UVA Darden Fall Pillars 2022

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PILLARS

state of the school INSIDE THIS ISSUE
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA | DARDEN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS | ISSUE 28 | FALL 2022 Report From Dean Beardsley PAGE 1 Launch of the Part-Time MBA Program PAGE 4 Hotel on Track for Spring Opening PAGE 8 Fiscal Year 2022 Donor Honor Roll PAGE 15

Fiscal Year 2022 Fundraising Highlights

• $40.5 million in new commitments, the third best year in the Powered by Purpose campaign and fourth best fundraising year ever

• Total campaign funds raised and credited to Darden reached $374 million, 93.5 percent of the way to the first $400 million milestone, with three years to go. Including matching money and gifts to other foundations in support of Darden, the total impact of the campaign to date for Darden is $467 million

• 50 major gifts of more than $100,000, a Darden record, with 17 first-time major donors

• $5.7 million raised by the University of Virginia Darden School Foundation for the Darden Annual Fund to support scholarships; faculty excellence; global impact; diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives; and areas of greatest need

• More than $650,000 raised in a single Day for Darden

• Thir teen new members joined the Principal Donors Society, which recognizes donors at the $1 million and above level

• $5 million in new Planned Giving commitments

• $11.6 million in contributions from alumni who celebrated a Darden reunion, an increase of 19 percent over the annual average during the past five years

• More than $400,000 in gifts and commitments from the Class of 2022

• An anonymous $5 million gift to complete the fundraising for Smith Hall

THE STRENGTH OF THE DARDEN COMMUNITY

Iwas recently asked to and agreed to serve on the governing board of my undergraduate institution, Washington College. This hum bling opportunity to serve reminds me just how strong the pull of alma mater is to many alumni. At Darden, that’s especially true. We continually boast one of the most engaged alumni bases in the world — a global network of 18,000 graduates in more than 90 countries. And this past fiscal year, you strongly supported Darden through the generous gifts of your time, talent and treasure.

Our donors once again delivered a significant year of philanthropy, the highlights of which are listed below. Your investments support every aspect of our student and faculty experience. In this issue of Pillars, you will learn more about how you are making a difference — from funding faculty excellence and student scholarships to improvements to the Darden Grounds and the introduction of our new Part-Time MBA program.

Also, in this issue, we are pleased to recognize so many for their ded icated support in an Honor Roll of donors; however, this is more than just a list of names. Like the record-setting participation in this spring’s Darden Reunion — which drew more than 1,000 alumni and 600 guests — this Honor Roll reflects the Darden community’s strength.

Reading the names and realizing the impact of each one is a reminder that — as Lem Lewis (MBA ’72) said this summer when receiving the Charles C. Abbott Award, the highest award we bestow upon alumni — “Darden [is] a labor of love.” On behalf of everyone here at Darden, we are so grateful that you agree, and the pull of alma mater is so strong.

PROGRESS TOWARD PURPOSE

Powered by Purpose Campaign

Milestone I $400 million Milestone II Priorities Forthcoming by 30 June 2025

Darden’s Powered by Purpose Campaign Priorities

Faculty, Thought Leadership & Curricular Innovation

Scholarships, Financial Aid

Student Experience

Grounds Master Plan, Technology

Darden Annual Fund

1.
2.
&
3.
& Innovation 4.
Darden’s progress toward achieving the full potential of these priorities will accelerate as the School advances toward its fundraising goals for the campaign. As of 31 August 2022 94% $374.5M LETTER FROM THE DARDEN SCHOOL FOUNDATION LEADERSHIP
Sincerely,

DARDEN 2022: EMERGING STRONGER

Life is unscripted. So is leadership.

Having just finished my seventh year as Darden’s dean, amid a complex and chal lenging global environment, I am honored to report, as I do each fall, on the state of the School. The short answer is that it is strong. It is also clear that the responsible leaders Darden develops to improve business and society are needed now more than ever.

Thanks to the Darden community — alumni, friends, faculty, staff and stu dents — and despite challenges, Darden is thriving. We are pursuing excellence in all dimensions and are well-positioned to re alize the full potential of Darden’s mission to deliver unparalleled transformational learning experiences.

The School is executing against the five strategic priorities the community identified for the Darden Worldwide 2026 strategic plan:

• Attracting exceptional students by delivering and enhancing the world’s best, most accessible global education with top ROI

• Attracting, retaining and developing diverse, world-class faculty and staff talent

• Advancing scholarly research and prac titioner-relevant thought leadership

• Expanding competitive infrastructure, global brand and network at UVA and beyond

• Expanding Darden resources via out standing executive education, advance ment, technology and innovation

These priorities inform the pillars of our Powered by Purpose campaign — which is nearing its first milestone with a little more than two-and-a-half years left in the campaign.

(continued on next page)

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COVER STORY

TALENT AND BIG IDEAS THAT CHANGE THE WORLD

We must start with faculty and staff, on whose shoulders Darden is built.

In August, we welcomed 12 new faculty, bringing to 50 the number of faculty hired since I joined. The new est cohort bolsters existing areas of strength and breaks new ground, notably with the addition of the first-ever Bodily Bicentennial Professor in Analytics. The all-star culture of Darden faculty, defined by teaching, research and service, is paramount for the School’s future. This year, The Princeton Review rated Darden the number one MBA faculty for the fifth year in a row.

To support faculty research, we launched this year an Office of Research Services with additional case writers and research assistants. We are also relaunching the Ph.D. program in 2023 and look forward to welcoming doctoral students in two fields of study: Strategy, Ethics and Entrepreneurship and Quantitative Analysis. Re cruiting has begun, and demand looks strong.

This summer, we announced the formation of the Real Estate Initiative — which builds on the School’s longstanding offerings in real estate, asset management and investing from the Richard A. Mayo Center for Asset Management — and the Walentas Professorship in Real Estate. The initiative represents a significant accel eration of opportunity for Darden students who wish to pursue careers in real estate by providing a distinct offering among leading MBA programs.

Darden faculty members have received multiple prestigious teaching awards in recent months, with recognitions coming from the University and around the world. (Learn more about these top honors on Page 7.)

Darden staff also support and power the School’s thought-leadership efforts expertly. Darden Ideas

to Action, for example, connects readers with leading research and the latest thinking from the School’s faculty and other experts. All told, Darden’s commu nications channels reached more than half a million readers last year.

THE BEST STUDENT AND LEARNING EXPERIENCE

Last spring, aligning with our commitment to global education and thanks to the Batten Worldwide Scholar ship, more than 300 Darden students traveled to 10 dif ferent international locations. It was the most extensive single global offering in the School’s history and unique among peers.

Darden also continues to evolve the student expe rience. The student club Darden Capital Management, which offers hands-on experience in asset manage ment, introduced a $1 million fund focused on real estate — bringing the total Darden School Foundation assets under student management to $30 million. Also introduced this spring is a new dual degree with the UVA School of Architecture, alongside its master’s in urban and environmental planning.

In August, we welcomed 551 students of the now three formats of the MBA: 349 to the Full-Time MBA in Charlottesville, 134 to the Executive MBA (which has a Global Executive MBA option) and 68 to the new PartTime MBA based in Rosslyn — a strong outcome for the program’s inaugural year. We also welcomed to Rosslyn 59 students to the Master of Science in Business An alytics, which we deliver with UVA’s McIntire School of Commerce. The cohort of our flagship executive education program for senior leaders — The Executive Program, which graduated in June — was the largest in several years and signals evergreen interest in Darden’s leadership and management programs.

The MBA admissions cycle was highly competitive. I am proud that we saw a near-record number of appli cations in what was a significant down year for many other top schools. For the Full-Time MBA, one student is admitted for about every eight applications.

Inclusive excellence remains a priority. Recruiting women and under-represented minorities this year was challenging, as peer schools ramped up their efforts and scholarship offerings. The Darden School Founda tion helped address the situation through a current-use women’s scholarship challenge and new programs for students such as Impact Fellows and Breakthrough Scholars, the latter focusing on asset management.

The Full-Time Class of 2022 enjoyed in-person graduation in May, followed by record career outcomes and historical highs for salary and signing bonuses. The most popular hiring industries were consulting,

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finance, technology, consumer packaged goods and health care. Several rankings agencies called out Darden again for its employment outcomes, including The Princeton Review, U.S. News & World Report and Poets & Quants, which named Darden graduates third among MBA programs for lifetime ROI of almost $3 million, behind Wharton and Kellogg.

AMBITIOUS GROUNDS

Darden is an oasis of learning due in part to its beauti ful Goodwin Family Grounds in Charlottesville. Work continues on the School’s master plan to ensure that our buildings create the setting for a best-in-class experience and generate ongoing revenue to sustain future growth.

Donors unlocked matching funds to complete financing for C. Ray Smith Hall — enabling renovations to the alumni hall and home to the Darden School Foundation and Sands Institute for Lifelong Learning. The new boutique hotel and conference center, which will be operated by Kimpton when it opens in spring 2023, is on time and budget. (Learn more on Page 8.) Both Smith Hall and the new hotel will be LEEDcertified — an internationally recognized marker of environmentally sustainable building practices.

Finally, in June, the University of Virginia Board of Visitors Buildings and Grounds Committee accepted a proposal from the Darden School to add a student housing project to UVA’s Capital Plan. Then, at its next meeting in September, the board approved the re mainder of Darden’s refreshed master plan, including renovations to the faculty building and student spaces which have not been updated in more than a quarter century. (Learn more about this early positive step in a comprehensive vetting process for these projects on Page 9.)

RESOURCES TO DO GREAT AND GOOD

None of this would be possible without financial resources and the philanthropic generosity of Darden donors. Darden is emerging from the pandemic in a strong position because of the incredible momentum and solid investments we had going into the crisis. We ended the fiscal year on budget. We have appropriate reserves. Due to the capital campaign and UVIMCO’s performance, our endowments are the strongest they have been in School history.

However, we know that endowments take time to grow and that we have more to do with two-and-a-half years until the Powered by Purpose campaign’s conclu sion in 2025. We also recognize that the market is in creasingly volatile and will be for some time. Darden’s focus continues to be on raising funding to support excellence and position Darden for decades of success as one of the world’s preeminent business schools.

In so doing, it is our intention to do great and good, in concert with the University and in support of our mission.

Life is unscripted. And so is leadership. Together, we will manage through it and make Darden the best it can be.

On the Cover — Multiple Paths to the Same Summit: The Darden MBA

In a historic first for Darden, incoming students from all three MBA formats — Full-Time, Part-Time and Executive with a Global Executive MBA option — came together on Grounds in August to begin their academic journey. Representatives from these classes are pictured alongside the faculty members leading these formats.

(rear row, left to right) Yael Grushka-Cockayne, Altec Styslinger Foundation Bicentennial Chair in Business Administration and senior associate dean for professional degree programs; Mariam Eatedali, part-time MBA student, Class of 2025; Mark Kington, full-time MBA student, Class of 2023; Hieu Le, part-time MBA student, Class of 2025. (front row, left to right) Matthew Boyd, Pharm.D., executive MBA student, Class of 2023; Lauren Powlovich, MD, executive MBA student, Class of 2023; Tom Steenburgh, Richard S. Reynolds Professor of Business Administration and senior associate dean for the full-time MBA program; Vashti Barran, full-time MBA student, Class of 2023.

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The campaign empowers Darden to nurture the outstanding faculty of the future and develop insights for leaders facing real-world business challenges.

Q&A:

DARDEN GROWS IN D.C. WITH LAUNCH OF PART-TIME MBA

Senior Associate Dean for Professional Degree Programs Yael Grushka-Cockayne leads degree programs for a growing group at Darden: working professionals. Nearly 400 students are now working toward an MBA or Master of Science in Business Analytics at UVA Darden D.C. Metro in Rosslyn, Virginia. In August, Darden built upon its success with the Executive MBA it offers in the D.C. region by launching a second format of the MBA: the Part-Time MBA.

The current bustle in the Washington, D.C., area represents steady and substantial growth in a market that launched with 70 Executive MBA students in Rosslyn with the 2017–18 academic year.

Grushka-Cockayne shares her thoughts on the state of the professional degree programs and why now was the right time to launch a new format of the Darden MBA.

TELL US ABOUT THE PART-TIME MBA.

We launched the Part-Time MBA for D.C.-area students interested in the Darden MBA who also want a bit more flexibility in completion time. Unlike our lockstep Executive MBA, which has a Global Executive MBA option, and our Full-Time MBA delivered in Charlottes ville, the Part-Time students can com plete the program on a slightly slower timeline, likely in about 33 months. These students will continue to work while earning an MBA, and skew slightly younger than our Executive MBAs, who also typically work full time.

WHAT NEED DO YOU SEE THE PART-TIME MBA FILLING?

The Part-Time program brings flexibil ity and optionality. It is simply another path to the Darden MBA. By taking two courses a quarter instead of three, perhaps some will manage a slightly more demanding work environment, for instance. We’ve tried to design the pro gram to be both flexible and predictable, with a mix of weekday evening in-person programming and synchronous online learning that allows students to plan well in advance.

As we’ve thought about growth at Darden, we identified several different

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FACULTY SUPPORT

paths, and the Part-Time MBA seemed like the one that most closely met our mission to educate, inspire and trans form; with our D.C. area location, the audience was clearly there, as well.

HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE THE INITIAL DEMAND?

We have enrolled an incredible first cohort. We know the D.C. area well, so that has helped, but so have the pandemic-influenced trends of this push toward greater flexibility and a strong job market. Many young people would love to pursue an MBA but don’t feel they can walk away from a great job at the moment. A Part-Time MBA or an Executive MBA allows these students to invest in themselves and maintain or even accelerate their professional trajectory.

HOW DID PHILANTHROPIC SUPPORT HELP LAUNCH THE PART-TIME MBA PROGRAM?

A lot of what we do relies on the gener osity of our donors, and with the PartTime MBA program, the support was helpful at every stage of the way. That includes giving us the literal space — the Sands Family Grounds in Rosslyn is a huge draw, and our identity in the area has been strengthened by it — and the opportunity as faculty members to work on it. Philanthropy has helped from the beginning, with investigating the landscape, providing funds for program design and marketing efforts and all the way to scholarships for incoming students. The launch of the Part-Time format has definitely benefited from generous and visionary philanthropy.

As we’ve thought about growth at Darden, we identified several different paths, and the Part-Time MBA seemed like the one that most closely met our mission to educate, inspire and transform; with our D.C. area location, the audience was clearly there, as well.”

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Members of the inaugural Part-Time MBA class began their Darden journey in Charlottesville in August alongside their Full-Time and Executive MBA classmates before shifting their studies to Rosslyn.

DARDEN COMMUNITY REMEMBERS PROFESSOR JOHN COLLEY, MOVES TO FURTHER HIS LEGACY

In May, friends and family cele brated the life and impact of Pro fessor John Colley at a memorial service at Old Cabell Hall.

The event was delayed almost two years due to the coronavirus pandemic and held at the end of the first in-per son Darden Reunion Weekend in three years, allowing hundreds of former students and friends to come together to celebrate Colley’s incredible impact.

A parade of former students, col leagues and friends offered remem brances of Colley, many about the fre quent basketball games he and Professor Alec Horniman played against students at UVA’s Memorial Gymnasium over the years or returning to Darden each year to help teach in Colley’s courses.

Dean Scott Beardsley noted during his welcome remarks that, at Colley’s retirement, a group of former students stepped up to complete the endowment for the Darden Jefferson Fellowship program in his honor and Darden

Professor Jim Detert holds a chair in his name. Other legacies established in his honor supporting students include the Colley Raven Scholarships and the John Colley Award.

“In so many ways, his spirit shines on,” Beardsley said.

Darden and UVA have agreed to name an iconic space at the Darden School in Colley’s honor. The skylight dome at the top of PepsiCo Forum in Saunders Hall will now be known as the Colley Cupola.

Associated with this new space, the Darden School Foundation and Darden School aim to raise $5 million in honor of Colley, which will be designated to the new Colley Faculty Excellence Fund.

For more information and to support this ef fort in honor of Colley, contact Carter Hoerr at hoerrc@darden.virginia.edu.

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Darden Professor Jacquie Doyle (MBA ’89; Ph.D. ’95), a former student of Professor John Colley who now carries on his legacy teaching classes they developed together over the years, offered the closing keynote at the celebration of Colley’s life.
In so many ways, his spirit shines on.”
— Dean Scott Beardsley
FACULTY SUPPORT

Darden Faculty Members Receive Top Honors

Darden faculty members have received multiple prestigious teaching awards in recent months, with recognitions coming from both the University and around the world. Highlights of recent faculty awards include:

Ed Freeman, University Professor and Elis and Signe Olsson Professor of Business Administration, received the Thomas Jefferson Award, the highest honor given to a member of the Univer sity community. Freeman’s award, given for his hugely influential body of work around stakeholder theory, recognizes a faculty member who has demonstrated excellence in scholarship, research, and creative works and a record of creation or dissemination of knowledge that has contributed substantially to the educa tion and development of students.

Renowned for his role in the Darden classroom, Freeman is one of the few faculty members to hold the title of University Professor and teaches on a variety of topics throughout the Darden MBA program. He also serves as aca demic director for the Institute for Busi ness in Society and as course head for First Year Business Ethics at Darden.

Previous Thomas Jefferson Award winners at Darden include Professors Alec Horniman and John Colley, who both received the Thomas Jefferson Award for service to the University. Col gate Darden received the award in 1958.

Marc Lipson, Robert F. Vandell Profes sor of Business Administration, received an All-University Teaching Award, which recognizes a professor who goes above and beyond in creating meaning ful learning environments. A professor in the Finance area at Darden, Lipson was cited for his commitment to student development and aiding in curriculum enhancement, among other factors.

Lipson has been leading the Darden School in what he calls “studentcentered learning” since arriving in 2005. His supporters said he has the “ability to get students to engage with difficult problems, experiment with solutions, and in the process understand markets and organizations.”

Lipson also developed “Darden Before Darden,” a pre-matriculation program that supports students from diverse backgrounds to acquaint them with the School and Darden’s methods.

Saras Sarasvathy, Paul M. Hammaker Professor in Business Administration, received the Global Award for Entrepreneurship Research in Sweden. The prize committee noted that effectuation had long since reached beyond entre preneurial research and was now widely adopted in fields such as marketing, strategy and international business.

Rather than trying to predict the future, Sarasvathy says, “Successful entrepreneurs have learned the inverse lesson — that just with things already within your control in the present, you can co-create the future, instead of pre dicting it. That is thinking effectually.”

Sarasvathy’s research illuminates both how entrepreneurs make their decisions and how the entrepreneurial process unfolds, influencing thousands and changing the way business schools teach the subject. She has also shown a remarkable commitment to engaging with the global entrepreneurship com munity, and her influence in the field is pervasive.

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GROUNDS

DARDEN HOTEL ON TRACK FOR SPRING OPENING

The campaign allows Darden’s Grounds to set the standard for world-class business education and uniquely reflect the School’s values, interests and purpose.

Construction of the new hotel at Darden is more than three-quarters complete, keeping the project on track for a spring opening. Its name will be revealed this fall.

The hotel, owned by the Darden School Foundation and operated by boutique hotelier Kimpton Hotels & Restaurants, will support Darden’s academic mission. It will host students and programs for all MBA formats, as well as faculty confer ences and symposia. It will serve as the hub of Darden’s Executive Education & Lifelong Learning programs. It will also offer the UVA and Charlottesville com munities a place for conferences, celebrations, and other meetings and events.

The hotel will be open to all, and the funds it generates through the Darden School Foundation will support scholarships and the School’s mission of student and faculty excellence.

The five-story building will feature 199 guest rooms, including 12 suites. Ame nities for guests will include morning coffee and tea service, an evening social hour, in-room yoga mats, an on-site fitness center, complimentary bicycles and pet-friendly policies.

The exterior silhouette of the hotel, designed by Cooper Carry architects, is in Jeffersonian style to blend into University Grounds and will meet specifications for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED, certification.

The hotel will feature a taproom and a ground-level restaurant with an outdoor terrace. It will house approximately 11,500 square feet of meeting spaces

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Types of Naming Opportunities Available

HOTEL AND CONFERENCE CENTER

Featured Spaces

Academic Spaces

Outdoor Spaces

Event and Meeting Spaces

Arrival Points

Hospitality

Guest Rooms and Suites

ARBORETUM AND BOTANICAL GARDENS

Aquatic Oases

Communal Spaces

Arrival Points

Varietal Thematic Gardens

Walks and Trails

Woodlands and Clearings

Visit the “Darden Grounds Master Plan, Technology & Innovation” section of the Powered by Purpose campaign website (giving.darden.virginia.edu) for specific naming opportunities and giving amounts.

University Approves Darden Plan to Study Student Housing, Refreshed Master Plan

In June, the University of Virginia Board of Visitors Buildings and Grounds Committee accepted a proposal from the Darden School to add a student housing project to UVA’s Capital Plan. Then, at its next meeting in September, the board approved the remainder of Darden’s refreshed master plan, including renovations to the faculty building and student spaces which have not been updated in more than a quarter century. The overall objective is to improve the Darden residential experience, advance the academic mission, address strategic needs, improve inclusion and make Darden more competitive.

These votes are an early positive step in a comprehensive vetting process. More architectural drawings to ensure economic and experience optimization, development of a public-private partnership, and approval of a business plan — among many other steps — are required before any construction could begin.

and classrooms for educational gatherings. In addition, the hotel boasts a 6,000-plus-square-foot ballroom with the capacity to seat 425 guests.

Another feature of the facility will be a 5-acre botanical garden and arboretum on the hotel grounds, with a stream running through it. The gardens connect to the Rivanna Trail and will offer outdoor space and continuity to North Grounds.

The spirit of philanthropy is evident in the hotel proj ect, and naming opportunities remain for many indoor and outdoor spaces, both large and small.

Leisure reservations will open up soon. For event inquiries or information regarding group bookings, a new website will debut soon.

For information on making a gift to support the hotel, restaurants, arboretum and botanical gardens, please contact Samantha Hartog, interim vice president for advancement, at hartogs@darden.virginia.edu.

The full-scale proposed housing project (with sites on the north and south end of the Darden Grounds) could provide up to 440 beds, which will be programmed further to accommodate the amenities and needs of Darden’s students. The project might be phased, and although it will help to address a housing shortage, Darden students will still require other housing in proximate locations such as Ivy Gardens. The plan also includes new recreation amenities and creates new pedestrian-scaled brick paths lined with shade trees.

The University’s annual capital planning process ensures that major capital projects — defined as new construction, renovation, or infrastructure projects with budgets of $5 million or more — align with broader institutional priorities. The University updates its Capital Plan annually to add new projects, remove ones that are no longer a priority and prioritize others using established criteria. Naming opportunities for housing-related philanthropy are under development.

Now that the Darden student housing project is approved for UVA’s Capital Plan, the Buildings and Grounds Committee must review and approve the concept, site, design guide lines and schematic design. Additionally, as other individual projects within Darden’s broader master plan concept are designed, programmed, funded and presented, the School and the Darden School Foundation Board of Trustees are ex pected to advance capital plan recommendations to the UVA Board of Visitors for inclusion in the Major Capital Plan.

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ANNUAL FUND EMPOWERS DONORS WITH NEW GIVING PRIORITIES

Campaign support for the Darden Annual Fund enables the School to remain innova tive, invest in top strategic priorities and respond nimbly to emerging opportunities.

The Darden Annual Fund is making it easier for donors to power the School’s strategic priorities. Starting this fall, donors can prioritize their annual fund gifts in the following areas:

• Faculty, Thought Leadership & Curriculum

• Scholarships, Financial Aid & Student Experience

• Sustainable Grounds

• Area of Greatest Need

These areas correspond to the pri orities of Darden’s Powered by Purpose campaign, providing an opportunity for all donors to support the needs of our students, faculty and community more directly. Also, gifts to each area advance inclusive excellence efforts — invest ments that move the School and global business forward.

As always, every gift to the Darden Annual Fund matters, no matter the amount. And importantly, annual giving continues to have an immediate impact, empowering the School to say “yes” to new ideas while providing foundational

support to programming essential to the Darden experience. As a result of this flexibility — in addition to the new, streamlined giving priorities — annual fund investments will more clearly amplify our endowment.

Many of Darden’s best ideas — now either supported by endowed funds or part of the School’s core offerings — started as initiatives of the annual fund. For example, the annual fund provided market research that helped launch the Executive and Part-Time MBA programs. Also, scholarships for inclusive excel lence offered by the Darden School Foun dation started and continue as efforts of the annual fund — including those to recruit under-represented minorities, women and international students.

Kick-starting initiatives with the human and financial capital to build momentum and measure success enables Darden to develop sustainable programs with lasting student and faculty engage ment. And now, with Darden Annual Fund priorities helping donors power their purpose, the impact on Darden is limitless.

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ALUMNI MEMBERS OF THE HICKORY CLUB

MEMBERS OF THE DARDEN SOCIETY

least

least

11PILLARSFALL 2022 • Faculty, Thought Leadership & Curriculum • Scholarships, Financial Aid & Student Experience • Sustainable Grounds • Area of Greatest Need NEW ANNUAL GIVING PRIORITIES Darden Annual Fund Fiscal Year 2022 Highlights $5.7 MILLION RAISED 4,000 ALUMNI DONORS 32% ALUMNI GIVING PARTICIPATION RATE 899 ALUMNI
(recognizing those who gave gifts of at
$2,500 per year, or at
$1,000 per year for those in the four most recent graduating classes) 2,406
(recognizing those who have given each year consistently for a minimum of three years)

DARDEN COMMUNITY CELEBRATES POWER OF SCHOLARSHIPS

Above: Sukari Brown (Class of 2023), a recip ient of the Consortium for Graduate Study in Management Fellowship through the Darden School Foundation. Above Right: Former Prudential Chairman and CEO John Strangfeld (MBA ’77)

Darden celebrated the power of scholarships at the annual scholarship cel ebration in April, with the community reflecting on the more than 90 new scholarships created since the start of the Powered by Purpose campaign.

Full-Time MBA student Sukari Brown (Class of 2023), a recipient of the Con sortium for Graduate Study in Management Fellowship through the Darden School Foundation, explained how a health condition helped power her commitment to changing the world.

“My condition is something a lot of medical professionals still don’t understand, and the only reason is a lack of funding,” said Brown. “So I wanted to take my experience in construction and consulting and private equity and come to business school and fill in the gaps in order to make myself a better investor, a better friend, a better partner and a better family member.”

Former Prudential Chair and CEO John Strangfeld (MBA ’77) explained his passion for funding scholarships for students with military experience. A recent planned gift by Strangfeld will ensure the School has resources to support the military community for years to come.

At the event, Strangfeld drew an ovation when he announced that he had just learned one of the early Strangfeld scholars had recently made a seven-figure donation to create a new full scholarship to attend Darden.

“The idea is that the full circle is great,” Strangfeld said. “How you choose to approach it is up to your own individual ideas.”

To support a scholarship, contact Stephanie Brady at bradys@darden.virginia.edu or +1-207-333-2517.

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Campaign support creates scholarships and an unmatched student experience that sparks a virtuous circle in which top student talent draws top faculty, top rankings and top resources.

SCHOLARSHIP MATCH PROGRAM SUPPORTS WOMEN@DARDEN INITIATIVE

As the top business schools ramp up efforts to land top female students, the University of Virginia Darden School Foundation and generous Darden School of Business alumni are positioning the School as a leading destination for women.

The Foundation has announced a women’s scholarship challenge match program, powered by $2.5 million in donations that serve as gift-matching funds. New commitments of $10,000 or more made to the Foundation to support women’s scholarships will be matched 1:1 until the matching funds run out. To date, a total of $3.3 million dollars has been secured for the women’s schol arship challenge, with $1.7 million in remaining matching funds to award.

The program is a powerful tool for recruiting women to Darden. A gift of $150,000 provides funding for a fulltuition scholarship for two years and unlocks the matching funds to support a second student with a full-tuition scholarship. A $500,000 gift supports three full-tuition scholarships for two years or five partial-tuition scholarships, which is doubled thanks to the match.

To support the women’s scholarship

and unlock matching funds,

Stephanie Brady at

Natalia Alvarez Diaz (MBA ’22) received the 2022 Edie Hunt Inspiration Award, given by the Forté Foundation in Los Angeles, during its annual MBA Leadership Conference this summer. Forté is a nonprofit working to launch women into successful and significant careers — and the Hunt Award is given annually to an MBA who has contributed to her school or community by advanc ing women in business.

While president of Darden’s Graduate Women in Business organization, Alvarez Diaz helped make changes within Darden’s administration to broaden women’s exposure to less traditional career opportunities in business, secure more scholarships for women, particularly of under-represented minorities, and increase sensitivity among Darden’s Career Center staff about the nuances of identity in pursuing a business career.

To hear from Alvarez Diaz about her Darden experience and the importance of scholarships in recruiting women and underrepresented minorities to the School, watch the video linked below.

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challenge
contact
bradys@darden.virginia.edu or +1-207-333-2517
Darden Alumna Recognized for Women’s Scholarship Advocacy

GENOVESE AWARDS TURN 30

The Frank E. Genovese (MBA ’74) Second Year Fellowship entered its 30th year in 2022, with four recipients — Class of 2023 students Emily Corelli, Rachel Hurst, Brian Krentz and Mathieu Philie — joining a network of 78 other Genovese fellows.

First Year students in the top 30 percent of the class interested in working as general managers or wishing to own their own businesses are eligible to apply for the award.

“I am extremely honored to be chosen by Frank and the selection committee for this award,” said Krentz, who interned with the biotech startup Evozyne over the summer. “I am excited to follow in the tradition of Darden students making tremendous impact in the world.”

Speaking at the April event at which the awards were presented, Genovese spoke of the joy in giving back to good causes and encouraged students to give early for maximum impact. Recently, three previous Genovese Fellows took up the charge, launching scholarship initiatives of their own.

Genovese has been an active presence at the Darden School for decades. An Abbott Award recipient and former Darden School Foundation Board of Trustees member, Genovese has often returned to lecture in courses such as “Acquisition of Closely Held Enterprises.”

Scholarship Gift Enhances AccessDarden Program

AccessDarden — a need-based merit scholarship program for students in all three MBA formats — is attracting strong interest from alumni who want to pay forward the transformational Darden experience.

John O. (MBA ’82) and Frances Downing recently established a scholarship as part of the program, further enhancing its impact on Darden students from all backgrounds.

Once admitted to Darden on merit, students can apply for scholarship support based on their financial need, which is determined by considering factors such as income, savings and assets. Based on eligibility, the maximum amount offered currently is $20,000 per year, roughly 20 percent of a student’s cost of attendance.

Over time, with further donor support, it is expected that grant amounts will increase.

The John O. (MBA ’82) and Frances Downing Scholarship is a strong vote of confidence in Darden’s ambitious goal that no student graduate with more than the cost of one year in debt, including need-based grants and scholarships.

For more information on how you, too, can invest in AccessDarden, please contact Stephanie Brady at bradys@darden.virginia.edu or +1-207-333-2517.

14 PILLARS FALL 2022 SCHOLARSHIPS
(left to right) Darden School Foundation President Michael J. Woodfolk (TEP ’05), Emily Corelli (Class of 2023), Rachel Hurst (Class of 2023), Brian Krentz (Class of 2023), Frank E. Genovese (MBA ’74), Mathieu Philie (Class of 2023), Darden Dean Scott C. Beardsley
15PILLARSFALL 2022 Financial Results Page 16 HONOR ROLL Principal Donors Society Page 18 Principal and Major Gifts Page 20 Cornerstone Society Page 21 Darden Society Page 22 Leading Supporters of the Darden Annual Fund Page 30 Reunion Giving Page 32 Corporate and Foundation Giving Page 33 Fiscal Year 2022 Honor Roll

Fiscal Year 2022 Financial Results

SOURCES OF FUNDS

54% Tuition and Fees: Full-Time MBA, Executive MBA, MSBA and Ph.D. programs

18%

Restricted Endowment Draws and Current-Use Gifts: Endowment and current-use restricted gifts from alumni, corporations, foundations and friends

14% Executive Education & Lifelong Learning and Hospitality: Non-degree offerings and Darden’s dining facilities

10% Auxiliary Businesses and Other: Darden Business Pub lishing, Darden Course Materials Management, massive open online courses, conferences and capital reserves

4% Darden Annual Fund

USES OF FUNDS

52% Student Experience: Faculty, degree programs, scholarships, career services, admissions, student affairs, technology, financial aid and the registrar

12% Executive Education & Lifelong Learning and Hospitality: Non-degree offerings and Darden’s dining facilities

12% Building and Grounds: Utilities and maintenance related to the Darden Grounds

9% Research: Centers of Excellence (Batten Institute, Center for Global Initiatives, Institute for Business in Society, Olsson Center for Applied Ethics, Richard A. Mayo Center for Asset Management and Sands Institute for Lifelong Learning) and general faculty research support

6% University Assessment: Funds provided by Darden to the University of Virginia to support University-wide overhead costs

5% Administration: Finance, human resources, compliance and the dean’s office

3% External Relations: Outreach and partnerships with Darden’s global alumni network, donors, media, corporations and other important stakeholders that advance the mission of the Darden School

Auxiliary Businesses, Other and Contribution to Reserves: Darden Business Publishing, Darden Course Materials Man agement,

open online courses, University funding and conferences

16 PILLARS FALL 2022
2%
massive
SOURCES $143.4M 54% 18% 14% 10% 4% 52% 12% 9% 12% 6% 5% 3% 2% USES $143.4M

ENDOWMENT

37% Scholarship endowments provide aid for students in Darden’s degree programs.

29% Centers of Excellence endowments support the Batten Institute, Center for Global Initiatives, Institute for Business in Society, Olsson Center for Applied Ethics, Richard A. Mayo Center for Asset Management and Sands Institute for Lifelong Learning.

Endowed

faculty

17PILLARSFALL 2022
21%
professorships provide direct
support to the School. 13% Other includes those funds used for other purposes, including unrestricted funds to support the dean’s highest priorities and faculty excellence. ENDOWMENT $808M 37% 29% 21% 13%

Honor Roll

Principal Donors Society

Founded in 2003, the Principal Donors Society recog nizes those who support Darden at the highest level of lifetime giving. Through philanthropic support of $1 million or more, Principal Donors have truly estab lished themselves as the School’s most loyal stewards. Darden honors this extraordinary philanthropy on the entablature frieze of the Rosenblum Foyer and Pep siCo Forum, as well as donor recognition walls in the South Lounge and at the Sands Family Grounds at UVA Darden D.C. Metro.

Jefferson Level: $25M & Above Anonymous * Frank Batten Sr. + * David M. LaCross ’78 & Kathleen O. LaCross Frank M. Sands Sr. ’63 + & Marjorie R. Sands + David C. Walentas ’64 & Jane Walentas +

Madison Level: $10M–24.9M Altec/Styslinger Foundation George A. L. David ’67 * Robert J. Hugin ’85 & Kathleen Hugin Richard A. Mayo ’68 & Sara Page Mayo * The Batten Foundation George S. Tahija ’86 & Laurel Tahija

Monroe Level: $5M–9.9M Anonymous H. William Coogan Jr. ’82 & Theresa Kost Riddle James A. Cooper ’84 & Stacy L. Cooper Frank E. Genovese ’74 & Susan L. Genovese * W. Hunter Goodwin III + ’95 & Crystal H. Goodwin Kirsti W. Goodwin ’02 & Matthew T. Goodwin Robert D. Hardie MBA ’95, PhD ’99 & Molly G. Hardie Martina Hund-Mejean ’88 & Bruno J. Mejean Thomas A. Saunders III ’67 + & Mary Jordan Saunders * John R. Strangfeld Jr. ’77 Robert C. Woodworth ’73 & Joyce Woodworth

Rotunda Level: $2.5M–4.9M W.L. Lyons Brown III ’87 & Susanna S. Brown Terrence D. Daniels ’70 & Courtnay S. Daniels * Colgate W. Darden Jr. + & Constance Darden + * U. Bertram Ellis Jr. ’79 John W. Glynn Jr. JD ’65 & Barbara A. Glynn In Honor of the Class of 1957 Gary T. Jones ’74 & Elizabeth Rhett Jones * Doug Lebda ’14 & Megan Lebda Lemuel E. Lewis ’72 & Sandra Lewis H. Eugene Lockhart Jr. ’74 & Terry J. Lockhart * John G. Macfarlane III ’79 & Dudley W. Macfarlane * Donald E. Morel Jr. TEP ’97 & Lauren Morel Michael E. O’Neill ’74 & Patricia J. O’Neill

18 PILLARS FALL 2022

Frank M. Sands Jr. ’94

James W. Todd ’64 + & Sharon K. Todd * Steven C. Voorhees ’80 & Celia Voorhees Thomas R. Watjen ’81 & Nanette A. Watjen Donald M. Wilkinson ’66 + & Lucinda P. Wilkinson + *

Colonnade Level: $1M–2.4M Anonymous (3)

Kirby Clarke Adams ’79

Beverley W. Armstrong ’66 + * & Carol C. Armstrong Stephen E. Bachand ’63 & Phyllis Bachand Thomas J. Baltimore Jr. ’91 & Hillary D. Baltimore Frank Batten Jr. ’84 & Aimee C. Batten * Dorothy Neal Batten ’90 *

E. Thayer Bigelow Jr. ’67 * William D. Cannon Jr. ’68 + & Nancy Cannon David Cheek ’79 & Kathy Cheek

James S. Cheng ’87 & Jeanette Wang Cheng Gordon Crawford ’71 & Dona Crawford Hugh Cullman

William K. Daniel II ’91 & Robin W. Daniel Robert G. Doumar Jr. ’88 & Noelle C. Doumar Charles G. Duffy III ’87 * Louis G. Elson ’90

Lawton W. Fitt ’79 & James I. McLaren * John D. Fowler Jr. ’84 & Corey P. Fowler

Peter M. Grant II ’86 & Colleen Jennings Grant Bret W. Holden ’88 & Jeanne Marie Holden

Thomas V. Inglesby ’84 & Joan Weaver Inglesby John B. Jung ’84 & Connie B. Jung

Peter D. Kiernan ’79 & Eaddo H. Kiernan Martin L. Killgallon II ’72 & Deborah Killgallon * William C. Killgallon TEP ’76 & Susan Killgallon * Mark J. Kington ’88 & Ann A. Kington

Philip W. Knisely ’78 & Patricia Knisely Robert E. Lamb II ’70 & Charlotte Lamb Bruce R. Lauritzen ’67

Lawrence Lewis Jr. + & Janet P. Lewis + * Daniel S. Lynch ’84 & Elizabeth H. Lynch ’84 Thomas C. MacAvoy + & Margaret M. MacAvoy + J. Huston McCollough II ’75 & Joan S. McCollough *

Barclay McFadden III ’76 & Jane Perry McFadden

The Melville Foundation

Albert N. Morgan Jr. ’72 & Carla H. Morgan J. Byrne Murphy ’86 & Pamela Murphy

Morris S. Smith Foundation, Trustees Sterling, Larry and Mei Franklin Marshall N. Morton ’72 & Caroline Morton Paul A. Murphy + G. Ruffner Page Jr. ’86 & Virginia White Page Zhiyuan “Jerry” Peng ’03 & Ying Hu Harry T. Rein ’73 & Susan D. Rein Douglas A. Scovanner ’79 & Mary M. Scovanner Mary Buckle Searle ’86 & Stewart Searle Jack T. Siegel ’67 + & Alice H. Siegel * Henry F. Skelsey ’84 & Susan W. Skelsey Robert W. Smith ’87 & Teresa Smith Shannon G. Smith ’90 Allan W. Staats ’62 + & Barbara G. Staats E. Roe Stamps IV & Penny Stamps + Wallace Stettinius ’59 & Mary Gray Stettinius Henri A. M. Termeer ’73 + & Belinda Herrera-Termeer Bruce R. Thompson ’90 Warren M. Thompson ’83 William P. Utt ’84 & Carolyn S. Utt Bradley J. Waitzer ’87 & Terry Waitzer David N. Webb ’77 & Nancy Shepherd Webb ’77 Thomas E. Worrell Jr. ’71 *

Founding Members

Deceased

19PILLARSFALL 2022
*
+

Principal and Major Gifts

Principal and major gift donors continue to power the innovations that matter most within the Darden experience to new heights. Their generosity is essential to advancing key priorities through the Powered by Purpose campaign: faculty, thought leadership and curricular innovation; scholarships, financial aid and student experiences; Darden Grounds Master Plan, technology and innovation; and emerging strategic priorities of the School.

This list recognizes donors who made cumulative commitments of $100,000 or more between 1 July 2021 and 30 June 2022.

$5M & Above Anonymous

$2.5M–$4.9M

Mark J. Styslinger & Jennifer O. Styslinger

Steven C. Voorhees ’80 & Celia Voorhees

$1M–$2.49M

James Craig Allison ’82

Robert Scott Creighton ’82

Hugh Cullman

John Osborne Downing ’82 & Frances Skiddy Downing Robert John Hugin ’85

Richard Arthur Mayo ’68 & Sara Page Mayo

Donald E. Morel Jr. TEP ’97 & Lauren Morel

$500,000–$999,999

John R. Belk ’86 & Kimberly D. Belk Charles G. Duffy III ’87

Bret W. Holden ’88 & Jeanne Marie Zavertnik Holden J. Byrne Murphy ’86 & Pamela Murphy Owen K. Rankin & Michele J. Rankin

Susan Nancy Sobbott ’90 Allan W. Staats ’62 + & Barbara G. Staats

$250,000–$499,999

Anonymous (2)

Stephen Eugene Bachand ’63

W.L. Lyons Brown III ’87 & Susanna S. Brown Nancy B. Chappell & Samuel M. Chappell III ’82 David Cheek ’79 & Kathy Cheek William Kenyon Daniel II ’91 & Robin W. Daniel John D. Fowler Jr. ’84 & Corey P. Fowler Carson Gleberman ’86 & Joseph Gleberman Kirsti W. Goodwin ’02 & Matthew T. Goodwin Martina Hund-Mejean ’88 & Bruno J. Mejean Kimberly B. Morrish ’93

Matthias Daniel Renner ’86 & Linda G. Renner Douglas Allen Scovanner ’79 & Mary M. Scovanner E. Roe Stamps IV

$100,000–$249,999

Anonymous (2)

Daniel Abdun-Nabi Nina Abdun-Nabi ’82 + Richard E. Berry ’94

Mary Buckle Searle ’86 & Stewart A. Searle III Guillaume M. Cuvelier ’91 Franklin S. Edmonds Jr. ’95 & Pamela F. Edmonds John M. Fruehwirth ’96 & Christine A. Fruehwirth ’96 John P. Hodgson ’87 & Malia Blythe Jeffers John K. Keppler ’02 & Dianne Keppler Elizabeth H. Lynch ’84 & Daniel Seth Lynch ’84 David T. Pearson ’11 & Sarah M. Pearson Harry T. Rein ’73 & Susan D. Rein Anthony W. Smith ’87 & Elizabeth R. Smith Robert Winston Smith ’87 & Teresa Smith Peter Arthur Stoudt & Alice W. Handy John R. Strangfeld Jr. ’77 Robert Stephen Ukrop ’72 & Jayne B. Ukrop Robert C. Woodworth ’73 & Joyce Woodworth

20 PILLARS FALL 2022

Cornerstone Society

The Cornerstone Society celebrates those who follow in the footsteps of Presidents James Monroe, James Madison and Thomas Jefferson in leaving a legacy through a planned gift to the University of Virginia. Through designations to Darden in wills, living trusts, retirement plans, gifts of life insurance, charitable gift annuities and charitable remainder trusts, members of the Cornerstone Society secure the success of Darden for future generations of purpose-driven leaders.

Anonymous (2)

Nina Abdun-Nabi ’82 +

James C. Allison ’82 & Tracy Allison + Kathryn A. Alsegaf ’93 & Hadi Alsegaf ’93

John E. Baber III ’66 & Ann Baber

Rose R. Barry

David A. Beach ’69 & Carolyn H. Beach

Melvin D. Beale ’76 & Ann J. Beale

Stephen D. Benson ’71 & Victoria F. Benson

Mary K. Boler ’88

C. Clinton Bolte ’72 & Mary T. Bolte

Lawrence Brett III ’79 & Robbin A. Brett

S. Gregg Brooks ’09 & Chandra Brooks

David P. Campbell Jr. ’95 & Jennifer Campbell

William Daniel Cannon Jr. ’68 + & Nancy Cannon

Robert Huntington Carlile ’66

Ronald C. Carlock Jr. ’93 & Kristin R. Carlock ’93

Thomas Yates Catlett ’86

Christopher J. Chapman ’73

Samuel M. Chappell III ’82 & Nancy B. Chappell David Cheek ’79 & Kathy Cheek

J. Gordon Clayton ’69 & Katherine J. Clayton Susan C. Coogan ’82

Richard D. Crawford ’74 & Barbara J. Crawford Robert Scott Creighton ’82 Richard P. Dahling ’87 & Nancy L. Sanborn

James R.V. Daniel III ’59 & Colleen H. Daniel George A. L. David ’67

Richard M. David ’81 & Lauren David Norwood H. Davis Jr. TEP ’75

William A. Dawson ’67

John Livermore Dodge ’59 +

Basil M. Duncan III ’90

Peter M. Dunn ’81

Franklin S. Edmonds Jr. ’95 & Pamela F. Edmonds Karen K. Edwards ’84

Kelly W. Eldridge ’02

U. Bertram Ellis Jr. ’79

Charles H. Foster Jr. ’67 & Diane R. Bates

Paul L. Fowler Jr. ’81 & Sandra J. McDiarmid Giles R. Fox ’90

Thomas J. Friedmann ’90 & Amy D. Anderson

John P. Frye Jr. ’71 & Jerrie S. Frye Michael J. Ganey ’78

Palmer P. Garson ’83 & Douglas D. Garson Frank E. Genovese ’74 & Susan L. Genovese David W. Goodrich ’73 & Julie Houk Goodrich Mark R. Gordon ’79 & E. Leigh Gordon George H. Groves ’73 & Jimmie Winn Groves Elizabeth M. Hagood ’89 & D. Maybank Hagood ’89

Conrad Mercer Hall TEP ’83

Brenton Shaw Halsey Eugene W. Hansen ’76 Edward H. Hawfield ’75 & Nancy S. Hawfield Justin Hicks ’21 & Amy Margaret Bourett Johna P. Hodgson ’87 & Malia Blythe Jeffers Mary M. Hoobler ’88 Martina Hund-Mejean ’88 & Bruno J. Mejean Claire C. Hyde ’80 & William L. Hyde Jr. Burdett L. Ives ’67 & Elinor B. Ives Michael Kender ’87 & Lucretia H. Kender John B. Kishman ’82 Ryan P. Knauss ’00 & Christina M. Knauss David M. LaCross ’78 & Kathleen O. LaCross Mark C. Lamarre ’90 Donald A. Lucchesi ’79 & Elizabeth Lucchesi Douglas S. Luke Jr. ’66 & Sarah C. Mullen James C. Magill Jr. ’79

Herbert R. Martens Jr. ’78 Barclay McFadden III ’76 & Jane Perry McFadden Raleigh C. Minor

Michael K. Minter ’78 & Emma Hill ’78 James M. E. Mixter Jr. + Garth Monroe ’05

Clifford D. Moore III ’81

Richard J. Parsons ’80 & Yvette Parsons Lewis F. Payne Jr. ’73 & Susan K. Payne Jeremy D. Phelan ’74 Jerome C. Philpott ’88 & Ann S. Philpott Dana E. Quillen ’76

Michele J. Rankin & Owen K. Rankin

Ryan D. Rayborn ’10 & Jessica Rayborn

Robert E. Reeve ’85

Harry T. Rein ’73 & Susan D. Rein William F. Richmond ’76 Katherine Duff Rines

Dean Bentley Roberson ’86 & Debra Mullins Roberson

Joyce E. Rothenberg ’85 & Mace Rothenberg

Abby A. Ruiz de Gamboa ’04 & Alber to A. Ruiz de Gamboa

James L. Rumsey ’57

Michael L. Santoro Jr. ’74 & Martha C. Santoro

Thomas A. Saunders III ’67 & Mary Jordan Saunders

Frederick B. Schmidt-Fellner ’85 &

Terri W. Schmidt-Fellner

Mary Buckle Searle ’86 & Stewart A. Searle III

Martha A. Shenkenberg ’88

John W. Sinwell ’60 +

Anthony W. Smith ’87 & Elizabeth R. Smith

Robert M. Smith ’77 & Karen E. Connolly

T. Kent Smith ’84 & Mary L. Smith

Susan Nancy Sobbott ’90

Robert E. Spekman & Susan K. Snyder

Allan W. Staats ’62 + & Barbara G. Staats

Wallace Stettinius ’59 & Mary Gray Stettinius

John R. Strangfeld Jr. ’77

Gerald R. Strauss + Heidi Lynn Stump ’13 & David J. Dube ’11

Claire M. Terry ’80 & Theodore L. Terry II ’80 Warren M. Thompson ’83

Thomas D. Tichenor ’11

James P. Totten ’85 & Josephine Totten Ronald E. Trzcinski ’71 & Patricia Trzcinski

Charles A. Tysinger ’99 & Virginia C. Tysinger

Nicholas P. Valdrighi ’65

Steven C. Voorhees ’80 & Celia Voorhees

Thomas B. Whelan II ’77 & Claire F. Whelan

Steve Whisenant & Emilye H. Whisenant R. Van Whisnand ’68 & Campbell B. Whisnand

Gary R. Wilhite ’84

Howard P. Wilkinson Jr. ’73 & Carolyn N. Wilkinson

J. Richard Wilson ’57 & Anne Wilson Charles T. Wingo ’69

Robert C. Woodworth ’73 & Joyce Woodworth Douglas C. Young ’80 & Cynthia H. Young

21PILLARSFALL 2022

Darden Society

The Darden Society is a group of annual supporters who demonstrate a commitment to the School through gifts to Darden. Gifts at the Darden Society level of $2,500 per year (or $1,000 per year for Darden’s four most recent graduating classes) provide funding for the School’s most immediate priorities.

As a benefit of membership, all Darden Society members receive the exclusive rosette pin, a symbol of Darden pride that has been in production and distribution for members since the society’s found ing. Members also receive invitations to Darden events and special gatherings.

Executive Circle: $100,000 & Above

Anonymous (4)

Nina Abdun-Nabi ’82 + Stephen Eugene Bachand ’63 John R. Belk ’86 & Kimberly D. Belk Richard E. Berry ’94

W.L. Lyons Brown III ’87 & Susanna S. Brown A. Hazen Burnet ’69 & Sarah M. Burnet John M. Camp III ’79 & Caren Camp David Cheek ’79 & Kathy Cheek H. William Coogan Jr. ’82 & Theresa Kost Riddle James Alan Cooper ’84 & Stacy L. Cooper Hugh Cullman

William Kenyon Daniel II ’91 & Robin W. Daniel Terrence David Daniels ’70 & Courtnay S. Daniels

Robert G. Doumar Jr. ’88 & Noelle C. Doumar John Osborne Downing ’82 & Frances Skiddy Downing Larry Franklin & Mei Kwong Franklin Sterling C. Franklin Carson Gleberman ’86 & Joseph Gleberman Crystal H. Goodwin Kirsti W. Goodwin ’02 & Matthew T. Goodwin Robert D. Hardie ’95 & Molly G. Hardie Bret W. Holden ’88 & Jeanne Marie Zavertnik Holden Robert John Hugin ’85 Martina Hund-Mejean ’88 & Bruno J. Mejean David M. LaCross ’78 & Kathleen O. LaCross Elizabeth H. Lynch ’84 & Daniel Seth Lynch ’84

Richard Arthur Mayo ’68 & Sara Page Mayo Donald E. Morel Jr. TEP ’97 & Lauren Morel Albert Neuble Morgan Jr. ’72 & Carla H. Morgan J. Byrne Murphy ’86 & Pamela Murphy Adair B. Newhall ’09 & Kathryn M. McCann-Newhall Zhiyuan Peng ’03 & Ying Hu Harry T. Rein ’73 & Susan D. Rein James Garland Rose Jr. ’85 & Margaret W. Rose Estate Of Frank M. Sands Douglas Allen Scovanner ’79 & Mary M. Scovanner Allan W. Staats ’62 + & Barbara G. Staats Estate Of Allan Staats

The Stamps Foundation John R. Strangfeld ’77 Mark J. Styslinger & Jennifer O. Styslinger George S. Tahija ’86 & Laurel Tahija Lowell Simmons Ukrop ’89 & Robert Scott Ukrop ’89

Steven C. Voorhees ’80 & Celia Voorhees Bradley Jon Waitzer ’87 & Terry Waitzer

Sponsors’ Circle: $50,000–99,999 Anonymous (2) Daniel Abdun-Nabi

Jacqueline Glynn Brandin ’93 Wesley G. Bush Elia Fabiola Carter ’02 & Adam Penn Carter ’02 David Blair Kelso ’82 & Sara E. Kelso Douglas R. Lebda ’14 & Megan Lebda J. Theodore Linhart ’71 & Mary L. Linhart Barclay McFadden III ’76 & Jane Perry McFadden Roy J. Moore ’86

Matthias Daniel Renner ’86 & Linda G. Renner Robert Winston Smith ’87 & Teresa Smith Susan Nancy Sobbott ’90 Bruce R. Thompson ’90 Jianwei J. Yao ’01 & Wenjing Mao

Founders’ Circle: $25,000–49,999

A. Anthony Annunziato Michael Simon Augins ’99

Thomas Jeremiah Baltimore Jr. ’91 & Hillary D. Baltimore Jane Parke Batten Jack M. Benson ’97 John Andrew Bugas ’86 & Maryann Horgan Bugas James S. Cheng ’87 & Jeanette Wang Cheng Thomas Scott Coleman ’79 & Yasmine Z. Coleman Charles R. Cory ’82 & Kimberlee Scott Cory Gordon Crawford ’71

Guillaume M. Cuvelier ’91

Richard P. Dahling ’87 & Nancy L. Sanborn Charles G. Duffy III ’87 Franklin S. Edmonds Jr. ’95 & Pamela F. Edmonds Louis G. Elson ’90

Lawton W. Fitt ’79 & James I. McLaren John D. Fowler Jr. ’84 & Corey P. Fowler Catherine Joan Friedman ’86 & Jon R. Duane

John M. Fruehwirth ’96 & Christine A. Fruehwirth ’96

Thomas M. Fulcher Jr. ’86

Darren Adam Fultz ’06

Frank E. Genovese ’74 & Susan L. Genovese John Matthew Geraghty ’72 Peter M. Grant II ’86 & Colleen Jennings Grant

22 PILLARS FALL 2022

Gregory Brian Graves ’89

John Eric Greenwood ’78 & Mary Jane Greenwood

Robin F. Grossman

Naren K. Gursahaney ’89

William A. Hawkins III ’82 & Sharon Doyle Hawkins Robert Luther Huffines ’92 & Lisa G. Huffines

Lynn A. Isabella

Richard Irwin Kellogg ’72

Mark J. Kington ’88 & Ann A. Kington

Philip William Knisely ’78 & Patricia Knisely Reginald W. Lathan ’87

Amanda Lozano ’09

Seton G. Marshall ’09 & Katie B. Marshall William B. Massey Jr. & Randee Massey William E. Massey Jr. & Rebecca C. Massey Carolyn S. Miles ’88

Michael E. O’Neill ’74 & Patricia J. O’Neill Dana E. Quillen ’76

Thomas W. Reedy Jr. ’91 & Jennifer Byrd Reedy

Thomas E. Robinson ’73

Henry Fulton Skelsey ’84 & Susan W. Skelsey Shannon G. Smith ’90

George Stelljes III ’88

Benjamin Joseph Sullivan Jr. ’82 & Charlotte M. Sullivan Mark Brady Templeton ’78 & Yvonne Shuler-Templeton William Phillips Utt ’84 & Carolyn S. Utt Thomas Ros Watjen ’81 & Nanette A. Watjen Robert C. Woodworth ’73 & Joyce Woodworth

Leaders: $10,000–24,999

Anonymous

James Craig Allison ’82

R. David Banyard Jr. ’04 & Diane Banyard Rose Rita Barry Dorothy Neal Batten ’90

Scott C. Beardsley & Claire Dufournet Beardsley Brian C. Bednar ’97 & Rebecca B. Bednar

Thomas Mitchell Bland ’83 Ari D. Blum ’02

Earl R. Brownlee II & Diane S. Brownlee Mary Buckle Searle ’86 & Stewart A. Searle III William H. Carter ’99 & Erica Lynn Carter Kevin M. Cox ’79 & Charlotte J. Cox

James R.V. Daniel III ’59 & Colleen H. Daniel Diana Lady Dougan Helen E. Dragas ’88

James Kegebein Dunton ’62 & Nancy Hilton Dunton Richard C. Edmunds III ’92 & Kathy Edmunds Karen K. Edwards ’84

Laurence W. Ehrhardt ’96

Arnold B. Evans ’97 & Joyce H. Evans Clifford H. Farrah ’94 & Kimberley M. Farrah Luke E. Fichthorn IV ’98 & Katherine B. Fichthorn Douglas A. Fordyce ’96 & Melissa Fordyce Lee R. Forker Jr. ’63

Ann H. Fowler ’95 & Frederick L. Fowler III ’95

Thomas J. Friedmann ’90 & Amy D. Anderson Martha L. Gangemi ’87 & Michael Gangemi ’86 Robert A. Gary IV ’77

Peter U. Gavin ’13 & Andrea M. Gavin

Andrea Price Goodman ’84 & Donald W. Goodman ’84

Patrick C. Graney III ’81 & Jessica S. Graney Ira Harris Green Jr. ’90 & Susan M. Green

John W. Guinee III ’82 & Michelle K. Guinee Carrie Coker Haley ’87 & John Rattermann Haley ’87 E. Hooper Hardison Jr. ’88 & Ann M. Hardison Mark M. Hutto ’02 & Frances P. Hutto

Thomas Vincent Inglesby ’84 & Joan Weaver Inglesby Margaret M. Jacobsen ’87 & Richard Carl Jacobsen Jr. ’89

Dearing Ward Johns Lisa O. Jones ’85

John Paul Kanan ’06

Matthew Andrew Kaness ’02 & Theresa Kaness Mary Lou Kelley ’91

John K. Keppler ’02 & Dianne Keppler

Rosemary B. King ’91 & Martin G. King ’91 Kevin A. Klau ’02 & Erin Klau Patricia K. Kyle

Robert Porter Kyle ’82 + & Patricia K. Kyle

Linwood Allen Lacy Jr. ’69 & Constance C. Lacy Robert E. Lamb II ’70 Michael B. Lanahan ’74 & Leslie H. Lanahan Paige G. Lauster ’92 & Steffen Michael Lauster ’92 Stephanie M. Leouzon ’89 & Eugene H. Leouzon Lemuel Ethan Lewis ’72 & Sandra W. Lewis Donald A. Lucchesi ’79 & Elizabeth Lucchesi John D. Malgieri ’07 Brian N. McDonald ’87 & Margaret McDonald Emmett English McLean ’84

Mark C. Mead ’90

Sachin J. Mehra ’96 & Bina Mehra Peter Charles Meisel ’86 & Susan Meisel James K. Meneely III ’97 & Jennifer R. Meneely Curtis John Miller ’02

E. Benjamin Mix III ’86

Kenneth D. Morgan ’68

Edmond N. Moriarty III ’87 Marshall N. Morton ’72 & Caroline Morton Blake T. Myers ’93 Wayne Brasher Nelson III ’81 & Cheryl N. Nelson Ernest Mitchell Norville ’84 & Carla S. Norville Michael Francis O’Neill ’92

Gene Ruffner Page Jr. ’86 & Virginia White Page Michael Thomas Paradis ’16 & Deana Paradis John William Parsons ’89 & Ellen T. Parsons Louise C. Parzick ’86 & Joseph Edward Parzick William H. Payne II ’22

David T. Pearson ’11 & Sarah M. Pearson Carl E. Peoples ’94

Dominic Michael Pomponi ’05 & Kimberly Pomponi John Ashton Powell ’82 Scott A. Price ’90 & Shizuko M. Price Theodore W. Price ’68 & Carol B. Price J. Marvin Quin II ’72

Matthew Joseph Reintjes ’04 & Janine Bernasek Reintjes Mark S. Richardson ’87

Todd Walter Riggs ’02 & Jennifer Riggs Katherine L. Rios ’11 & Luis G. Rios Murrieta ’11

23PILLARSFALL 2022

Darden Society

W. Gregory Robertson ’70

Joyce E. Rothenberg ’85 & Mace Rothenberg

Kevin W. Schuyler ’97

Katrina Sherrerd Smith & David G. Smith

Karen S. Smythe ’87 & John Ln Smythe Edward A. Snyder

David L. Tayman ’97 & Alice Tayman

Warren M. Thompson ’83

Timothy Paul Treadway ’79

Kimberly Franklin Trundle ’93 & Stephen S. Trundle

Robert Stephen Ukrop ’72 & Jayne B. Ukrop

Edward West Valentine ’93 & Laura Valentine

Jeroen B. van Beek ’96 & Valerie van Beek

Paul Victor Walsh ’92 & Jennifer S. Walsh

Alexander R. Westra ’12

Elizabeth Kirk Weymouth ’94 & Philip B. Weymouth III ’93

Harris Williams

Mary Reaves Wimbish ’97

James William Wininger ’04 & Heather Wininger Charles Howard Witmer ’83 & Meryl B. Witmer

Keith Woodard ’75 & Patricia B. Woodard Wesley Wright III ’96

James Q. Xue ’02

Richard S. Youngman ’76

Marietta Edmunds Zakas ’82 & Dennis L. Zakas Alfonso M. Zulueta ’87

Fellows: $5,000–9,999

Anonymous

Jay Scott Adams ’92 & Monique S. Adams Brian Christopher Alas ’16 & Taylor Alas

Firas J. Al-Barzinji ’15

Stephen B. Altizer ’93 & Anne B. Altizer Yukiyoshi Aoyama ’03

Sandeep Singh Aujla ’04

Mazen Gabriel Baroudi & Monique Baroudi Kristen L. Bartch Knight ’02 & Gregory Knight Scott F. Bass ’97 & JoEllyn Bass

Frank Batten Jr. ’84 & Aimee C. Batten Randolph H. Batten ’12

David A. Beach ’69 & Carolyn H. Beach Thomas J. Benjamin ’08

Stephanie Tharpe Bennett ’09 & Adam D. Bennett ’09 Jack M. Benson ’97 & Cecilia B. Benson Thomas Edward Bettcher ’75 & Barbara C. Bettcher William A. Boffa ’06 & Christina Pappas Stacy H. Bolduc ’90 & John P. Bolduc ’90 Edward P. Brickley ’98 & Colleen Brickley Allison S. Bridges ’01

Stephen W. Bright ’82 & Nancy S. Bright Stephen G. Brooks ’09 & Chandra Brooks Fayette Brown III ’67 & Laurie W. Brown Barbara M. Bruner & Robert F. Bruner

Tawana Murphy Burnett ’04 & Blaine Burnett Edward John Casey Jr. ’84 & Holly M. Casey Gregory Wolfe Cashman ’93 & Margaret Neal Andrew Chambers ’11 Audrey Chen ’97

John Milton Childress II ’83

Mark Andrew Christian ’86 & Melissa V. Christian

Marc W. Christman ’72 & Deirdre A. Christman

Hugh M. Comer II ’91 & Debora R. Comer

Michael Colin Connolly ’03

Susan C. Coogan ’82

David A. Cooper ’97 & Charis San Antonio Cooper Preston S. Copenhaver III ’86 & Sarah Copenhaver Clayton C. Cosby ’97 & Christine C. Cosby Laura Jacobs Costello ’06 & Anthony D. Costello ’06 John D. Cote ’13

Robert Charles Courain Jr. ’67 & Ruth Courain

Jesse Van Crews ’77 & Vanessa Crews

Martin James Curran ’84 & Susan Sager Curran

Ravenel B. Curry III ’67

Edward A. d’Agostino Jr. ’85

George A. L. David ’67

Martin N. Davidson

Jill Renee Davis Blake ’91 & Alric Christopher Blake Michael Albert DeCola ’77 & Lee F. DeCola

Peter V. Del Presto ’85 & Nancy B. Del Presto Zubin Makrand Desai ’18 Margaret Wilson Doherty ’84 & James Joseph Doherty ’83

Basil M. Duncan III ’90

George T. Eastment III ’72

Catherine B. Edwards ’85 & Steven Ray Edwards ’85 Frank R. Ellett ’93 & Heather L. Ellett Joyce Jennings Ernst ’87 & Michael Ashley Ernst ’86 Warren F. Estey ’98 & Linda E. Estey John H. Faulk ’02 & Suzanne C. Faulk Tracy O. Foster ’92

Thomas Crawford Frame ’82

Theresa O. Frankiewicz ’87 & Charles A. Frankiewicz Alyssa M. Franklin ’05

David R. Frediani & Mary Frediani Christopher Edward French ’84 & Rhonda H. French Jon M. Friar ’11

Howard Stanley Furman ’85 & Jacquelyn Sachs Furman Mark Philip Garside ’01 & Catherine Hopkins Garside Gregory W. Gartland ’00 & Lauren A. Burrow James V. Gelly ’87 & Cordelia A. Gelly

Virginia S. Genereux ’92

John Kirby Graham ’87 Diana Romney Gray ’79 & William Gray ’78 Lawrence Lewis Gray ’92 & Freddie Gray Maggie Gray ’17

Owen D. Griffin Jr. ’99

Stephen Kirkman Grimm ’83 James Randall Groch ’85 & Mignon Groch Christopher Jeffrey Grogan ’87 + & Kenyon Bissell Grogan Kenyon Bissell Grogan

Irving M. Groves III ’77

Richard Allen Haight ’89 & Franziska Haight William Randolph Harrison ’86 & Paula B. Harrison Jennifer S. Hayes ’01 & Brandon Coleman Hayes ’01 Kristin B. Herendeen ’89 & Paul Sanford Herendeen ’83 Graham Scott Hetzer ’84 & Katherine W. Hetzer Daniel Blaustein Hirschhorn ’88

24 PILLARS FALL 2022

John P. Hodgson ’87 & Malia Blythe Jeffers

Richard R. Hollington III ’91 & Sarah Hollington

Andrew C. Holzwarth ’09 & Michelle Holzwarth

Freya S. Hooper ’94 & Ned Hooper ’94

Kristen S. Huntley ’87

A. Gibboney Huske ’97

Claire C. Hyde ’80 & William L. Hyde Jr. Gautam C. Ijoor ’10

Scott Jackson ’12

Marcien B. Jenckes ’98 & Sabrina A. Cellarosi

Melissa C. Jenkins ’16

Gary Thomas Jones ’74 & Elizabeth Jones

Jason R. Jordan ’97 & Elizabeth C. Jordan

Kathryn M. Kaish ’86

Carolyn A. Keating ’92

Brian H. Kennedy ’80 & Barbara T. Kennedy

Michael J. Kennedy ’90 & Robin A. Kennedy

James Scott Key ’68 & Carolyn R. Key

Robert Francis Kibble ’72

Mark Kieffer ’11 & Karlyn Kieffer

Gabrielle King ’71

Kenneth F. King ’93 & LaDonna M. King

Peter S. Kirby ’91 & Kyoko O. Kirby

John Robert Kirk ’64 & Joanne L. Brown

Melynda M. Klausner ’91 & Mark R. Klausner ’91

Noah D. Knippa ’08

Markus A. Kritzler ’04

Naresh Kumra ’99 & Jaya Sinha Susan Frederick LaKosh ’78

Wengang Li ’04

Richard Scott Lindahl ’91

Nicole McKinney Lindsay ’99 & Josiah S. Lindsay ’02 Stephen Christopher Linthwaite ’00 & Kristin S. Linthwaite Grant Nelson Lischick ’19

Emily C. Liu ’02 & Todd Brandon Hayes

Richard A. Longstaff ’92

William Bannon Luckert ’04 & Sara K. Luckert

Jane R. Lundquist ’80 R. Jeffrey Lymburner ’92

Shonyel L. Lyons ’11

Peter G. Mann ’64 & Margaret Thomson Mann Elizabeth Quin McCann ’08 & John R. McCann Jr. ’08 Scott F. Meadows ’15 & Sarah Nalls Meadows Fernando Z. Merce ’98 & Kelly C. Buckley Merce John M. Millar ’72 & Mary Hinson Millar J. Clifford Miller III ’68

Cooper Newton Mills Jr. ’81 & Cynthia W. Mills G. Gilmer Minor III ’66 & Charlotte M. Minor Melissa M. Monk ’08

Margaret A. Montague ’01

John D. Munford III ’87 & Elizabeth H. Munford

Zell Murphy II ’92

Julie G. Murray ’96 & Philip W. Murray ’96 Aaron T. Myers ’15 & Valerie Myers

Thomas Michael Neir ’88 & Sally Otten Louis Paul Nelson II ’77 & Lee Melchor-Nelson W. Olin Nisbet ’92

Sandra Norris ’87 & John P. McGlynn

Lisa T. Nyberg ’89 & Matthew M. Nyberg ’89

Patricia Obermaier Anderson ’92 & Jeffrey A. Anderson

Linda B. Ogden ’92 & William Sterling Ogden Jr. ’92

Talmadge O. O’Neill ’95 & Renata O’Neill

Robert Lee Oster ’72

Lilla Marie Oxaal ’83 & David McLeod Hillman ’82

Christopher Mitchell Padgett ’87

J. Russell Parker III ’72

Timothy E. Parker ’01 & Elizabeth Parker

Richard M. Paschal ’89 & Lura Paschal

Atul Pasricha ’89

William J. Passer ’96

Mark R. Patterson ’87 & Thea Jennie Lewis Patterson

G. Patrick Phillips ’73 & Deborah Phillips

Brian K. Plum ’10

Claire F. Polk ’05 & Daniel Edward Polk

Matthew L. Priest ’14

Peter Davis Prowitt ’81 & Nancy G. Prowitt Larry J. Puglia ’90 & Sandra Marie Puglia Marc Anthony Puntereri ’77

Yudhono Rawis ’16

Robert E. Reeve ’85

Christopher Todd Rehberger ’15 & Michelle P. Rehberger Brian Rhodes ’09 & April Rhodes

Brett M. Robertson ’08 & Heidi Bennett Robertson

Reynaldo Roche ’07

Flavia C. Rotta ’04 & Joao M.C. Rotta ’04

Klaus T. Said Michael L. Sandridge ’98 & Danielle W. Sandridge

Frank M. Sands ’94

Nicholas P. Sargen

Meme Y. Scherr ’96 & Peter Jeremy Scherr Robert G. Schoenvogel ’06 & Thames T. Schoenvogel

Francine Newton Shanfield ’87 & Robert Jacobs Shanfield ’87 George F. Shipp ’82 & Anne W. Shipp Conor F. Sibley ’06

Ricardo Berardinelli Silva ’86 & Amelia W. Silva Rebecca S. Silvestri ’87 & Gregory A. Silvestri ’87 Jessica Pohl Sinnarajah ’07 & Jason Sinnarajah ’07

Erik A. Slingerland ’84

Emily Follin Smith ’85

Cynthia K. Soledad ’02 & Burke Morton Monica Spencer Green ’97 & Holcombe T. Green III James M. Spencer ’98 & Carolyn Spencer Beth C. Spilman ’88 & Vance Henkel Spilman ’88

Connee B. Sullivan ’82 & Kent C. Sullivan

Edward C. Swindler ’84 & Barbara J. Swindler

Naomi E. Tam ’93 & Thomas R. Klenke ’94

Thomas A. Taylor Jr. ’85 & Juliette L. Taylor Morton G. Thalhimer Jr.

James E. Thompson Jr. ’86 & Cynthia T. Thompson

Matthew Gilmour Thompson ’66 & Janet H. Thompson

Kelly M. Thomson ’99

Lynn H Thomson

Helen Mary Troy ’81

Nicholas P. Valdrighi ’65

Thomas Boushall Valentine Jr. ’15

Paige H. Van Buskirk ’10 & Brett L. Van Buskirk ’10

25PILLARSFALL 2022

Darden Society

Curtis William Voges ’88

C. S. Vosmik ’89

Susan P. Webb ’84 & Jean-Francois Dreyfus Peter N. Weeks ’73 & Kay Scholberg Weeks

Roger Livingston Werner Jr. ’77 & Karen Werner R. Van Whisnand ’68 & Campbell B. Whisnand Jay S. White Jr. ’97

Daniele M. Wilson ’11

Gary Randall Wolfe ’92 & Teresa L. Wolfe John H. Woodfin Jr. ’95 & Charlotte B. Woodfin John Oliver Wynne Jr. ’04

Jose Maria Zertuche ’00 & Virginia Valcarcel Zertuche Sallye C. Zink ’77

Deans Roundtable: $2,500–4,999 Anonymous (3)

Brad Edward Akard ’07

Kristina M. Alimard ’03 & Babak Alimard Mark M. Allenbach ’15

Anna Maria Anthony ’96 & Peter Bradley Eliza Hannah Appleton ’22

Robert C. G. Armour ’92 & Lisa F. Armour L. Bradford Armstrong ’74 Lynn M. Atkinson ’96

Eileen O’Shea Auen ’89 & Jeffrey G. Auen Stuart Case Bachelder ’06 Keith F. Bachman ’89

Michael N. Bailey ’10 & Amelia P. Bailey John Michael Balay ’89

Sherrill P. Bandlow ’85 & Joseph L. Bandlow Jr. ’85 George E. L. Barbee ’67 & Molly J. Barbee

Rita C. Bartenstein ’12 & Christoph Bartenstein ’12 Christine P. Barth ’94

Elizabeth J. Bartholomew ’84

Lucien L. Bass III ’65 & Mary B. Bass George Brooks Beam ’81 & Betsy Beam Kelly Becker ’08

Katrina Nicole P. Bergh ’14 & Randall Bergh William L. Besash ’14

Divya Bhansali ’00

Arup Bhattacharjee ’09

David James Blair ’82

Elizabeth Anne Boehmler ’07

Christopher B. Boggs ’98 & Caroline Boggs David L. Bonenfant ’10 & Jennifer L. Bonenfant Alan Clarence Botsford Jr. & Susan Perkins Botsford Helen M. Boudreau ’93

Toni N. Bowden ’96 & A. Bruce Bowden ’96 Michael T. Bowersox ’07 & Elizabeth Devane Bowersox Soledad H. Boyle ’01 & Blair P. Boyle ’01 William M. Brewster ’10

Mark W. Bridgers ’97

Jennifer Souers Briggs ’14

Austin Brockenbrough IV ’98 & Karen K. Brockenbrough Mark Craig Bronfman ’84 & Lisa Bronfman Christopher Lord Brookfield ’92

James A. Brown III ’92 & Diana A. Brown Eric B. Brune ’10 & Carrie G. Brune

Amy S. Buckley ’97 & Richard E. Buckley

Wade Buick ’12

Christopher K. Burke ’97

Hacker Caldwell III ’79 & Kitty Caldwell

Nancy Cannon

William Daniel Cannon Jr. ’68 + & Nancy Cannon

Claire M. Cappio

Cameron Scott Cardozo ’99

Cheryl Samson Carson ’86 & David Bruce Carson ’86

Kent D. Carstater ’96

John L. Castleman ’93 & Elizabeth P. Castleman

Cummins Catherwood Jr. ’67 & Susan Catherwood Susan J. Chaplinsky

Christopher J. Chapman ’73

Paul F. Charnetzki

Phillip C. Chen ’87

Nicolas M. Choumenkovitch ’92

Shravani Bagchi Chowdhury ’99 & Aman Chowdhury ’98

David T. Clark ’97 & Phyllis A. Clark

Barry Clay ’89

Rodney B. Clemente ’17

Michael John Cloonan ’01 & Kristen Gallagher Cloonan

Robert E. Cockburn ’97

William Seth Cohen ’07 & Jessica Cohen

Robert E. Collier ’10

Steven R. Colton ’88 & Jeri Cash Colton

Jorge Conde-Berrocal ’11 & Jennifer F. Conde

Jerome E. Connolly Jr. ’88 & Vanessa P. Connolly Sarah Roy Coogan ’16 & Henry William Coogan III ’16

Halsey M. Cook Jr. ’91

Sheri S. Cook ’93

Richard E. Core Jr. ’09 Thomas E. Coulbourn Jr. ’95 & Sterling K. Coulbourn Robert J. Coury ’97

Catherine Babcock Cranor ’80 Robert Scott Creighton ’82

Donna Lynnette Crowder ’10 Andrew G. Crowley ’11

John Edward Cunningham IV ’83

Cory Michael Davis ’07 & Shannon L. Davis

Henry Adams Davis ’69

Paige T. Davis Jr. ’09 & Alyssa P. Davis Ryan Michael Davis ’07

Henry L. de Montebello ’76

Nathan A. DeLuke ’11 & Nichole L. DeLuke Teresa Reynolds DiMarco ’81

Kathryn Roberts Dinneen ’12 & Brian P. Dinneen ’11 Edward Grant Dinwiddie ’58 & Elizabeth D. Dinwiddie Jill B. Dixon ’99 & Jeffrey S. Dixon ’99

Perry Edward Doermann ’71 & Mary H. Doermann Christopher C. Donahue ’15

Jennifer L. Dresback ’03 & Brian Scott Kohler ’18

Christian Duffus ’00

Eric Dzwonczyk ’97 & Cynthia C. Dzwonczyk

Jonathan R. Ebinger ’93

James J. Edwards Jr. ’93 & Laura S. Edwards

Asli Keskinel Eksioglu ’92

Frank Tazewell Ellett ’65 & Lucy R. Ellett

26 PILLARS FALL 2022

Jonathan D. England ’06

Matthew Eubanks ’07

J. Kyle Evans ’14

Albert Hugh Ewing III ’71 & Susan Ewing

Albert Thomas Fechtel Jr. ’79

Thomas G. Feldmann ’98

Pedro C. Fenjves ’84

James Alan Ferency ’84 & Alise L. Ferency

Ernest James Ferland Jr. ’98 & Susan E. Ferland

Sarah J. Finlayson ’79 & Lindley G. DeGarmo

Michael Fairleigh Finnegan ’07

Ryan W. Fisher ’12

Caitlin C. Fitzmaurice ’11

Joseph B. Folds III ’91 & Lynn S. Folds

Arthur Eugene Foster ’63

Carol I. Fox ’98

Jonathan Daniel Fraade ’84 & Rita Appel Eric Freeman ’68

John P. Frye Jr. ’71 & Jerrie S. Frye

Palmer P. Garson ’83 & Douglas D. Garson Anne Gary Harold W. Geisel ’70 & Susan L. Geisel

Jeff Manuel Giller ’92

Gerald Carl Gonzenbach ’85

David W. Goodrich ’73 & Julie Houk Goodrich

Roxane Ivy Googin ’85 & Kent Winterholler Jacqueline Grace ’10

Patrick Clifford Graney IV ’07 & Dabney Edwards Graney Phillip S. Green ’11 & Hitomi Green

W. Andrew Grubbs ’81

Yael Grushka-Cockayne

Susan Voigt Gummeson & U. Peter C. Gummeson Scott P. Gutterman ’95 & Cristina Gutterman Page P. Hagan

Elizabeth McMillan Hagood ’89 & D. Maybank Hagood ’89

Constance J. Hallquist ’91

Summer Kassir Haltli ’10 & Brennan M. Haltli

Paul T. Hamaguchi ’70

Simon N.R. Harford ’88

Maureen E. Harrell ’08

David A. Harrison ’82 & Sally W. Harrison Thomas Hartenstein ’10

William Dallas Hawfield Jr. ’69

Scott M. Headd ’12 & Nicole Morgan Keats Headd Carolyn Vogt Heim ’77 & Donald J. Heim Jr. ’77 Anne G. Hennessy ’91 & Peter Robert Hennessy ’86 Craig M. Herron ’92 & Georgey Herron Justin Hicks ’21 & Amy Margaret Bourett Peter Jones Hicks ’74 & Kathryn V. Hicks Kenneth Baver Hodge ’74

J. Cameron Hoggan Jr. ’68 & Dixie Epes Hoggan

Suzanne Rosenkranz Hoglund ’86 & Robert Nels Hoglund ’86

Harriet Thurston Holderness ’76 & James Luebchow Hans G. Horne ’90

Andrew Paul Houlahan ’66

Sonia LaRosa Hounsell ’99 & Patrick John Hounsell ’99

Gen A. Izutsu ’15 & Teel Izutsu

Monica Jasty ’15

Cynthia K. Jed ’04 & Justin L. Jed ’04

Frederick Emerson Jenney ’81 & Cynthia Lund Jensen

Kendall Jennings ’12

Wei Jin ’99 & Wen V. Zhang

David Charles Johnson Jr. ’84 & Caroline D. Johnson

Thomas Edward Johnstone ’88 & Cindy Johnstone

T. Reginald Jones ’11

John Bernard Jung Jr. ’84 & Connie B. Jung

Karen Juul-Nielsen ’78 & Richard Leslie Garnett ’75

Arnon Katz ’09 & Mor Katz

Maureen E. Keegan ’17

Michael Kender ’87 & Lucretia H. Kender

David Mitchell Khtikian ’05

Elizabeth A. Kidder ’15

Andrew Paul Kingman ’84

Kevin M. Kosefeski ’08 & Kelly C. Kosefeski

Nathan A. Kredich ’97

Rudolph Krediet ’06

Chetankumar Kuchangi ’08

Thomas W. Lacy ’97 & Jane Lacy Robert M. Lane ’15

Joel Robert Lanik ’05

James Page Lansdale ’84

Reid Alexander Lathan ’18

Heidi F. Laub ’89 & George T. Laub ’89 Christopher M. Lawrence ’14

Howard Coleman Lawrence ’62

Shawn A. Lawson-Cummings ’91 & Aeon L. Cummings ’91 Harry Atkins Lawton III ’00

T. Gaylon Layfield III ’75 James E.C. Leavitt III ’85 & Rhonda Leavitt Tyler Howard Leinbach ’88 Larry J. Lenhart ’90 John G. Lert Jr. ’73

Buddy LeTourneau ’73 Ross S. Levine ’08 & Lauren Jacob Levine Michael B. Lewis ’07 Geir Lie ’88 & Carol Hodge Lie Michael J. Lipsey ’08

Peter B. Loring ’76 & Babette Loring John G. Loverro ’00 & Bridie Loverro

Christian Mark Lown ’01 Douglas S. Luke Jr. ’66 & Sarah C. Mullen Luann Johnson Lynch & Byron Claude Lynch III C. H. Randolph Lyon ’67 & Evelyn H. Lyon Elie W. Maalouf ’89 & Kathleen T. Maalouf James B. Mackey ’98 & Heidi B. Mackey James C. Magill Jr. ’79

Daniel P. Mahoney ’08 & Tucker B. Mahoney Armen Joseph Malikian ’71

William A. Maner IV ’90 & Allison B. Maner Kristina F. Mangelsdorf ’94 David Boyd Manley ’75

Todd R. Marin ’89 & Fiona Kotur Marin Philip Bernt Marsel ’17

Anne T. Masters ’97 & Eric S. Masters Irenee D. May Jr. ’84 Jay Middleton McDonald ’71

27PILLARSFALL 2022

Darden Society

Roy Wheatley McDowell ’87 & Barrie J. McDowell

Kathy N. McGowan ’87 & John J. McGowan

James F. McIntyre ’97

John Godfrey McLean Jr. ’85 & Susan A. Giles McLean

George J. McVey Jr. ’97 & Mary Ellen McVey

Alexandra Medack ’20

Lea Varelas Medow ’94

Rajan Jitendra Mehra ’93 & Karuna Mehra

Noelle Marie Mendez-Villamil ’04 & Vikas Chawla ’04

Michael W. Meredith ’17

Christopher I. Meyer ’09 & Megan Meyer

Christy Brock Miele ’94

Kevin M. Miller ’97

Eugene T. Millsap IV ’12

Brendan Shane Miniter ’16 & Paulette Miniter

Thomas C. Minoff ’14

Michele C. Minton ’96 & Paul A. Minton ’96

Jeanne Leslie Mockard ’90

Elizabeth Dale Moffett ’88 & Dean Matthew Powell

Sunil K. Ghatnekar ’92 & Christine Louise Moon ’92

Douglas Thomas Moore ’80 & Dana Foster Moore

Tami M. Moore ’09 & Andrew J. Moore

Tiffani Chantelle Moore ’16

Peter G. Morgan ’16 & Sarah Kish Morgan

Betsy M. Moszeter ’11

Robert Eugene Motyka ’86 & Susan E. Motyka

Courtney L. Muller ’96

Lacy Gibbes Newman ’77

Dana Leff Niedzielska ’97

Claude Beeland Nielsen ’75

Benjamin K. Noland ’11

Walker J. Noland ’03 & Mary-Margaret Bivens Noland

Nels Peter Nordquist ’99 & Jennifer Nordquist

Philip K. O’Bannon ’15

Justin Neville Obletz ’03

Julia Hupman Ocko ’87 & Robert Ocko

R. Timothy O’Donnell ’81 & Michelle Kane O’Donnell James Hawley Oldershaw ’02

Jeffrey Floyd Omohundro ’91 & Karen Harris Omohundro

Nathaniel Montgomery Osborne Jr. ’83 & Claire Osborne Peyton H. Owen Jr. ’84 & Susan Lee Owen

Richard J. Parsons ’80 & Yvette Parsons

Caren Pasquale Seckler ’98 & Michael Seckler Lewis F. Payne Jr. ’73 & Susan K. Payne

Antonio U. Periquet Jr. ’90 & Martha I. Periquet Karen Kjorlien Phillips ’82

Alex R. Picou ’89 & Deirdra Picou

Kathryn Adams Pittman ’10 & Mark Alan Pittman

Timothy James Portland ’90 & Elizabeth L. Portland

Luke Michael Pototschnik ’04

Stephen W. Powell ’87 & Elizabeth Ann Sliwinski Powell

Chris J. Privon ’83 & Keron C. Privon David Xingran Qu ’08 & Angela Qu

Christopher Columb Quarles III ’90

Thomas D. Rein ’11

Dustin T. Renn ’07

Albert Lebert Richey III ’74

Jorge Rodriguez Juarbe ’16

Elvis Rodriguez ’10

Harold Joaquin Rodriguez Jr. & Jacquelyn Fleishel Rodriguez

Katrina L. Rogers ’01 & John Rogers

Ronny T. Rowell ’12

Jeffrey P. Rudnicki ’11 & Emily Chase Dowling

Joseph Charles Rutte ’16

Michael J. Saewitz ’12

Smita Sahatpure ’04 & Anirban Mukherjee

William Benjamin Sanders ’06

Kevin Schaar ’11

Elizabeth H. Schad ’79

Michael D. Schad

Glenn Scherrer ’08 & Hilary Kathleen Scherrer

Robert Charles Schletter ’79

Leslie Zanetti Schorr ’88 & Thomas E. Schorr

Wilrich Herman Schroeder ’85

Linden Elizabeth Soule Schult ’17

John Frederick Schumacher ’83 Joseph V. Schwan ’13

William H. Schwarzschild IV ’08

Randolph Scott Seibert ’09 & Aimee Perron Seibert Katrina D. Shackelford ’08 & Virginius R. Shackelford IV Ronak Yogesh Shah ’02 Paul Shaw ’10

William H. Shea Jr. ’81 Lauren Shepard

Taylor Anne Shepard ’20 George F. Shipp ’82 Elizabeth Wells Shumadine ’01 & James Hunter Shumadine ’01 David A. Simon ’03 & Julia Lockhart Simon Manoj Sinha ’09

John Franklin Skeele ’77 & Ann Parkhill Skeele Susan O’Neill Skelsey ’15 & Henry F. Skelsey Jr. ’15 Sarah Hunter Sloan ’92

Thomas A. Smallhorn ’94 C. Ray Smith ’58 & Phyllis J. Smith Joshua A. Smith IV ’97

Russell Page Smith ’86 & Louann J. Smith Townsend C. Smith ’87 & Eileen P. Smith

Rosamond Parker Smythe ’84 & Daniel Thompson Smythe ’84 Steven Alan Sonnenberg ’79 & Karen S. Sonnenberg

Matthew Christopher Steere ’99 & Erin G. Steere Scott A. Stemberger ’04 & Renee Stemberger

Marc David Stern ’88 & Kim Yellin

Adele Brown Stotler ’85 & David C. Stotler ’85 Nicholas Thomas Stuart ’05 & Zsavon Butler Greg S. Suellentrop ’16 & Holly Suellentrop Bradley J. Sullivan ’07 & Laura H. Sullivan

Jenelle Hammes Sullivan ’99 & Daniel P. Sullivan ’99 Ichiro Suzuki ’84

Stephen Craig Sweeney ’07

Samuel Vose Tallman Jr. ’71 Leslie L. Tarkington ’69 & Marcus M. Tarkington ’69 Thomas K. Tattersall ’04 & Kelly E. Tattersall Ann H. Taylor ’85 & Peter R. Taylor Claire M. Terry ’80 & Theodore L. Terry II ’80 Deborah B. Thomas ’89

Rodney M. Thomas ’99

28 PILLARS FALL 2022

Matthew G. Thompson Jr. ’89 & Nancy Tucker Thompson

Jodi Lynn Thrasher ’05 & Santhosh George Varughese ’05

Thomas D. Tichenor ’11

Michael K. Tierney ’96 & Janet P. Tierney

Rodman Tilt III ’13

David C. Todd ’12

Joaquin Rodriguez Torres ’01

David Reid Townsend ’00

Kenneth Battershill Trippe ’87

Meredith B. Tutterow ’99 & Samuel T. Tutterow ’97

James Ughetta & Gina Ughetta

Zachary G. Upcheshaw ’15

Alok Vaish ’97

Patricia D. Van Belle ’94 & David G. Shanahan ’87

Bradley M. Vaughn ’08

Stacy Brown Vermylen ’75 & David B. Vermylen

Gerrud Wallaert

Jennifer Baker Walsh ’10 & Robert M. Walsh ’10

Guilford D. Ware Jr. ’91 & Elizabeth E. Ware

Gordon Howell Watkins ’66 & Kay M. Watkins

Seth E. Webber ’99

Collin David Weber ’18

Robert M. Weber ’91

Michelle Jo Weiss ’85

Meghan A. Welch ’10

Lily E. West ’12

Thomas B. Whelan II ’77 & Claire F. Whelan

Carter V. Whisnand ’01 & Laura P. Whisnand

Martha C. White ’94

Alexander D. Whittemore III ’00

Gary R. Wilhite ’84

Howard P. Wilkinson Jr. ’73 & Carolyn N. Wilkinson

Robert E. Willen ’95 & Cynthia E. Siedman-Willen David M. Willey ’89 & Joy S. Willey

Catherine Cranton Williams ’12 & Christopher Davis Williams Christin G. Willis ’13 & Jeffrey M. Willis ’13

Jacob B. Womble ’15

Christopher John DiBiagio Wood ’12 & Leslie N. Wood Peter Woodbury ’91

Jennifer Crutchfield Worth ’11

Landon R. Wyatt III ’82 & Edith H. Wyatt

John Alan Young ’92 & Rebecca A. Young Ted Joseph Zukowski ’87

Abbott Associates: $1,000–2,499

Nora Lewis Allen ’19

Katherine Atchison ’18

Jeffrey Bazydlo

Jessica Block ’20

Teeja Boye ’19

David Buchanan ’20

Fernando Chiaverini Albano Pereira ’20

William T. Childrey ’19

Antoine Edward Cobb ’18

Kyle Patrick Collins ’18

Parks Hewitt Daniel ’18

Kelly Clark Denner ’18 & Michael Alexander Denner ’18

Brant Adam Feldman ’19

Christine Kasper Flanagan ’18 & Michael Francis Flanagan ’18

Nicholas Edmunds Frank ’19

Sarah S. Freeman ’18 & David R. Blackwell III ’14

Catherine Terrell Fuller ’19

Juntao Ge ’20

Grace E. Gummeson ’19

Karen O. Henneberger ’20 & Mark W. Henneberger

Swetha Susan Isaac ’19

Todd J. Jacobs

Jennifer Levy Jasinski ’19

Edner Damion Joseph Jr. ’20

Ariel Katz ’18

Shristi Singh Kauffman ’19

Tyler David Kirchoff ’18

William Robert Maloni Jr. ’20

Justin Daniel Masters ’19 & Sara Rose Verhalen

Juan A. Morales ’18

Samidh Pareek ’18

Jay Patel ’20

Sean Anil Patel ’19

Timothy Conrick Prey ’18

Candice Elaine Mae Radloff ’18

Amanda L. Richardson ’19

Caroline Rose ’19

Jennifer H. Rose ’19

Nikhil Shyamsunder Shetty ’18

Natalie P. Smith ’18

Molly D. Squire ’17 & Barker Squire ’17

Vidhur Srinivasan Chari ’18

Lingyi Sun ’19

Bryan Richard Takvorian ’21

Courtney Anne Tamm ’20

Emily M. Thornton ’21

Erin C. Tollini ’20

Sheron Torho ’20

Christopher Tucker ’21

Alexander Lane Utt Jr. ’19

Alana Beatrice Sullivan Wall ’19

April K. Wiggs & Kevin Lamont Wiggs

Deceased

+

Hickory Club

The Hickory Club recognizes Darden alumni who have consistently given to the Darden School each year for a minimum of three years. Founded in 2005 as a way to recognize loyal donors, the Hickory Club was named for Dean Charles C. Abbott’s ever-loyal black Labrador retriever, Hickory. The club symbolizes the dedication Darden alumni express to the School through consecutive giving.

29PILLARSFALL 2022
2,406 Members

Leading Supporters of the Darden Annual Fund

Through the Darden Annual Fund, everyone has a part in shaping the School and its ability to deliver on its mission. Thanks to the generosity of alumni and friends, the Darden Annual Fund helps support innovation, recruit and retain world-class faculty and staff, provide scholarships for deserving students from all backgrounds, enhance Darden’s impact and stature around the world, and ensure the School lives its value as a diverse, global community.

Executive Circle: $100,000 & Above Anonymous

James Alan Cooper ’84 & Stacy L. Cooper Robert John Hugin ’85

Sponsors’ Circle: $50,000–99,999

Martina Hund-Mejean ’88 & Bruno J. Mejean Douglas R. Lebda ’14 & Megan Lebda

Donald E. Morel Jr. TEP ’97 & Lauren Morel Albert Neuble Morgan Jr. ’72 & Carla H. Morgan

Douglas Allen Scovanner ’79 & Mary M. Scovanner George S. Tahija ’86 & Laurel Tahija Bruce R. Thompson ’90 Steven C. Voorhees ’80 & Celia Voorhees

Founders’ Circle: $25,000–49,999 Anonymous

A. Anthony Annunziato

Thomas Jeremiah Baltimore Jr. ’91 & Hillary D. Baltimore Jane Parke Batten

John Andrew Bugas ’86 & Maryann Horgan Bugas Gordon Crawford ’71

Terrence David Daniels ’70 & Courtnay S. Daniels Louis G. Elson ’90

Lawton W. Fitt ’79 & James I. McLaren John D. Fowler Jr. ’84 & Corey P. Fowler Thomas M. Fulcher Jr. ’86

Frank E. Genovese ’74 & Susan L. Genovese Peter M. Grant II ’86 & Colleen Jennings Grant Richard Irwin Kellogg ’72

Philip William Knisely ’78 & Patricia Knisely William B. Massey Jr. & Randee Massey William E. Massey Jr. & Rebecca C. Massey Michael E. O’Neill ’74 & Patricia J. O’Neill Dana E. Quillen ’76

Robert Winston Smith ’87 & Teresa Smith Shannon G. Smith ’90 Mark Brady Templeton ’78 & Yvonne Shuler-Templeton Robert C. Woodworth ’73 & Joyce Woodworth

Leaders: $10,000–24,999

Anonymous

James Craig Allison ’82

Rose Rita Barry

Dorothy Neal Batten ’90

Scott C. Beardsley & Claire Dufournet Beardsley Brian C. Bednar ’97 & Rebecca B. Bednar John R. Belk ’86 & Kimberly D. Belk Richard E. Berry ’94 W.L. Lyons Brown III ’87 & Susanna S. Brown Mary Buckle Searle ’86 & Stewart A. Searle III William H. Carter ’99 & Erica Lynn Carter H. William Coogan Jr. ’82 & Theresa Kost Riddle Kevin M. Cox ’79 & Charlotte J. Cox Guillaume M. Cuvelier ’91

Richard P. Dahling ’87 & Nancy L. Sanborn James R.V. Daniel III ’59 & Colleen H. Daniel Robert G. Doumar Jr. ’88 & Noelle C. Doumar James Kegebein Dunton ’62 & Nancy Hilton Dunton Franklin S. Edmonds Jr. ’95 & Pamela F. Edmonds Richard C. Edmunds III ’92 & Kathy Edmunds Arnold B. Evans ’97 & Joyce H. Evans Clifford H. Farrah ’94 & Kimberley M. Farrah Luke E. Fichthorn IV ’98 & Katherine B. Fichthorn Ann H. Fowler ’95 & Frederick L. Fowler III ’95 Catherine Joan Friedman ’86 & Jon R. Duane Thomas J. Friedmann ’90 & Amy D. Anderson Robert A. Gary IV ’77 Peter U. Gavin ’13 & Andrea M. Gavin Andrea Price Goodman ’84 & Donald W. Goodman ’84

Kirsti W. Goodwin ’02 & Matthew T. Goodwin Gregory Brian Graves ’89

Ira Harris Green Jr. ’90 & Susan M. Green John W. Guinee III ’82 & Michelle K. Guinee Naren K. Gursahaney ’89

Carrie Coker Haley ’87 & John Rattermann Haley ’87 Robert D. Hardie ’95 & Molly G. Hardie E. Hooper Hardison Jr. ’88 & Ann M. Hardison William A. Hawkins III ’82 & Sharon Doyle Hawkins

30 PILLARS FALL 2022

Bret W. Holden ’88 & Jeanne Marie Zavertnik Holden Robert Luther Huffines ’92 & Lisa G. Huffines

Margaret M. Jacobsen ’87 & Richard Carl Jacobsen Jr. ’89

John Paul Kanan ’06

David Blair Kelso ’82 & Sara E. Kelso

Rosemary B. King ’91 & Martin G. King ’91

Mark J. Kington ’88 & Ann A. Kington Patricia K. Kyle

Robert Porter Kyle ’82 + & Patricia K. Kyle

David M. LaCross ’78 & Kathleen O. LaCross Linwood Allen Lacy Jr. ’69 & Constance C. Lacy Michael B. Lanahan ’74 & Leslie H. Lanahan Stephanie M. Leouzon ’89 & Eugene H. Leouzon Lemuel Ethan Lewis ’72 & Sandra W. Lewis Nicole McKinney Lindsay ’99 & Josiah S. Lindsay ’02

Amanda Lozano ’09

John D. Malgieri ’07

Emmett English McLean ’84

Sachin J. Mehra ’96 & Bina Mehra Peter Charles Meisel ’86 & Susan Meisel E. Benjamin Mix III ’86

Edmond N. Moriarty III ’87

Marshall N. Morton ’72 & Caroline Morton J. Byrne Murphy ’86 & Pamela Murphy Blake T. Myers ’93

Adair B. Newhall ’09 & Kathryn M. McCann-Newhall Ernest Mitchell Norville ’84 & Carla S. Norville Michael Francis O’Neill ’92

Gene Ruffner Page Jr. ’86 & Virginia White Page Michael Thomas Paradis ’16 & Deana Paradis Louise C. Parzick ’86 & Joseph Edward Parzick William H. Payne II ’22

Dominic Michael Pomponi ’05 & Kimberly Pomponi John Ashton Powell ’82

Theodore W. Price ’68 & Carol B. Price

Harry T. Rein ’73 & Susan D. Rein Matthew Joseph Reintjes ’04 & Janine Bernasek Reintjes Katherine L. Rios ’11 & Luis G. Rios Murrieta ’11 Thomas E. Robinson ’73

Kevin W. Schuyler ’97

Henry Fulton Skelsey ’84 & Susan W. Skelsey Katrina Sherrerd Smith & David G. Smith Susan Nancy Sobbott ’90 George Stelljes III ’88

Mark J. Styslinger & Jennifer O. Styslinger Warren M. Thompson ’83 Timothy Paul Treadway ’79

Kimberly Franklin Trundle ’93 & Stephen S. Trundle Lowell Simmons Ukrop ’89 & Robert Scott Ukrop ’89

Robert Stephen Ukrop ’72 & Jayne B. Ukrop Edward West Valentine ’93 & Laura Valentine Bradley Jon Waitzer ’87 & Terry Waitzer Elizabeth Kirk Weymouth ’94 & Philip B. Weymouth III ’93 James William Wininger ’04 & Heather Wininger Charles Howard Witmer ’83 & Meryl B. Witmer Richard S. Youngman ’76

Deceased

FUND

31PILLARSFALL 2022
+
ANNUAL DARDEN POWERED BY PURPOSE

Reunion Giving

Reunion Giving allows classes to align philanthropy to impact the future of the School and honor its legacy of excellence.

This list recognizes reunion giving from 1 July 2021 through 30 June 2022.

REUNION CLASS

REUNION GIVING TOTAL CLASS PARTICIPATION

1957  $26,550  22%

1962  $27,350  30%

1967  $39,025  38%

1972  $481,295  38%

1977  $403,844  38%

1982  $5,001,744*  32%

1987  $2,635,771  45%

1992  $330,389  40%

1997  $617,101  40%

2002  $1,453,635  33%

2007  $186,631  32%

2012  $115,101  36%

2012 EMBA  $28,407  30%

2017  $48,840  25%

2017 EMBA  $41,550  39%

2017 GEMBA  $12,700  35%

TOTAL $11,604,672 35%

32 PILLARS FALL 2022
*40th Reunion Giving Record

Corporate and Foundation Giving

Philanthropic support from corporations and foundations is integral to Darden’s success to date and aspirations for the future. Organizations whose missions align with Darden power the School’s position as a global business school committed to improving the world. Corporations and foundations meaningfully impact each of the School’s strategic priorities thanks to grants that support thought leadership, scholarships, coursework, student experiences and so much more.

Foundations are recognized in lists throughout this publication, and here, Darden proudly recognizes corporate support from 1 July 2021 through 30 June 2022.

3M

Accenture

Airbnb Alix Partners Alvarez and Marsal

American Express Company Bain & Company, Inc.

Bank of America Chevron Cigna

Columbia Capital Corporation Danaher Corporation

DaVita Inc.

Dell USA LLC

Deloitte Consulting LLP

DH Dental Business Services, LLC

E. & J. Gallo Winery Emerson Envista Holdings Ericsson, Inc.

EY-Parthenon

Fortive, Inc.

FTV Business Services, LLC General Motors Company Gradleaders, Inc

Harris Williams & Company

IBM inCode Consulting

Johnson & Johnson

JP Morgan Chase & Company

L.E.K. Consulting LLC Lexington Partners Inc.

Liberty Mutual Marsh & McLennan Companies, Inc.

McKinsey & Company

Medtronic, Inc.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP

Riverside Company

Rotunda Capital Partners

Thalhimer Brothers, Inc.

The Arnold Group

The Boston Consulting Group, Inc.

The Hershey Company

The London Company

The Vanguard Group

Triangle Insights Group, LLC Walmart.com

Wells Fargo

ZS Associates, Inc.

33PILLARSFALL 2022

P. O. Box 7726

Charlottesville, Virginia 22906-7726 USA

The Darden Campaign in Support of Honor the Future, the Campaign for the University of Virginia

Pillars is published by the Darden School Foundation, a nonprofit organization that supports the Darden School by promoting philanthropic support from alumni, friends and corporations; managing endowment funds for the School’s exclusive benefit; and operating Darden’s top-ranked Executive Education & Lifelong Learning programs, the Darden hotel and Abbott Center hospitality.

Questions, comments and address changes should be directed to: advancement@darden.virginia.edu or

Darden School Foundation

Office of Advancement

P.O. Box 7726

Charlottesville, Virginia 22906-7726 USA

Interim Vice President for Advancement:

Samantha Hartog

Chief Marketing and Communications Officer: Juliet K. Daum (TEP ’22)

Editor

David Buie-Moltz

Writers:

David Buie-Moltz, Dave Hendrick, Tom van der Voort

Copy Editor: Catherine Burton

Design: Susan Wormington

Photography:

Tyla Gallegos, Avi Gerver, Tira Hightower, Ali Johnson, Sam Levitan, Michael Matthews, Andrew Shurtleff

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