your impact our stories
Transcription
your impact our stories
K N O X V I L L E 2013–2014 IMPACT REPORT YOUR IMPACT OUR STORIES You make a BIG difference! Because of you, our university partners, UT received an increase of 40 percent over last year’s fundraising total. Together, more than 35,000 individuals and corporate partners made gifts totaling nearly $131 million to the university; however, true success is measured by enhanced educational experiences for our students. With almost 60 percent of undergraduate students receiving financial aid, you help give deserving students access to the state’s flagship university. A student’s scholarship dollars and your additional investment in the university give students more than just an opportunity for a degree. You are allowing students to be taught by top-notch faculty who inspire them, have accountability and collaboration through a living community dorm experience, participate in leadership training, and travel the world. As you’ll see on the following pages, this report highlights a small portion of your great impact. Your investments are improving the student experience. You are meeting needs through book stipends, new buildings, and classroom technology. You are also preparing students for the workplace and the world. Your generosity is creating something larger and more powerful than all of us—you are transforming lives. Thank you, Scott Rabenold Vice-Chancellor for Development & Alumni Affairs 1 2 Engineering was always Cassie Finney’s career goal, and as a resident of a UT Learning Community, she is Living Knowledge A self-proclaimed science geek, Cassie Finney still remembers being captivated as she watched a penny dissolve during a high school chemistry experiment. Her fire for the sciences flourished when she lived with other engineering techies in Morrill Hall during her freshman year. The Engage Living and Learning Community—one of eighteen living and learning communities at UT—offers a 360-degree approach to learning by pairing the conventional residence hall experience with tailored academic learning centered on engineering. Donor Impact: $6.4 million given for merit-based scholarships. “I know I thrived because I lived in Engage,” says Finney. “I can’t even picture my first year of college without it. I hadn’t taken physics in high school, so the material was all brand new to me. And, thankfully, I had a floor of roommates who were willing to help me when I needed it. “We shared the same classes, did our homework together, studied together, had dinner together, tutored one another, encouraged and pushed each other. That community was 90 percent of my life, and I loved every minute of it. “It’s camaraderie like no other, because we were all in it together. And I’ve made friendships that will last a lifetime.” 3 For public relations major Alexander Perry, a need-based scholarship meant Supporting Dreams For sophomore Alexander Perry, the Regal Scholarship erased difficult questions like “what if I have to work a few part-time jobs?” or “what if my parents have to work overtime constantly or sign their names to loans they cannot afford?” Dedicated to students from families making less than $40,000 a year, the $2,500 scholarship helps lift the economic weight from forty UT students from Knox County annually. The Regal Entertainment Group’s foundation invests $100,000 every year in the scholarship. Much like the need-based Tennessee Pledge Scholarship, it makes higher education more than just a dream for students from lowincome families. “It was such a surreal moment for me when I received the letter congratulating me on receiving the scholarship,” says Perry. “And the tears came because I knew what this would mean, not just for me, but my family. My books and fees are covered. “I can see my graduation day. I can see me going to graduate school for a master’s degree. I didn’t have to find a way; a way was made.” 4 Donor Impact: $7.2 million given for need-based scholarships. 5 Donor Impact: Almost $10 million given for graduate assistantships. 6 Carrie Sease and Hanna Powell are learning valuable lessons in marketing and at the same time Growing Traditions With fashion as a muse, Hanna Powell (’14) and Carrie Sease (’14) were able to venture into product development, brand management, and marketing because of The Rocky Top Institute, established by the heirs of “Rocky Top” composers Boudleaux and Felice Bryant. “The royalties are split between the Bryant family and UT,” says Powell, “with UT’s portion supporting the Rocky Top Institute (housed in the Retail and Consumer Sciences Program) and the Pride of the Southland Band. But that is only part of story. “This is an investment that changed my academic course and that of so many others. I was engrossed in a real-world project of coming up with an idea that retailers want to sell. You have to sell ideas and understand pricing, marketing, and promotion while looking at target markets and what they want to buy. You learn these theories in the classroom, but there is nothing like it when you are able to apply it in the real world. Carrie Sease adds, “A Rocky Top Institute fellowship afforded me the opportunity to see these theories come to life in Paris, the fashion capital of Europe.” 7 Brad Collett leads a team of landscape architect students who are Designing the Future In 2011, Assistant Professor Brad Collett joined the faculty of UT’s new graduate landscape architecture program. Since that time, he has overseen four demonstration projects as part of Plan East Tennessee: A Regional Partnership of East Tennessee Communities. One of these projects, in Townsend, allowed Collett and students Clint Wayman (left) and Brandon Orrick (right) to create a long-term visioning plan that included a public greenway along the Little Tennessee River, a walkable town center, and a civic gathering space. Collett says, “The program is offered through a partnership between the colleges of Architecture and Design and Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources, which gives us a strategic advantage to deliver an education balanced across both art and science. Our interest in landscape extends far beyond aesthetics and is inclusive of its performance, its restorative capabilities, and its sustainability as a living system. A generous endowment held in trust from Bill and Donna Cobble played a central role in the program’s funding. “As the first and only landscape architecture program in the state, we’ll be able to look at questions from a unique perspective—one that has never before been contemplated academically in Tennessee.” 8 Donor Impact: More than 2,200 faculty and staff made donations last year. 9 Donor Impact: $40.1 million given for college outreach projects and strategic priorities. 10 For accounting major Ashley Stewart, funding from a charitable grant provided a ticket to New York and Making Connections Ashley Stewart is a senior accounting major with a dual concentration in international business. As a Global Leadership Scholar, she was able to study in London with UT professors during the spring of her sophomore year. This spring, thanks to a $75,000 grant from a charitable foundation managed by Michael Lobel (’71) and contributions from other donors, Stewart and nineteen fellow members of the College of Business’s Beta Alpha Psi honors organization took an educational enrichment trip to New York City. “Our first stop in New York was a breakfast at KPMG,” says Stewart. “Michael Lobel, who got his start at KPMG and is now a partner at Schulman Lobel LLC, told us what being a UT alumnus has meant to him and how UT prepared him for the accounting world. “We toured PricewaterhouseCoopers, where I interned this summer, Wall Street, the New York Stock Exchange, and saw the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. From this experience, I learned how important it is to be open to making new connections. You never know who you’ll meet. We’re all grateful for the opportunities we’ve had. My perspective is that as long as we are really thankful and take advantage of these opportunities, the more people will donate, and the more students can have opportunities like this.” 11 Real-life lessons and classroom instruction in the Emerging Leaders course achieve the goal of Promoting Leadership Thanks to the generosity of donors Clay and Debbie Jones, the 3-credit-hour course Emerging Leaders is taught each fall to sophomores interested in studying leaders, leadership theories, and the application of leadership in various situations. Will Burleson says the class changed the entire focus of his college career. “Because of the Emerging Leaders class, I was able to become a better overall person. I learned about all the different types of leadership styles and which style is most effective in different situations. “My favorite experience from the class was our trip to Washington DC to visit American University and George Washington University. Each semester the class includes an off-campus leadership experience to learn about the leadership styles and opportunities in another community. “I will always remember the team-building exercises, especially our adventurous monument scavenger hunt, and I have already applied what I learned in real-life situations. Above all, this class taught me that no type of leadership is necessarily the best, but that the best leaders are versatile and able to adapt how they lead.” 12 Donor Impact: 300 students participated in the Emerging Leaders class. 13 Climbing Club president Corinne Kinzy says RecSports programs were all-important for Inspiring Confidence This spring, Corinne Kinzy, a junior in mechanical engineering and president of UT’s Climbing Club, won the 2014 Ira Sliger Leadership Award for dedication and excellence among rec athletes. A four-year member of the climbing team at West High School in Knoxville, she joined UT’s Outdoor Program as a freshman, took Student Outdoor Leadership Education (SOLE), and worked her way up from apprentice to instructor. Kinzy, a recipient of the HOPE Scholarship, is also student director of Ignite Outdoors, a summer program under the Center for Leadership and Service in which incoming freshmen take part in six-day adventure trips. “When I joined the Outdoor Program, Director Benjy Darnell made it clear that if you have an idea, go for it,” says Kinzy. I appreciate the way lots of people in RecSports have been supportive of any ideas I’ve had and anything I wanted to learn. “The Outdoor Program uses the outdoors as an avenue to learn leadership, which comes naturally to me because I’ve been climbing for so long. It’s taught me to have a dynamic leadership style and be able to teach in different types of environments and test the waters for different methods.” 14 Donor Impact: 35,244 individuals invested in UT last year. 15 Donor Impact: $10.2 million for faculty support and 19 new professorships. 16 An endowed professorship makes it possible for filmmaker Paul Harrill to guide young artists by Nurturing Creativity Script writing as a kid led Paul Harrill (’94) into making short films in college with a borrowed Super 8 camera. Today the Dee and Jimmy Haslam Professor of Art is described as “one of America’s finest and most sensitive directors” for this genre—including Gina, An Actress, Age 29, which won the Grand Jury Prize in Short Filmmaking at the Sundance Film Festival—and Something, Anything, which has won international praise. At UT, his teaching in the newly created cinema studies major has resulted in an enrollment uptick in digital film and narrative filmmaking courses. “Serving at UT as a Haslam Professor is a profound honor,” says Harrill. “It’s a sign of the university’s belief in the work I’ve done, and the work I’ll do. Feeling that kind of support in such a concrete way is humbling, and also inspiring. “So I don’t think of supporting the university as giving a gift. I think of it more like making an investment. When we support UT, we make the university better for the students, but by doing so, we also raise the reputation of our own degrees. “When I give to the university, I do so because I want to help young artists that might not otherwise be able to study what they do. But I also know that art makes the world a better place—it renews us—and we will all benefit from that creativity.” 17 Private donations and scholarships made it possible for Ravyn Towns to experience Expanding Horizons Ravyn Towns (’14) has always chosen to take on challenges. Afraid of heights, but not flying, she took to the skies and fell in love with an aviation program in high school. The Memphian capitalized on her Oprah-sized personality as a broadcast journalism major at UT. As graduation approached, she wanted the experience of traveling to Cyprus with the School of Journalism and Electronic Media. Besides having no study-abroad funds, Townes had missed the application deadline by two weeks. “I had faith in knowing that it would happen,” says Townes, “even though the odds seemed so great. With my application accepted after the deadline, I knew things would continue to align. “The late Marva Rudolph (who served as associate vice chancellor and director of the Office of Equity and Diversity) gave me my first donation; then the College of Communication and Information Dean Mike Wirth and his wife supported my dream; and then the Office of Multicultural Student Life gifted me with a scholarship. “Many barely knew me, but they believed in me and cared enough about my dream to make it a reality. I’ll always be thankful.” 18 Donor Impact: Last year, nearly 1,000 UT students studied abroad. 19 Nourishing Strengths 12,000+ Philanthropy affects all parts of student life—even the food students eat. Tennessee Fund donors support student-athletes in many ways, including nutrition. Almost 14,000 individuals donated to the Tennessee Fund last year. cases of water Check out some of the food and drinks our student-athletes go through in just one year: • 11,133 cases of Gatorade • 16.9 tons of fruit • 40,000 peanut butter and jelly sandwiches 16.9 • 9,000 pounds of peanuts • More than 12,000 cases of water tons of fruit 9,000 20 pounds of peanuts Building a Foundation When the Natalie L. Haslam Music Center opened its doors last fall, all School of Music programs, faculty, and staff were brought together under one roof for the first time. With more than 123,000 square feet on four floors, this $40 million facility serves more than 350 students. The Haslam Music Center is one of the nation’s top music-education facilities, with eight technology-enhanced classrooms; fiftysix practice rooms; fifty-seven performance studios/academic offices; an organ studio; the 412-seat Sandra G. Powell Recital Hall; the George F. DeVine Music Library; a recording lab; computer, electronic music, and piano labs; and an academic tutoring center. “We are obligated to provide our students with the best faculty, staff, and resources. That’s why we are in the education business,” says Chancellor Jimmy G. Cheek. “This building will provide learning opportunities. It is the best building of its kind in the country.” 21 Creating Gateways The John D. Tickle Engineering Building opened in fall 2013 and houses the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering. Since 2007, the College of Engineering’s undergraduate enrollment has increased by 40 percent and its doctoral enrollment by more than 60 percent. The Tickle Building accommodates the growing college with twenty-four laboratories, one lecture hall, three student workspaces, three conventional classrooms, and sixty-three faculty and graduate student offices. The laboratories include a high-bay area for structural testing and asphalt-road-surface testing as well as a geotechnical laboratory. The three classrooms promote collaborative learning through the use of Smart Boards. The building also anchors a new gateway to campus and provides a link between Neyland Drive and the Hill via a bridge that includes fiberglass-reinforced large I-beams made by Strongwell, Tickle’s company. 22 Sponsoring Growth UT’s new Student Union will be the central gathering space on campus for students, faculty, staff, alumni, and guests. As our highest-profile facility, it will be a showplace that celebrates UT’s rich history and traditions. Phase I is being constructed on the former student center parking garage and will open in spring 2015. Phase II will then begin construction on the existing University Center site. At 380,000 square feet, nearly twice the size of the existing center, features will include • a Career Services suite, • larger and more flexible meeting spaces equipped with state-of-the-art equipment, • a 1,000-seat performance auditorium, and • a ballroom triple the size of the existing one. “This stunning addition to our campus will be “home away from home” for Vols past and present,” says Chancellor Jimmy G. Cheek. Gifts to support Student Life and the Chancellor’s Top 25 Excellence Endowment can allow individuals to be recognized in the new Student Union. For more information about recognition opportunities, please contact the UT Office of Development at 865-974-2115. 23 Thanks to the generous gifts of our benefactors, in 2014-2015 we are Making It Happen Roy L. and Paulette D. Aaron Cathy L. Acuff George A. Adams, Jr. Brooke M. Adams Shigeko Akimoto Floyd Akins John Q. and Kristi M. Allen Martha L. Allmon Eric G. and Molly M. Alspaugh Natalee Anderson John E. and Deborah Anderson Todd E. Archer Susie Armstrong Randy Atkins D. Doyle Attaway and Martha Attaway Ron C. Averill Regan M. Avery Jill Bartee Ayers Edward U. and Virigina I. Babb John L. and Eleanor J. Bailey Sally Ann Baker, CRNA, MSN Tom and Anne B. Baker Nannette A. Baker David A. and Michelle Bakewell James V. Ballard David K. and Janine N. Barber Dr. William M. and Carol H. Bass Brandon F. Pace and Ashley Beals-Pace Krystal D. Bean Allison Beck Edward L. and Anne O. Beeler Ralph M. Begun Will T. and Helen Cherry Bell Maria Rose Bellenger Leslie Benmark Elise Marie Bennett Mark W. and Beverly S. Bensen 24 John E. Bertrand Rich and Melva Bible Tim and Janet Bigelow Ann Marie Bingham Tim R. Bishop Natalie G. Blackburn Erik Bledsoe Jim and Donna Bletner Juliene E. Blevins Shannon D. Blevins Mike S. and Kimberly D. Blevins Christine R. Boake George Bock Christopher J. Boehme Alana D. Bogie Mark A. Borst Edward J. and Patricia Bouwer David A. and Lee Stewart Bowen JoAnn M. Bowen Bege K. Bowers Douglas K. and Beverly Bradley M. Denise Brandon Stuart J. and Cindy Bresee George W. Bressler Randy Brewton Jacob H. Bridges III D. Scott Briggs Shirley Pih Broadbery Eric D. and Rebecca A. Brooks Donna Yates Brown Lea Brown Dan and Linda Brown Kathy G. Browning Brian P. Broyles Laura J. Bryan John M. Bryant, Jr. and Karyn L. Bryant John P. and May Bumpus Matt E. Burnette Ken J. Burns, Jr. Ralph M. Burns Cindi D. Burns April M. Buschur Margaret A. Butler Matthew B. Callan John Bradford and Ann Vandenoord Campbell John G. and Gail C. Campbell C. Spence and Marianne Campbell Robert and Janet Campbell Chester D. and Anne Campbell Lauren M. Carey Cathi Carmack Sarah Carrier Glen C. Carter Michael O. Carter George G. and Maribeth Carty Tracy K. Carusi C. Mark Carver Will J. and Joy Carver Alan L. and Jean E. Cates Teresa G. Caudle Tom Cervone and Susan Creswell George and Joanne Chambers John A. Chandler Bob E. Charles, Jr. Dr. Jimmy G. Cheek and Ileen Cheek Weiwei Chen Sunha Choi Joseph K. Christian and Megan Clark-Stewart Christian Robert E. Christopher William H. Clark, Jr. and Louise L. Clark Peter V. Claussen, Jr. Margaret Cochran Charles H. Coffin Tim Cokkinias Below is a listing of those who made a gift of $100 or more to UT during Big Orange Give last year. Kelly Leigh Coley David R. and Debbie L. Collette Nick A. and Mindy H. Collins Mike L. Collins Eric J. Connor III and Alison G. Connor Benjamin E. Cook Christopher J. Cook Lanis Lee and Lisa Cope Teresa J. Corbitt Michael R. and Cynthia B. Corn William R. and Barbara Cory Frank S. Costa Frances J. Cottrell Jeremy R. Cowan Ned and Regina Cox Woody S. Cozart Scott D. and Jill E. Craig Loretta G. Cravens Mark P. and Mona D. Crockett Cheryl A. Crosby Bart and Kim Cross Tony and Leah Cross Joe and Emily Crozier Anthony W. Crunk Martha J. Curd Jeffrey W. Currey Richard A. Cutler Mike S. Dale Tina L. Dasha Mike and Linda Davidson Robert and Sharon Davies Bartley B. Davis, Jr. Charles H. Davis David H. and Alice C. Davis Bill C. and Kimber L. Davis Cynthia Mills Davis Wayne and Sylvia Davis Lori A. Dawson Garry A. and Linda McKown Day Anne de Vega Maggie W. Deaner Nancy E. Dearolf Michael and Lee Anne Demere Charles M. and Amy R. Denney Harold L. Denton George Devault, Jr. Nancy S. DiFrancia Angela R. Dobbs Joseph J. Domzalski James P. Donaldson Gregory J. Donoghue Helen S. Dowty James R. Doyle John J. Doyle Jonathan W. and Anne D. Driskill Jim and Peggy Seaman Duke Gary W. and Nancy J. Dunavant Gary T. Eastwood Jacqui Ebert Alan W. Eichelman Don L. Eisenberg Scott F. Eisenhart Allen R. Elkins Sara R. Ellis R. Scott and Leslie A. Elmore Alyson L. Engle Christine M. Esswein Patti S. Ettien Mike W. Evans Ron M. Everett Theressa Gray Ezell Lisa T. Fall James E. and Carole Mercer Farnham Mary J. Farnsworth Aaron T. Fausz Christie H. Feiler Ron Feinbaum John A. and Stephanie Brokke Felker Teresa Ferguson Sally J. McMillan, Ph.D. and James E. Fields, Ph.D. Mark and Kit Fields Adam W. Fischer Janice R. Fisher Michael M. and Susan D. Fleenor David M. Fleming Aaron B. Flinn Thomas E. Foley Joseph J. and Ashley R. Ford Mike W. and Beth Ford Gordon and Laura Ford Cathy Zoe Ford Lisa Ann Ford Russ H. and Tracey L. Ford Gary L. and Mary D. Forry Carole Fowler Michael and Jane Fowler Jesse L. Frasier, Jr. Richard J. Frederick Barbara J. Froula Willard C. Gaby, Jr. and Jane E. Gaby Mary Taylor Gallagher Ed Gamble Brian E. and Frances Gard Arlene A. Garrison Glen S. and Kathryn H. Germain James G. Gerstle Cathie Peitzsch-Gibbs David M. Gibson Scott P. and Cindy L. Gibson Tim J. Gibson David C. Giles 25 Thanks to the generous gifts of our benefactors, in 2014-2015 we are Making It Happen Laura E. Giles Mark A. and Andree L. Girone Chad E. Glende Bill H. and Sheila C. Gober William and Barbara Goetz Melissa G. Goff-Hey David A. Golden Steven F. Gomez and Terra E. Clotfelter-Gomez Kirk A. Grathwol Les D. Gray Richard L. Gray Dragoslav Grbovic and Jelena Pjesivac-Grbovic Howard and Diane Green Michael D. and Elizabeth J. Greene Larry M. and Janette B. Greene Roger D. and Shirley B. Greenup Amy B. Griffith Vicki L. Guin G. Curtis and Debbie Gwaltney Eric R. and Tyra Haag Sue Ellen and Rayford Haaga Christopher M. Haley Charles W. and Lauren R. Haley Christopher and Colleen Haley John Hall John W. Hall Hilary R. Hamlin Sabrina A. Hampton June Harse Ralph C. and Nancy M. Harvey Joe and Rebecca Haskins James and Erin Loughran Hastings Jason E. and Daphne K. Havens Tom S. Hawkins, Jr. and Constance E. Hawkins Bryan D. and Connie J. Haynes Patrick Hazari Paul M. Heitman 26 Christopher C. and Cynthia Hemme Jim D. and Ashlie Henderson Tracy H. Henderson Kerry L. Henry Melissa A. Henry Anne D. Hensley Jeff and Melanie Herman Mark E. Hershberger Brian T. Hester Joanne M. Hibbs D.V.M. M. Ann Hiegel Todd A. Hilbert J. Robert Hill Bill C. and Marjorie S. Hill Kem G. and Marily Hinton Tom A. and Judy E. Hodge Cheryl S. Hodges John A. and Patricia J. Hoffmeister Jennifer L. Holder Christine M. Holloway Stephen R. Holt USAF Kenneth C. and Sherry C. Hood Erin Horeni-Ogle Douglas J. and Carol Clark Hornstra Mary Anne Hoskins Carl F. House, Jr. and Carol S. House Dana D. and Rogene R. Howard Lee Huffaker, Jr. Darren and Joanna Hughes Julia A. Hunt Stephen C. Hunter Kenneth A. Huntsman Adlai and Rachel Hurt Gino L. Inman Myra Hendee Ireland Jenna Irwin Steven E. Isbill Judy Isenhour Edward R. Isler Elizabeth M. Jakubowski Elizabeth Janicak Tommy R. Jervis Sharon Price John Jeff D. Johnson Lee P. Johnson Micah E. Johnson Joe and Pat Johnson Len Johnson Renee Johnson Jade J. Johnston Dean M. and Laurie A. Jones Mason and Emily W. Jones Kathy Jones Charlene P. Judd William N. and Megan Z. Kain Abe and Vicki Kalfus Susan M. Kearney Mary Keen Brad F. Kerr, Sr. John A. and Dianne M. Kerr Doug Kerr J. Darrell King Mark S. King Candice L. Klein John E. Kobza Frank A. Kocur II James D. and Amber S. Koonce Brandi L. Koontz Christopher and Barbara Korynski Bridget K. Krause Matthew J. Krebs, Sr. and Joy T. Krebs Scott and Andrea Kuban Michelle Wittcoff Kuhl Rick B. Kuhlman, Jr. and Beverley Knight Kuhlman Below is a listing of those who made a gift of $100 or more to UT during Big Orange Give last year. Jan Stoker Lach Bruce G. Lalonde Jeffrey S. and Cathy A. Lang Edward A. Langan III William E. Lanham, Jr. and Patricia Middlemas Lanham Joy C. Lauderdale Beth Atkins Lawrence Joel R. Lay H. Rowan Leathers III and Myra Fort Leathers Alan Ledger Eun Sook Lee Linda S. Lee Harold W. and Linda S. Lee Emily E. Lenn Michael E. and Lynda H. LeVan Charles S. and Elizabeth J. Lewis Li Li Han Lin Tsan-Hsun Lin Jason M. and Allison White Little Lester P. Lockhart Joni L. Longfellow Tom K. and Tori A. Looney Dr. Theresa M. Lee and Jacob Love Jeffrey A. Lovelace David and Shirl Lowe Jeffery C. Lowe Ronald M. Lustig John H. Lyle Bonnie Lynch Robert S. Lyons Wesley M. MacDonald Kristen M. Mackowiak Malcolm and Laurie Macnair Paul Maiden Judith Mallory Michael Manzo James C. and Charlotte Maples Vittorio Marone James M. Marshall William B. Marshall Whitney Martin Brad A. Martin III David W. Matheny Heather Osteen Mathias Edward B. Maupin III Doug H. and Jane C. McCarty Donna Walsh McCauley Mike and Katie McCay Michael K. McCormack Philip N. McCullough Walter Ray McDavid, Jr. Ailsie F. McEnteggart Wade G. McGarity Marsha McGinnis Douglas and Kathleen McKenzie Rudolph McKinley, Jr. and Janice K. McKinley Virginia Feeney McRee Patrick F. and Nora D. Messing Robert E. and Charlotte T. Miller Jessica M. Miller David F. and Kathy A. Miller James A. and Pamela Hatley Miller David L. and Katherine McKay Mincey Bill A. Mitchell Ed L. and Carolyn J. Mohundro Joseph B. Montgomery Roger D. Moore and Debra Kay Inglis Sally Morris Martha J. Morris Paula H. and Grainger Morrison Carolyn C. Morrison Mark L. Morrison Doug and Myrna Morrow Lucas R. Moss Gary E. and Audrey E. Mount Susan Mulholland Freddie E. Mullins George T. and Sue Winn Munson Joe and Jenni Neal Richad S. Nelson Pat Neuhoff Adam W. Nicholson Kitty A. Norton Mark A. Notestine Kevin M. and Raja J. O’Brien Mike F. O’Brien Robert and Terry Olberding Mark and Sharon Oldham Remilekun and Olufemi Omitaomu Nancy Hill Ordman Charles and Leslie Osborne Patrick O’Shea Karen P. Ousley Kimberly S. Padgett Tony F. Pagano III Brent K. Park Ryan S. and Megan Parker-Peters Christy H. Parsons Ted A. and Margaret Pearson J. Michael Pemberon Harold M. Pendell, Jr. Clay and Suzanne Petrey Craig Phillip and Marian Ott Jason A. and Kathryn G. Phillips Kris R. Phillips Sara A. Phillips Carl and Peggy Pierce Patricia Pierce-Goss Stephanie B. Piper W. Steve Pittman 27 Thanks to the generous gifts of our benefactors, in 2014-2015 we are Making It Happen Michael T. Pless Leonard F. Pogue III and Elizabeth A. Pogue John T. Poindexter IV John S. Poole Clarence W. Potter, Sr. Shawna E. Powell Terrica M. Preast Danny and Allison Pressley James S. Pringle Dr. Joseph L. and Sharon M. Pryse Patricia A. Purvis Scott and Sarah Rabenold George H. Rafael Bobby J. and Earline Raines Thomas J. and Janet L. Ralston Frank Rambo Dave and Sharon Ramsey Cissa Rassel Freddie A. Ray James M. Reagan Benjamin C. Rechter Leslie and Deborah Reed Kevin M. and Susan B. Reed Christie L. Reeves James C. Reno, Jr. David A. Reynolds John S. Reynolds Steven Reznik Steve F. Richards, Jr. Nancy McLean Richardson Michael D. and Leah M. Richardson Robert A. Rider Sherrie Robbins Riley Dylan Q. Riley Greg and Kimberly Ring Joseph M. Ripley Joseph Boyd Rives III and Bonnie J. Rives 28 Jon G. and Mintha E. Roach Jack B. and Anne M. Robbins Norma D. Robinette Worrick G. Robinson IV and Leslie A. Robinson Marian S. Rodgers Carol Ronka Richard L. Rose Jeremy B. Ross David M. and Sue B. Rowland Sherrie Rutherford William C. Rutherford Susan S. Ruyle Lucia Knight Sams Robin F. Sansone Michael S. and Emily D. Saylor Richard M. Scharff Claudia J. Schauman William Warren and Diane Grob Schmidt Margaret Scobey Connie Scott Shannon E. Scott Ron V. Sellers N. David Sellman, Jr. and Ann Smithwick Sellman Mark J. Sellmann Bill Sellmer II and Mary Sellmer Joseph Sfameni John R. and Cynthia L. Sharp Benjamin H. and Lindsay E. Sharpe Justin P. Shaw Larry E. Shell Ronald L. and Patti L. Shelton Keith and Susan Shields Charles S. Shoup, Jr. David F. and Mary A. Shuford Cristopher M. Shupp Jason R. Shuppert Rita Freeman Silen Donna A. Silvey Danny D. Simmons Donna Simpson Karen Simsen Jack A. Sitgreaves, Jr. J. Allen Sitzler R. Brian and Monica D. Skelton Bob Skillern Sandy J. Skiner Judith Bailey Slagle Tara L. Smalstig Jake Smith Delaine R. Smith Gilbert A. Smith Louis S. and Margaret V. Smith John M. Snow Kent T. and Jan H. Stair Nancy C. Stalcup C. P. A. Andrew H. and Emily B. Stallings Jennifer and Trey Stanley Andrew Stefaniak Joseph R. Stevenson Gene H. Stewart Frank and Billie Stidham Bruce and Martha Stone Wade R. Stonebrook Vivian . Street Larry M. Sullivan Christopher Summerlin Jeff Swett David C. and Valerie S. Swift Rui Tang Bethany C. Taylor Eboni M. Taylor Alexander M. Taylor, Jr. and Connie Bell Taylor Edward L. Taylor Dr. Keith P. Taylor Below is a listing of those who made a gift of $100 or more to UT during Big Orange Give last year. Ricky and Lisa Taylor William and Caye Teegarden Katherine C. Tefft Joe B. Sylve III and Madeline M. Theard Julie Berry Thomas Nancy Kay Thomopoulos-Williams Marla Thompson Herman and Peggy Thompson John B. Thornburg Tom and Judy Thorpe Rick G. and Elizabeth B. Tinker Melissa A. Tribble Griffin G. Tuggle Normand D. Turgeon Sara E. Turley Natalie E. Turner Ted R. Twyman Yea-Hwang and Shu-Chen Uang Wayne P. and Deborah H. Underwood Unum Group, Inc. UT Federal Credit Union Robin L. Vasa Edward G. Vaughan III and Ann M. Vaughan Michael R. and Elizabeth C. Vaughan Thomas J. and Sue L. Vaughn Rex and Vicky Veal Larry Ventis Sherry L. Vermillion Susan C. Vester Keith and Callie Victory Judy Z. Wahl Adrian D. Waits George C. and Stephanie E. Wallace Brian D. and Christina A. Waller David M. Walls Holly Warlick Bob Weldon C. P. A. Hunt Welles IV Dabney S. Wellford, Sr. and Dorothy C. Wellford J. Walton and Cynthia L. West Kathy J. Wheeler Raymond F. Wheeler Penny J. White Chuck H. Whitfield, Jr. Daniel P. and Rosemary G. Whitlow David and Pamela Williams Linda L. Williams Paul and Alma Williams John R. Willis III Alan and Wendy Wilson Hal E. Wilson Wade J. Wilson Catherine A. Wilt Lynda J. Wimberly Priscilla W. Wisner Kwai Lam Wong Eric R. Wood Thomas R. and Paula D. Wood Jesse C. Woodall III and Kimberly F. Woodall Nancy J. Worley Tim and Patsy Wright Xiaohong Xin David and Peggy Yam Marlon W. Yankee Barry A. Yoakum Pamela F. Zelman Yanhong Zhang Nathan and Katie Zipper Zhiyuan Zuo 29 Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage PAID Permit #481 Knoxville, TN K N O X V I L L E Office of Alumni Affairs and Development Tyson Alumni House 1609 Melrose Avenue Knoxville, TN 37996 The University of Tennessee is an EEO/AA/Title VI/Title IX/Section 504/ADA/ADEA institution in the provision of its education and employment programs and services. All qualified applicants will receive equal consideration for employment without regard to race, color, national origin, religion, sex, pregnancy, marital status, sexual orientation, gender identity, age, physical or mental disability, or covered veteran status. Pricipal photography by Steven Bridges; photo on page 21 by Denise Retallack, provided by BarberMcMurry architects. PAN E88-0101-022-001-15 TAH 14017