When some 30 ϳԹ students clad in matching T-shirts assembled near the stage during the university’s annual Momentum event Tuesday, they offered a simple but powerful message to those in attendance: “Thank you.”
Momentum, which celebrates the university’s philanthropic supporters, spotlighted undergraduate scholarships this year, a top priority of the Forward Thinking capital campaign. During an evening that featured several student and donor testimonials, President Barbara R. Snyder also announced new commitments to support student scholarships, among them:
- a $1 million commitment from John T. Chambers, executive chairman and former chief executive officer of Cisco Systems, to support female medical school students;
- a new term scholarship matching gift program from the Lubrizol Corp., Lubrizol Foundation and Lubrizol employees that already has raised at least $100,000;
- another $250,000 in new scholarship commitments from emeriti and current trustees; and
- a new scholarship fund established in honor of Patricia “Pat” Kilpatrick, the university’s first female vice president, who passed away earlier this month.
- Chambers’ $1 million commitment is in honor of his parents, June and John, both of whom received medical degrees from ϳԹ.
- Alumni and Lubrizol executives Mark Sutherland and Bob Graf each committed $25,000 to the Lubrizol’s new scholarship initiative, with the Lubrizol Foundation matching their gifts. Through these gifts, Lubrizol contributed $100,000 before even announcing the scholarship campaign to its employees, many of whom also are ϳԹ graduates.
- Alumnus Yale Paprin committed $25,000 to the scholarship honoring Kilpatrick, which soon was matched by alumna Lynn Ritvo. Both spoke Tuesday of Kilpatrick’s profound influence on their lives. Others have joined them in raising $88,000 thus far toward the scholarship, and fundraising continues.
- Alumnus Bob Herbold, former chief operating officer at Microsoft, who committed $1.5 million to support graduate students at Case School of Engineering. The commitment will help support a multifaceted initiative at the engineering school: the Institute for Smart, Secure and Connected Systems.
- Alumnus, emeritus trustee and former board chair Allen Ford, who gave $200,000 to term scholarships that will benefit multiple students over eight years
- Trustee Ellen Stirn Mavec, who gave a $25,000 term scholarship to provide tuition assistance to a student in the visual arts.
- Trustee and alumna Virginia Nord Barbato who supported stipends for graduate fellows in the university’s doctoral program in art history.
- A shared scholarship launched by former Undergraduate Student Government presidents Duwain Pinder and Neil Ursic, who are encouraging their fellow USG alumni to contribute to the fund.
- A shared scholarship supported by members of the Pittsburgh Alumni Chapter, including Ollie Poppenberg and Liz McFarlin
- A shared scholarship initiated by members of the Alumni Association of ϳԹ board.