Tradition & Innovation Torchbearers: Steering Committee Chair Pat Haden and USC College's Diane MacGillivray are two leaders of the College's ambitious fund-raising effort.
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Tradition & Innovation
One year after its official launch, USC Colleges fund-raising initiative gathers steam
By Wayne Lewis
December 2006
In September 2005, USC College publicly announced its largest-ever
fund-raising initiative, Tradition & Innovation, with the ambitious
goal of raising $400 million by 2010.
Since the announcement fund-raising has proceeded apace: The College
received $46 million in gifts and pledges in the 2005-06 fiscal year,
and $10.4 million in the first quarter of 2006-07. To date, the
initiative has brought in almost $200 million in pledges and donations,
nearly half its goal.
Said USC College Dean Peter Starr, The initiative owes much of its
success to the leadership of USC trustees and members of our College
Board of Councilors. Were very grateful their support and guidance
has been absolutely key to our efforts.
Pat Haden (B.A., English, 75) has played a leading role in the
fund-raising effort. A USC trustee and member of the Colleges board,
Haden serves as chair of the Tradition & Innovation steering
committee. The Rhodes Scholar and former NFL quarterback has also
supported the College initiative through personal donations and
scholarship grants awarded by the George Mayr Foundation, which he
chairs.
Haden is especially thankful to all of the donors who, as he said,
have made his job easier. He points to Katherine Loker (B.A., English,
40) as a prime example.
Katherine is among the Colleges most generous benefactors, Haden
said. Her stalwart support, over so many years, has been
extraordinary. Theres no doubt shes made a difference in the
advancement of the College directly through her generosity, but also
as a role model for other donors.
Among other gifts, Loker continued her 27-year tradition of
supporting the Loker Hydrocarbon Research Institute with a 2006
surprise gift of $1 million.
Tradition & Innovation gives the faculty and students the
support they need to increase the pace of their innovative work, said
Diane MacGillivray, the senior associate dean for advancement in the
College. And were seeing the impact.
To continue to forward movement, the initiative must reach out
beyond the Colleges Board leadership and draw support from a wider
range of College supporters, MacGillivray said.
Larger gifts energize the initiative, providing essential
momentum, she said. But were working to increase all levels of
engagement and participation among alumni, parents and other
stakeholders, and to reach out to foundations and corporate
philanthropy.
And even the youngest College alumni are responding. Many members of
the Class of 2006 each contributed a small but meaningful amount
$20.06 to the initiative.
Most new graduates live on a tight budget, so we were especially
appreciative of their generosity and interest in supporting their alma
mater, MacGillivray said.
Kristy Hawley (B.A., international relations and communication, 06)
pledged her 2006 donation to the Center on Public Diplomacy, an
interdisciplinary collaboration of the Colleges School of
International Relations and the USC Annenberg School for Communication.
The center's work is extremely important in a world dominated by
global media messages and 30-second sound bites, Hawley said.
Donating was one small way to contribute to a project that made an impact on my learning experience at USC.
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