith of Wilmington, Del., for the Jimmie W. Monteith Memorial Engineering Fund, providing program support for the College of Engineering and the Richard Shea Memorial Fund for the Alumni Association, and provid-ing scholarship support to the Robert Femoyer Memorial Corps of Cadets Fund.

An anonymous gift establish-ing the Chair of Excellence for Community Viability Endowed Fund, a professorship benefiting Cooperative Extension in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

From Luther J. and Alice R. Hamlett of Savannah, Ga., in the form of a charitable remainder unitrust in continuing support of the Luther and Alice Hamlett Scholarship in the College of Science and an additional contribution in support of the Luther and Alice Hamlett Athletic Scholarship.

Individuals $500,000+

An anonymous gift in support of the Alumni and Conference Center Campaign.

From Robert B. Pamplin and Robert B. Pamplin Jr. of Portland, Ore., a gift of continuing support for the Pamplin Masters of Business Administration Endowment, the Pamplin Scholars Program, and the Virginia Tech Athletic Fund’s Pamplin Endowment.

From William C. and Elizabeth H. Latham of Haymarket, Va., for the Alumni and Conference Center, the Class of ‘55 Fund for the Alumni and Conference Center, and for future designa-tion within the university.

From William C. Davis of Blacksburg, Va., a gift of real estate to benefit the Virginia Center for Civil War Studies.

From Richard S. Foster of Virginia Beach, Va., a gift benefit-ing the Richard S. Foster Urban Forestry Endowed Scholarship and the Lane Stadium expansion.

From William B. Holtzman of Edinburg, Va., for the Alumni and Conference Center Campaign.

From the estate of Grover L. and Elizabeth H. Wilson of Bradenton, Fla., for the Elizabeth & Grover L. Wilson Endowed Scholarship, benefiting students university-wide.

From the estate of Ralph L. Price of Blacksburg, Va., for the VTCCA Ralph L. & Katherine W. Price Scholarship Fund, the Ralph L. & Katherine W. Price Endowed Scholarship benefit-ing student athletes, and the Ralph L. & Katherine W. Price Business Scholarship.

Individuals $250,000+

From the estate of Helen Mahin of Arlington, Va., to the Dr. and Mrs. Dorsey Taylor Mahin Endowed Professorship and the Bustopher Jones “Sugarpuss” Mahin Companion Animal Endowment to benefit the Vir-ginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine.

From the estate of Harold C. Wright of Abingdon, Va., for the Wright Family Scholar-ships benefiting students university-wide.

From Frank D. Porter III and Beverly V. Porter of Roanoke, Va., for the Alumni and Confer-ence Center Campaign, the Lane Stadium expansion, the Virginia Tech Athletic Fund Endowment, and for future designation in the Pamplin College of Business.

From JoAnne S. O’Brien of Washington, D.C., providing support through the Dr. JoAnne S. O’Brien Endowed Fund benefiting the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine.

From William E. Jamerson Sr. and Ellen P. Jamerson of Appomattox, Va., for the Lane Stadium expansion and the Alumni and Conference Center Campaign.

From Patricia A. Caldwell of New York, N.Y., establishing the Patricia A. Caldwell Unrestricted Endowment to benefit the Col-lege of Science.

From Richard E. Moody of Landenberg, Pa., a gift of real estate to benefit the Virginia Tech Corp of Cadets.

An anonymous donation in support of the Department of Hospitality and Tourism Management.

From Robert and Ruby Priddy of Wichita Falls, Texas, for the Walter Mason Priddy Endowed Scholarship, providing univer-sity-wide scholarships, and the VTCCA Robert T. Priddy ‘40 Endowed Scholarship, benefiting the corps of cadets.

From Evelyn A. Gordon of Johnson City, Tenn.; Charles O. Gordon Jr. and Betsy H. Gordon of High Point, N.C.; and their children, Charles E. Gordon and Elizabeth H. Gordon of Blacksburg, Va., gifts benefiting the Virginia Tech Athletic Fund Capital Projects and Endowment, and the Athletic Training Room.

From Raymond and Madelyn Curry of Alexandria, Va., for the Raymond and Madelyn Curry Graduate Fellowship benefiting the Department of Civil and Envi-ronmental Engineering.

Individuals $100,000+

From Mitchell O. Carr of Staunton, Va., for the Class of ‘55 Fund for the Alumni and Conference Center.

From Cliff and Agnes Lilly of Chesterfield, Va., for the Class of ‘56 Reunion Fund, the Dr. A.C. Lilly Jr. Faculty Fellowship Endowment for the College of Science, the Alumni Association programs, and the Department of Physics.

From Alfred E. Knobler of New York, N.Y., for the Alfred E. Knobler Graduate Assistantship in English.

From Charles M. Neviaser of Jacksonville, Fla., for the Charles M. Neviaser Endowed Football Scholarship and the Charles “Buddy” Neviaser Scholarship for the Pamplin College of Business.

From Nicholas and Fay Street of Bristol, Va., a gift for the Lane Stadium expansion and estab-lishing a scholarship benefiting the corps of cadets.

From the estates of Henry L. and Mary E. Buckardt of Paeonian Springs, Va., providing program support through the American Work Horse Museum Endowment in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

From the estate of Col. Charles C. Walts Jr. of Palm City, Fla., for the Charles C. Walts Scholarship Endowment providing scholar-ship funds for the College of Engineering.

From Floyd W. Merryman Jr. and Floyd W. Merryman III of Rustburg, Va., in support of the Lane Stadium expansion and future athletic capital projects.

2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

Designation of Gifts and Other Grants Uses of Gifts Sources of Gifts

A B C D E F G H I J K L M NOPQ

R

ST

U VWXY Z a

A. College of Agriculture & Life Sciences (includes Middleburg Agricultural Research & Extension Center: $60,580) ........$5,064,087 ...............6.62%B. College of Architecture & Urban Studies .............................1,574,281 ...............2.06%C. Pamplin College of Business ...........2,583,944 ...............3.38%D. College of Engineering ...................8,411,093 .............10.99%E. College of Liberal Arts & Human Sciences .........................2,064,554 ...............2.70% F. College of Natural Resources .............838,100 ...............1.09% G. College of Science ..........................3,682,124 ...............4.81% H. College of Veterinary Medicine (includes Equine Medical Center: $734,310) 4,714,657 ...............6.16%

I. Administration/Other ....................5,204,566 ...............6.79% J. Alumni & University Conference Center ..........................3,686,879 ...............4.82% K. Alumni Programs ..............................680,469 ...............0.89% L. Corps of Cadets...............................2,041,559 ...............2.67% M. Financial Aid ..................................1,922,235 ...............2.51% N. Fine Arts............................................101,210 ...............0.13% O. Graduate School ................................148,451 ...............0.19%

P. Honors Program ................................450,708 ...............0.59% Q. Independent Centers .........................208,423 ...............0.27% R. Intercollegiate Athletics ...............24,093,687 .............31.47% S. Library ..............................................410,826 ...............0.54% T. Multicultural Programs .....................113,712 ...............0.15% U. Parents’ Fund ....................................336,371 ...............0.44% V. William E. Skelton 4-H Center at Smith Mountain Lake .................1,400,321 ...............1.83% W. Student Affairs ..................................333,422 ...............0.44% X. University Unrestricted .....................397,938 ...............0.52% Y. Virginia 4-H Foundation ....................195,037 ...............0.25% Z. WVTF Public Radio .........................1,768,830 ...............2.31% a. Private Grants ................................4,121,211 ...............5.38%

Total ...............................................$76,548,695 ...........100.00%

*Administration/Other listing includes cumulative projects and designations, such as Informa-tion Technology, Reynolds Homestead, gifts to be designated, etc., as well as a one-time gift of interest in the Hotel Roanoke of $4,668,000.

*Equine Programs (MARE Center and Equine Medical Center) total $794,890 or 1.03% of overall FY 2005 Private Gift Income.

Figures represent all gifts received in support of Virginia Tech. This includes outright and irrevocable deferred gifts.

2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

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A B C

D

E

F

G

A. Alumni ......................................$25,510,853 .............33.33% Alumni ................................................. $25,500,155 ...............33.32% Students ...................................................... $10,698 .................0.01%B. Parents .........................................$1,890,578 ...............2.47%C. Friends .......................................$18,834,380 ............ 24.60%D. Faculty/Staff ................................$1,579,887 ...............2.07% Active ..................................................... $1,382,414 .................1.81% Retired ....................................................... $197,473 .................0.26%E. Corporations ..............................$16,705,370 ............ 21.82% Direct Gifts and Grants ............................. $11,461,876 ...............14.97% Matching Gifts ......................................... $1,500,891 .................1.96% Private Grants .......................................... $3,742,603 .................4.89% F. Foundations ................................$8,184,599 .............10.69% Direct Gifts and Grants ............................... $4,082,427 .................5.33% Personal/Family Foundations ...................... $3,723,564 .................4.86% Private Grants ............................................. $378,608 .................0.50%G. Other Organizations .....................$3,843,028 ...............5.02%

Total ...............................................$76,548,695 ...........100.00%

A

B

C

D

A. Current Operations ....................$37,593,382 .............49.11% B. Endowment .................................19,099,031 .............24.95%C. Capital Facilities ...........................15,735,071 .............20.56%D. Private Grants ............................... 4,121,211 ........... 05.38%

Total ...............................................$76,548,695 ...........100.00%

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The Ut Prosim SocietyLifetime membership in the Ut Prosim Society, Virginia Tech’s most distinguished recognition organization, 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 2005.

President’s Circle of the Ut Prosim SocietyThe 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.

BenefactorsDistinguished BenefactorsR.T. and Brenda Avery

Mr. and Mrs. R. Sidney Barrett LS

David H. Burrows * LS

Patricia A. Caldwell LS

Mitchell O. and Iris T. Carr

Mr. and Mrs. William S. Cross

Mr. and Mrs. Ben J. Davenport Jr.

George and Josephine DeSerio LS

Chet and Dorothy Duke LS

Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Eaton LS

Mrs. Edward R. English

Georgia Anne Snyder-Falkinham and Joseph O. Falkinham III

Richard S. and Judy L. Foster

Ray D. and Violet T. Frith

Hope M. Greiner

F. Staley Hester Jr. LS

Dr. Tomas Hudlicky and Dr. Josephine Reed

W. Stuart Johnson

Alf Knobler

Betty J. and Robert E. Leisy

Dr. and Mrs. A. Clifton Lilly Jr.

William C. McAllister LS

Sara L. and Samuel H. McGhee III LS

Mr. and Mrs. E. George Middleton Jr. LS

Mary B. and Spencer W. Morten

Nancy B. and Samuel H. Nixon Jr. LS

Ed and Barbara Norwood LS

Dr. JoAnne S. O’Brien LS

John E. Peterson Jr. LS

Mr. and Mrs. G. Robert Quisenberry LS

Mr. and Mrs. F. Richard Quible LS

Ralph and Inez Roop * LS

Edward B. and Barbara R. Scruggs LS

June Oblinger Shott

J. Mark Sowers and Deborah K. Sowers

James M. and Eleonore E. Stevens

Alphonse J. Stroobants *

Robert J. and Julia N. Styne LS

Irwin W. Uran

Mr. and Mrs. Leo A. Vecellio Jr.

Edward B. Via *

Chester and Anne Waldron LS

Mrs. Muriel Walts LS

Joseph F. Ware Jr.

Stewart B. West LS

W.S. White Jr.

Senior BenefactorsHugh T. Adams LS

Kelso S. and Vera M. Baker

Margaret T. Baldock LS

Mrs. Laurie Battle LS

William E. (Ping) Betts Jr. *

Lavinia A. Blick LS

Michael J. Bogese Jr.

Gail Boggs LS

Mrs. Cecil W. Bolling

Gordon D. Bowman II * LS

Mrs. John L. Breeden *

Barbara Brugh LS

2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

Maroon = President Circle Charter MembersBold = New and Advancing Members*= Ut Prosim Charter members (1987)LS = Legacy Society members

President’s CircleHorace E. Alphin LS

Richard D. and Kristin S. Bishop

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.* LS

Joseph H. and Barbara G. Collie

Anne Heth Connor

Ann W. Cutchins LS

Eleanor and Bill Davenport

Sandra C. Davis LS

William C. Davis LS

John and Constance DeBell LS

Mary Elizabeth Francis*

Clifton C. Garvin Jr.* LS

Mr. and Mrs. William H. Goodwin Jr.

Corrie J. and John Grado* LS

T. Marshall Hahn Jr. and Peggy Lee Hahn* LS

Dr. and Mrs. Luther J. Hamlett LS

Charles J. “Mickey” Hayes Jr. LS

Bill and Ann Holtzman

Ruth C. Horton* LS

Mr. and Mrs. William E. Jamerson*

Ethel C. Kelly LS

William C. and Elizabeth H. Latham*

John R. Lawson LS

Edsel H. Lester*

Samuel and Lorinda Lionberger

Mr. and Mrs. E. Morgan Massey

John P. McConnell

Mrs. Paul Mellon*

Floyd W. Merryman Jr. and Frances T. Merryman* LS

Floyd W. Merryman III and Lynn W. Merryman

Dorothy A. Metcalf

Ben F. Morgan Jr. LS

Charles M. and Doris Neviaser*

Dr. and Mrs. Glenn R. Noffsinger LS

Mrs. Russell V. Oliver LS

Robert B. Pamplin* LS

Robert B. Pamplin Jr.*

Frank D. Porter III and Beverly V. Porter

William J. Pulte

Jean Ellen duPont Shehan LS

Bill and Peggy Skelton* LS

Barbara B. and Donald G. Smith

Garnett E. and Patsy T. Smith LS

Wendy Smith

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas D. Street

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas F. Taubman

Mr. and Mrs. James E. Turner Jr. LS

G. Truman and Margaret Hall Ward* LS

Wesley T. Worsham* LS

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Ut Prosim Society Benefactors, continuedLaura Morris Burrows LS

Mr. and Mrs. W. Jackson Burrows * LS

Fred T. and Jane Burns Campbell

Mrs. W. John Campbell Jr.

Carol Rector Capaldi

John F. Carroll Jr.

Vinod and Ranjana Chachra

Blakeslee Nettleton Chase

David S. and Kryssa Jeannette Cooper

William C. Cranwell *

Madelyn and Raymond G. Curry Jr.

Carol Davis

Henry J. Dekker * LS

Lois W. Dickerson LS

Neahbya Dickinson

Robert H. Digges and Dr. Kathleen Grega Digges

L.H. Dixey Jr.

Margaret B. Dove LS

Walter W. Duncan LS

Ray W. and Sallie A. Edwards

E. Ralph English Jr.

Mrs. W. Curtis English

Howard Feiertag LS

J. Gray and Janet A. Ferguson

Lucy S. Ferrari LS

Mr. and Mrs. Bertram R. Firestone

Mrs. Charles O. Gordon Sr. * LS

Dr. Frederick C. Grant LS

Mr. and Mrs. J. Wesley Hall Jr.

Harold D. and June M. Hankins

Leo and Melva Harris

Shirley and Jack Harris LS

William A. and Eleanor C. Hazel

Martha B. and Lawrence C. Heiskell LS

Dwight E. and Carolyn R. Houff

Mr. and Mrs. George R. Irvin Jr. LS

Mr. and Mrs. Phillip C. Jamerson

Barbara and Jim Johnson

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Jones Jr. LS

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Jones * LS

Arthur A. and Marie L. Kirk

Mrs. Joel Krisch *

Jean M. Lane

Patrick M. and Nancy R. Lathrop

Robert T. and Carolyn L. Lawson

Dawn H. and Gary D. Lerch LS

David Richard Lincicome

Alan T. Lingerfelt

Harriette H. Marocchi LS

Cecil and Shirlee Maxson LS

Jack W. Miller Jr.

William T. Miller

Richard E. Moody LS

Audre H. Moore LS

Sandy J. and Anne V. Moore

Ross and Beth Myers

William F. and Dorothy A. Newman LS

Mr. and Mrs. Troy A. Peery

Robert T. and Ruby N. Priddy

Cecil and Nancy Hall Pruitt

Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Quillen

Glenn and Dixie Reynolds

W. Thomas Rice *

Robert and Nancy Richards LS

Kent and Shirley Roberts LS

Florence K. Roberts

John G. Rocovich Jr. and Sue Ellen Butler Rocovich * LS

Malcolm M. and Diane M. Rosenberg

Neville A. and Mary H. Rowland LS

Alex Schaerer

Eric and Wendy Schmidt

Marvin H. “Skip” Schuelke Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. William C. Scruggs LS

Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Shultz Jr. LS

Mrs. L. Dal Simmons

T. Frank Smith Jr.

Hobart Speegle Jr. *

Beverly R. Steinman

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas G. Stewart LS

Mrs. Charles O. Strickler *

Jack and Judy Sweers LS

Hazel C. and Lee C. Tait LS

Edwin H. and Melinda P. Talley LS

Suzanne Parker Thornhill

William and Rita Thornton LS

B.E. Upton and Grace T. Upton

Tracy D. Wilkins

E. Carlton Wilton Jr.

Dorothy G. Wiss LS

Elaine W. and Andrew J. Young Jr. LS

BenefactorsMrs. Walter G. Adams

William A. and Nancy E. Aden

Ben H. Adkins Jr. and Patrcia H. Adkins

Fred R. and Carla S. Adkins

Michael L. and Lee A. Aliff

John D. and Annette Ambler

Preston H. Andrews LS

Leonard C. Angle Jr. and Mary Lou Angle LS

Regine Archer

F. Robert and Judith L. Armentrout

Alvin V. Baird Jr. LS

James P. Baker and Pat O. Baker

Jerry H. Ballengee

Donald J. Balzer Jr.

Tommy and Laura Balzer

Martin J. Bannon III

Mr. and Mrs. James M. Barnhardt III

Paul B. Barringer

Mr. and Mrs. John W. Bates III LS

Wesley L. and Bette M. Baum LS

Mr. A. Bill Beach and Dr. Sylvia Garcia Beach

Frank and Cheryl Beamer

V. Max and Felicia G. Beard

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Beavers LS

Ron and Gwen Beck

Jim and Pat Berry

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel G. Bickford Jr.

Richard L. and Marie Bidwell

Daniel (Danny) W. Bird Jr. LS

Wilson P. Bishop and Alice B. Bishop

Willis P. Blackwood and Mary N. Blackwood

Thomas J. Blair III *

Erv and Betsy Blythe

Jeanne and Deane Blythe

Patricia J. Boinest LS

Jeff Bolton

Anne Eaton Bonsack LS

Daniel C. Booker Jr.

Edward T. Bowles

Wesley R. and Mary Lou Bowles

L. Allen and Marilyn Bowman LS

Mr. and Mrs. A.P. Boxley III

Charles L. and Joanne Boyd

Michael and Julie Boyer

William M. Brackney

Jerry and Sally Brammer

James A. and Cynthia F. Branscome

Louis M. Briel LS

Flavius Brinsfield

Charlie and Stephie Broadwater

John G. and Bernice S. Brooks

D. Perry and Sharon C. Brown

John and Mary Jean Brown

Robert E. and Lynne A. Brown

Thomas C. Broyles and Betty F. Broyles

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn A. Bryant Jr.

James O. and Kay Bunn

Robert G. Burleson * LS

Mr. Thomas C. Burns and Dr. Sharon Lord

Roy and Audrey Burrows

Mrs. Robert S. Burruss

T. Norman Bush and Carolyn B. Bush

Lucille G. Calhoun LS

Brian and Melissa Callaghan

William J. Callis

Nicholas T. Camicia LS

L. Clay Camp *

S.V. Camp III and Gail B. Camp

Mr. and Mrs. William M. Camp Jr. *

Dan and Vickie Canada

Maj. Gen. (Ret) and Mrs. Archie S. Cannon Jr. LS

Ray and Beulah Carmines

Don and Caroline Carrigan

Clement D. Carter and Georgia B. Carter

Dean and Rosina Carter

John Gordon Casali LS

Ruth Groves Chaney

E. Tyree Chappell

Michael and Susan Cheatham

Don S. Cherry

Randy and Patricia Chrisley

Mr. and Mrs. J. Leonard Clagett

Thomas R. and Ann M. Clark

Tom and Nancy Clark Jr.

George B. Clarke IV

Richard O. Claus

Margie C. Clevinger

Gary P. Clisham

Rick and Bobbie Cobaugh

J. Harwood Cochrane *

Mai and Charlie Coffey LS

Stanley and Frances Cohen * LS

Mace T. Coleman

Ronald L. Coleman Sr.

Mr. and Mrs. Roland H. Coles

Thomas E. “Sonny” and Nancy Conner

C. Peter Cooley and Christine K. Cooley

Doug Coons and Lori Wauters Coons

William P. Copenhaver LS

Ed and Linda Cord

Gary D. and Laura B. Cornwell

George Costan

Doyle C. Counts LS

Frank N. Cowan

2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

Donald M. Cox

Col. Robert B. Cox LS

J. David and Cynthia W. Craig

The Honorable and Mrs. C. Richard Cranwell *

Robert M. Cranwell *

Shannon L. and Corinna W. Crawford

Steven R. Crawford

Bud and Madelon Crockett LS

Alvin Q. and Lucy S. Croy LS

Robert and Lucille Cruise

Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Crutchfield

Lester B. and Pat Cundiff LS

Virginia M. Currie LS

Dell and Sonya Curry

John W. Cutler Jr. and Betsy Cutler

Donald V. Dalton LS

Patrick L. and Cathy J. Daly

Kathy Dargo

Scott A. Darnell

Kendley J. Davenport LS

August F. Davis LS

C.Y. and Carole Davis

Mary Ellen and William Deemer *

Randall W. DeHart

David Jefferson Dempsey

Gary and Heidi Derby

Nicholas H. Des Champs Ph.D.

William S. and Carolyn T. Dewhirst

Douglas S. Divers Jr.

C. Bailey Dixon *

John C. Dixon

Jack and Liz Donehower

Kerry and Mary Donnelly

Bob Dorey

Lloyd G. and Virginia H. Doxey

Joseph W. Drewry

Mrs. Thomas W. Drewry

J.B. and Ruth Drinkard

Buford L. Driskill Jr.

Shelley Duke LS

Mr. and Mrs. H. Windley Dunbar

Dennis and Susan Duncan

James Michael and Ann Duncan

Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Duncan

Dr. Robert Lewis Durfee

Charles and Eleanor Easter

Elmer R. Easton

George K. Eberwine Jr.

Robert V. and Susan A. Eckert

Mr. and Mrs. George H. Edmiston Jr.

H. Gilford and Cheryl T. Edwards

John N. and Patricia K. Edwards

Willena K. Elmore

John and Angie Emery

John Engelberger

Jesslyn J. Etgen LS

Bill Evans LS

Mrs. Leona Evans

Wolter and Luba Fabrycky

John W. Failes

Gilbert L. and Jewel Cowan Faison

Charlotte and Gary Farrar

R. Paul Farrell Jr. LS

Paul and Evelyn Farrier LS

Robert B. Fetter LS

Larkin Watson Fields and Mark A. Sosa

Eugene V. Fife

Neil A. Finn and Celia K. Finn LS

Mrs. Sanford B. Fitts

James P. Fitzgerald

John and Cassell Fitzhugh

Norman and Joyce Fitzwater

Elizabeth A. Flanagan and H. Michael Mitchell LS

Fred and Charlotte Fletcher

Carolyn Foreman

Tim Foreman

Mr. and Mrs. Watt R. Foster Jr.

Gaynell S. Fowler

Andrew E. and Sandra K. Fox

Mr. and Mrs. W. Heywood Fralin

Peggy H. Frank and Marshall J. Frank

Philip and Rae Frankfort

Margaret M. Franklin LS

Eustace Frederick

George L. Freeman Jr.

Robert L. Freeman *

Robert L. Freeman Jr.

Mrs. Monroe E. Gardner Jr. *

Edward V. Garthright

Dr. Ray A. Gaskins LS

Lois B. Gaunt

Dr. E. Scott Geller

Jim and Diana George Jr.

Alexander F. Giacco * LS

Dan and Linda Gilbert LS

Richard B. Gillett and Anna May Wheeler Gillett LS

Richard A. Girard LS

Ralph L. and Marion B. Givens

Harold and Betty Glass LS

John C. and Lydia Rice Glenn LS

Jeffrey L. and Sara B. Glesner LS

Colonel Walter P. Glover and Mazie L. Glover LS

Mr. and Mrs. John A. Gonsa

George Royden Goodson Jr. * LS

Mary R. Goodykoontz *

Alixe Gordin

Charles E. Gordon

Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Gordon Jr.

Elizabeth H. Gordon

Lucy Gordon

Floyd D. and Elizabeth S. Gottwald

C.T. “Red” Graves and Anne Hutcheson Graves LS

Dorothy N. Graves

Elmon T. Gray *

Howard E. and Mary E. Gray

James M. and Margaret L. Grayson

Mr. and Mrs. David Gribbons

Lucille and Gary J. Griffin

Mr. and Mrs. Vernon D. Grizzard

Lila M. Groseclose

Lucian Y. Grove LS

Jay and Becky Guynn

Harvey L. Hales Jr. and Brenda L. Mitchell

Franklin “Mack” Halsey and Robin Halsey

Francis N. Hamilton LS

Marcellus Hampton

Thomas J. and Barbara F. Hampton * LS

R. Philip and Charlotte Hanes

Cardwell F. Hannabass

J. Daniel and Ann M. Hardy

James H. Haren *

Charles L. and Florine H. Harowitz

Joe and Gayla Harris

Leon and Beverly Harris

John O. and Mary Lou Harrison

William H. and Polly C. Harrison LS

James H. Hatch LS

Alfred W. Hauser LS

Marie Hawkins

Buddy and Laura Haycox

Mr. and Mrs. James F. Hayes III

Jane K. Hearn

Eddie F. and Dawn D. Hearp LS

Shelley Hearp Cooper and Todd F. Hearp

Douglas and Margaret Heath

Davis G. and Sharolyn B. Heatwole LS

Robert A. Heller and Agnes S. Heller LS

Lee Thomas Helms M.D. and Sandra Rice Helms

David and Ruth Henderson

John B. Higginbotham

C.T. and Moira H. Hill

J.S. Hill *

Paul H. Hill

James E. and Lynne Hines

Wayne and Barbara Hinman

Milton E. and Cecelia H. Hite

William H. Hobbs

Emory and Kristin Hodges

Stan and Linda Hodges

Evanne Loh Hoehn-Saric and Rudolph Hoehn-Saric

Joseph H. Hoge III *

Charles F. Holden III

Marian and Oren E. Hopkins Jr.

Carolyn and Charlie Horner

Mrs. Irvin G. Horner

Mr. Wayne and Dr. Claire Horton LS

Steven House and Cathi House LS

Chip and Susan Houston

Chuck and Terri Lynn Howard

H. Jefferson Howard

Bob and Nancy Hubble

Robert A. and Beverly W. Hudson Jr.

Wallace L. Huff and Emogene G. Huff

Gene and Peggy Huffman

Dr. Owen F. Hughes

Jerry and Linda Hulick

Mary Ellen and Harry H. Hunt III

William F. Hyde

Patricia B. and Michael W. Hyer

Colonel Irvin Luther Hylton Jr.

Don and Brenda Irons

Thomas D. Irvin LS

Jessica Bolling Ison

Timothy E. and Kristina C. Jackson

Jeff and Natalie Jaffe LS

Gene A. and Ina M. James

Mr. and Mrs. Kent James

Dorothy G. and William H. Jeffress LS

Joseph R. Jenkins

Charles H. Jennings

Benjamin C. Johnson and Janice K. McBee

Chris and Starlette Johnson LS

Janet and Jim Johnson LS

Joseph A. Johnson Jr. LS

Mr. and Mrs. Marvin L. Johnson

Matt and Patti Johnson LS

Steve Johnson

Stuart Johnson LS

A. Harrison Jones Sr. and Eleanor P. Jones

Clark and Betty Jones

Gregory B. Jones

J.B. Jones and Jane Hardcastle Jones

James L. Jones Jr.

John R. Jones III

Doug and Sue Juanarena

Gene and Helen Justice

Dennis M. Kamber and Sherry L. Kamber

David S. Kantor

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kass

H.A. “Bud” Keever

J. Michael and Candi Kelly

Duncan C. Kennedy III and Nancie R. Kennedy

Jan and Claire Kennedy

Kit and Gail Kennedy

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Lee M. Kerley III

W. Christian Killorn and Virginia Killorn

Bill and Sue King

George W. and Dorothy S. King

Huston W. Kitts Sr. and Sarah S. Strauss

Arthur C. Klages *

Paul L. Knox and Lynne Taylor Knox

Debbie Koller and Kent Koller LS

N. Robert and Helen K. Kopecko Jr. LS

Kurt J. and Lorraine Krause

John H. Kroehling LS

George R. Kuhn Jr. and Christa A. Amend

Lawrence J. and Carolyn Jones Kyle

Charles and Patricia Lamb

G. Haden Lane

James W. Lark Jr. and Betty O. Lark

O. Kent LaRoque III

Roland E. Latta

Bill and Peggy Lavery

Mrs. John L. Lawrence *

Barry and Melissa Lawson LS

Benton R. Leach

Mary Leach * LS

Tien Min Lee and Ling Yan Lee LS

Frank L. Leonard

John C. “Jack” Lester Jr. and Leta A. Lester LS

Mr. and Mrs. William R. Lewis Jr.

Janice B. Litschert

D. Joe Long

Eric A. and Dorothy B. Long

Marcus H. Long Jr.

William R. Long and June Hall-Long

Joseph R. Loring and Sheila D. Johnston *

Richard J. Louden and Evelyn Pulley Louden

Joe and Patty Love

David and Sharon Lowe

Robert E. Lucas Jr. and Rebecca P. Lucas

Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Lynch Jr.

Nancy J. and Kenneth G. Malm

Gordon Asher Mapp and Sarah McKenney Mapp

Ronnie and Faye Marcum

Donald and Jan Marks

Irvin Marshall LS

Steve and Ginny Marshall

Carol and Ray Martin

Darrell D. and Betty R. Martin

Debra and Michael Martin

F. Wayne Martin and Lynn H. Martin LS

Thomas L. and Mattie Mason Jr.

Alexander B. Massie

William W. and Nan E. Massie

Peggy Cecil Matney

Marjorie S. Maupin

Sam and Priscilla McCall LS

Joann D. McCauley LS

Lacy Hartwell McClain and Ann Phillips McClain

Reese O. and Nancy W. McCormick Jr.

Peter J. and Nancy Cupp McDonald

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

Donald J. McNamara

Mr. and Mrs. Rieman McNamara Jr. LS

Mark G. McNamee and Carole M. McNamee

William B. McSpadden

Mary McVay and Ted Rosenberg LS

Geraldine M. Meador

Dr. and Mrs. Arthur G. Meakin LS

Mrs. Irene F. Meigs LS

Kenton and Liliana Meland

Dr. Joesph S. Merola

A. Patricia Merryman

Miles L. Merwin

Peggy S. and Alex L. Meszaros

Donna W. and Stephen W. Michael LS

G. Leonard Michon Jr. and Carmen Q. Michon

Matthew J. and Donalyn W. Mikulich

John and Camille Milks

Mr. and Mrs. William T. Miller Jr.

David P. Minichan Jr. M.D. and Tosca G. Minichan

Evelyn L. Mitchell * LS

James K. and Virginia W. Mitchell

Mr. and Mrs. Norris E. Mitchell *

A.A. Modena

Nancy and Nick Moga LS

Ellis P. Monroe * LS

James A. Monroe Jr. LS

B. Barnett Montague LS

J. Kyle Montague *

Mr. and Mrs. John W. Montague Jr.

Pauline O. Montgomery

William J. and Elizabeth H. Montgomery LS

David Moon

Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy T. Moore LS

Joe and Mille Moore LS

Larry and Suzanne Moore

Robert Morris

Bill F. Morrisette Sr.

David Welch Morrisette

Joseph F. Morrissette

Bill and Pat Moseley LS

Lorenz Moser and Rengin Holt LS

Dorothy Moss

Robert F. Moss Jr.

The Honorable and Mrs. Thomas W. Moss Jr. LS

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L. Motley

Lucile Mulky

R.W. (Bill) and Diane Mullins Jr.

Kent A. and Cheryl P. Murphy

Tom and Sue Murray

Reginald H. and Phyllis G. Nelson IV

Doris B. Newell

Beverly Johnson Nicely and Hiawatha Nicely Jr.

Don Nicewonder *

J.D. Nicewonder *

J. Kevin Nicewonder

K.R. Nicewonder

Sheldon and Betty Nichols

Jerome and Ruth Anne Niles LS

Vaughan and Ruth Noble LS

W. Ernest Norcross *

Jim and Cathy Nyfeler

Lynn A. Nystrom

John B. and Joann P. Obenchain LS

Charles G. O’Brien

W. Jefferson and Paula P. O’Flaherty

Newman R. Ogden Jr.

Jacqueline L. Ohrstrom Jr.

William W. Old LS

Bill and Sara Ortega

Joseph F. and Millie Outten

Leo A. Padis Jr.LS

J.W. Pamplin * LS

David and Sharon Parcell

Drs. Elizabeth and Arthur Parker

Charles H. Parkerson

Colonel and Mrs. Harry J. Parrish

Mrs. Benjamin L. Partlow LS

Cordell and Nancy Parvin

Jack M. Patteson

Dorothy Rollins Pauly

William N. Paxton LS

James E. and Brenda K. Pearman Jr. LS

Bob and Jean Perdue

Jeffrey A. and Suzanne D. Perry *

John V. and Helen T. Perry Jr.

Lawrence E. and Joanne S. Perry Jr. LS

Douglas C. Petty Jr. LS

Vincent S. and Carolyn A. Phelps

Thomas L. Phillips *

Lawrence Cox Phipps and Jane Brooks Phipps

James M. and Marilyn K. Pollard

Jay and Shelley Poole LS

Jeanette and Don Poole

Louis Popp

R. Gregory Porter III LS

Bittle W. Porterfield III

W. Reginald Powell LS

Hal G. Prillaman *

Nick Prillaman Jr. *

Scott D. Prince LS

Phyllis Stancill Pruden

Dr. Charles W. Pryor Jr.

James M. Pyne

Eugene and Michaele Rackel LS

George B. Ragsdale

Charles J. and Mary N. Rainero

Leo A. Rapoport * LS

Ted and Brenda Rappaport

Ellen Reck

Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Rector Jr.

Coleman G. Rector

Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Reed

Litz B. and Ruth M. Reed LS

Raymond E. and Peggy C. Reed LS

Charles J. and Constance S. Reid

William E. Reiser Jr.

Robert Reuter and Katherine Downs-Reuter

Keith A. Reynolds and Jan Vaughan Reynolds

Don and Sheila Richardson

Minnis and Louise Ridenour

Inez Truluck Ripley LS

Richard T. Ripley

S.J. and Elizabeth A. Ritchey

Mrs. James A. Rives * LS

Mrs. Allan W. Roadcap * LS

Jack and Charlotte Roberts

Richard W. and Jamie H. Roberts

Edwin T. and Norma B. Robertson

Richard D. Robertson LS

Ut Prosim Society Benefactors, continued2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

W. Thomas and Barbara Robertson

Mrs. J. Kenneth Robinson

Dr. Craig A. Rogers

Wayne N. and Nancy R. Root

Mrs. Elizabeth K. Rosenbaum

Mrs. Joseph L. Rosenbaum

William O. Ross LS

Robert Anthony Ruberti

The Honorable and Mrs. Thomas Davis Rust

Phil and Glenda Rutledge LS

Susan Bull Ryan and Dr. J. Thomas Ryan

Jai and Pallabi Saboo

Ann and Jerry Samford

George Sampson LS

Mrs. H. Robert Sanders Jr.

William G. Sandy

Paul M. and Tatum N. Saunders

Harold W. Schneikert Jr. LS

Reed and Gail Schweickert LS

Robert G. Scogin and Lauri A. Scogin

David S. and Jane N. Scott

Rodney M. Sedwick and Regina R. Sedwick

Mr. and Mrs. James W. Severt LS

Francis A. and Marianne Shane

Daniel Sheets

Sylvia L. and M. Dwight Shelton Jr.

Mrs. J. Landon Short LS

Dr. Jean Snyder Renner Short

Samuel E. and Judith J. Shrader

Dalton B. Shumate LS

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

Harry J. Skinker

Lynn E. and Yvonne S. Slonaker

Bruce B. Smith

Charles R. and Janet K. Smith

George R. Smith Jr. LS

James E. and Carolyn H. Smith

Robert H. Smith

Robert Mark Smith and Jacquelyn Hart Smith

Raymond D. and Jean N. Smoot

Michael E. Snyder

Richard E. and Carol A. Sorensen

Lloyd R. Sorenson Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Souders

Carlton M. Southworth Sr.

Don and Beverly Sowder

Mr. and Mrs. O.A. Spady

Robert E. Spencer and Carole T. Spencer LS

Leila B. and Kirk E.Spitzer

Mr. and Mrs. John C. Spracher

Helen D. and Frank A. Spurr Jr. LS

W. Fred St. John

William M. (Bill) and Mary K. Stafford

David R. Stanton *

Lee R. and Regina Aultice Steeneck LS

Bill and Cynthia Sterrett Jr. LS

Donald and Madeline Stewart LS

Mrs. George A. Stewart LS

Jeffrey R. Stewart LS

Dewey L. Stinson Jr. LS

William L. Stinson

J. Conley and Nancy W. Stone

Walter E. Story

Jeanne H. Stosser

Jeffrey P. Stosser

Scott Alan Stosser

Bill and Roberta Stover

Morris V. Stowers

Charles S. and Mary R. Strickler

J. Patrick Strickler

Robert H. Strickler *

Donald and Joanna Sunshine

Chris and Jane Swan

James D. Swan Jr.

Tony and Phyllis Syme

Mary Jane Talbot

John and Rosemarie Tamminen

Terry F. Tanner *

Jay and Cheryl Taustin

William P. and Dorothy Taylor

A.F. Teske Jr. and Betty A. Teske

Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Thatcher

C. Stephen and Elaine B. Thomas LS

David T. Thomas II and JoAnn Spangler LS

John W. Thomas Jr. *

Joseph C. Thomas *

Margaret Allen Thomas LS

Sally B. and Robert I. Thomas Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Stuart C. Thomas

Curtis A. and June Haworth Thompson

Joseph L. and Lois J. Thompson

Ronald and Sandy Thompson

Thomas T. Thompson LS

Randy and Karen Thurman

Thomas C. Tillar Jr. LS

Deborah and Daniel Tillotson

Paul and Dorothea Torgersen LS

Frances G. Trent LS

Hyde Tucker LS

Margaret C. Tucker *

Ute and Ed Tucker LS

James C. and Allison B. Turk Jr.

Robert L. Turner

Mr. and Mrs. Steve W. Turner

Mr. Phillip W. Unger

E. Francis, Susan S., and Suzanne Y. Updike

Phil and Eve Urick

John A. Urquhart

Nicholas P. and Margaret P. Valdrighi

Donald C. and Moira Vaughn

Mr. and Mrs. William P. Vinyard Jr.

Joseph H. and Patricia Beasley Vipperman

Charlotte O’Hara Vorhauer *

L. Preston Wade *

George and Catherine Walker

L. Dudley Walker

Doug and Pat Wall

J. Robert and Marion L. Walton

William D. and Bonnie Lou Wampler

David Ward

Dr. and Mrs. O.W. Ward Jr.

Eric and E.C. Warren

James G. and Martha S. Watkins

Jerry and Merle Watkins LS

Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Watson Jr.

Margaret F. Watson

Mrs. W.A. Watson III

Hobart Ayres Weaver and Mollie Little Weaver

Jack W. Webb LS

Nick Wehrmann

Sidney and Ann Weinstein *

Norma Wells

Robert H. and Janice G. Wells

Roger P. Wells

R.G. West LS

Dr. T.G. Westmoreland

Jeffrey K. White

Linden L. White *

Preston M. White and Catharine M. White

William I. and Carol S. White Jr.

Paul Whitehead Jr.

Tom and Diane Whitehead

Thomas and Sanda Wilburn

Rhoda A. Wilkerson LS

Colonel (USA Ret.) and Mrs. Richard F. Wilkinson LS

Ronald L. and Kris Willard

Ronald L. Willard II and Sara C. Willard

Jesse A. Williams Jr.

Richard L. Williams

Verne C. and Jewel N. Williamson

Beverly A. Willis

Mark and Helen Wilson LS

Kay and Peter Winzenried LS

Col. and Mrs. Calvin S. Wisman

Robert L. and Betty Wolfe

Mrs. E.B. Wood Jr.

Henry Wise Wood Jr. M.D.

Oliver and Reese Woody

Hal G. and Thornie Worley LS

Robert W. Worley Jr. and Barbara G. Worley

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 MemoryWalter G. Adams

A.L. Baldock

Patricia A. Briel

Kenneth V. Brugh Jr. *

Elizabeth Bailey “Betty” Carlson

Allan Chase

Jack S. Copenhaver

Edward H. Dickinson *

Col. James T. Ewell Jr.

Sanford B. Fitts

Earl H. Hann

Liebert Hawkins

Frances U. Irvin

Kathleen Neff

J. David Newell

George L. Ohrstrom Jr.

Clarice Slusher Pritchard

Peter DeWitt Pruden Jr.

Henry Reese

Dr. Shelton H. Short III

William G. Skewes

Alice Y. Skinker

Walter Thomas

Evelyn P. Vecellio *

William B. Webber *

Thomas M. Wells

Mrs. Marion A. Williams *

Elizabeth H. Wilson

Frances F. Young

2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

40 4�

2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

The Legacy SocietyThe Legacy Society was established to recognize alumni and friends who have provided for Virginia Tech through their estate plans or other deferred gifts.

Bold = New Members 2005

UP = also Ut Prosim members

CS = also Caldwell Society members

Frank L. Abbott

Hugh T. Adams UP

Dr. and Mrs. Harley P. Affeldt

George E. Aker

W. Morgan and Joyce M. Allen Jr.

Horace E. Alphin UP

Mrs. Ralph A. Amos

Mr. and Mrs. Nelson R. Anderson

Mr. and Mrs. Preston H. Andrews UP

Dr. Wayland D. Andrews

L.C. Angle Jr. and Mary Lou Angle UP

Jerome Strauss Antel Jr. and Shellie Frosh Antel

Michael G. and Jane L. Anzilotti

Emmett H. and Kathleen S. Apffel

Dr. and Mrs. H. Pat Artis

Diane Clevenger Aukland and Duncan D. Aukland

John S. and Audrey F. Autry

Mrs. Richard M. Bagley

Mrs. Velt E. Bailey

Alvin V. Baird Jr. UP

Margaret T. Baldock UP

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Barlow

Mr. and Mrs. Glynn D. Barranger

Mr. and Mrs. R. Sidney Barrett UP

Jo Anne Barton

Mrs. Laurie C. Battle UP

Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Baum

Wesley L. and Bette M. Baum UP

Susan W. and Guy O. Beale

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Beavers UP

Elizabeth Anne Bedinger

Doris Craig Belak

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Belcher

Daniel “Danny” W. Bird Jr. UP

H. Peter and Patricia J. Bisschop

Mr. and Mrs. John P. Black CS

Mr. and Mrs. John T. Blanks

Lavinia A. Blick UP

Jeanne and Deane Blythe UP

John J. Bodo

Gail and Berda Boggs UP

Patricia J. Boinest UP

Roger E. Bonney

Anne E. Bonsack UP

Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bowen Jr.

L. Allen and Marilyn B. Bowman UP

Gordon D. Bowman II UP

Ray and Diann Boyd

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Glenn Breeden Jr.

Louis M. Briel UP

Parke Brinkley CS

William F. Brittle

Dr. and Mrs. J.A. (Fred) Brothers CS

Richard G. Broun

Dr. Charles S. and Millicent P. Brown UP

Col. and Mrs. James Mandly Brown Jr.

Dr. Nancy Brown

Barbara Brugh UP

J. Fletcher Bryant

Ellen A. Bryant

Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Hoge Buchanan

Mrs. Walter A. Buchanan

Dr. and Mrs. Robert S. Burford Jr.

R. Wayne Burford and Susan Castanza

Mrs. Edward C. Burgess

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Allen Burkett

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burkey

Robert G. and Beverly B. Burleson UP

Mr. and Mrs. W. Jackson Burrows UP

David H. Burrows UP

Laura Morris Burrows UP

Patrick H. Butler III

Dr. David W. Byrd

Dr. and Mrs. Mitchell A. Byrd

Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Caceci

Mr. and Mrs. John L. Cahoon

Patricia A. Caldwell UP

Lucille G. Calhoun UP

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Camicia UP

Andrea S. and Brian L. Camper

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald C. Canaan II

Maj. Gen. (Ret.) and Mrs. Archie S. Cannon Jr. UP

Robert Bronough Carter Jr.

Susan Graybill Carter

T.A. and Jeanette Carter UP

Dr. John G. Casali UP

Shirley W. Casali

Ms. Roas J. Castiel

Dr. Anthony J. Cataldo II

Jason A. Cecil

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight R. Chamberlain CS

Mr. and Mrs. Alpheus J. Chewning III

Reginald and Bettye Childers

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.

Mrs. E.C. Compton

Mr. and Mrs. William L. Connellee

Drs. Dale W. and Sherry L. Conrad

Betsy Robertson Conway

Nancy K. Cook

William Rand Cook and Laura N. Cook

Robert Keith Cope

Mr. and Mrs. E.H. Copeland Jr.

W.P. Copenhaver UP

Charles Cornelison

Harry E. Corr

Col. Robert B. Cox UP

Phyllis R. Cragle

William R. Craig

Larry E. Creekmore

Alvin Q. and Lucy S. Croy UP

W. Alvin and Beverly A. Cruise

Beverly L. Cullen

Lester B. and Pat Cundiff UP

Virginia M. Currie UP

Dr. and Mrs. Malcolm Cutchins

Ann W. Cutchins UP

Kendley J. Davenport UP

August F. and Virginia C. Davis UP

Dr. Gilbert P. Davis Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. James T. Davis

Mr. and Mrs. William C. Davis UP

Ms. Lorraine G. Lordi and Mr. Milt Davis

John and Constance DeBell UP

Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Leonard Deege

Mrs. Elizabeth D. Degges CS

Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Dekker UP

Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Delano CS

Mr. Christopher B. DeMay

George and Josephine DeSerio UP

Rebecca Sue DeShazo

Lois W. Dickerson UP

Mr. and Mrs. Dennis M. Dickison

Mr. and Mrs. Edgar F. Dickson Jr.

Page M. Dickson CS

Mr. and Mrs. Shawn Preston Dikes

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne A. Dixon

Annice Brame Dorsey

Margaret B. Dove UP

Elizabeth T. Downing

Lloyd G. and Virginia H. Doxey UP

Mr. and Mrs. Andrew M. Dreelin III

C. Ramsey Duck

Mr. and Mrs. Duke M. DuFrane

Chet A. Duke Jr. and Dorothy H. Duke UP

Philip J. and Shelley Duke UP

Walter W. and Mary Ruth Duncan UP

Peggy McCormick Dunham

William T. Dunkin and Linda S. Walsh

Victor and Barbara DuPont

Mr. and Mrs. William E. Durham

Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Eaton UP

Nick Economy

Robert E. and Christina T. Edwards

Mr. and Mrs. William Arthur Ellenbogen CS

Elizabeth H. Ellett

Mr. and Mrs. W. Robert Epperly

William Douglas Evans UP

Edwin Jester Ewing CS

R. Paul and Jane Brooks Farrell UP

Paul and Evelyn Farrier UP

Nina Vince Farthing

Matilda T. Faulkner

Marguerite E. Favrao

Howard Feiertag UP

Mrs. G. Stanley Feild Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin S. Feldenheimer

Mrs. J. Robert Ferguson

Lucy S. Ferrari UP

Robert B. and Audrey Lillard Fetter UP

Mr. George A. Fiebelkorn Jr. and Mrs. Patricia A. Reslock

Mr. and Ms. Kevin F. Finn

Neil A. and Celia K. Finn UP

Elizabeth A. Flanagan and H. Michael Mitchell UP

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Fletcher

Elliott and Temple Fox

Richard L. Francis

Margaret M. Franklin UP

Mr. and Mrs. Alex Justin Fritz

Clifford A. Frohn Jr. and Beth C. Frohn

Herman W. Gabriel

William Vincent Gargiulo

Dr. and Mrs. Ron Garret

Mr. and Mrs. George B. Garrott III

Clifton C. Garvin Jr. UP

Dr. Ray A. Gaskins UP

Leslie C. and Anneva Gates

Dr. and Mrs. L. Leon Geyer

The Caldwell SocietySupporters of Virginia Tech whose lifetime giving to the university totals $50,000 up to $100,000 qualify for the Calwell Society, which carries the name of William Addison Caldwell, the first student to enroll at Virginia Tech.

Bold = New Members * = Charter members LS = also Legacy Society members

Floyd W. Abernathy Jr. and Brenda G. Abernathy

Gerald L. Alderson*

William R. and Janet W. Anderson

Charles Elliott Andrews and Jean S. Andrews

Stewart Baynum

John H. Bartko Jr.

Mary Jones Berry

John P. Black * LS

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bowen Jr.

Robert B. and Shelby Bowles *

Ted A. and Ann W. Boyer

Jeff Brandmaier

Warren L. and Lillian Braun

Parke C. Brinkley * LS

John A. and Paula S. Brothers LS

Thomas A. and Catherine H. Carpenito *

C. Hill Carter Jr. and Helle Klingemann Carter *

Charles and Ann Dobson Catlett

Dwight R. Chamber-lain and Marylynn Chamberlain * LS

Vincent J. Cilimberg Jr. *

David Clark

John D. and Kathryn T. Clary

Otto R. and Anita R. Claus

Jesse B. and Judith A. Coleman

James A. Collins Jr.

Benjamin G. and Rachel Ann Cottrell

Jennifer J. Crawford

William G. Cridlin Jr. and Cary G. Cridlin

Arlene Critzos and John Critzos II

Warren Nathaniel Dannenburg Jr. and Rhonda A. Dannenburg

Scott D. Dawson Sr. and Cheryl B. Dawson

Elizabeth D. Degges LS

Robert B. and Martha Webb Delano * LS

Page Dickson LS

Thomas W. di Zerega

Joseph M. Donnelly Jr.

Julian G. Duncan

Glenn C. and Renee Edwards *

William Arthur Ellenbogen and Janet Keith LS

Ruben W. Engel *

Lorene Hudson Evans and Stephen F. Evans

James A. and Karen B. Everett

Edwin J. Ewing * LS

Alex P. and Nita Fekas

E. Ritchie and Ernestine L. Fishburne

James R. Fisher *

Marion Maxwell Fitzgerald and Suellen B. Fitzgerald

Louise P. Ford *

William G. Foster Jr. and Judith A. Foster

Kindy French and Emanuel Friedman

S. Cary Gill

James N. and Sandra S. Gillum

Robert S. Gilmore * LS

Fred A. Gosnell Jr. and Marijane Gosnell * LS

Bruce C. Gottwald Jr. and Kimberly C. Gottwald

George W. and Dianne W. Gray *

George T. and Emma Lou Hanks *

David R. and Marianne Hardey

Richard E. Harman Sr. and Peggy Harman

Charles F. and Ellen E. Hartman LS

Homer H. Hickam Jr. and Linda Hickam

L. Ralph Hicks Jr. and Donna F. Hicks

William T. and Shirley Hoeck

Irvin G. Horner Jr. and Laurie Horner

Donald W. and Collene J. Huffman LS

Cecilia M. Hylton

George R. Janosko and Wanda Callis Janosko *

Richard C. and Diane W. Jennell

Miles C. Johnston and Mary Garland Johnston *

Ashok N. and Sudha N. Katti LS

John W. and Theresa Kelley

Stephanie P. Key and David Lee Key Jr.

Theodore E. King Jr. LS

Alan I. and Deborah M. Kirshner LS

Noel R. Krieg *

Louis J. Lancaster

John A. Lansing

Beauton Lawson *

A.H. and Nina Mae Lemmon

Mayer G. and Susan Levy

John K. Light

H.C. and Margaret E. Love * LS

C.J. Luczak

Sharon Magness *

William E. Martin Jr. and Frances E. Martin LS

William H. and Barbara J. May

Brian A. and Susan H. McCall

John and Nancy McCord LS

James R. and Kay L. McCormick

Renell Y. Meeks

J.F. Merz Jr. and Lida W. Merz *

Henry L. Moore *

Timothy H. and Michele M. Mullins

Edwin A. and Lelia W. Myrick LS

George W. Norton and Marjorie J.T. Norton

Marcus L. Oliver LS

Ann M. Oliver LS

E.M. and Helen M. Pace *

Louis K. Palmer Jr. and Karen B. Palmer

Bruce C. and Christine D. M. Parker

Regina M. and Arthur L. Parkerson

James E. Pearman Sr. and Lorene S. Pearman *

James D. and Pamela J. Penny

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Perry * LS

John P. and Linda S. Phillips

John D. and Nancy J. Philpott *

Barry S. and Mary V. Pillow

Anne Pinkard

Sue C. Pipes

Marvin L. and Lee Pollard * LS

William and Linda Poorbaugh

Don M. and Dorla Sue Powers

George R. and Betty J. Preas

Cecil D. Quillen Jr. and Vicey C. Quillen

Jack J. and Ann Elliott Randall *

Charles A. Read II and Harriet Schwartz Read *

James R. and Emily Farmer Reames

Kenneth L. and Martha J. Reifsnider

J.C. and Roberta Rice

Henry E. and Constance J. Richeson

John I. and Diane L. Riffer

Randolph P. and Susan L. Rivinus LS

W.E. and Rhoda Farmer Roberts

James I. Robertson Jr. and Elizabeth G. Robertson LS

Ray A. and Leah B. Robertson

Thomas L. and Sue Robertson *

Brenda H. and George W. Rohe

Stephen H. and Mary C. Rosenoff

Charles M. Rotgin Jr. *

John A. Ruffin III and Betty Ruffin *

Donald L. and Mary E. Sage LS

Emily Shultz

Harry and Penny G. Schwarz

Charles F. and Judith Loope Sears

Robert L. Sendelbeck and Sara Lee Richard-son Sendelbeck LS

Patrick N. and Patricia A. Shaffner

Louis H. and Diane E. Sharpe *

Daniel G. and Jessie Lee Shawhan

Mark L. and Nancy D. Scheffel

Pleasant C. and Hazel P. Shields LS

David W. and Linda Smith *

William S. Spears

James T. Stephens LS

Marianne S. Stern *

Brian Storrie and Muriel Lederman

Jimmie A. and Beckie K. Street

Karen H. Sublett *

John T. Sutton Jr. and Carol H. Sutton

Theodore J. and Judy P. Sutton

Larry T. Taylor

Gene A. “Bull” Teel and Sue Teel

Patrick H. and Mary S. Terry

Gail Thompson

Kathryn F. Trice * LS

Michael Vick

Anne M. and Hans F.E. Wachtmeister

Jimmie L. and Ellen Ertz Wade

Norman O. Wagenschein LS

Charles W. and Dorothy Wampler

Robert F. Warren Sr. and Joyce W. Warren

Alfred B. and Fonda P. Warwick LS

Daniel L. and Jacqueline C. Westra

Charles K. Whites-carver Jr. and Mary Ann M. Whitescarver

David H. Williams Jr. and Betty G. Williams *

George A. Williams Jr. and Deborah R. Williams

Gordon C. and Jean H. Willis *

Shirley Wolfson *

David W. Worthington and Beverly L. Worthington

Jack F. Wright Jr. and Barbara Wright *

In Memory:Allan P. Ford Sr.

Elizabeth C. Luczak

James I. Sublett

Samuel A. Wolfson

4� 4�

2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report2005 Virginia Tech University Philanthropy Report

Ed W. and Barbara Norwood UP

Dr. and Mrs. Quinton J. Nottingham

John B. and Joann P. Obenchain UP

JoAnne S. O’Brien D.V.M. UP

Mr. and Mrs. William W. Old UP

Frances Long Oliver

Mr. Marcus L. Oliver CS

Helen Roop Osborne

David J. and Peggy A. Oshinski

Rebecca K. Ottinger

Frederick A. and Margaret S. Overly

O. Wayland and Dee Dee Overstreet

Leo A. Padis Jr. UP

Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Pamplin UP

J. William Pamplin UP

Dr. W. Dale and Mrs. Boots F. Parker

Charles Alan and Barbara R. Parrish

Shirley Virginia Parrish

Hilda G. Partlow UP

Martin W. and Sharon H. Patterson

William N. Paxton UP

Mr. and Mrs. James E. Pearman UP

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Perry CS

David Samuel Perry Jr.

Lawrence E. and Joanne S. Perry Jr. UP

Dr. Norma J. Peters

Mary Todd Peterson

Mr. and Mrs. John E. Peterson Jr. UP

Douglas C. Petty Jr. UP

Mr. and Mrs. Maurice R. Phillippi

Glenn F. Phillips

Helen Eckert Phillips

Marvin L. Pollard and Leila W. Pollard CS

Jay S. and Michelle L. Poole UP

R. Gregory and Rebecca G. Porter UP

William A. and Betty Potts

Mr. and Mrs. W. Reginald Powell UP

Martha Gregg Price

Scott D. Prince UP

Frank Richard Quible UP

Mr. and Mrs. G. Robert Quisenberry UP

Eugene and Michaele Rackel UP

Leo A. and Lois M. Rapoport UP

Mrs. John C. Reece

Raymond E. and Peggy C. Reed UP

Mrs. Ruth M. Reed UP

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn W. Rehberger

Mrs. Malcolm J. Reid

Eugene H. Reilley Jr. and Frederica Reilley

Mac E. Rein

Paula Diane Relf

Lois C. Reynolds

Robert R. and Nancy A. Richards UP

Dr. John B. Riley

Inez T. Ripley UP

Dr. Louis P. Ripley

Mrs. James A. Rives UP

Mr. and Mrs. Randolph P. Rivinus CS

Mrs. A.W. Roadcap UP

Dr. and Mrs. James I. Robertson Jr. CS

Richard D. Robertson UP

Mrs. Richard G. Robertson

Mr. and Mrs. C.M. “Kip” Robinson Jr.

Harry and Sarah Robson

John G. Rocovich Jr. and Sue Ellen Butler Rocovich UP

Ralph G. and Inez G. Roop UP

Mary McVay and Ted Rosenberg UP

William O. Ross UP

Neville A. and Mary H. Rowland UP

Dr. James A. Rule Jr. and Ms. Jeanne M. Welch

Carolyn Adele Russell

Philip T. and Glenda J. Rutledge UP

Donald L. Sage CS

George and Barbara Sampson UP

William W. Sauer

Virginia F. Saunders

Robert W. Scates Jr.

Mrs. Charles E. Schaaf

Charles W. Schiffert M.D. and Dolores Schiffert

B. June and Richard E. Schmidt

Harold W. Schneikert Jr. ‘65 UP

George P. Schrader

Cyrus Gregory Schwab III and Judith Kincaid Schwab

Mr. and Mrs. K. Reed Schweickert Jr. UP

Frederick G. and Wanda W. Scott

Edward and Barbara Scruggs UP

Mr. and Mrs. John M. Scruggs

Mr. and Mrs. William C. Scruggs UP

Pat Moore Seawell

Mark S. and Georgia S. Seiler

Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Sendelbeck CS

James W. and Eliza H. Severt UP

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin F. Sharpe

Lilly W. Shen

Mr. and Mrs. Pleasant C. Shields CS

Mrs. J. Landon Short UP

Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Shultz Jr. UP

Dalton B. Shumate UP

Sandy Siegrist

Mr. and Mrs. Roger W. Simmons

Mr. Robert Curtis Sinclair Jr.

Margaret Groseclose Skelton UP

William E. Skelton UP

Stephen and Valerie Skripak

Garnett E. and Patsy T. Smith UP

Mr. and Mrs. George R. Smith Jr. UP

James C. and Linda F. Smith

Robert and Sarah Smith

Susie Smith

William E. and Molly H. Snizek

Katherine E.G. Solters

Mr. and Mrs. William H. Speiden

Roger W. and Sandy P. Spence

Robert E. and Carole T. Spencer UP

Mrs. Wayne E. Spitler

Frank Arthur Spurr Jr. and Helen Dessin Spurr UP

James B. Stark

Lee R. and Regina Aultice Steeneck UP

James T. Stephens CS

Ronald D. and Irene A. Stephens

Edward O. Sternberg

Mr. and Mrs. William M. Sterrett Jr. UP

Susan V. Stevens

Jeffrey Stewart UP

Donald W. and Madeline H. Stewart UP

Douglas and Catherine Stewart UP

Mrs. George A. Stewart UP

Dewey L. Stinson Jr. UP

Ms. Lisa Ann Storms and Mr. David W. Roberts Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. W. Alexander Stuart Jr.

Robert J. and Julia N. Styne UP

Jack and Judy Sweers UP

William J. Sweet

Hazel C. and Lee C. Tait UP

Edwin H. and Melinda P. Talley UP

Robert W. and Elizabeth Anne Tallgren

J. Richard Tawes

Mrs. Richard F. Taylor

Orren K. Tench Jr. and Helena P. Tench

Mr. and Mrs. C. Stephen Thomas UP

David T. Thomas UP

Margaret Allen Thomas UP

Dr. R.B. Thomas

Maj. Gen. and Mrs. Thomas T. Thompson UP

Paul M. and Martha A. Thorn

Mr. and Mrs. David L. Thornton

William and Rita Thornton UP

Jill S. Tietjen

H. Gordon Tiller Jr. ‘56 and Margie L. Tiller

Thomas C. Tillar Jr. UP

Thomas C. and Ruth W. Tillar

Mr. and Mrs. William R. Tise

Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Tolson

Dorothea and Paul E. Torgersen UP

Mrs. Frances G. Trent UP

Mrs. William A. Trice Jr. CS

Mr. and Mrs. Douglas L. Trott

E. Donald Trotter

Col. and Mrs. William H. Tucker Jr.

Ute K. and William E. Tucker UP

C. Hyde Tucker UP

Mr. and Mrs. James E. Turner Jr. UP

Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur H. Tusler Jr.

Mrs. William B. Umberger

Patricia Y. Ames-Urie and David Milton Urie Jr.

Dr. and Mrs. Edwin W. Vaughan

Norman O. Wagenschein CS

Mr. and Mrs. W. Barry Wagner

Chester and Anne Waldron UP

Michael A. and Charlotte Anne Walker

Randolph and Lucinda Walker

Kenneth J. and Joan Ross Walsky

Mrs. Muriel Walts UP

Dr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Ward

George Truman Ward and Margaret Hall Ward UP

Richard C. Ward

Alfred B. and Fonda P. Warwick CS

Jerry D. and Merle M. Watkins UP

Mrs. Diane Dillon Weaver

Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Webb UP

Kevin S. Weekley

Mildred A. Crawford and Alvin C. Wiedmann

Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred A. Wells

Richard G. West UP

Rev. and Mrs. Stewart B. West UP

Frank Rex and Nadine White

Mark and Molly Whitehouse

John B. Whitt

Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Whittington

James and Juanita Wightman

Rhoda A. Wilkerson UP

Col. and Mrs. Richard F. Wilkinson UP

Col. and Mrs. T.O. Williams

Mr. and Mrs. Jody L. Williams

Ms. Carrie Rachel Wilmer

Mark and Helen Wilson UP

Virginia Peters Wilson

Richard S. Winstead

Kay Moody and Peter Winzenried UP

Dorothy G. Wiss UP

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

Mrs. Alice S. Wygant

Steven M. and Cheryl H. Yates

Mrs. Comer V. Yeatts

Elaine W. and Andrew J. Young Jr. UP

Robert B. Younger Jr.

Mark S. Zitz UP

Michael T. Zuravel

In Memory:A.L. Baldock

Patricia P. Briel

Cynthia F. Branscome

K.V. Brugh Jr.

Byron M. Brumback

Elizabeth Bailey Carlson

Richard P. Carter

Jack S. Copenhaver

Col. James T. Ewell Jr.

William G. Farthing

Frances Irvin

Richard F. Petty

Ralph L. Price

James R. Randall Jr.

Henry Reese

Walter L. Thomas

Annie Williams

Elizabeth H. Wilson

Frances F. Young

Alexander F. Giacco UP

Richard G. Gibbons

Anne Hayes Giles

Richard B. Gillett and Anna May Wheeler Gillett UP

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

Jeffrey L. and Sara B. Glesner UP

Colonel Walter P. Glover and Mazie L. Glover UP

Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Goldsten

George and Patricia Goodson UP

Sara Farley Goodwin

Deanna and Ed Gordon

John Dallas Gordon

Mrs. Charles O. Gordon Sr. UP

Mr. and Mrs. Fred A. Gosnell Jr. CS

Rosemary Carucci Goss and Robert Goss

Carolyn Gough

Corrie J. and John Grado UP

Dr. Douglas S. Graham

James B. and Ellen W. Graham

Dr. Frederick C. Grant UP

C.T. “Red” Graves and Anne Hutcheson Graves UP

Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. Gray UP

James P. H. Green

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald B. Gridley

W. W. Griggs III

Mr. and Mrs. Lucian Y. Grove UP

Dr. and Mrs. T. Marshall Hahn Jr. UP

Dr. and Mrs. Don A. Halperin

Francis N. Hamilton UP

Dr. and Mrs. Luther J. Hamlett UP

Mr. and Mrs. Branch R. Hammock

Thomas J. and Barbara F. Hampton UP

Harry P. Hancock Jr. ‘50 and Martha Price Hancock

Harriet Handsfield

Shirley and Jack Harris UP

William H. and Polly C. Harrison UP

Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Hartman CS

Robert Z. Haskins Jr.

James H. Hatch UP

Mrs. James F. Hatfield Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Alfred W. Hauser UP

Charles J. (Mickey) Hayes Jr. UP

Eddie F. and Dawn D. Hearp UP

Davis G. and Sharolyn B. Heatwole UP

Vicki Heilig

Martha B. and Lawrence C. Heiskell UP

Robert A. Heller and Agnes S. Heller UP

Mr. and Mrs. Joe S. Henderson

Sara H. and Austin Henry

F. Staley Hester Jr. UP

Mr. and Mrs. Roy R. Hill

Thomas E. Hilts

Dr. Eileen and Mr. Clay Hitchingham

Ellen and Mike Hoadley

Capt. and Mrs. E. Thomas Hodnett Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Davis Hodsden Jr.

Mrs. Edward R. Hoehl

Dr. and Mrs. Robert Henry Holland

Robert E. Hord Jr.

Mr. Wayne and Dr. Claire Horton UP

Ruth C. Horton UP

Steve and Cathi House UP

Donald W. and Colleen J. Huffman CS

Thomas N. Hunnicutt III and Ann Nordholdt Hunnicutt

Anne Hunter

Mr. and Mrs. George R. Irvin Jr. UP

Thomas D. Irvin UP

Mr. and Mrs. Samuel W. Jackson

Wilbur H. Jacobus ‘45 and Florence S. Jacobus

Jeff and Natalie Jaffe UP

Michael R. Jamison

Dorothy G. and William H. Jeffress UP

Floyd E. Jennings

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Johnson

Janet and Jim Johnson UP

Joseph A. Johnson Jr. and Karen L. Johnson UP

Mary Ann H. Johnson

Matt and Patti Johnson UP

Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Johnson

Pete and Frances Johnson

Stuart Johnson UP

William F. and Margie P. Johnston

Debra G. Jones

E. Lindsay Jones

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Jones Jr. UP

Dr. Robert H. Jones and Dr. Jeryl C. Jones

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Jones UP

Dr. Helen E. Jordan

Robert A. and Diana Jordan

Bernard S. and Carol A. Jortner

Mark S. Journell

James Randolph Joyce Jr. and Glenda S. Joyce

Page Johnston Karling

Mr. and Mrs. Ashok Nagar Katti CS

Mr. and Mrs. David L. Keeney

David A. and Janice E. Keitz

Mr. and Mrs. James F. Kelly

Ellen Cross Kelly UP

Mrs. Herbert W. Kelly

Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Kender

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Kennerly

Dianne B. Kesterson

Edwin P. Ketchum Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Crawford F. Kidd

Martha McCarty Kimmerling

Angela S. and Joseph F. King

Mr. and Mrs. M. Frederick King

Stephen and Linda King

Theodore E. King Jr. CS

Mr. and Mrs. Alan I. Kirshner CS

William E. and Emily K. Kitchen

Deborah W. and Mark G. Klein

Mr. and Mrs. William D. Klink

Mark A. and June M. Kohler

Debbie Koller and Kent Koller UP

Glenna and Michael Kolvek

Mr. and Mrs. N. Robert Kopecko Jr. UP

Gaye MacBrair Kostinas and John E. Kostinas

Robert H. and Linda C. Kramer

Alfred H. and Jean E. Krebs

Mr. and Mrs. John H. Kroehling UP

Mr. and Mrs. William H. Kucheman

Madge T. Landis

Mr. Thomas Langhorne III and Ms. Deidre Catherine Kravitz

Mr. Leslie P. Langley

Paul M. Large

Hugh and Alice Latimer

Barry and Melissa Lawson UP

Mr. and Mrs. John R. Lawson UP

Mary Leach UP

Tien Min Lee and Ling Yan Lee UP

E. Baxter Lemmond

Dawn H. and Gary D. Lerch UP

John C. “Jack” Lester Jr. and Leta A. Lester UP

Drew Lichtenberger

Mr. and Mrs. Graham Lilly

G. Karr Linkous Jr.

Clovis E. and Rosa H. Linkous

Garland M. Linton and Hilda G. Linton

Anna and D. Frederick Lohr Jr.

Ms. Charlotte Lomax

Ms. Lorraine G. Lordi and Mr. Milt Davis

Mr. and Mrs. H. Clarence Love CS

Patricia Lewis Lucas and John M. Lucas

Mr. and Mrs. C. Daniel Lynes

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Maddock

Christopher J. Mallin

Harriette H. Marocchi UP

Irvin Marshall UP

Mr. and Mrs. F. Wayne Martin UP

John W. Martin and Patricia R. Martin

William and Frances Martin CS

Cecil and Shirlee Maxson UP

Michael P. and Georgia E. Maxwell

Dr. Sue B. Mays

William C. and Rennie M. McAllister UP

Sam and Priscilla McCall UP

Joann D. McCauley UP

Elizabeth A. McClanahan and Byrum L. Geisler

Mr. and Mrs. William D. McClellan Jr.

Edward L. and Sandra P. McClelland

Aaron L. and Christina McClung

Margie B. McClung

Martha Q. McCollum and William Chris McCollum

Nancy and John McCord CS

Mr. and Mrs. Harry McGehee

Sara L. and Samuel H. McGhee III UP

Bernard L. and Kate L. McGinnis

Robert W. and Wanda McHone

Mr. and Mrs. William D. McLaughlin Jr.

Ernest C. McLeod Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. George E. McMichael Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Rieman McNamara Jr. UP

Mr. and Mrs. Frank R. McNeice

Dr. and Mrs. Arthur G. Meakin UP

Stuart Mease

E.B. Peter Meekins and Caddy Rowan Meekins

Irene F. Meigs UP

Floyd W. Merryman Jr. and Frances T. Merryman UP

Harry M. and Lois H. Meyers Jr.

Stephen and Donna Michael UP

Dr. and Mrs. Max R. Mickey Jr.

E. George Middleton Jr. and Elizabeth F. Middleton UP

Nicholas M. and Elaine M. Mihalas

Charles M. and Nancy B. Milam

Evelyn L. Mitchell UP

Constance Moehring

Nancy and Nick Moga UP

Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Molden

Ellis P. Monroe UP

B. Barnett Montague UP

William J. and Elizabeth H. Montgomery UP

Richard E. Moody UP

Audre H. Moore UP

Edward L. Moore

Jimmy T. and Betty D. Moore UP

Joe and Mille Moore UP

Vicky L. Moore

Monica Moran

Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Morgan Jr. UP

T. Darin and Lisha P. Morton

William W. and Patricia A. Moseley UP

Lorenz Moser and Rengin Holt UP

The Honorable and Mrs. Thomas W. Moss Jr. UP

Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Muddiman

Edwin A. and Lelia W. Myrick CS

William A. Nash II

Carol B. Nassetta

Paul Nekrasov

Mr. and Mrs. Craig E. Nesbit

Dewey L. and Lorene H. Newman

William F. Newman ‘40 and Dorothy A. Newman UP

James R. Nichols

Drs. Jerome and Ruth Anne Niles UP

Nancy B. and Samuel H. Nixon Jr. UP

Mr. and Mrs. B. Vaughan Noble UP

Gordon A. Noffsinger

Dr. and Mrs. Glenn R. Noffsinger UP

Richard E. Norman

Dr. Johann A. Norstedt

Elizabeth A. Flanagan Vice President Development and University Relations 540/231-7676 [email protected]

Thimothy G. Corvin Associate Vice President University Development 540/231-2801 [email protected]

Connie C. Talbott Associate Vice President Capital Support 540/231-2814 [email protected]

Rhonda K. Arsenault Associate Vice President Advancement Services 540/231-2833 [email protected]

Salinda A. 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 V. Albimino Director, Corporate Relations Pamplin College of Business 540/231-4524 [email protected]

Wallace Allen Associate Director of Corporate Relations 540/231-3729 [email protected]

Bob Bailey Regional Director, Major Gifts 540/231-2873 [email protected]

Max R. 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 M. Christopoulos Director of Donor Relations 540/231-2827 [email protected]

Steven T. Clark Esq. Director, Gift Planning 540/231-2813 [email protected]

Tracy Cooper Director of Development College of Architecture and Urban Studies 540/231-7562 [email protected]

Otis “OT” 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]

Thomas W. Giffin Director of Development Honors Program and Graduate Studies 540/231-2898 [email protected]

Field Glover Regional Director, Major Gifts 540/231-2757 [email protected]

Deborah Hamilton Associate Director, Corporate Relations College of Engineering 540/231-6648 [email protected]

Timothy Howland Associate Director, Corporate Relations College of Science 540/231-8739 [email protected]

Tysus Jackson Director of Development College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences 540/231-5952 [email protected]

Jeff Janosko Regional Director, Major Gifts 540/231-2857 [email protected]

Kylie H. Johnson Director of Development Fine and Performing Arts 540/231-3751 [email protected]

Catherine C. Larmore Director of Development Equine Programs 540/687-3521 [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]

Vernon Meacham Associate Director, Corporate Relations College of Agriculture and Life Sciences 540/231-8585 [email protected]

Lucius M. Merritt Sr. Director of Development Intercollegiate Athletics 540/231-6618 [email protected]

Jacqueline L. Nottingham Director of Annual Giving and Special Gifts 540/231-3092 [email protected]

Nancy L. 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]

David L. Spracher Director of Development Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets 540/231-2806 [email protected]

Robert L. Stamp Jr. Senior Director of Development, Regional Programs 540/231-6244 [email protected]

Mary Grace Theodore Regional Director, Major Gifts 540/231-6234 [email protected]

Cathy Werner Director of Foundation Relations 540/231-3737 [email protected]

University Development Contacts

Virginia Tech Foundation Inc. 2000 Kraft Dr., Ste. 2100, Blacksburg, VA 24061 www.vtf.edu www.givingto.vt.edu