Kirk Shisler Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/kirk-shisler/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Thu, 21 May 2026 14:07:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 黑料正能量 names Nathan K. Leopard as new advancement VP /now/news/2026/emu-names-nathan-k-leopard-as-new-advancement-vp/ /now/news/2026/emu-names-nathan-k-leopard-as-new-advancement-vp/#comments Thu, 21 May 2026 12:30:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=61711 Longtime fundraiser and advancement professional led efforts at Virginia Tech and Penn State

Colleagues describe Leopard as an encouraging, passionate, and selfless leader who brings an umatched motivation and cheerfulness to his work. 鈥淗e has a calming sense about himself and yet he is very encouraging to jump on the bus,鈥 one colleague wrote. 鈥淗e makes me want to make a gift to whatever cause he is supporting.鈥

黑料正能量 announced on Thursday it has named Nathan K. Leopard as its new vice president for advancement. Leopard, who most recently served as director of development for Virginia Tech鈥檚 Pamplin College of Business, starts in the role on June 1.

Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus announced the appointment in an email to faculty, staff, alumni, and friends on Thursday morning. The hire concludes a nationwide search that began in January.

Leopard succeeds Kirk Shisler 鈥81, 贰惭鲍鈥檚 vice president for advancement since 2005, who is transitioning to a new role as senior advisor for gift planning. Shisler has said the transition will allow him to focus exclusively on securing major gifts to sustain 贰惭鲍鈥檚 mission.

Leopard will continue a comprehensive advancement operation encompassing fundraising, alumni and constituent engagement, communications, and advancement services. He will also expand connections among alumni, donors, faith communities, foundations, and regional partners in support of the university鈥檚 mission.

鈥淎s vice president for advancement, I look forward to strengthening our culture of generosity, expanding our philanthropic reach, and helping secure the resources necessary to sustain and grow this mission,鈥 Leopard said.

Dr. Dycus remarked on Leopard鈥檚 鈥済enuine alignment鈥 with 贰惭鲍鈥檚 mission and community. 鈥淲hat stands out most about Nathan is his values-driven, relational approach to advancement,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e views fundraising not as a series of transactions, but as a meaningful partnership that invites alumni and friends into a shared vision for impact.鈥

Two decades of experience

Leopard brings two decades of fundraising and advancement experience leading alumni relations, annual giving, event-based fundraising, and interdisciplinary major gifts.

At Virginia Tech, he led fundraising and stewardship operations for the Pamplin College of Business, where he personally secured more than $17 million in gifts since August 2022 and helped direct development efforts that generated nearly $50 million in support for the school. He also co-led the college鈥檚 Giving Day strategy, which saw substantial growth in donor participation.

Prior to that, Leopard served as senior director of major gifts at Penn State University鈥檚 Smeal College of Business, where he played a key role in the college鈥檚 success during the six-year A Greater Penn State for 21st Century Excellence fundraising campaign. The $2.2 billion campaign generated more than $116 million in gifts and commitments for the college, exceeding its goal by more than 22%.

He also served as associate director of development for Penn State鈥檚 Schreyer Honors College, where he led the development and launch of an initiative that significantly boosted parent giving.

Leopard鈥檚 nonprofit experience includes serving as the first distinguished giving director for the American Cancer Society.

He holds an MS in college student personnel from Miami University (Ohio) and a bachelor鈥檚 of science in public relations from Northwest Missouri State University. The Show Me State native, who began his career in student affairs and whose wife, Dr. Jennifer Grossman Leopard, is the director of student life at James Madison University, described himself as a 鈥渂ig believer鈥 in the holistic experience.

鈥淭he people I鈥檝e met at 黑料正能量 have been genuine, thoughtful, and caring,鈥 he said. 鈥淗aving the opportunity to be at a place like 黑料正能量, where I can embrace the whole person and support others in embracing their full selves, is truly meaningful.鈥

贰惭鲍鈥檚 focus on preparing graduates who make the world a better place aligns with his personal mission, Leopard said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not just going out and leading companies, reforming laws, treating illnesses, or educating people, but they鈥檙e changing the world,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 want to help people change the world.鈥

Building on positive momentum

Leopard joins the university at an exciting time. 黑料正能量 is three years into its first-ever, five-year Forward Together comprehensive campaign, which has raised more than $32 million, or 80% of its $40 million goal. Enrollment is also on the upswing. The university announced this week it received 3,000 undergraduate applications for the first time in its history.

In addition to building on that positive momentum, Leopard said he looks forward to getting to know each of the members of the advancement team and working with Dr. Dycus and the board of trustees to shape their vision for the future of 黑料正能量 while connecting with donors.

Leopard lives in the Harrisonburg area with his wife, Jennifer, and their two children, Caroline and Jack. Their daughter has participated in 贰惭鲍鈥檚 Shenandoah Valley Children鈥檚 Choir and in several camps held on campus.

Quoting the soccer coach from the comedy series Ted Lasso, Leopard said he aims to 鈥渂e curious鈥 as he steps into his new role.

鈥淚鈥檓 going to be a sponge and learn as much as I can about 黑料正能量, including about our students, our alumni, our stakeholders, and our events and culture,鈥 he said.

鈥楾his is where I鈥檓 meant to be鈥
Shortly after moving to the Friendly City from State College, Pennsylvania, in 2021, Leopard discovered an obituary for his fourth great-grandmother, Susan Caroline Cravens Leopard (1824-1913). Born in Harrisonburg, she was related to the Harrison family that settled the area.

鈥淭here鈥檚 definitely something spiritually that connects me here,鈥 Leopard said. 鈥淚t feels like this is where I鈥檓 meant to be.鈥
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鈥楢 living, evolving experiment in education鈥: D.C. program turns 50 /now/news/2026/a-living-evolving-experiment-in-education-d-c-program-turns-50/ /now/news/2026/a-living-evolving-experiment-in-education-d-c-program-turns-50/#respond Wed, 18 Feb 2026 19:12:22 +0000 /now/news/?p=60634 Alumni reunite to share memories, stories from their time in the program

The 黑料正能量 Washington Semester program started off in the fall of 1976 as a 鈥渉igh-risk proposition,鈥 recalls Phil Baker-Shenk 鈥79.  

鈥淚t was a high risk for the college, a high risk for us individual students, and certainly a high risk for (program founder and director) Nelson Good 鈥68 and Arden Shank, who staffed it,鈥 said Baker-Shenk, one of the first students in the yearlong program (then known as the Washington Study-Service Year or WSSY) from 1976-77. 鈥淚t was a high risk all around, and yet people with good ideas decided to plunge in, take that risk, and make it happen.鈥

Fifty years later, that big gamble has paid off.

Alumni of the urban studies program鈥攖he only such program offered at Anabaptist-affiliated institutions鈥攃redit it with giving them improved professional confidence, greater clarity about career direction, more comfort in working with people different than they are, and an increased awareness of systemic injustices.

Each semester and summer, students from 黑料正能量 and partner schools such as Bethel College, Bluffton University, and Goshen College converge at the Nelson Good House in the culturally diverse and multiethnic Brookland neighborhood of Washington D.C. It鈥檚 there that they learn to live in a shared community, cooking and eating meals together, managing a collective budget and household responsibilities, and navigating conflict with maturity.

Students gain real-world professional experience in their chosen field of study through internship placements, study the history and social dynamics of the city, and immerse themselves in the rich culture and vibrancy of the nation鈥檚 capital.

Baker-Shenk was among the 60 alumni and supporters of the 黑料正能量 Washington Semester, from its beginnings in the 1970s through today, who gathered at the Busboys and Poets restaurant in Brookland on Saturday, Feb. 14, to share their memories and experiences from their time in the program and celebrate its 50-year legacy. The milestone reunion included remarks from Program Director Ryan Good, 黑料正能量 Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus, Provost Dr. Tynisha Willingham, and many students and alumni from the past five decades. 


黑料正能量 Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus delivers remarks at Busboys and Poets in Brookland, Washington D.C., on Saturday, Feb. 14.

Since its inception, more than 1,000 students have called the program home for a season of their lives, said Dycus. They鈥檝e taken courses at and built relationships with institutions such as Catholic University of America and Howard University. And students have learned to live with difference, practice shared leadership, and carry conviction into real work.

鈥淲e鈥檙e celebrating a living, evolving experiment in education,鈥 Dycus told the crowd. 鈥淥ne that has asked generations of students to take learning seriously enough to put it to work. Since 1976, this program has woven together community living, academic study, and vocational reflection right in the complexity of our nation鈥檚 capital.鈥

As the story鈥檚 been told, shared Dycus, Nelson Good came to D.C. as a conscientious objector during the Vietnam War era. 鈥淎nd, out of that experience, he helped build a program committed to servant leadership and social justice, and an education shaped by peace, responsibility, and courage to see the city as it is.鈥

Nelson Good directed the program until his retirement in 1987, mentoring it through major transitions. When the time came to find a new home closer to public transportation and academic partners, he personally helped find and secure the building at 836 Taylor Street that became the Nelson Good House. 

鈥淗e did that work even while facing a cancer diagnosis and died a few months before the facility鈥檚 dedication (on Aug. 20, 2005),鈥 Dycus said.


Alumni of the 黑料正能量 Washington Semester gather to celebrate the program’s 50-year legacy.


The 黑料正能量 Washington Semester offers a built-in social and professional network for its alumni, many of whom find long-term careers in D.C., thanks to the web of connections and relationships they build through the program.

Aerlande Wontamo 鈥06 was among the first cohort of 15 students to live at the Nelson Good House during the spring of 2006. She interned at the Ethiopian Community Development Council while taking classes at Howard University.

鈥淚t was such a meaningful experience for me because I got on (Howard’s) campus and I looked like everybody else,鈥 said Wontamo, who is originally from Ethiopia. 鈥淭here was another person in our group, I think from Goshen, who was also at Howard, and she was white. We would go to school, and that was the first time she felt like a minority. It was this wonderful experience for both of us.鈥

Like many alumni of the 黑料正能量 Washington Semester (it was known as the Washington Community Scholars鈥 Center or WCSC after 2002), Wontamo stayed in the city. Twenty years later, the economic development grad is still working in the refugee and immigrant services field as senior vice president of U.S. programs for World Relief, a global Christian humanitarian organization.

鈥淚t was my internship that was such a meaningful experience for me and led me through all of the steps to get to where I am,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o, I鈥檓 a huge fan of the program.鈥


Ryan Good, director of the 黑料正能量 Washington Semester, and senior Genesis Figueroa, who was in the program last spring, talk about the impact of the program.

Anisa Leonard 鈥21, a social work grad originally from Kenya, interned at Voices for a Second Chance, a nonprofit dedicated to supporting individuals returning home from incarceration, during her spring 2021 semester in the program.

鈥淭he WCSC program was absolutely foundational in getting me to where I am now,鈥 said the social worker. 鈥淚t sparked my interest in working with people who are marginalized in so many ways, especially in a city so impacted by race and gentrification.鈥

Genesis Figueroa joined Ryan Good on stage for a conversation, reflecting on her experiences in the program during spring 2025. The 黑料正能量 senior, who is double majoring in political science and Spanish, interned at Catholic Charities in its immigration legal services department, where she provided translation, interpretation, and administrative work. She said she hopes to become an immigration lawyer.

鈥淚t definitely solidified what I want to do after college and what type of work I want to do,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t solidified my passion for it.鈥

Another 黑料正能量 senior, Dia Mekonnen, remembered living at the Nelson Good House with 13 other students during summer 2025. 鈥淚t was really packed,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut it was really nice to connect with them. It was nice to cook together, to be able to share our perspectives, and we still hang out.鈥


Saturday morning’s celebration was attended by alumni from each of the past five decades, former directors, and staff members.

Baker-Shenk credited Nelson Good, along with many other heroes, with the courage and vision to implement and sustain the idea of the D.C. program over the years.

鈥淥ne of the many things he taught me, and it was a little hard for me to take back in the 鈥70s, was that institutions deserve our love and our commitment and our care,鈥 he said. 鈥淔ifty years later, here鈥檚 an institution that has carried each of us in this room in one way or another, and it happened because it was nourished and encouraged.鈥

Hear what others had to say
At the same time, said Dawn Longenecker 鈥80, who was in the second cohort of the D.C. program (1977-78), Nelson Good also taught students to challenge institutions. 鈥淚 think he created WSSY as an alternative to the institution that we were all a part of at 黑料正能量,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was an alternative place where you could come to the city and really struggle with the systemic forces that were out here, that are still out here, that are wreaking havoc.鈥
Provost Dr. Tynisha Willingham called the D.C. program a distinctive of the 黑料正能量 experience: 鈥淲e鈥檝e been able to partner with other universities because so many have moved away from doing this work in the city. But yet, we continue to do the work. We continue to support students. And we continue to place our students in organizations that are changing the landscape of not just D.C., but also the world.鈥
Since 2018, Bianca Ward, who has primarily worked in public health and HIV outreach, has met with students in the program to speak about her vocational journey and hear about their experiences, hopes, and dreams. 鈥淲e talk about self-care, social justice, and all of these things, and every time I leave, I am inspired by what鈥檚 happening in that space,鈥 she said.
Others attending the reunion included Professor Emerita Dr. Kimberly Schmidt, who directed the program for 22 years; former assistant director Doug Hertzler 鈥88; and former staff member Cynthia Lapp 鈥86.

Kirk Shisler 鈥81, vice president for advancement, speaks to the importance of supporting the 黑料正能量 Washington Semester.

Kirk Shisler 鈥81, vice president for advancement, is a proud member of the third cohort of students in the program (1978-79). He told guests there were many ways to support the program. One such opportunity is through the Dr. Kimberly Schmidt Endowed Scholarship, which was dedicated during the program鈥檚 on-campus reunion at Homecoming 2025.

鈥淔inancial aid is such a critical part of the story for every student, and it鈥檚 an obstacle,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an obstacle to participation in this program and others. And so what we can do to mitigate that through donor-funded aid is an opportunity we want to focus on.鈥

Learn more about the 黑料正能量 Washington Semester at .


Read more:

  • Sept. 2025: Rebranded 黑料正能量 Washington Semester celebrates 50 years of career-building and community
  • Nov. 2016: Forty years of service and learning celebrated at WCSC鈥檚 Nelson Good House
  • Aug. 2015: Washington Community Scholars鈥 Center celebrates 10 years at the Nelson Good House in Brookland
  • March 2014: The history of the Washington Community Scholars鈥 Center
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Longtime advancement VP switching gears and staying on /now/news/2026/longtime-advancement-vp-switching-gears-and-staying-on/ /now/news/2026/longtime-advancement-vp-switching-gears-and-staying-on/#comments Thu, 22 Jan 2026 15:40:39 +0000 /now/news/?p=60423 After 21 years at the helm, Shisler 鈥81 looks forward to new advisory role

Kirk Shisler 鈥81 wants to make one thing very clear: He鈥檚 not retiring. At least not anytime soon. After 21 years of faithfully serving his alma mater as its vice president for advancement, he鈥檚 simply switching gears. 

This summer, Shisler will transition from his lofty perch as VP to a new position specially carved out for him that utilizes his unique qualities and strengths in a way that benefits 黑料正能量 best. He said his new role as senior gift planning advisor will allow him to focus exclusively on securing major gifts to sustain 贰惭鲍鈥檚 mission.

鈥淲e recently crossed the halfway point of 贰惭鲍鈥檚 five-year, $40 million Forward Together campaign, and I am pleased to report that we have already raised $29 million, or 72% of the goal, which puts us ahead of schedule,鈥 Shisler said. 鈥淚 look forward to increasing our fundraising momentum even more as I assume my new role.鈥

Interim President Rev. Dr. Shannon W. Dycus will formally announce the news of Shisler鈥檚 transition via email on Thursday, Jan. 22. With the announcement, 黑料正能量 officially enters into a national search for its next vice president for advancement.

For several years now, Shisler said, he鈥檚 anticipated a transition like this one. By passing his administrative responsibilities on to a successor, he can directly focus his energies toward the aspects of advancement he enjoys most and where he will have the greatest impact. And, despite the various headwinds straining higher education, Shisler said he believes 黑料正能量 is poised to transcend those challenges.

鈥淲e have a strong leadership team in place under Interim President Dycus, and a tremendous faculty and staff,鈥 Shisler said. 鈥湻〔驯檚 value proposition includes a proven track record for the employability of its graduates, who also benefit from an education that blends rigorous academics with soft skills in leadership, conflict resolution, and other skills needed to succeed in today鈥檚 work environment.鈥


Kirk Shisler, vice president for advancement at 黑料正能量, meets with guests at a dedication ceremony for the new track and field complex during Homecoming and Family Weekend 2024.

鈥楢n enduring imprint鈥

贰惭鲍鈥檚 presidents, past and present, commended Shisler for his effective fundraising, steadfast leadership, and deep commitment to the university over the past two decades. 

Dycus, interim president of 黑料正能量 since July 1, credited Shisler with 鈥渟haping a culture of generosity rooted in mission鈥 and strengthening alumni and donor relationships. 鈥淜irk鈥檚 steady, values-driven leadership will leave an enduring imprint on this institution and the countless students whose lives have been changed through his work,鈥 she said.

Dr. Loren Swartzendruber 鈥76, MDiv 鈥79, president of 黑料正能量 from 2003 to 2016, noted that he had recruited Shisler twice to 黑料正能量: first as an admissions counselor when Shisler was a high school senior, and later as president when Shisler was hired to lead the advancement division. 鈥淣o university president can be successful without a person of Kirk鈥檚 caliber in that office,鈥 said Swartzendruber. 鈥淗is continuing efforts to attract leadership gifts will pay dividends for years to come.鈥

And President Emerita Dr. Susan Schultz Huxman, who led the university from 2016 to 2025, expressed gratitude for the 鈥渆normous positive impact鈥 Shisler had 鈥測ear after year for 20 years without fail,鈥 advancing 贰惭鲍鈥檚 mission, supporting its students, contributing to its financial health, and ensuring its donors felt special and important. 

鈥淲ithout 鈥楥aptain鈥 Kirk鈥檚 can-do spirit, relational genius, and organizational prowess, there is no first-ever 黑料正能量 comprehensive campaign for people, programs, and facilities,鈥 said Huxman, referencing the Forward Together (2023-28) campaign. 鈥淭here is no audacious $40 million five-year goal, half of which we raised in just the first two years. This bold and successful campaign has been the crowning achievement of his great legacy in executive administration at 黑料正能量.鈥

Indeed, there have been many crowning achievements for Shisler over the years. Whether it鈥檚 the completion of 贰惭鲍鈥檚 state-of-the-art track and field complex鈥攔egarded among the finest athletic facilities in the conference鈥攖he transformation of laboratories and classrooms in the Suter Science Center through a $12 million campaign (2007-15), or renovations to the south section of University Commons, he鈥檚 always kept his eyes squarely on the prize: ensuring 黑料正能量 not only survives but also thrives long into the future.

Less visible, but just as impactful as those capital improvement projects, is the membership growth of 贰惭鲍鈥檚 throughout his tenure. The group of alumni and donors name 黑料正能量 in their estate plans, supporting the future financial stability and security of the school. 鈥淲e have grown the society from roughly 150 members, when I arrived in 2005, to over 600 today,鈥 Shisler said. 鈥淲e often refer to these future gifts as 贰惭鲍鈥檚 Book of Futures. The approximate future value of these estate commitments currently exceeds $35 million.鈥


Clockwise from top: Kirk Shisler, vice president for advancement, with Phil Helmuth and Graham Stauffer, during Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day 2023. | The longtime advancement VP speaks during a gathering celebration at Homecoming and Family Weekend 2021. | Shisler accepts a hard hat from Braydon Hoover 鈥11, MA 鈥21, then-associate vice president for advancement at 黑料正能量, during a groundbreaking ceremony for the track in 2023.


Focus, patience, and tenacity

One key ingredient to Shisler鈥檚 success is the length of his tenure, which has allowed him to build close connections and enduring relationships with alumni and donors.

According to a from the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources, fundraising administrators have a median of five years of service in their position, slightly below the median for all higher ed administrative positions (5.5 years). Those figures are well below the 21-year span that Shisler has served at 黑料正能量.

During those 21 years, he estimated, working with advancement teams and the three aforementioned presidents, he helped raise about $120 million for 黑料正能量. Last year, thanks to a combination of generous donors and several large bequests, the university achieved its second-highest fundraising total on record.

鈥淭hose who have been involved in higher ed and nonprofit fundraising for as long as I have know that it takes significant focus, patience and tenacity to secure gifts of significance for our organizations,鈥 Shisler said. 

Doug Mason, an advancement consultant who has advised 贰惭鲍鈥檚 team for 15 years as well as many other schools, said his most successful clients have leaders who 鈥渟tick with it and really invest in the mission of their institution.鈥  

鈥淒onors really appreciate continuity,鈥 Mason said. 鈥淗aving somebody like Kirk, who鈥檚 been there for over two decades, is quite unusual, and it鈥檚 been extraordinarily beneficial to 黑料正能量.鈥

So why exactly has Shisler stayed for so long? He said the societal impact of 贰惭鲍鈥檚 alumni around the world continues to motivate him and sustain his commitment to the university鈥檚 mission. He added that, through the years, he鈥檚 been blessed to be part of 鈥渉ighly motivated and supportive teams of advancement professionals,鈥 and that he鈥檚 continually inspired by the dedication and high-quality work of 贰惭鲍鈥檚 faculty and staff.


Kirk Shisler leads fly fishing lessons during the Fall Faculty-Staff Conference in August 2023.

A seasoned fundraiser

Growing up in Telford, Pennsylvania, Shisler said his parents taught him at a young age the importance of giving generously and of tithing to the church. But it wasn鈥檛 until later, after entering the workforce, that he realized his skills in storytelling and communications could be used to fundraise for causes he cared about. The Dock Mennonite Academy alum graduated from 黑料正能量 with a bachelor of arts in English in 1981. He then began a quarter-century career at Laubach Literacy International, a nonprofit now known as ProLiteracy.

Kirk鈥檚 career, at a glance
1981: Shisler graduates from 黑料正能量
The following positions were all held at Laubach Literacy International/ProLiteracy in Syracuse, New York
鈥1981-83: Public Communications Editor (through a volunteer of Eastern Mennonite Missions) 
鈥1984-88: Director of Planned Giving
鈥1989-99: Director of Fund Development
鈥2000-05: Vice President of Fund Development
Shisler is then hired by 黑料正能量 President Loren Swartzendruber to lead 黑料正能量 Advancement
鈥2005-26: Vice President for Advancement
Shisler transitions to his new role as senior gift planning advisor on July 1, 2026

In 2004, Swartzendruber called Shisler to ask whether he would be interested in the VP position, succeeding Richard L. Gunden. After an interview that summer, Shisler accepted the offer (he started in the position in April 2005). 鈥淟oren said to me, 鈥榃ell, Kirk, you will have served Laubach for 23 years. I鈥檓 really hoping that you鈥檒l give the same amount of time, or more, to 黑料正能量,鈥欌 Shisler recalled. 鈥淎nd here we are. With my transition to a different role, I may end up serving 23 years.鈥

As a result of his change, the avid fly fisherman said he鈥檒l spend less time on the road and more time with his family鈥攈e and his wife, Mary Ann, have two sons, Ben and Andy. He鈥檒l also spend less time in meetings as he devotes his focus entirely on working with major donors to design 鈥渃haritable gifts of significance鈥 for 黑料正能量.

Back when he was first hired at the university, Shisler told the late Jim Bishop, former public information officer for 黑料正能量, in a 2005 news article: 鈥満诹险芰 is at a very exciting juncture in its history. I believe the school is truly a vehicle for healing and hope in our troubled world, and I look forward to joining the 黑料正能量 community as, together, we advance its mission.鈥

Twenty-one years later, those words still ring true.

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A Royal Tale: 鈥楽peedy鈥 Margaret Martin Gehman 鈥42 set the pace for giving at 黑料正能量 /now/news/2025/a-royal-tale-speedy-margaret-martin-gehman-42-set-the-pace-for-giving-at-emu/ /now/news/2025/a-royal-tale-speedy-margaret-martin-gehman-42-set-the-pace-for-giving-at-emu/#comments Wed, 02 Apr 2025 12:02:13 +0000 /now/news/?p=58551 Editor鈥檚 Note: This profile is the last of six stories about students and alumni leading up to Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day, which is today. For more information about the day and how to donate, visit:

If you鈥檝e ever attended an art show at the gallery that bears her name, stepped foot inside one of the many buildings on campus she helped to finance, or benefited from her endowed scholarship fund, you鈥檙e likely already familiar with the name Dr. Margaret Martin Gehman. What you might be less familiar with is the legacy of generosity and selfless service she embodied at 黑料正能量.

Gehman received a two-year degree from 黑料正能量 in 1942 and joined the faculty in 1944; she taught art and physical education classes until her retirement in 1987. The professor emerita taught a watercolor class through 1996 and served regularly as a volunteer on campus and with other local organizations. She was among 贰惭鲍鈥檚 most generous philanthropists, establishing an endowed scholarship fund as well as program endowments for athletics, the humanities and special buildings on campus. In 2005, she became the first recipient of the eponymous 鈥満诹险芰 Philanthropist of the Year鈥 award. She died in August 2019 at age 97. 

Nearly a half-dozen years after her passing, Gehman鈥檚 boundless generosity continues to flourish and shape lives at 黑料正能量. A recent $400,000 gift from her estate will bolster the Margaret Martin Gehman Endowed Scholarship Fund, which provides general financial aid to undergraduate students. The gift increases the endowment fund to more than $500,000, which is expected to generate about $25,000 in direct financial aid each year.

While the fund previously supported one to two students each year, it can now benefit at least five students annually, according to Kirk Shisler ’81, vice president for advancement. 鈥淢argaret loved 黑料正能量,鈥 he said. 鈥淪he maintained continuous loyalty and appreciation for the students, alumni, many of whom remained her friends, and the strong sense of community she enjoyed throughout her many years here.鈥

Phil Helmuth, then-executive director of development at 黑料正能量, accepts the keys and title to Margaret Martin Gehman鈥檚 1967 VW Beetle.

As one example of her love for 黑料正能量, look no further than the time she donated her beloved 1967 blue Volkswagen Beetle in 2010 to support student scholarships. 鈥満诹险芰 has been good to me over the years, and this is another way I can express my appreciation,鈥 she said in an article about the donation. 

Shisler said the latest gift from her estate brings Gehman鈥檚 total contributions to 黑料正能量 to just under $2 million. 鈥淭his puts an exclamation point on her many decades of support,鈥 he said.

In a 2012 article celebrating her 90th birthday, Gehman credited her parents with 鈥渢eaching the value of a lifestyle of simplicity and generosity.鈥 鈥淭he Lord 鈥 has blessed me with the ability to serve and the opportunity to share with others,鈥 she said. 

Margaret Martin Gehman introduced tennis, volleyball, ping pong, basketball, tumbling and a game called speedball鈥攁 hybrid soccer and basketball game鈥攖o 黑料正能量. 

For much of her time at 黑料正能量, Gehman was affectionately known as 鈥淪peedy.鈥 A student had bestowed the nickname on her, not only for introducing the game of speedball to campus but also for her energy, athleticism, and swiftness. 鈥淪he would dash across campus between classes,鈥 Shisler said. 鈥淪he would practically run from one place to another.鈥

Even in her later years, the speed never left her. Braydon Hoover ’11, MAOL ’21, vice president for enrollment and long-time advancement professional at 黑料正能量, recalled watching his wife, Heidi Hoover ’10, escort Gehman to the art gallery named after her. 鈥淚 will never forget the image of 鈥楽peedy,鈥 at 94 years old, taking off down the hallway with my dear spouse having to jog to keep up with her, walker and all,鈥 he said. Hoover, like many on 贰惭鲍鈥檚 advancement team, also knew the longtime donor by another name: 鈥淪aint Margaret.鈥

One lesser-known detail about 鈥淪aint Margaret鈥 was her love for lending money to people and organizations in need. On several occasions, Shisler said, she loaned money to 黑料正能量 to fund certain projects. 鈥淪ometimes, she would turn around and forgive those loans, converting them into outright gifts,鈥 he added.

The fleet-footed philanthropist was a trailblazer, ahead of her time in many ways, as her nickname might suggest. She was among the first women graduates of 黑料正能量 to earn a doctorate, receiving hers in art education from George Peabody College (now part of Vanderbilt University) in 1962. Despite her plain dress and head covering, which may have given the impression that she was conservative, Gehman 鈥渇lowed with the times,鈥 according to Shisler. 鈥淗er loyalty to 黑料正能量 never wavered, even through periods of change and various cultural headwinds,鈥 he said.

黑料正能量 President Dr. Susan Schultz Huxman, along with Jasmine Hardesty, former director of development and planned giving, celebrate Margaret Martin Gehman’s 95th birthday in 2017.

黑料正能量 President Dr. Susan Schultz Huxman described Gehman as 鈥渙ne of the most interesting, engaging, joyful and nonconformist鈥 donors she鈥檚 ever met. Former 黑料正能量 President Dr. Loren Swartzendruber has praised Gehman for her 鈥渋ncredible gift for frugality and generosity, a rare blend that you do not typically find.鈥

It was this frugality that became the stuff of legend. Today, those on campus who were lucky enough to have known her exchange stories of her resourcefulness and ingenuity with a smile. Gehman was known to keep her lights off as long as possible to save electricity. In the evenings, as the sunlight faded, passersby could spot her silhouette in the window, leaning toward the nearest streetlamp with a book in her hands to get enough light for reading. 

Your generous support helps students pursue a quality college education without financial barriers. Join us for the 9th annual Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day and contribute to the scholarships that empower future 黑料正能量 students. Together, we can help write 贰惭鲍鈥檚 next chapter. 


Read the previous profiles in our A Royal Tale series:

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Neurologist pays forward the financial support, encouragement that got him through 黑料正能量, medical school /now/news/2021/neurologist-pays-forward-the-financial-support-encouragement-that-got-him-through-emu-medical-school/ /now/news/2021/neurologist-pays-forward-the-financial-support-encouragement-that-got-him-through-emu-medical-school/#comments Sat, 16 Oct 2021 12:53:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=50384

The photo below is not the beginning or the end of this story. It’s one moment in many years of strangers becoming family, of kindnesses repaid upon kindnesses, of how opportunity — whether a tragic event, a life-changing surgery, or four years at a university — can be transformative.

Meet Dr. Ron David ’60, his wife Dr. Susan Lewis Pillsbury David, and Alejandra Rivera Tejada ’18. Here they are three years ago on the occasion of Alejandra’s graduation from 黑料正能量. A native of San Pedro Sula, Honduras, she graduated with honors and a degree in nursing.



Here’s more about how this moment came to be:

Dr. Ronald David ’60 was 12 years old when his life took a catastrophic turn: his mother died. David said his father wasn’t equipped to raise him after losing his wife, so he arranged for David to spend the summer on a family friend’s farm in Denbigh, Virginia.

“I don’t know what would have happened to me if not for the Weavers’ willingness to take someone as ornery as me,” he said. “That’s how, basically, I got connected with Mennonites and the Mennonite church.”

Once being taken in by the Weaver family that summer, David never left. He became the youngest sibling in a vibrant, bantering family that encouraged him to follow in the other children’s footsteps 鈥 Sara Jane Weaver Wenger ’42, Kenneth Weaver ’52, Samuel Weaver ’66, and future Royals parent Lloyd Weaver Jr. 鈥 and attend Eastern Mennonite College. Others at the Mennonite Church the Weavers attended also saw potential in the young David, and pitched in for his tuition.

“So not only did they give me love and discipline, but they also took on a financial burden,” David said.

He went on to graduate with honors from the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, became a child neurologist, and founded the Virginia Center for Autism and Related Developmental Disorders. He had four children of his own 鈥 and it was through one of his son-in-laws that David got involved with a Presbyterian medical missions program in Honduras. He and his wife, Dr. Susan Lewis Pillsbury David, started traveling there every Christmas season to provide healthcare to people who lived out in remote, mountainous corners of the country. 


Volunteers prepare to offer medical care in a rural church in Honduras. (Courtesy photo)

While on these trips, David noticed a high prevalence of cataracts, to the point where people were going blind at a young age. He co-founded the nonprofit to provide free cataract surgeries and other eye care to people in southern Honduras. 

In doing this work, he was introduced to Melvin Tejada, the administrator of an eye hospital in the eastern part of the country 鈥 and the two became fast friends. Tejada’s daughter, Alejandra Tejada Rivera ’18, said that David quickly became “like family” to them. 

Dr. Ron David is interviewed by Melvin Tejada about the organization’s work in Honduras. A former hospital administrator, Tejada was among the co-founders of the KHISH Proyecto Visi貌n.

Alejandra Tejada Rivera was also interested in a career in healthcare. In her late teens, she started volunteering with the medical brigades as an interpreter. 

“We were in the mountains 鈥 very poor areas,” she explained. “A lot of those people don’t go to the hospital because they don’t have the transportation or money to pay for healthcare. So they come for women’s health problems, pediatrics is a big one, and just family medicine.”

As she started to envision her future career, David suggested she apply to 黑料正能量. He wanted to sponsor her studies 鈥 to pay forward the help he had received from the Weavers and others who had provided for his education.

As David puts it, “I said, ‘well, maybe we can do for Alejandra what the church did for me.'” 

Tejada Rivera entered the nursing program at 黑料正能量. She excelled in her studies, met her fiance Drew Diaz ’18, and graduated with honors. She’s now a registered nurse certified in orthopedics and pediatrics at Sentara RMH in Harrisonburg 鈥 and she and Diaz now participate in the same medical missions through which she first met David.


From left: Drew Diaz and Alejandra Tejada Rivera, with fellow Latino Student Alliance leaders Gillian Zehr, Mario Valladares, and Mario Hernadez in 2018. Diaz and Tejada are set to marry; he is currently in medical school and she is a nurse at Sentara RMH in Harrisonburg, Va. (Photo by Andrew Strack)

“I feel like that’s my calling,” Tejada Rivera said. “I would like to give back to my country, because there are many in need over there.”

Seeing his young proteg茅 excell in her own career and help others, David “can’t help but be proud of her accomplishments,” he said. 

Most of all, he hopes his story will inspire others to support educational opportunities for youth who can’t afford them. 

“There are a lot of gifted people, particularly in Central America, that could use a little helping hand,” said David.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted us all, which is why these stories of paying-it-forward generosity are so meaningful,” said Vice President for Advancement Kirk Shisler.

Those interested in contributing to student access, affordability, and belongingness at 黑料正能量 can learn more about the Forward Together Campaign at emu.edu/campaign.

“Donors to the Forward Together Campaign could be the bridge students need to experience 黑料正能量’s transformative programs during a particularly challenging season,” Shisler said.

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贰惭鲍鈥檚 2020-21 donors come through with strong support /now/news/2021/emus-2020-21-donors-come-through-with-strong-support/ Thu, 26 Aug 2021 17:12:49 +0000 /now/news/?p=50152

Responding to financial challenges prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic and new initiatives to increase student access and opportunity, 黑料正能量 donors and alumni generously contributed over $5.1 million during the 2020-21 fiscal year. This represents a five percent increase over the previous fiscal year.

Contributing focal points for generous donors were the launch of the new Forward Together campaign and another successful, record-breaking Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day in April.

鈥満诹险芰 exists to prepare our students to lead together now and in the future to create a more just and sustainable future,鈥 said Kirk Shisler, vice president of advancement. 鈥淭his is a mission that our Royals family of 3,000 donors and alumni stand behind and support with whole hearts. We hear again and again that our 黑料正能量-educated leaders are serving, unifying and healing in their communities worldwide.鈥

The Forward Together campaign focuses on three strategic initiatives, each of which gained significant donations during the first year of a multi-year campaign: 

  • The University Fund for Resilience totaled gifts of $1,772,511. In addition to unrestricted gift support, this includes annual gifts for the Center for Justice and Peacebuilding, Eastern Mennonite Seminary, and Athletics.The fund helps provide student tuition support, student life services, collaborative faculty-student research, technology upgrades, cross-cultural programs, and infrastructure, among other operating expenses.
  • The Student Tuition Relief Initiative gained a total of $2,307,026. This included $278,291 for direct tuition relief assistance for students in need; $705,322 in direct grant scholarship awards, and $1,323,413 in named endowed scholarship funds;
  • The Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Fund, buoyed by the new leadership of Dr. Jacqueline Font-Guzman as executive director of DEI, accrued total gifts of $111,264. [Read more about her work and .]

贰惭鲍鈥檚 Lov黑料正能量 Day helped to launch the Forward Together Campaign, raising a record-breaking $280,653 from 1,017 gifts (30 percent more than in 2020).

黑料正能量 will celebrate the dedication of Suter Science Center West this fall during Homecoming 2021. Suter West鈥檚 multi-million dollar renovations supported 贰惭鲍鈥檚 engineering majors with several labs and spaces for faculty/student collaboration; a new welcoming and open main entrance to lead visitors into the S-106 lecture hall, to be named in honor of President Emeritus Loren Swartzendruber and his wife, Pat; and renovated space to display artifacts from聽 The D. Ralph Hostetter Collection.

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黑料正能量’s political clubs make bipartisan effort to get out the vote /now/news/2020/emus-political-clubs-make-bipartisan-effort-to-get-out-the-vote/ /now/news/2020/emus-political-clubs-make-bipartisan-effort-to-get-out-the-vote/#comments Thu, 22 Oct 2020 12:04:37 +0000 /now/news/?p=47505

Two clubs at 黑料正能量 did their best to get out the vote this month ahead of the Nov. 3 presidential election 鈥 and contrary to the fraught and divisive national scene, they did so harmoniously.

The effort, which included a jointly staffed booth on multiple days outside the dining hall and one virtual evening session, was intentionally 鈥渂ipartisan,鈥 according to Adam Peachey, co-president of the College Republicans, and Luke Wheeler, co-president of the Young Democrats. 贰惭鲍鈥檚 Student Government Association, an elected group of student leaders, helped to start the conversation and contributed staffing.


A student registers to vote while Ani Beitzel, a member of 黑料正能量’s Young Democrats, watches. The booth was jointly staffed by members of both of 黑料正能量’s political clubs.

鈥淪GA thought this drive would be a perfect opportunity for the political clubs on campus to lead together and show unity during this extremely polarizing election season,鈥 said Theo Yoder, SGA vice-president. 鈥淲e hope that we made a difference in our community by helping give students the opportunity to practice their right to vote. SGA is also planning to work closely with them in the future to plan more events revolving around this election.鈥

The clubs have also met with faculty, staff and administrators to consider ways to promote respectful and civil dialogue about the debates and the election in the coming weeks. 

Publishing a joint statement, via email to the campus community, was one high-profile way that group sought to elevate discourse, urge empathy, and raise awareness about how some aspects of the current election were impacting more vulnerable members of the community, specifically those 鈥渓acking in physical safety or an empowered voice.鈥 The message lifts up 贰惭鲍鈥檚 community-building values and a shared priority to 鈥渕ove through these next weeks rooted in the values that define 黑料正能量 as peacemakers rooted in Christian understandings.鈥 


An excerpt from the 10/16 email

Intentional 黑料正能量 community invites us to the following actions:

  • Vote! As you are eligible, participate in the important decisions impacted by all of the roles on our ballots.
  • As a learning community, lean into the critical thinking and questioning invited by this political moment. 
  • Hold together communication priorities of speaking for self, listening to understand, welcoming discomfort as an opportunity for self-awareness, acknowledging history that is racialized and gendered.
  • Continue to affirm our Non-Discrimination Policy stating 黑料正能量 does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national or ethnic origin, sex, disability, age, sexual orientation, gender identity or any legally protected status. Not only do we not discriminate, but we also affirm individuals of these identities. 
  • Build a relationship or have a meaningful conversation with someone who sees things differently than you.

The statement was signed by Peachey, Wheeler, SGA co-presidents Justice Allen, Anisa Leonard, Allison Shelly, Dean of Students Shannon Dycus and Provost Fred Kniss.

A convocation on Oct. 28, which will include some of these same student leaders, will focus on the value of civic engagement and 鈥減romoting community values in this politically polarized time,鈥 Peachey said. 鈥淲e want to focus on ways to depolarize or handle things in ways that people can maintain or even find new friendships despite political differences.鈥

Also on Oct. 28, historian and author Rick Shenkman, of George Washington University鈥檚 History News Network, will speak in a University Colloquium on 鈥Why is Democracy So @#$&!  Hard?鈥 The event from 4:15-5:15 p.m. will be livestreamed at on 贰惭鲍鈥檚 Facebook page. 

Discussions around campus climate during this tumultuous political season began at a September meeting attended by campus leaders representing students, faculty, student life and administrators, according to political science professor Ji Eun Kim, who advises both clubs.* 

鈥淲e have specific 鈥楲ife Together鈥 commitments which help to guide us all into situations like this,鈥 said Dycus, who convened the meeting. 鈥淲e want and need our students to be engaged civically. What does it look like to listen respectfully and share our opinions in ways which show compassion and build relationships? As we all care about and contribute these discussions as contributing citizens, centering our commitments towards wisdom, accountability and Christian peacebuilding help us do this in the right spirit.鈥

The voter registration drive was the main focus of the two clubs, especially because other events, such as debate or election night watch parties, have been difficult to plan with COVID-19 precautions for on in-person gatherings, Peachey said.

Sponsoring a voter registration drive shows that 贰惭鲍鈥檚 student leadership holds representation at the polls to be an important individual right, the two leaders said.

鈥…Both clubs agree that the more people that vote, the more representative our government is and that, even if the people we are registering disagree with us politically, we still want those people to be represented,鈥 Wheeler said. 鈥淥ur desire for a representative election was a big driving force for the collaboration and SGA also helped to connect us and to encourage the bipartisan effort.鈥

The voter drive is also an effort to encourage healthy ways of participating among the student body, Peachey said. The volunteers helped students check if they were already registered, register to vote in Harrisonburg or apply for an absentee ballot, he said.鈥淓specially with covid, we want to encourage other options besides driving home to vote.鈥 

Reflecting on his experience, Peachey said that while 黑料正能量 has 鈥渁 reputation as a liberal campus,鈥 he鈥檚 experienced 鈥渁 lot of affirmation of anyone expressing different views.鈥

鈥淚鈥檝e been encouraged by a lot of discussion going on about fostering a better political environment on campus and the desire to hear from both sides of the political spectrum,鈥 he said.

For his part, Wheeler says he鈥檚 learned a lot in 鈥渞eally productive and interesting鈥 conversations with Peachey.

鈥淚 have learned that we really are not that different, even with what might seem like vastly different views on the surface,鈥 Wheeler said, adding he appreciated Peachey鈥檚 鈥渄evotion to the political process and to helping everyone to vote,鈥 even as they may not share the same political views.  

*The meeting included Peachey, Wheeler and Young Democrats co-president Reuben Peachey-Stoner; SGA co-presidents Justice Allen and Anisa Leonard; Dean of Students Shannon Dycus; Provost Fred Kniss; Director of Student Programs Rachel Roth Sawatzky; Professor Mark Sawin, president of 贰惭鲍鈥檚 Faculty Senate; and Vice President for Advancement Kirk Shisler.

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In tough times, 黑料正能量 alumni, donors show up together /now/news/2020/in-tough-times-emu-alumni-donors-show-up-together/ Thu, 06 Aug 2020 12:00:40 +0000 /now/news/?p=46687

Responding to financial challenges prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic, 黑料正能量 donors and alumni generously contributed over $4.9 million during the 2019-20 fiscal year, and set a聽new record for annual unrestricted support.

Jasmine Hardesty (right), director of development and planned giving, with a donor at the 2019 Donor Appreciation Banquet.

This financial support is also a gift of hope, said Kirk Shisler, vice president for advancement. 鈥満诹险芰 exists to prepare our students to lead together now and in the future to create a more just and sustainable future. The generous response of our Royals family, nearly 3,000 donors and alumni strong, says loud and clear that they stand strong with 黑料正能量 and our mission of preparing students to serve and lead in a global context.鈥

Donors gave generously to two funds specific to COVID-19 relief:  Nearly $1.8 million for the University Fund for Resilience and approximately $88,000 for the Student Tuition Relief Fund. 

贰惭鲍鈥檚 Lov黑料正能量 Day, an annual event in April, shattered records, helping to raise $214, 683 from 732 gifts.

Shisler noted that the record year exceeded the previous year鈥檚 unrestricted giving by 8 percent and met division fundraising goals by more than 4 percent.

Nine new endowed scholarships totalling over $700,000 have been established, as well as two direct grant scholarship funds of at least $20,000 each, to support student access to an 黑料正能量 education.

贰惭鲍鈥檚 continues to draw significant donations, including two matching grants totaling $35,000,  to celebrate its 25th anniversary. CJP offers graduate degrees in conflict resolution, transformative leadership and restorative justice, as well as professional training in those topics and other work connected to social and racial justice.

鈥淥ur alumni have again shown us through their support that they value how 黑料正能量 has prepared them to meet and respond to the pressing challenges of this time, and they want to help 黑料正能量 continue to provide that educational experience to others,鈥 Shisler said. 

Shisler also noted the spirit of generosity among 贰惭鲍鈥檚 board of trustees, faculty and staff, including retirees and 鈥渢he tenacious, positive work of the Advancement team whose efforts contributed significantly to the positive outcomes.鈥

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Lov黑料正能量 Day 2020 sets new records! /now/news/2020/lovemu-day-2020-sets-new-records/ /now/news/2020/lovemu-day-2020-sets-new-records/#comments Thu, 09 Apr 2020 20:28:19 +0000 /now/news/?p=45515

With help from rallying donors across all 50 states and an impromptu head-shaving challenge, 贰惭鲍鈥檚 fourth annual Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day on April 8 raised a record $214,683 from 732 gifts.

This amount is an increase of nearly $100,000 over the 2019 totals.

Thank you to the many, many supporters who have “shown up together” in big ways for the people that make 黑料正能量 the special place it is – our students, faculty, and staff.

The historic day was a surprising and uplifting result at a time when many other university fundraising events are being cautiously rescheduled or even cancelled. Much of the event鈥檚 momentum in past years carried over from on-campus activities, but the COVID-19 pandemic pushed outreach in the digital space to an audience ready to respond.

Royals supporters were equally as generous with their time and energy, sharing videos and photos online and sending love to 黑料正能量 in a way 鈥渢hat made the day feel inclusive in a way it鈥檚 never been before,鈥 said Braydon Hoover ’11, director of development and annual giving and chair of the event committee. 鈥淲e truly are one big family.鈥

Social media was a-buzz with tiny tots and kids of alumni in Royal blue, field hockey players batting balls, volleyball athletes challenging their fans, musicians and triathletes and cross country runners and artists all sharing their love for 黑料正能量.

鈥淥ur theme this year was 鈥楽how Up for 黑料正能量鈥 and that happened in a big way at a hugely important time for all of us,鈥 said Kirk Shisler ’81, vice president for advancement. 鈥淟ov黑料正能量 Day brought us together in a way that no other event could.”聽

As if the excitement could not be contained, the 24-hour outpouring of love began even before April 8 and stretched into the morning of April 9, with more donations accumulating even in this morning. Target goals on the challenges were met quickly with tallies eventually far exceeding the goals.

Other highlights of 2020 Lov黑料正能量 Day:

  • Raising $53,253 for the Emergency Student Compassion Fund.
  • Raising $146,981 for the UFund for Resilience.
  • Unlocking $70,000 in challenge match funds.
  • Winning the 50-state challenge (thanks, Arkansas and Louisiana!).
  • Helping the Education Program, Women’s Volleyball Team, and the Black Student Alliance to win $1,000 each.
  • Hearing the many reasons why donors Lov黑料正能量 (for a few, read on!).

A Few Reasons We Lov黑料正能量

  • The life-changing opportunity 黑料正能量 gave me to live and learn in another country!
  • Our granddaughter loves the school and volleyball.
  • I have loved 黑料正能量 since my first year on campus, 1963 — lifelong friends, caring professors, and a new perspective on our church and world.
  • I can’t repay what 黑料正能量/CJP gave me, but this is a good day to give something back!
  • I really love the new tagline, “Lead Together!” I am forever grateful for the opportunities I experienced as an undergrad (class of ’86) to develop leadership skills in various settings. That could only happen with committed faculty and staff who encouraged me in those opportunities. I’m the person I am today because of my 黑料正能量 experience. Forever grateful!

As he always does in his traditional role as Lov黑料正能量 Day MC, Hoover watched the totals on the leaderboard tick up with delight. This year, he kicked coverage off with a 鈥淢orning Show鈥-style greeting, clutching a mug of coffee and wearing a plush Royal blue robe over his Lov黑料正能量 Day t-shirt. 

Chats throughout the day followed with Royals 鈥渃elebrities,鈥 including Herm the mascot (retiring soon), The Hon. Deanna Reed, mayor of Harrisonburg and a member of the 黑料正能量 Board of Trustees; JD Richardson, co-president of Black Student Union; 黑料正能量 President Susan Schultz Huxman; alumnus Trent Wagler ’02, with guitar, of The Steel Wheels; and Student Government Association co-presidents Seth Weaver and Leah Wenger. [And Yankees catcher and 2019 Alum of the Year Erik Kratz ’02 sent in a video greeting. Thanks, Erik!]

In a moment of delirium, caused by lack of coffee at 10 p.m., Hoover joked that he would shave his head if donations reached $200,000. 鈥淚 thought I was safe,鈥 he later recalled. Not so.

To the attempted rescue came Louise Otto 鈥79 Hostetter, hoping a $225,000 threshold might  #SaveBraydonsHair. 

While an unprecedented number of gifts came pouring in the hour before, Hoover began shaving with a few minutes to midnight before signing off. 鈥淓ven if we couldn鈥檛 save my hair,鈥 he said, 鈥淚鈥檓 happy to donate it to the cause in support of our people!鈥

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黑料正能量’s ‘giants’ of chemistry honored with lab dedication /now/news/2020/emus-giants-of-chemistry-honored-with-lab-dedication/ Tue, 18 Feb 2020 16:12:36 +0000 /now/news/?p=44921

Words of prayer, poetry, thanksgiving and anecdotes both humorous and moving lifted up the life and work of three former faculty members during last week鈥檚 Advanced Chemistry Lab dedication ceremony. The renovated lab 鈥 where former faculty members Dr. Glenn Kauffman, Dr. Gary Stucky and Robert Yoder worked, taught and mentored in more than 90 years of collective exemplary service 鈥 was filled with several generations of family members, grateful alumni, current and former faculty and donors to hear reflections on their powerful legacies.

In the words of Dr. Ed Sandy 鈥81, who thanked all three men for helping him to fulfill a childhood dream of becoming a doctor, 鈥渢he words and deeds of these three mentors, living amongst so many young people like me, created a generation of scientific leaders and their works that have bettered the world around the world. Thank you, Robert Yoder. Thank you, Glenn Kauffman, and thank you, Gary Stucky, for all you have done for so many of us. Your legacy of mentorship continues to inspire us all.鈥

The lab renovation and dedication was one of the final projects of the larger Suter Science Center transformation, accomplished with nearly $12 million in philanthropic support from more than 600 alumni and donors, said Kirk Shisler 鈥83, vice president for advancement, in his welcome. 

A final, larger scale dedication of Phase II or 鈥淪uter West,鈥 is being planned for Oct. 17 during Homecoming and Family Weekend.

The event was followed by a reception and a Suter Science Seminar by Dr. Brian Stauffer 鈥91, professor of medicine and cardiology at the University of Colorado.

In a short speech, Dr. Glenn Kauffman 鈥60, with daughter Keri Kauffman 鈥00 and wife Mary Kauffman, paid special tributes: to his former colleagues at 黑料正能量  and former dean Dr. Lee Snyder for their support in helping to grow the chemistry program and expand research opportunities; to colleagues at James Madison University for collaboration on faculty and student research; and to 贰惭鲍鈥檚 chemistry graduates, who have supported the program through their own work and through equipment donations like that of Dr. Shawn Ramer 鈥83, who arranged for 黑料正能量 to be gifted an electron microscope from MIT during his postdoctoral at Harvard.

Science, Kauffman concluded, is action and activity: 鈥淚 have always believed and thought that science is a verb, not a noun, not an encyclopedia of facts and numbers, but then the answering of questions, solving of problems and puzzles and creation of the language that extends our understanding of our planet and its place in the cosmos.鈥

The family of Robert Yoder represents four generations at the dedication ceremony. Lois Yoder (front), Robert鈥檚 wife, is flanked by their daughters Kim Yoder (left) and Karen Dean ’84 (right). Robert鈥檚 son Kent is in the far left of the back row with his wife Diane to his left. Behind Karen Dean is her husband Bill. Grandson Justin Yoder was unable to attend; his wife Heather Bauman Yoder 鈥04 (left) brought her sons, and Robert鈥檚 great-grandsons Judah and Ellis. Robert鈥檚 son, Doug, was unable to attend. 

Yoder brought years of expertise (and many stories, remembered Dr. Ed Sandy 鈥81) of 鈥渢hat secondary temple, the hospital.鈥 He and other aspiring pre-med students listened avidly 鈥渢o what it was actually like to be in a clinical lab.鈥

Janet Harder Stucky, widow of Gary Stucky, with Dr. Ed Sandy 鈥81, a special guest who has fond memories of all three professors. Sandy is executive director of Speciality Services Provider Solutions, Blue Ridge region, for Sentara Healthcare, and past president of Sentara RMH Medical Group. 

Sandy鈥檚 first experience in the chemistry lab years ago was 鈥渁 little scary,鈥 he remembered, to the laughter of the crowd. It was Gary Stucky鈥檚 class that first caused his boyhood dream of becoming a doctor to begin fading away, but it was the same professor鈥檚 invitation to return the next semester and take an even more difficult chemistry class that eventually changed his life.  鈥淚 said, yes, I’ll do it. I took that advice…it eventually became the spark to my learning and it changed my trajectory, changed me from biology to chemistry, gave me the desire to work and learn. And it truly gave me my career.鈥

When Dr. Tara Kishbaugh, now dean of the School of Sciences, Engineering, Art and Nursing, joined the chemistry faculty in 2004, she often was called 鈥渢he new Glenn.鈥 Kishbaugh heard that metaphor as a way of asking what traditions and values would be carried by the new generation of educators. As much has changed, she says, much of the values of the Kauffman-Yoder-Stucky generation remains. Practical rigor in the classroom and student-led research, she said, is highly valued. 鈥淥ur students learn to think and act and be scientists.鈥 And the community of care fostered by all three professors, so apparent when Kishbaugh first arrived on campus, lives on as well:  鈥淪tudents repeatedly say, you listened to me, you believed in me 鈥 The emphasis on caring and education for the whole person is just central to who we are.鈥

Professor Matt Siderhurst, who teaches in the Advanced Chemistry Lab, with Kirk Shisler 鈥81 (right), vice president of advancement. Siderhurst is among the many faculty who continue to support the culture of student-led research that Kauffman and his colleagues began. Also present at the dedication was Professor Emeriti Joe Mast and Kenton Brubaker, former chemistry lab hygiene officer John Spicher 鈥58, and Professor Emeritus Roman Miller, who is honored each spring, along with Kauffman, when the Kauffman-Miller Research Awards are made to support undergraduate students in summer research projects.

President Susan Schultz Huxman shares remembrances from Dr. Shawn Ramer 鈥83, who was unable to attend. Ramer earned a PhD in organic chemistry and did a postdoc at Harvard Medical School after graduating from 黑料正能量. He served in a variety of roles as senior executive and information technology, science and healthcare and is a member of the President鈥檚 Second Century Advisors.

Ramer thanked Glenn Kauffman for creating a nurturing environment that supported his interests and held him to high scholarly standards. 鈥  I am forever grateful for the mentorship, instruction and friendship, which you provided during my time at 黑料正能量 鈥 please know that I think of you frequently and always with much gratitude. I’m delighted to be part of honoring your contributions to 黑料正能量 and the gifts you gave to those of us who had the privilege of being your students.鈥

Huxman also offered a blessing to the space, beginning her prayer with this invocation:

Here in this space, our Suter Science Center, our faculty and students do not shy away from but readily embrace the wonders of God’s vast kingdom even as they study the laws of nature and what is humanly observable. The distinction of Mennonite education as practiced by 黑料正能量 faculty is Testament to the idea that knowledge is not sufficient.

Practice is not sufficient unless this is connected to a witness grounded in Christ, committed to peace and practiced in community. We thank professors Kauffman, Stucky and Yoder for practicing this rare and beautiful distinctive of Mennonite higher education and I thank all of you for being the great cloud of witnesses that blesses this space in honor of these three devoted and selfless educators. 

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Record number of gifts lifts third annual Lov黑料正能量 Day /now/news/2019/record-number-of-gifts-lifts-third-annual-lovemu-day/ Mon, 15 Apr 2019 20:53:37 +0000 /now/news/?p=41850

With a record-setting number of gifts on April 10鈥檚 , 黑料正能量 donors helped students access valuable courses, get to know caring professors, go on their cross-cultural and enjoy a transformative higher education experience.

Thank you!

More than $115,210 was given from 731 gifts during the 24-hour period — and givers were also generous in their reasons why they donated. A few students among the record number of student participants wrote the following:

  • I love 黑料正能量 because it has molded me into the person I am.
  • 黑料正能量 helps you grow as an entire person and embrace who God wants you to become.
  • I love that I get to play basketball but still focus on academics and the future!
  • I love the atmosphere of home, hospitality and care for everyone!

Attendance was big at several reunion events around the country, as well. Jeff Shank ’94, director of alumni and parent relations, said the day not only helped support 贰惭鲍鈥檚 future and its students but also helped to build strong connections between 黑料正能量 alumni 聽and the 黑料正能量 community. 鈥淲e had 156 alumni attend six events in four states, including Virginia, Pennsylvania, Indiana, and Ohio. At the Harrisonburg event, Doug Alderfer 鈥92 talked about feeling a lot of pride when he looked around the room and saw so many good people doing good work in his community. I know others experienced similar feelings.鈥

Challenges Met!

The taco truck outside the University Commons provided savory lunch treats to celebrate LOV黑料正能量 Day.

The number of givers exceeded goals in several of the challenges. Target goals of 50 were met quickly during

  • the Lunch Hour Challenge (87),
  • the Parent/Grandparent Challenge (98),
  • the Faculty and Staff Challenge (85) and
  • the Sweetheart Challenge (54).

The Alumni Challenge also logged 320 gifts to an anticipated total of 300.

With each donation, donors were prompted to vote for an academic department, athletics program and student club. Top vote-earners were awarded $500. Winners were the education department, field hockey and the Black Student Union.

Next year, look for the 50-state challenge to return. The $5,000 gift went unclaimed. Do you know someone (anyone!) in Wyoming, Nevada, North Dakota and Utah? We鈥檙e also looking for supporters of 黑料正能量 in Alabama, New Hampshire and Rhode Island so that we can unlock the $5,000 challenge.

Big Crowdfunding Support!

The event was also record-setting in another way, said Vice President for Advancement Kirk Shisler ’81. 鈥淭hat 黑料正能量 is truly a place of inspiration and vision has just recently been affirmed to us all. Inside of one month, approximately 1,000 alumni and friends have raised nearly $230,000 in support of Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day 鈥 and for the MJ Sharp Peace and Justice Endowed Scholarship through the incredible MJ Sharp Dream Hike to the top of Kilimanjaro that gained worldwide attention.鈥

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黑料正能量 lab space to be dedicated in honor of Glenn M. Kauffman, Gary L. Stucky and Robert Yoder /now/news/2018/emu-lab-space-to-be-dedicated-in-honor-of-professors-glenn-m-kauffman-gary-l-stucky-and-robert-d-yoder/ /now/news/2018/emu-lab-space-to-be-dedicated-in-honor-of-professors-glenn-m-kauffman-gary-l-stucky-and-robert-d-yoder/#comments Thu, 14 Jun 2018 13:31:12 +0000 /now/news/?p=38632 As Kirk Shisler met and visited with 黑料正能量 alumni through the Suter Science Center capital campaign, the vice president for advancement was struck by the number of times he heard the names of Dr. Glenn M. Kauffman, Dr. Gary L. Stucky and Robert Yoder.

Professor Steve Cessna instructs in the Advanced Chemistry Lab. (Photo by Andrew Strack)

鈥淭hese alumni were often medical professionals or working in the science fields, and remembered with great affection the mentorship of these professors,鈥 Shisler said. 鈥淣aming the Advanced Chemistry Lab in their honor is a perfect way to commemorate their legacy of teaching, mentorship and scholarship. Of course, these gentlemen are part of a long, rich tradition of exemplary science instruction at 黑料正能量 that continues to this day.鈥

The new Advanced Chemistry Lab in the renovated Suter Science Center is a learning space for upper-level students and the faculty who mentor them in labs and research related to analytical chemistry, environmental chemistry, biochemistry and molecular biology.

鈥淭heir fine legacy continues today with the recent and prestigious accreditation by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology of our biochemistry program and the large number of students who go on to graduate and professional schools and successful careers afterwards,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t seems like nearly every week, we celebrate the successes of alumni like Ruth Maust 鈥13, who just earned a three-year graduate research scholarship from the National Science Foundation, or Blake Rogers 鈥14, who was National Physician Assistant Student of the Year.鈥

A gift in support of the lab naming honors past teachers and mentors and supports professors who are having similar impact today, he added.

To join in honoring these professors, visit the Suter Science Center campaign website.

Glenn M. Kauffman

The lab in the renovated Suter Science Center is the teaching and research space for analytical chemistry, environmental chemistry, biochemistry and molecular biology. (Photo by Andrew Strack)

In addition to chairing the chemistry department for many years, Glenn M. Kauffman is a Renaissance man who is skilled and conversant in a broad range of areas, including philosophy, theology, music, gardening and sports. His academic contributions extended beyond his specialty of organic chemistry to the pre-professional health sciences and the sciences in general. In retirement, Dr. Kauffman continues his many extra-curricular activities, including gardening. He is active in the American Rhododendron Society.

Gary L. Stucky (1941-2005)

Gary L. Stucky came to 黑料正能量 to teach chemistry after several years with a private lab, including one year in tropical disease research with Mennonite Central Committee in Africa. He taught at 黑料正能量 from 1972 to 1993, and also at Bethel College, University of Rochester (New York) and James Madison University. An enthusiastic teacher, he was also remembered for his care for others. He completed pastoral studies training at Eastern Mennonite Seminary and was commissioned as a chaplain by the Western District Conference of Mennonite Church USA in 2003.

Robert D. Yoder (1929-2005)

Robert D. Yoder taught human biology, microbiology and immunology courses at 黑料正能量 from 1963 to 1995 and was advisor to 贰惭鲍鈥檚 medical technology students. A 1957 graduate, he earned a master鈥檚 degree from James Madison University and then served as a lab assistant to Dr. Daniel B. Suter in 1962. After completing the medical technology program at Rockingham Memorial Hospital during a 1977 sabbatical, Mr. Yoder worked in the laboratory there part time during the week and full time during summers doing blood chemistry analysis until his retirement. He also volunteered many hours at the Harrisonburg Free Clinic and as a laboratory technician in the Suter Science Center. An avid angler, birdwatcher and environmentalist, he was a former president of the Massanutten chapter of Trout Unlimited.

To join in honoring these professors, visit the Suter Science Center campaign website.

More on science at 黑料正能量

  • Do I really want to be a doctor? 贰惭鲍鈥檚 PPHS program prepares students for medical careers.
  • More grants than ever are helping to fund student summer research at 黑料正能量.
  • Blake Rogers ’14is the national Physician鈥檚 Assistant Student of the Year.
  • Ruth Maust 鈥13 earns three-year doctoral research fellowship.
  • Three students team up to carry on water quality research in Virginia mountain streams.
  • A record number of chemistry students earned National Science Foundation Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REUs) in 2016.
  • And if you’re curious about who is supervising this major project, here’s an article about Phil Martin ’81, who returned to his alma mater after “retiring” to provide oversight to the renovations.
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黑料正能量 receives $672,000 bequest through Virginia College Fund /now/news/2018/emu-receives-672000-bequest-virginia-college-fund/ Mon, 22 Jan 2018 16:51:00 +0000 /now/news/?p=36570 黑料正能量 (黑料正能量) has received a portion of a $2.7 million bequest from the Virginia College Fund.

The university will receive $672,000, primarily to be used for student scholarships and capital improvement, according to President Susan Schultz Huxman.

“We are thrilled with this very generous gift from Mr. Beatty,鈥 said Huxman. 鈥淗e was a true ambassador for the kind of holistic education we deliver to students to shape them into excellent citizens and workforce ready employees. We are here to assist students, including Virginians in rural areas who are first-generation college students, a special focus of the Virginia College Fund.”

The gift, from the Guy E. Beatty Revocable Trust, is the largest in the organization鈥檚 history. Beatty was a former board member. The VCF was one of several beneficiaries in a large charitable trust.

The participating members, all of which received portions of the bequest, include 黑料正能量, Ferrum College, Bluefield College and Averett University.

鈥淢r. Beatty鈥檚 gift is an affirmation for the quality of the educational programs that are offered by the participating members of the Virginia College Fund, in that we provide generous financial support for low- to moderate-income students, minority students and also first-generation students who are interested in a smaller college or university,鈥 said Kirk Shisler, vice president of advancement.

Beatty was president and CEO for the family-run, global Beatty Management Company, located in McLean, Virginia. He joined the VCF board in the 1990s and was supportive of the VCF鈥檚 goals, 鈥渆specially in helping students who might not otherwise have the opportunity achieve a college education and better themselves,鈥 said Jim Dill, executive director and president.

鈥淭his is a transformational gift for The VCF,鈥 Dill said in a press release. 鈥淲e are grateful to Guy, his widow Betty, and the Beatty family for their long-term generosity and belief in a private college education. Guy was a long-time board member and fully believed in our schools and the students they produce.鈥

The four VCF beneficiaries are members of the Council for Independent Colleges in Virginia and the State Council for Higher Education of Virginia, and accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.

The VCF has raised over $23 million in its 53-year history. The funding comes from individuals, foundations and corporations.

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Annual donor banquet thanks ‘mission-makers’ and ‘third-way kingdom-builders’ /now/news/2017/annual-donor-banquet-draws-record-attendance/ Mon, 16 Oct 2017 13:33:16 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=35267 A record crowd of nearly 450 attended the donor banquet Friday evening at 黑料正能量鈥檚 .

Vice President for Advancement Kirk Shisler said the event is one small way to thank the many alumni and 黑料正能量 community members for their philanthropic support. 鈥淚t is especially gratifying to know that more than 3,200 donors and alumni stand strong with 黑料正能量 and the bold mission we serve,鈥 said Shisler. “We are in the final months of to聽support our growing engineering program and thriving science majors, and our University Fund and other projects continue to benefit from a very loyal core of alumni donors and individual friends of the university.”

This year’s banquet was scheduled between a host of other Centennial-related activities: many guests came across University Commons from the Margaret Martin Gehman Gallery which hosted an , and an expedited program after the dinner left time to walk across campus to Lehman Auditorium for an evening performance of the .

Mission-makers, game-changers

鈥淚 don鈥檛 just see donors and supporters,鈥 President Susan Schultz Huxman noted in her keynote address. 鈥淚 see mission-makers and game-changers. I see bold visionaries, and third-way kingdom-builders, people who see a different kind of return on their investment in giving to 黑料正能量.鈥

Huxman offered listeners an overview of the institution鈥檚 Centennial history, drawing four parallels between the pioneers of 1917 and those carrying on the legacy in 2017.

鈥淭he similaries between then and now are striking and comforting,鈥 she said, 鈥渁 reminder that the apple seed does indeed bear an apple tree.鈥

贰惭鲍鈥檚 faith foundation 鈥渨as mission critical in 1917 and it鈥檚 still mission critical in 2017,鈥 she noted. 鈥淗ere where we connect faith and service and academic learning, we are a community of learners committed to be the reconciling love of Jesus.鈥

Creation care was important then, with one of the first standard courses offered being soil study and crop production, and now, as 黑料正能量 curriculum and facilities continues to prioritize sustainability.

The university鈥檚 first woman president also pointed out that the class of 1917 included four women and three men, learning together in a co-educational environment long before many colleges in the state valued such equity.

And the spirit of rigorous intellectual inquiry continues today, she said, as was shown early in the exhaustive search for the first president, a portion of whose favorite quotation from Alexander Pope appears on the banner of the first literary society. 鈥淭hat expectation of high-end academic achievement has always been the abiding ethos at 黑料正能量.鈥

鈥淗appy birthday, 黑料正能量!” Huxman concluded. “May you flourish for another 100 years as we bring scholarship, service and shalom to the Shenandoah and beyond.鈥

Testimonies from students

Junior nursing major Esther Ghale and seminary graduate student Valerie Showalter offered the traditional student addresses to thank donors for their generosity.

Ghale, who moved to Virginia from Nepal at age six, said her choice to attend 黑料正能量 had been clear for some time, based on high reviews of the nursing program. As a student, she鈥檚 been 鈥済reatly blessed鈥 by professors of high character, small class size, the community atmosphere, and opportunities for extracurricular and spiritual involvement, including her recent cross-cultural experience in Guatemala and Colombia.

These programs 鈥渨ould not be available for students like me, without everyone鈥檚 generous donation to 黑料正能量,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 want to thank you all individually, with a grateful heart for your thoughtful and kind-hearted gifts to this wonderful school that I have come to call home.鈥

After returning from a three-year international service assignment with Mennonite Mission Network, Showalter took an online course at Eastern Mennonite Seminary with Dorothy Jean Weaver. Her calling, she says, was soon revealed. Showalter benefited from a ministry leadership scholarship, an investment both in her and in the future of the church.

Now associate pastor at Shalom Mennonite Church in Harrisonburg, Showalter urged those gathered 鈥渋n the community united by 黑料正能量” to “each find a way to share our gifts with one another, equally beloved participants in the Kingdom of God.鈥

The donor banquet was sponsored by Sentara, BB&T and ColorQuest Custom Printing.

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Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day on April 4 will help make 黑料正能量 available to all /now/news/2017/lovemu-giving-day-april-4-will-help-make-eastern-mennonite-university-available/ Mon, 13 Mar 2017 20:45:49 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=32324 on April 4 at 黑料正能量 (黑料正能量) will allow supporters to 鈥渟how the love鈥 with those who otherwise could not afford the quality academics and transformational opportunities of an 黑料正能量 experience.

鈥淕ifts to 黑料正能量 are key to making the 黑料正能量 experience accessible to all, including those from varied socio-economic, academic and culturally diverse backgrounds,鈥 explains Kirk Shisler, vice president for advancement. 鈥淣ow more than ever, this is key to 贰惭鲍鈥檚 mission to prepare undergraduate, graduate and seminary students to serve and lead in a global context.鈥

Challenges and activities

Gifts of any size on this day 鈥 with close to $30,000 available in matching gifts by primarily anonymous donors 鈥 will support any fund the donor designates for undergraduate, graduate or seminary students. A variety of and special activities are planned throughout the day.

  • President Susan Schultz Huxman will match every alumni gift of $10 or more with $10 of her own, up to $1,000, for the Huxman Challenge.
  • Additional challenges include current students (t-shirt incentives!), lunch-time special, faculty/staff, parents and grandparents, and current and former Board of Trustee members.
  • Kiosks across campus will provide on-the-spot opportunities for students to jump in with a spontaneous gift of any size. They might also text grandparents, uncles, aunts and others who are supportive of the 黑料正能量 experience their loved one is having at 黑料正能量.
  • When making an online gift, donors will be invited to about 黑料正能量; the program earning the most votes will win $500 for their program/department use.
  • The 黑料正能量 advancement team will gather in a central location to make calls, take calls and pledges, monitor the incoming gifts, answer questions and visit classes with donuts and other incentives. 贰惭鲍鈥檚 mascot Herm will be along for the ride.

Why Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day?

We Lov黑料正能量! (Photo by Andrew Strack)

鈥淎lumni often say how much they 鈥榣oved鈥 their 黑料正能量 experience,鈥 says , director of alumni and parent engagement. 鈥淭hey mention friends, a professor, an athletic or cross-cultural experience.. Lov黑料正能量 Giving Day invites people to remember what they love about 黑料正能量 and share that love.”

The size of the gift does not matter. While all alumni, students, faculty, staff and friends are challenged to participate, Shank and other planners hope to particularly engage young alumni.

鈥淵ounger alumni have different giving patterns than previous generations,鈥 says Shisler. 鈥淲e want to challenge people to give from the heart, spontaneously, in the same way they do, for example, when touched by a KickStarter or other campaign for a specific cause.鈥

The cause, both Shisler and Shank note, is making 黑料正能量 affordable so every student can become equipped for success in the job market or further academic pursuits, within the context of a supportive community.

Throughout the day, people can watch and social media for updates on amounts raised and challenges that still need a boost.

Who benefits?

鈥湻〔驯檚 financial aid is as generous as we can make it for both merit-based and need-based undergraduate student aid,鈥 says , financial aid director. The average for an undergraduate student in 2016-17 was $30,000. Over $12 million in aid was awarded by 黑料正能量 in 2014-15.

Herm and friends Lov黑料正能量! (Photo by Andrew Strack)

鈥淲e work with each family, knowing that college study is a significant investment,” she said. “We believe 黑料正能量 is a worthwhile investment and need more support to make it available to all who seek to be part of our community.鈥

Plan to Show the Love

Please plan to show your love for 黑料正能量 on April 4 by giving a gift online, phoning in a pledge at (540) 432-4200 or (800) 368-3383, or emailing your intentions to devoffice@emu.edu.

Share your love and Royal pride in the comments section now or on April 4 when you make your online contribution. Tell us what you loved, learned and remember from your 黑料正能量 experience.

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