Indiana University Lilly Family School Of Philanthropy ANNUAL REPORT .

Transcription

Indiana UniversityLilly Family School of PhilanthropyANNUAL REPORTJuly 1, 2014 – June 30, 2015philanthropy.iupui.edu

A Message fromthe DeanAmir PasicInspiring ChangeWhat’s next? It’s a question I’ve been asked frequently during my first months as deanof the world’s first school of philanthropy. The answers are exhilarating, in part becausethe past year has been one of rapid growth, change, and innovation, paving the way forthe possibilities that animate us going forward.A record number of graduates completed our Philanthropic Studies programs.Groundbreaking research projected the future of giving, and international partnershipsfrom Berlin to China expanded understanding of philanthropy globally. New initiativesby Lake Institute on Faith & Giving and the Women’s Philanthropy Institute revealedinsights to aid congregations, donors, and nonprofits, and The Fund Raising Schoolequipped them to fulfill their important missions.Our greatest strength remains our talent. Our faculty, our staff, and especially ourstudents are the way we improve the world. We are inspired by them, just as we hopeto inspire them to make meaningful change. Alumni already are achieving great impact,improving the human condition across the country and across borders around the globe.Anticipating achievements and opportunities to come, we are first andforemost dedicated to our students’ success, redoubling our commitment toMission Statementthem and to all we serve. As we grow, we continue to benefit from the expertise ofThe Indiana UniversityLilly Family School ofPhilanthropy increasesthe understandingof philanthropy andimproves its practiceworldwide throughcritical inquiry,interdisciplinaryresearch, teaching,training, and civicengagement.colleagues who have transitioned into new roles and we thank Dwight Burlingame,Tim Seiler, and Bill Enright for their ongoing service. Special thanks to Founding DeanGene Tempel, who led the school for the first half of the fiscal year. Most of all, we thankyou, our dedicated friends, supporters, and champions who make our work possible andencourage us daily.Amir PasicEugene R. Tempel DeanIndiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy

Table of ContentsTable of ContentsPhilanthropic Studies. 2 – 4Research and Lake Institute on Faith & Giving. 5The Fund Raising School and Women’s Philanthropy Institute. 6International Programs and Public Affairs. 7Financial Summary. 8 – 10Leadership. 11Our Donors. 12 – 16Introduction .12Sage Society.12Rosso Society and Endowed Funds.13Founders’ Society. 14 – 15Professional Associates.15Research Partners.16On our cover:Our new, center-ofcampus UniversityHall home providesstudents withdedicated space tostudy, to interact andto collaborate withfaculty, and facilitatesstudent recruitmentand advising.philanthropy.iupui.edu 1

Philanthropic StudiesEducating Passionate Professionalsxx Careers Creating ChangeAlumni hold key leadership positions, such as:Outstanding Philanthropic Studies faculty andprograms educate emerging and veteran philanthropyprofessionals and scholars, preparing them to bethoughtful, innovative, visionary leaders.xx Moving Philanthropy Forward Director, White House Office of Social Innovationand Civic Participation Chair, National Endowment for the Arts General Manager, Koç Foundation, Istanbul Treasurer, State of Indiana Vice President, Global Philanthropy,JPMorgan Chase Understanding of philanthropy across bordersand within cultures will be advanced by the SteadFamily Chair in International Philanthropy, agift from Jerre and Mary Joy Stead and theirfamily through the Stead Family FoundationuAmir Pasic was appointed dean of theLilly Family School of Philanthropy.He holds the Eugene R. Tempel Deanship,established by a generous lead gift from Bill and Emmett D. Carson, Ph.D., CEO and presidentof Silicon Valley Community Foundation—thenation’s largest—served as the first VisitingCharles Stewart Mott Foundation Chair onCommunity Foundations. Indiana University President Michael A. McRobbiehonored Board of Visitors member Irene LillyMcCutchen with the Lilly Family School ofPhilanthropy Medal of Distinction in recognitionof her contributions and service to the school. The William and Edie Enright Fellowship inPhilanthropic Studies will aid future students.2 Annual Report Lilly Family School of PhilanthropyIrene Lilly McCutchen through theRuth Lilly Philanthropic Fund and generousmajor gifts from Maureen and Jim Hackett,Bob Hartsook, an anonymous donor, and others.u93%of graduates seeking jobs have beenplaced, including 100 percent of thebachelor’s degree graduates.

2015 graduates won positions such as: Vice president of development, NationalUrban League Director of philanthropy, Sheatufim, whichstrengthens Israel’s philanthropic sector Associate director, CCS fundraisingconsulting firmI chose this degree because it has so manyopportunities and I am going into a field that I ampassionate about. I want to influence young adults tobecome engaged with the community.– Brittany, B.A. student Program officer, Ball Brothers Foundation Executive director, Fay Biccard Glick CrookedCreek Neighborhood Center10:1 average student-faculty ratiophilanthropy.iupui.edu 3

Philanthropic Studies (continued)Educating Passionate Professionals, continuedxx Preparing for Promising FuturesStudents earned special honors, including National Bush Foundation Fellowship IU Graduate and Professional School’s Elite 50students list (4 students)Academic tuition revenuefor the school hasmore than doubledin the past 5 years. IUPUI’s Top 100 undergraduates list (2 students)Faculty members received national recognition: Assistant Professor Catherine Herrold’sdissertation won the Association for Research onNonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action’s2014 outstanding dissertation award. Assistant Professor Sara Konrath presented atSouth by Southwest on her research on using textmessaging to build empathy in teenagers.Admitted students’ average GPAsPh.D. programExecutive M.A. program William M. Plater Civic Engagement Medallion(3 students)53The largest class of studentssince the 1987 founding of theCenter on Philanthropy wasgraduated. It included the mostbachelor’s degree recipientsto date (10).4 Annual Report Lilly Family School of Philanthropy3.5M.A. program3.4Direct-Admit B.A. program3.4 Undergraduate Chancellor’s Scholar Max Kade Fellowship3.6 Assistant Professor Genevieve Shaker receivedthe 2015 Emerging Scholar Award from theResearch Council of the national Association ofFundraising Professionals. Dr. Jiangang Zhu, executive dean of theResearch School of Philanthropy at Sun Yat-senUniversity, was a Fulbright Scholar at the LillyFamily School of Philanthropy.

Research and Lake Institute on Faith & GivingDiscovering New InsightsInnovative, cutting-edge research conducted bythe school’s faculty and staff advances knowledgethat improves the practice of philanthropy forprofessionals, donors, and volunteers. Giving USA 2015, researched and written by theschool for Giving USA Foundation, estimatedrecord-high U.S. giving in 2014 for the first timesince the Great Recession. Insights from the 2014 U.S. Trust Study of HighNet Worth Philanthropy help donors, financialadvisors, nonprofits, and fundraisers becomemore strategic and effective.Exploring Faith and PhilanthropyLake Institute on Faith & Giving provides andsupports research, teaching, tools, and strategiesfor understanding the ways in which faith inspiresand informs philanthropy.The groundbreakingPhilanthropyOutlook, presented byMarts & Lundy, predictsgrowth rates in charitablegiving to aid nonprofits’planning and fundraising. The Coutts 2014 Million Dollar Donors Reportexamined wealthy donors’ giving patterns inseven regions around the world. Giving in Chicago, released with The ChicagoCommunity Trust, is the first comprehensivestudy of individual, corporate, and foundationgiving in the six-county metropolitan region. The first Lake Institute Network of EmergingScholars (LINES) convened leading youngresearchers, advancing the institute’s role ascatalyst, thought leader, convener, and funderfilling the void in knowledge about faith and giving. An Executive Certificate in Religious Fundraisingfor religious leaders and faith-based organizationfundraisers launched with leading seminaries,including Christian Theological Seminary, DukeDivinity School, Fuller Theological Seminary, andMcCormick Theological Seminary. Research on humanitarian internationalnonprofits earned Yale doctoral candidateShai Dromi the Lake Doctoral DissertationFellowship. Christian Smith, director of the University ofNotre Dame’s Center for the Study of Religionand Society delivered the Thomas H. Lake Lecture. As Lake Distinguished Visitor, Giving Backauthor Valaida Fullwood spoke about collectivegiving and African-American giving.philanthropy.iupui.edu 5

The Fund Raising School and Women’s Philanthropy InstitutePreparing Fundraisers for SuccessThe Fund Raising School, which has trained morethan 43,000 people in 40 countries over the past40-plus years, teaches professionals andvolunteers to be more effective fundraisers. Nonprofits around the world received training viaThe Fund Raising School’s contract programs.Training sponsors include the NCAA AcceleratingAcademic Success Program, the Islamic Societyof North America, the National Campaign toPrevent Teen Pregnancy, the University of PuertoRico, and Habitat for Humanity Indiana. The Fund Raising School’s Director Tim Seilerwas named the first Rosso Fellow in PhilanthropicFundraising. He received the school’s HenryA. Rosso Medal for Lifetime Achievement inEthical Fundraising, and was the Associationof Fundraising Professionals Indiana Chapter’s2014 Outstanding Fundraising Professional. Ascholarship honoring him will help more peopleaccess The Fund Raising School’s training.Enrollment in The Fund Raising School’scustomized programs grew 14 percent andpublic courses grew16 percent. Public course participantsatisfaction averages 97 percent. Bill Stanczykiewicz, former president and CEOof the Indiana Youth Institute, was appointeddirector of The Fund Raising School and seniorlecturer in Philanthropic Studies. The Fund Raising School achieved its highestever growth in revenue, up 48 percent from theprior year.6 Annual Report Lilly Family School of PhilanthropyUnderstanding Women’s PhilanthropyResearch, education, and training by the Women’sPhilanthropy Institute examines the impact ofgender differences in philanthropy and thepowerful role women play in changing the world. A 375,000 research grant from the Bill &Melinda Gates Foundation to the Women’sPhilanthropy Institute will provide donors,nonprofits, and scholars with increasedunderstanding of women’s philanthropy. The Women Give 2014 study found that younger,religiously unaffiliated women are generous donors,providing insights for nonprofits. Women’s Philanthropy Institute DirectorDebra Mesch was named the Eileen LambO’Gara Chair in Women’s Philanthropy. Ph.D. student Elizabeth J. Dale’s researchon same-sex couples’ philanthropic practicesreceived the 2015 Women’s PhilanthropyInstitute Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship. The Women’s Philanthropy Institute delivered aweb seminar for the Women’s Collective GivingNetwork, 38 organizations in 19 states comprising7,500 women involved in giving circles.

International Programs and Public AffairsInnovating Together InternationallyCollaborative learning, research, education, andtraining with our international colleagues expandknowledge and deepen global engagement inphilanthropy for the greater good.Providing Perspectives International philanthropists, scholars, andbusiness people attended a China PhilanthropySummit, part of a collaboration of the school andthe IU Research Center for Chinese Politics andBusiness funded by the Ford Foundation and theHenry Luce Foundation. Dean Amir Pasic’s Asia trip includedmeeting with colleagues at the Asia Centre forSocial Entrepreneurship and Philanthropyat the National University of Singapore andpresenting at IU’s Asia-Pacific Alumni eventin Bali, Indonesia. In China, he met with ourboard member Guangmei Yan and visited ourpartners from Sun Yat-sen University, TsinghuaSchool of Public Policy and Management, andBeijing Normal University’s China PhilanthropyResearch Institute. Students in the school’s first study abroadcourse spent two weeks in Berlin with AssociateProfessor Greg Witkowski learning aboutphilanthropy and public policy from local experts,lectures, and site visits. Distinguished alumnus Erdal Yildirim, wholeads Koç Foundation and who received theIU Benton Medallion in 2014, visited the schoolwith Koç University President Umran İnan toexplore partnership opportunities.The school increases public understanding of theimportant role philanthropy plays in society. Chair of the National Endowment for the Artsand alumna Jane Chu spoke at a communityengagement and the arts symposium hosted bythe school and other IU units. Emmett D. Carson, Ph.D., CEO and presidentof Silicon Valley Community Foundation andVisiting Charles Stewart Mott Foundation Chairon Community Foundations, participated in publicpresentations at the school with Brian Payne,president and CEO of the Central IndianaCommunity Foundation, and with Diana Aviv,president and CEO of Independent Sector. Founding Dean Gene Tempel was chosen asone of The NonProfit Times’ 50 most influentialnonprofit sector leaders.The school continued to see increased interaction onits social media properties, most notably LinkedIn,where page followers increased by 180 percent.On Facebook the school’s fan base rose 67 percent,while followers on Twitter grew 19 percent. Awareness of philanthropy and the school’sprograms was raised through sponsorships ofthe IUPUI Regatta, the IUPUI Jaguars men’sbasketball games, and the Indianapolis Indiansbaseball team’s education day, at whichDean Pasic threw out the first pitch.philanthropy.iupui.edu 7

Financial SummaryThe Lilly Family School of Philanthropy has completed its second fiscal year as a new school within IndianaUniversity on the Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis campus, developed from the resources of the Centeron Philanthropy. The school is dedicated to improving philanthropy to improve the world by training and empoweringstudents and professionals to be innovators and leaders who create positive and lasting change. It offers a comprehensiveapproach to philanthropy through its academic, research, and international programs and through The Fund RaisingSchool, Lake Institute on Faith & Giving, and the Women’s Philanthropy Institute.The school works in close collaboration with the Indiana University Schoolof Public and Environmental Affairs and the School of Liberal Arts and relieson valued support from thoughtful donors and partners. We work togetherto meet emerging opportunities and challenges with innovative programsand to share information with nonprofit professionals and scholars. Thesepartnerships allow us to help change lives and communities and shape thefuture of philanthropy in Indiana, across the nation, and around the world.The Lilly Family School of Philanthropy continues to champion and applythe principles of financial accountability to the public, transparency andhonesty, and responsible stewardship of resources. And with that, we offerthis financial information to further your understanding of our commitmentto excellence in all areas of our operations.This year’s report continues to include university-appropriated funds and assessment (the fee assessed by the Universityfor use of its administrative systems, physical plant, parking services, etc.). We believe including these details providesadditional clarity to the school’s financial activity. The Financial Statement for the 2014 – 2015 fiscal year reflects sourcesof revenue totaling 14.8 million and program expenses totaling 11.0 million resulting in a net positive balance of 3.8 million. This balance is comprised of 1.69 million in prepaid grant funding committed to multi-year grants, 285 thousand in contributions received to be committed per donor intent, 494 thousand in matching income receivedfrom endowment and campus sources to support endowed chairs, 956 thousand in The Fund Raising School programincome, and 390 thousand of encumbered funds carried forward into the 2015 – 2016 fiscal year to cover expensescommitted in the 2014 – 2015 fiscal year.In the 2014 – 2015 fiscal year the school continued to implement a conservative financial plan while building theacademic programs of the new school. As have many of its partner organizations in the sector, the school plans to continuewith prudent expenditure budgeting for the 2015 – 2016 fiscal year in order to ensure its financial health and to operate asefficiently as possible.Thank you for your continued support of the Lilly Family School of Philanthropy and its mission. Please contact us withany questions you might have about the 2014 – 2015 fiscal year financial information.Timothy B. FisherChief Financial Officer(317) 278-8945tfisher@indiana.edu8 Annual Report Lilly Family School of Philanthropy

REVENUE2014 – 20152013 – 2014IU Academic Course Tuition1,154,231856,086Training Program/Participant Fees (TFRS, Lake, ,952Other Operating Revenue (sales, grant residuals, indirect cost recovery, etc.)942,590 11,536,148Gift Revenue & Net Interest (excludes pledges and operating endowment interest)691,228 2695,8443,624,313 32,273,87014,767,50512,568,173University AppropriationOperating Income (interest earned/reserves)Grant Revenue(received in IU Research for Research, TFRS, Lake, WPI, Int’l Programs)Total RevenueEXPENDITURES:SalariesFringe BenefitsAssistantships/ScholarshipsSupplies & Expense2014 – 20152013 – ,2872,813,818 43,746,460Travel441,233520,665University 433,297Indirect Cost (charged on grants)Total ExpendituresNet Balance (revenue less expense)3,821,545 51,134,876NOTES1Other Revenue includes indirect cost recovery, grant residuals, materials sales (TFRS, Giving USA)2Includes gift and interest income. Excludes pledges, Lilly and Lake operating endowments interest income which is reflected above3Grant revenue includes front-loaded payments received for multi-year awards (incl. Research, Academic Programs, TFRS, Lake, Int’l. Programs, WPI)4Includes supplies, phone, computers, copying/printing, contract services (incl. space rental). Note that reduction in 2014 – 2015 over 2013 – 2014 was dueprimarily to reductions in Grant S&E expenditures and Operating contractual service expenses (2013 – 2014 WPI symposium).5Positive balance the result of 1.69 million in prepaid multi-year grant funding, 285 thousand in contributions received to be committed per donor intent, 956 thousand from TFRS program income, 494 thousand from quasi-endowment and campus matching funding designated for endowed chair support,and 390 thousand of encumbered funds carried into the 2015 – 2016 fiscal year to cover expenses committed in 2014 – 2015.philanthropy.iupui.edu 9

Financial Summary (continued)SOURCES OF REVENUE2014 – 2015l 24.5% Grant Revenue Received(includes Research, TFRS, etc)l 18.6% The Fund Raising School (course training fees)Total Revenue 14,767,505l 17.9%Endowment Interest and Reserves(operating endowment interest earned/reserves)l 8.8%Other – Indirect cost recovery, materials sales(TFRS, Giving USA, etc.), and revenue not allocatedto a particular programl 7.8%IU Academic Course Tuitionl 6.7%Other Operating Reserves (TFRS Cash Reserve)l 5.5%University Appropriationl 4.7%Gift Revenue and Interest (excludes pledges andoperating endowment interest)l 2.8%Lake Institute on Faith & Givingl 2.7%Women’s Philanthropy InstitutePROGRAM EXPENSES2014 – 2015l 18.7% Grant Expendituresl 16.4% The Fund Raising Schooll 15.0% Other – Expenses not allocated to a particularprogram (school-wide)l 14.8% Academic ProgramsTotal Expenses 10,945,95910 Annual Report Lilly Family School of Philanthropyl 10.7% Administration(includes Dean’s Office, Finance, Technology)l 5.5%University Assessmentl 5.3%Developmentl 3.4%Lake Institute on Faith & Givingl 3.2%Communications & External Relationsl 2.9%Research (non-grant funded general operating)l 2.4%International Programsl 1.7%Women’s Philanthropy Institute

LeadershipBOARD OF VISITORS2014 – 2015Sonia Chen ArnoldCounsel,Litigation and LegalCompliance,Eli Lilly and CompanyDonald ButtreyOf Counsel, Retired,Wood & McLaughlin, LLPGwen Perry DavisDeputy Director ofDevelopment,Museum of ContemporaryArt ChicagoGail FreemanPresident,Freeman PhilanthropicServicesTed GrossnickleSenior Consultantand Founder,Johnson, Grossnickleand Associates, Inc.Maureen HackettCommunity LeaderAlisa HendrixCommunity LeaderYvonne HuntCommunity LeaderJay LoveCEO, BloomerangMelynne KlausDirector,Christel DeHaanFamily FoundationLEADERSHIP TEAM2014 – 2015Irene Lilly McCutchenCommunity LeaderAmir PasicEugene R. Tempel DeanDebra MeschEileen Lamb O’Gara Chairin Women’s PhilanthropyAmir PasicEugene R. Tempel DeanIU Lilly Family Schoolof PhilanthropyCathie CarriganManaging Director,International ProgramsDirector,Women’s Philanthropy InstituteNasser PaydarExecutive Vice Chancellor,IUPUISean DunlavyDirector,Fundraising and InstitutionalAdvancementChair,Philanthropic Studies FacultyUna OsiliDirector, ResearchTimothy B. FisherChief Financial OfficerPatrick M. RooneyAssociate Dean, AcademicAffairs and ResearchMarcela O. RovzarPresident and Founder,PROCURADavid P. KingKaren Lake Buttrey Director,Lake Institute onFaith & GivingTimothy L. SeilerDirector,The Fund Raising SchoolKevin SalwenAuthor and PhilanthropistMarilyn H. KuhnChief Operating OfficerBill StanczykiewiczDirector,The Fund Raising SchoolEllen RemmerSenior Partner,The Philanthropic InitiativeCindy Simon SkjodtCommunity LeaderGene TempelFounding DeanDan SmithPresident and CEO,Indiana UniversityFoundationJerre SteadChairman and CEO,IHS Inc.Guangmei YanVice President,Sun Yat-sen UniversityDaniel YatesPartner,Bose McKinney & Evans, LLPStephanie Goodrid LawsonGift Officer and Director,Marianne Tobias Program,Eskenazi Health Foundationphilanthropy.iupui.edu 11

Our DonorsWe thank our thoughtful donors who share the Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy’scommitment to create positive and lasting change in the world. It is with their support that our faculty and staffare able to train and empower students and practitioners to innovate and lead in our global community. Together, we canshape the future of philanthropy and the world around us.The individuals, corporations, and foundations acknowledged in the following lists of our donors are vital to the successand growth of our school. We are tremendously grateful for their generous and ongoing support.SAGE SOCIETYThomas and Lou GlennJamie and Audra LevyJeff RichardsonLifetime giving of 10,000Marianne Glick andMichael WoodsTed and Debby LillyPatrick and Lisa RooneyRuth Lilly*Dottie C. RossoJohn GlierChristine and PhilipLodewickHenry A. Rosso*Eugene* and Marilyn* GlickDavid and Holly GrangeThe Honorable P.A. Mack, Jr.Alexis* and Marcela deRovzarJames and Karen GreenfieldMichael S. MaurerRichard C. SearlesKirsten Grønbjerg andGerry SuttlesRussell G. and Lou AnnMawbyTim and Karen SeilerTed and Marcia GrossnickleWilliam* and Rose MaysMaureen O’Gara Hackettand Jim HackettIrene Lilly McCutchen andWilliam McCutchenCynthia Simon Skjodt andPaul SkjodtWilliam* and Terri HanrahanWilliam C. McGinlyJerre and Mary Joy SteadRobert F. HartsookE. Kirk McKinneyHerman R. SutherlandWarren F. IlchmanDebra Mesch and Tate AyersGene and Mary TempelHarriet M. IveyJames and JacquelineMorrisCharles Tombergor moreMichael and Amy AlleyAnonymousL.H. and Dianne BayleyRichard A. BehrenhausenDwight and AudreyBurlingameKaren Lake Buttrey* andDonald ButtreyDonald A. Campbell, Jr.Robert and Carol CarterAmy Jorgensen ConleeBarbara and Louis CouryClaudine DonikianMichelle Staggs DoningerDavid H. Jacobs, Jr.Andrew J. Paine, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Sean DunlavyCharles and Virginia*JohnsonDon* and Suzanne*EarnhartDottie and Martin JohnsonJames J PelleriteJane Leighty JustisGwendolyn Perry DavisDavid and Melynne KlausGeorge and Peggy RappLeslie and KathleenLenkowskyEllen Remmer andChristopher FoxLori M. Efroymson-AguileraWilliam and Edie EnrightArthur C. Frantzreb*Gail L. FreemanJohn* and Audrey LeslieKim M. Gattle*deceased12 Annual Report Lilly Family School of PhilanthropyRobert* and Pauline* PaytonCurt SimicCharles and Angela SmithFrank and Jane WalkerCarter WolfKaren B. WoodJacki ZehnerKarl* and Barbara* Zimmer

ROSSO SOCIETYENDOWED FUNDSPlanned gifts benefittingThese endowed fundsthe Lilly Family School ofsupport the daily work ofPhilanthropythe Lilly Family School ofAnonymousLinda R. BrimmerDwight and AudreyBurlingameDonald A. Campbell, Jr.Gail L. FreemanJames and Karen GreenfieldKirsten Grønbjerg and GerrySuttlesRobert F. HartsookHarriet M. IveyCharles and Virginia*JohnsonJohn* and Audrey LeslieJames J PelleriteMike and Julie PerigoGwendolyn Perry DavisPhilip M. and Elizabeth C.PurcellPatrick and Lisa RooneyMarilyn Ross and BobSchwartzbergDottie C. RossoDavid and Ann SternbergMartha A. TaylorGene and Mary TempelNatasha van BentumWalter R. Winfree, IIIRapp RISE ScholarshipEfroymson Chair inPhilanthropyEileen Lamb O’Gara Chairin Women’s PhilanthropyPhilanthropyElmira Annis RISEScholarshipAngela Sowers DunlavyUndergraduate ScholarshipEndowed Chair inCommunity PhilanthropyArthur Carl FrantzrebProfessorshipErnest W. Wood ScholarshipBinford Chair in CorporateCitizenshipCampbell FamilyEndowmentConlee Family RISEScholarshipDebra Mesch DoctoralFellowship for Research onWomen’s PhilanthropyDickinson/Stone/IlchmanFellowship for GraduateEducationDonikian Family EndowedLectureship in PlannedGivingDottie RossoScholarship FundDr. Debra Mesch Women’sPhilanthropy RISEScholarship 1Dr. Debra Mesch Women’sPhilanthropy RISEScholarship 2Dr. Patrick M. RooneyLeadership in PhilanthropyRISE Scholarship 1Dr. Patrick M. RooneyLeadership in PhilanthropyRISE Scholarship 2Dwight and AudreyBurlingame DoctoralFellowshipEugene R. Tempel DeanshipEugene R. Tempel Fellowshipestablished by P.A. Mack, Jr.Hartsook FellowshipRobert and Carol CarterRISE ScholarshipRobert F. Hartsook Chairin FundraisingRussell G. and Lou AnnMawby RISE ScholarshipRussell G. and Lou AnnMawby RISE Scholarship 2Russell G. and Lou AnnMawby RISE Scholarship 3Russell G. and Lou AnnMawby RISE Scholarship 4Russell G. and Lou AnnMawby RISE Scholarship 5Hartsook Institute forApplied FundraisingResearchHearst Minority FellowshipJim and Alice Rooney RISEScholarshipJohn J. Schwartz, CFRE,and Family GraduateAssistantship, establishedby Walter R. Winfree, IIIJoseph & Matthew PaytonPhilanthropic StudiesLibrary FundRuth Lilly EndowmentPhilanthropySchool of PhilanthropyAlumni Association “SoPAA”ScholarshipStead Family Chair inInternational PhilanthropyTempel Dean’sDiscretionary FundTempel Family RISEScholarshipKaren Lake ButtreyMemorial FundThe Fund Raising SchoolExcellence in Programs,Initiatives and TrainingEndowmentKirsten A. GrønbjergResearch FundThe Glenn Family Chairin PhilanthropyL.H. and Dianne BayleyRISE ScholarshipThomas H. Lake ChairLake Institute onFaith & GivingTimothy L. Seiler AwardKaren Lake ButtreyDirectorshipThomas Lake FundLilly Family School ofPhilanthropy PhilanthropicStudies Undergraduate FundWilliam and Edie EnrightFellowship in PhilanthropicStudiesMelvin Simon Chair inPhilanthropy*deceasedphilanthropy.iupui.edu 13

Our Donors (continued)FOUNDERS’ SOCIETYMr. CF CallihanJohn GlierJane Leighty JustisGiving at the 1,000 level orDonald A. Campbell, Jr.Elizabeth GoreBen F. Kelley, Jr.above to build a foundationJohn M. CarreonKay Sprinkel GraceW.K. Kellogg Foundationfor the new Lilly FamilyCCSBob and Laura GrimmDavid and Melynne KlausDr. Salvatore P. AlaimoCentral Indiana CommunityFoundationKirsten Grønbjerg andGerry SuttlesBrad Kruse andKimberly FaurotCheryl L. AltinkemerSonia Chen and Ian ArnoldTed and Marcia GrossnickleAlejandro S. Amezcua, Ph.DSara and David CobbKathleen O. HackettMarilyn H. andRobert A. KuhnPatricia AnninoAaron Conley, Ed.D.Maureen O’Gara HackettThomas H. LakeAnonymousBarbara and Louis CouryMr. and Mrs. Timothy B.FisherStephanie Lawson andWilliam LawsonThe Atlantic Philanthropies(USA) Inc.Mr. Rob Caito and Ms. DenaRae HancockNathan and Autumn HandSusan L. AxelrodJennifer and David DavisRobert F. HartsookLeslie and KathleenLenkowskyAndrew and Aly BakerMarcela O. de RovzarShakeela and Zia HassanJacqueline and KennethBakerRoberta Donahue andJames WoldJulie A. and J W. Hat

School of Public Policy and Management, and Beijing Normal University's China Philanthropy Research Institute. Students in the school's first study abroad course spent two weeks in Berlin with Associate Professor Greg Witkowski learning about philanthropy and public policy from local experts, lectures, and site visits.