FUTURE FORWARD Annual Report Fiscal year 2023
VISION
IGNITING PASSION TO TRANSFORM LIVES.
MISSION
To inspire a community of UC and UC Health supporters through the power of philanthropy.
On the cover: Students outside the UC Digital Futures building. 2 FUTURE FORWARD
Table
of contents
5 LETTERS
Peter E. Landgren, President Rae A. Mang, Chair
9 INVESTMENT OVERVIEW
The UC endowment and its performance
15 PROPELLING OUR COMMUNITY FORWARD A look back: The momentum of your philanthropy
20 A NEW ERA OF BEARCAT CHAMPIONSHIPS Day One Ready success
24 FUNDRAISING REPORT
Fundraising highlights from fiscal year 2023
28 LEADERSHIP
UC, UC Health and UC Foundation
3
UC students at 2022 spring commencement. 4 FUTURE FORWARD
a letter from
peter e. landgren
Your generosity gives us much to celebrate as we reflect on this year of unparalleled success. The University of Cincinnati and UC Health are on a national stage thanks to the power of your philanthropy. It is an honor to share that we had another record-breaking year. I am especially proud of the $32.2 million raised for scholarships that go directly to student support. While the dollar number is impressive, it is the impact of your gifts that is truly distinctive. Across our campuses, you are changing lives, and building better futures for us all. The stories in this annual report are a testament to this vision: UC entered the Big 12 Athletic Conference with our student-athletes poised to compete and win. The UC Medical Center opened an expanded, state-of-the-art emergency department to serve our region. The new Portman Center for Policy Solutions will foster bipartisan engagement for our campus and nation. I am continually inspired by our community’s drive to seed excellence here at UC and UC Health. You have continued to create change through research, our renowned health care institutes and social justice initiatives. On a personal note, in August, I announced my intent to retire. I want to take the opportunity to thank you for your desire to transform our university community through your generous investments. I have been fortunate to serve my alma mater for 12 years and the past six years as the president of the UC Foundation. I look forward to continuing my affiliation with UC as I return to my academic home, the College-Conservatory of Music, as a member of the tenured faculty. As we enter the last year of the Next, Now campaign, I am certain you will propel our community onward—thank you for being future forward.
Peter E. Landgren President, University of Cincinnati Foundation Vice President for University Advancement, University of Cincinnati
5
a letter from
rae A. mang
As a proud alumna and the chair of the UC Foundation Board of Trustees, I can attest that it’s a remarkable time to be a Bearcat. Your dedication and support are transforming lives throughout UC and UC Health. I am consistently impressed by my fellow alumni, and those honored this past year by the UC Foundation and UC Alumni Association are exceptional. This year’s Alumni Celebration award recipients were celebrated for their service to the university, their communities, and fields of endeavor. I encourage you to visit the mural showcasing their likenesses on Vine Street in Cincinnati’s Over-the-Rhine neighborhood. The achievements of African American alumni, faculty, staff and students were recognized at the ninth annual Onyx & Ruby Gala. The UC African American Alumni Affiliate (4A) hosted this joyful event and raised scholarship donations. Finally, it was a great privilege to attend the George Rieveschl Recognition Dinner and connect with those receiving the Outstanding Philanthropic Volunteer Awards this year. These individuals and groups receive the Foundation’s highest honor for their commitments to UC and UC Health. I arrived at UC as a first-generation student who had never visited the city or campus. This leap of faith changed my life, and I am forever grateful. As I end my final year as chair, I want to say thank you for allowing me to serve my alma mater. I would also like to use this opportunity to celebrate fellow UC alumnus, Peter Landgren, who is retiring from his role as UC Foundation President. Under Peter’s leadership, the Foundation launched Next, Now: The Campaign for Cincinnati, the largest campaign in our history. His service to our university community will leave a lasting impact on UC and UC Health. On behalf of my fellow trustees, thank you for your tremendous support of UC and UC Health.
Rae A. Mang Chair, University of Cincinnati Foundation Board of Trustees 6 FUTURE FORWARD
Ewaniki Moore-Hawkins, BBA ’02, MBA ’06, and Littisha Bates, PhD, Associate Dean for Inclusive Excellence and Community Partnerships, College of Arts and Sciences, at the ninth annual Onyx & Ruby Gala. 7
investment overview
Thanks to 50 years of innovation, the UC Health Emergency Medicine and Trauma teams saved the life of Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin. 8 FUTURE FORWARD
a letter from the
chief investment officer
The UC investment team is pleased to report that the UC endowment generated a +5.2% gain in fiscal year 2023. This performance is outstanding in the context of the endowment’s investment performance in recent years— and adds to a long-term track record that all Bearcats can be proud of. Stability has been a critical component +14.0% of UC’s investment success. Its senior investment team has been pursuing the +12.0% same strategy for over a decade and has +10.0% benefited from a remarkably steadfast +8.0% (and devoted) investment committee. This consistency has enabled the team +6.0% to focus on investment strategies +4.0% that require a consistent long-term +2.0% approach, providing financial backing to early-stage startup companies and +0.0% investing in out-of-favor real estate assets. These long-term investments were the difference-makers to UC’s investment performance and are poised to drive continued superior performance in future years.
+11.7% +9.4% +8.0%
+5.2%
+5.0%
+5.7%
+6.5%
+3.1%
+2.5%
1-year
3-year
30-year
UC
Weighted Benchmark
Inflation
The UC community has a lot to be proud of. We were in the national spotlight during UC Health’s heroic treatment of NFL player Damar Hamlin after a life-threatening, on-field accident. The nation celebrated Hamlin’s recovery and the extensive team of doctors and health care professionals that made it possible. The following pages illustrate how UC Health’s breakthrough approach to emergency medicine led to an elevation of care. We also share how generous and steady endowment giving allows our emergency medicine physicians to embrace the future of emergency medicine.
Karl Scheer Chief Investment Officer, University of Cincinnati 9
How do you transform $2 million into nearly $10 million of support? Patience. Structuring a gift as an endowment magnifies its impact—and can transform a $2 million donation into nearly $10 million of value for UC in just a few decades. The discipline and endurance of UC’s investment program compounds gains and magnifies the impact of our donors’ endowment gifts. Each year, about 5% of each endowment is used to fund scholarships, research, professorships or programs designated by donors. The remaining capital, about 95%, is invested to replenish spending by generating investment gains.
This is carefully calibrated (and adjusted when necessary) to allow UC to spend the maximum sustainable amount so each endowment can provide the same support to its mission today and into the future. UC has proven the durability and power of endowments; it is still managing endowment capital donated 150 years ago. What is perhaps most surprising and inspiring about the endowment approach is how dramatically a successful investment program can enhance endowment capital impact in as short a period as a few decades. Below you can see that since 1993, the
+1,000% +900% +800% +700% +600% +500% +400% +300% +200% +100%
UC +921%
Balanced Portfolio +560%
Inflation +111%
This analysis assumes UC’s historical 30-year 8.0% annualized investment return, the current 5.0% spending policy and 3.0% inflation. The actual (after-inflation) value of the endowment 30 years in the future would be modestly above the original $2 million donation, meaning that UC would have maintained the buying power of this endowment fund and would have achieved “intergenerational equity,” a guiding principle for how UC manages its endowment program.
10 FUTURE FORWARD
2023
2022
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2020
2019
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2015
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2012
2011
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2009
2008
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1993
+0%
+9.0% +8.0% +7.0%
Damar Hamlin’s care highlights 50 years of innovation
+8.0% +6.5%
+6.0% +5.0% +4.0% +3.0%
+2.5%
+2.0% +1.0% +0.0%
UC
30-year Weighted Benchmark
Inflation
UC A Pool produced compounded returns of 921%, outperformed a balanced portfolio of global stocks and bonds by 362% and outpaced inflation by over 800%. Three decades transforms solid annual outperformance (1.5% per year) into astronomical full-period outperformance. Looking forward using UC’s 30-year track record and our current spending rate, a UC donor giving $2 million can expect that gift to provide $4.86 million in support over the next 30 years and grow principal to $4.90 million to fund future spending. The initial $2 million would be expected to deliver, in three short decades, $9.76 million of value.
The care Damar Hamlin received from UC Health Emergency Medicine and Trauma teams after he suffered cardiac arrest during the Buffalo Bills and Cincinnati Bengals game in January 2023 highlights 50 years of innovation. UC created the first emergency medicine residency program in the early 1970s to train physicians specifically for emergency departments (EDs). It’s hard to imagine today, but before UC’s breakthrough approach to training doctors with the unique skills needed in emergencies, EDs were staffed by physicians borrowed temporarily, often reluctantly, from other specialties. Since EDs were often thought of as providing little more than first aid, any doctor was considered qualified. Units were plagued by long wait times, medical errors and poor service. The growth of highly competent emergency medical professionals, trauma specialists and emergency networks was largely in the future—and UC saw that future first.
Damar Hamlin at the Chasing M’s event at UC Medical Center in July 2023. 11
Discovering possibilities in health care When the UC Health team saved Damar Hamlin’s life in January 2023, it was the culmination of 50 years of visionary leaders, dedicated students and innovative generosity. Emergency medicine’s local history dates to 1968, when UC physician Herbert Flessa, MD, created the idea of a training program for emergency medicine residents. His first recruit was Bruce Janiak, MD, who believed in the need for specialty training. In 1977, UC alumnus, Richard Levy, MD, took emergency medicine to the next level. He integrated the emergency medicine clinical and academic program, retained UC College of Medicine graduates and recruited gifted faculty from across the country. The UC Emergency
Medicine Residency program blossomed, research initiatives began and the quality of care for patients dramatically improved— it remains a top-ranked and sought-after program today.
Photos top to bottom: UC physician Herbert Flessa, MD. 2023 UC Emergency Medicine residents.
12 FUTURE FORWARD
Discovering possibilities in funding Not only did UC Emergency Medicine innovators Flessa, Janiak and Levy create a groundbreaking way to train specialists with a unique set of skills, they also laid the foundation for an innovative culture around the provision and protection of funding for ongoing innovation. In 1994, Levy donated $2.5 million to create two new endowment funds to guarantee a permanent source of support for the program. In the intervening three decades, under the direction of subsequent department chairs W. Brian Gibler, MD, and Art Pancioli, MD, nearly a dozen additional Emergency Medicinefocused endowed funds have been created to further bolster and secure the program.
Recently, the UC Emergency Medicine Department has taken a unique approach— raising funds from within its ranks of physicians, faculty and administrators and joined by program alumni—some now leading in prominent emergency departments nationwide. With this team of donors—all of whom share a passion for emergency medicine and are inspired to donate their resources, large or small—an endowment fund is grown one gift at a time until it reaches a level where it can be selfsustaining. At this point, the team begins funding a new endowment. An inspiring and visionary mentality has developed within the Emergency Medicine family—one of perpetual and innovative generosity.
Innovative Generosity Members of the UC Emergency Medicine Department have created a culture of giving. They collectively create endowments to support specific needs. Other creative ways to donate permanent capital to UC include:
Give to an existing endowment fund
celebrate your UC graduating class
Build an endowment fund
You don’t need to create a new fund if there’s an existing fund that supports a mission that inspires you.
Create an endowment to celebrate graduation, anniversaries, honor classmates who passed away or support individual departments.
Regular, long-term donations can create permanent support, impacting generations.
13
UC partners with the Village Life Outreach Project, a nonprofit dedicated to fighting poverty and improving lives in Tanzania, East Africa. In May 2023, Marian Spencer Scholars traveled to the Rorya district of Tanzania for the first time. 14 FUTURE FORWARD
“
Philanthropy’s impact can be seen everywhere on our campus. State-of-the-art buildings, world-class research opportunities, an ever-growing student population and Big 12 athletics—all made possible through your generosity. Our upward trajectory makes it a special time to be a Bearcat.” NEVILLE G. PINTO, PhD President University of Cincinnati
TOGETHER WE ARE
PROPELLING OUR 15
A LOOK BACK The momentum of your philanthropy
Empower
Our Next Leaders Ohio-based company LOTH, Inc.
Record-breaking year: 5,916 donors
creates a scholarship for UC Carl
believing in student success give
H. Lindner College of Business
$32.2 million to scholarships.
94
scholarship funds established
80
endowment funds established
students with a passion for selling.
$6.7M
176 corporate and foundation partners donate $3.49 million to
to research funds
UC scholarships. The Charles H. Dater Foundation marks a philanthropic milestone with UC. Since 1990, the foundation has given more than $1 million to university
$66,774
donated to emergency funds benefiting UC students
$16.8M
Carl H. Lindner College of Business scholarship fundraising record
$100M
Day One Ready campaign nears fundraising milestone supporting UC Student-Athletes
programs impacting children and youth. A $1 million gift from Ray, BSCH ’83, Travis Kelce, two-time NFL Super Bowl
and Connie Brooks creates the
winner and former Cincinnati Bearcat,
Ray and Connie Brooks Professorship
announces the creation of the 87 and
in Sustainability and Renewable Energy Endowment Fund at the UC College of
Running Student-Athlete Health and Wellness Endowment Fund. The fund,
Engineering and Applied Science.
launched by Kelce’s foundation, supports UC Foundation Trustee Arun Murthy,
the health and wellness of Bearcats
BBA ’95, makes a $250,000 gift to the
student-athletes.
UC Carl H. Lindner College of Business to help students manage costs associated with getting required certifications. Brothers Mike and Jim Rodarte establish the Level Up Scholarship Fund for students in public school districts across the region.
Explore
Embrace
Our Next Frontier
Our Next Purpose
An estate gift from Patrick, BA ’63, and Malle Portway allocates $10 million
makes a $100,000 gift to the Timothy
for four endowed funds at the Center for
Freeman, MD, Center for Intellectual
Cyber Strategy and Policy in the UC College of Arts & Sciences.
A gift of $5.25 million from the
The National Down Syndrome Society
James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Foundation will upgrade spaces within
and Developmental Disabilities,
UC Health for patients needing the most specialized neurological care.
created by the UC College of Medicine and UC Health.
A $1.25 million donation from PESI
Craig and Frances Lindner commit
will allow researchers at the UC College of
$15 million in support of John Byrd, MD,
Medicine to explore therapies used for
and the future Blood Cancer Healing
post-traumatic stress disorder.
Center.
The sixth annual UC Day of Giving raises more than $2,470,000 from The generosity of Shawn A. Ryan, MD,
3,800+ gifts in just 24 hours.
Ride Cincinnati marks $4 million in contributions to cancer research at the University of Cincinnati Cancer Center.
MBA ’11, supports the Emergency Medicine Endowed Chair to Benefit the Acute Treatment of Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder at the UC College of Medicine. Jerry Harris, JD ’72, and his family establish the Jerry and Carol Harris Family Scholar Award for Cancer Research at the UC College of Medicine. Chipping Away at Parkinson’s raises more than $200,000 to benefit the James J. and Joan A. Gardner Family Center for Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders at the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute.
Lyle E. Shaw, BSIM ’67, MBA ’68, and Gretchen S. Shaw give $320,000 supporting the University of Cincinnati Cancer Center, UC Athletics, UC Carl H. Lindner College of Business and the Gen-1 Program.
committed
to social justice More than 500 donors gave $1.85 million to funds related to diversity, equity and inclusion.
Bruce Besanko, BA ’82, establishes the Bruce Besanko Support Fund for the LGBTQ Center with $200,000. Elizabeth Gatten, JD ’21, is the first Eichner Research Fellow in Workforce Housing
Tom Sharp, BSEE ’84, MS ’92, PhD ’97, and the teams of NLign Analytics and Etegent Technologies create the Inclusive
Policy at the UC College of Law made
Excellence Support Fund for Students
possible by a FY22 gift from Bruce
in Math and Science with a $100,000
Eichner, JD ’69.
gift. The fund supports students at the UC College of Education, Criminal Justice, and
David R. Rodrigo, BBA ’94, MS ’06, and Amy Corbin, BFA ’94, MDES ’98, create the Pedro
Human Services.
Rodrigo’s American Dream Scholarship Endowment Fund for underrepresented students at the UC Carl H. Lindner College of Business.
An anonymous donor gifts $804,786 to the Ohio Innocence Project at the UC College of Law. This support furthers the Ohio Innocence Project’s goal of freeing
every innocent person in Ohio who has been convicted of a crime they didn’t commit. Gary Simmons, BBA ’76, and Susan (Youngman) Simmons, BA ’76, establish the Gary and Susan Simmons Endowed Fund for Inclusive Leadership. This gift
COMMUNITY FORWARD
provides support for inclusive leadership programming at the Warren Bennis Leadership Institute at the UC Carl H. Lindner College of Business.
“
Philanthropic growth and community engagement are at the heart of UC Health. Your trust and belief in our mission, our care and our people inspire us each day. Our vision of becoming a world-class academic health care institution is enabled by your continued investment, and for that we thank you.” CORY D. SHAW President & Chief Executive Officer UC Health
19
A NEW ERA OF BEARCAT CHAMPIONSHIPS UC’s first day in the Big 12 conference was July 1, 2023. Behind this momentous occasion are the 8,000 UC alumni, Greater Cincinnati leaders and dedicated Bearcats who have supported the Day One Ready Campaign. This devotion to our 450-plus student-athletes resulted in topping $100 million ahead of the 2023 football season and the beginning of a new era as a Power 5 school. Significant progress has been made toward the campaign’s top priorities to fuel support for student-athlete wellness, signature facilities and operational resources for championship readiness. Support includes: • Larry and Rhonda Sheakley make the largest single gift in UC Athletics history, spearheading the game-changing, multi-million-dollar Indoor Practice Facility and Performance Center. • Total Quality Logistics and UC create a long-term strategic partnership. This includes field level and stadium signage and logo assets for TQL as well as specific investment to the Indoor Practice Facility and Performance Center. • Dave and Wendy Herche invest in the renovation of the men’s and women’s basketball locker rooms, the makeover of the practice gym and several major athletic department initiatives. • Alumni Travis Kelce, BIS ’22, and Richard Kimbler, BBA ’73, MBA ’74, support student-athlete wellness. Students have access to resources and services related to both nutrition and mental health services. The Day One Ready Campaign is part of Next, Now: The Campaign for Cincinnati, the comprehensive fundraising campaign for UC and UC Health.
20 FUTURE FORWARD
“When we talk to our student-athletes, we talk about the dedication of our donor base and how much effort, energy and resources have been put into building our university and our athletics department around the opportunity to be in the Big 12.” John Cunningham
uc Director of Athletics
Rendering of UC’s new Indoor Practice Facility and Performance Center. 21
22 FUTURE FORWARD
fundraising report
UC adds $22.7 billion to Ohio’s economic base and supports over 125,000 regional jobs. 23
fundraising highlights
fiscal year 2023 commitments*
$153,476,446
commitments by fund type, source and purpose
35+43.7+21.3 66.7+31.7+0.31.3 52.6+21+21.42.12.9 TYPE
SOURCE
PURPOSE
CURRENT OPERATIONS $53,721,721 - 35%
NEW COMMITMENTS $102,359,649 - 66.69%
PROGRAM ENHANCEMENTS $80,661,947 - 52.56%
ENDOWMENT $67,059,674 - 43.7%
DEFERRED GIFTS $48,688,221 - 31.72%
SCHOLARSHIPS & FELLOWSHIPS $32,309,132 - 21.05%
FACILITIES $32,695,051 - 21.3%
GIFT-IN-KIND (Non-software) $489,622 - 0.32%
FACILITIES $32,895,051 - 21.43%
NEW MARKET TAX CREDIT $1,938,953 - 1.26%
FACULTY $3,228,275 - 2.10%
*Excludes UC Health contribution, non-government research fund, software gifts-in-kind, campaign-only gifts.
24 FUTURE FORWARD
UNRESTRICTED $4,382,040 - 2.86%
Gift Bands $1M+
$83,283,930 - 54.26% of all dollars 25 Principal Gifts - 0.06% of all gifts $38,798,120 - 25.28% of all dollars
$100K+ 152 Gifts - 0.35% of all gifts $25K+
$10,338,493 - 6.74% of all dollars 261 Gifts - 0.6% of all gifts
$25K-
$21,055,903 - 13.72% of all dollars 43,318 Gifts - 98.99% of all gifts
overall giving
43,756
total number of gifts
$67,254,259 gifts from alumni
25
financial highlights
UC Foundation and UC Health Foundation Combined* REVENUES
2023 TOTAL
2022 TOTAL
Contributions
100,392,224
91,137,923
University support
12,202,509
9,636,018
Fundraising fees
12,068,106
11,273,219
Investment gains (losses), net
31,916,353
(1,996,807)
Other
2,960,448
3,980,213
$159,539,640
$114,030,566
Distributions to University of Cincinnati
69,755,344
93,716,540
Assets released from restriction
2,879,040
2,055,939
Operating expenses
30,791,213
27,202,907
UC Foundation endowment fee
5,983,568
5,792,241
$109,409,165
$128,767,627
(641,839)
121,279
$ 108,767,326
$128,888,906
CHANGE IN NET ASSETS
$50,772,314
($14,858,340)
NET ASSETS, BEGINNING OF YEAR
$707,676,393
$722,534,733
NET ASSETS, END OF YEAR
$758,448,707
$707,676,393
TOTAL REVENUES
EXPENSES
TOTAL EXPENSES Change in present value of annuities payable TOTAL EXPENSES AND OTHER DEDUCTIONS
26 FUTURE FORWARD
ASSETS
2023 TOTAL
2022 TOTAL
Cash and cash equivalents
22,102,263
28,735,941
Pledges receivable, net of allowance
110,041,623
91,184,772
Investments
647,581,252
613,491,255
Beneficial interest in assets
17,061,172
15,395,456
Property and equipment
224,372
294,316
4,072,631
2,720,320
$801,083,313
$751,822,060
Accounts payable and accrued expenses
16,676,519
15,649,836
Agency payable
12,546,759
14,400,304
Trusts held for the benefit of others
3,892,974
3,880,193
Present value of annuities payable
7,247,318
8,950,868
Other liabilities
2,271,036
1,264,466
TOTAL LIABILITIES
$42,634,606
$44,145,667
NET ASSETS
$758,448,707
$707,676,393
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS
$801,083,313
$751,822,060
Other assets TOTAL ASSETS
LIABILITIES
*Unaudited
27
UC AND UC HEALTH LEADERS Neville G. Pinto, PhD President University of Cincinnati
Cory D. Shaw
President and Chief Executive Officer UC Health
UC FOUNDATION BOARD OF TRUSTEES CHAIR
Rae A. Mang
PRESIDENT
Peter E. Landgren
Medfield, MA
Cincinnati, OH
TREASURER
SECRETARY
Thomas D. Freeman Cincinnati, OH
PAST CHAIR
W. Troy Neat
Cincinnati, OH
Heather C. Ellison
Cincinnati, OH
UC FOUNDATION LEADERSHIP Peter E. Landgren
President, UC Foundation Vice President for University Advancement, UC
Jonathan Agree
Vice President, Development, Academic Medicine
Tammy R. Bennett
Vice President for Inclusive Excellence in Philanthropy
Linda E. Bledsoe
Thomas D. Freeman
Vice President and CFO, Administration and Finance
Jennifer L. Heisey
Vice President, Alumni and Donor Experience
Stephen A. Rosfeld
Vice President, Development
Carrie E. White
Vice President, Human Resources
Vice President, Technology, Information and Philanthropic Strategy
Heather C. Ellison
Caleb D. Whitted
Chief of Staff
Julie L. Engebrecht
Vice President, Strategic Communications
28 FUTURE FORWARD
Vice President, Principal Giving
TRUSTEES Shakila T. Ahmad Mason, OH Peter A. Alpaugh Cincinnati, OH Lori A. Beer New York, NY John B. Berding Cincinnati, OH Edwin L. Bowman Suwanee, GA Jim Boyce Indianapolis, IN Eric C. Broyles Fort Washington, MD Ken V. Byers Cincinnati, OH Thomas B. Carleton Loveland, OH Sean P. Connell Oak Brook, IL Alvin H. Crawford Cincinnati, OH William J. Davis Cincinnati, OH Kimberlee J. Dobbs Cincinnati, OH Timothy A. Elsbrock Cincinnati, OH Barbara Fant Cincinnati, OH Leigh R. Fox Cincinnati, OH Jerry L. Fritz Bella Vista, AR Paul D. Green Cincinnati, OH Lourdes J. Harshe Huntington Beach, CA Anil D. Hinduja Bethesda, MD Stuart G. Hoffman Pittsburgh, PA Gyan Jha Louisville, KY Gary D. Johns Fairfield, OH Laurence F. Jones Fairfield Township, OH Joseph P. Judge Washington, DC
Jerome C. Kathman Covington, KY Ruthie S. Keefe Cincinnati, OH Stephen E. Kimpel Hilliard, OH Rae A. Mang Medfield, MA Darrell D. Miller Altadena, CA Anndrea M. Moore Los Angeles, CA Shenan P. Murphy Cincinnati, OH Arun C. Murthy Flower Mound, TX Russell C. Myers Cincinnati, OH W. Troy Neat Montgomery, OH Jacqueline C. Neumann Cincinnati, OH Cora K. Ogle Cincinnati, OH Kirk L. Perry Cincinnati, OH Judy L. Pershern Cincinnati, OH Ryan M. Rybolt Cincinnati, OH Richard C. Seal Cincinnati. OH Shimul A. Shah Cincinnati, OH Christopher J. Van Pelt Loveland, OH Amanda L. Wait Arlington, VA Andi K. Wiot Cincinnati, OH Andrea I. Zahumensky Chicago, IL
* Herschede Society as of June 30, 2023 UC Foundation Trustee list as of June 30, 2023
EX-OFFICIO TRUSTEES Cara Baah-Binney Cincinnati, OH Flavia M. Bastos Covington, KY Thomas D. Cassady Cincinnati, OH Phil D. Collins Cincinnati, OH Heather C. Ellison Cincinnati, OH Thomas D. Freeman Cincinnati, OH Kiley Gawronski Cincinnati, OH Patrick A. Kowalski Cincinnati, OH Peter E. Landgren Cincinnati, OH Robin M. Lightner Fort Thomas, KY Cory D. Shaw Cincinnati, OH
TRUSTEES EMERITI Eugene R. Allspach* Houston, TX Elroy E. Bourgraf* Naples, FL Jack E. Brown* Cincinnati, OH Otto M. Budig* Cincinnati, OH Daniel P. Carmichael* Carmel, IN Phil D. Collins* Cincinnati, OH Todd C. DeGarmo* Washington, DC Thomas E. Dewey* Montgomery, OH David B. Dillon* Mission Hills, KS John S. Domaschko* Covington, KY Dianne G. Dunkelman* Cincinnati, OH Bob L. Fealy* Chicago, IL
Brian E. Hall* Cleveland, OH Donald C. Harrison* Montgomery, OH Carrie K. Hayden* Steamboat Springs, CO Lynnette M. Heard* Houston, TX Robert A. Heimann* Cincinnati, OH Kathryn A. Hollister* Cincinnati, OH Thomas H. Humes* Cincinnati, OH Timothy E. Johnson* Cincinnati, OH Barbara W. Kellar* Cincinnati, OH Robert J. King* Cleveland, OH Patricia L. Klingbiel* Elmhurst, IL Marvin P. Kolodzik* Cincinnati, OH David M. Lance* Warsaw, KY Louis H. Lauch* Naples, FL Jerry P. Leamon* Cos Cob, CT Doloris F. Learmonth* Cincinnati, OH William E. Lower* Cincinnati, OH Eva L. Maddox* Chicago, IL John M. Mang* Medfield, MA Thomas E. Mischell* Cincinnati, OH Joffre P. Moine* Mason, OH Jerome P. Montopoli* Naples, FL Valerie L. Newell* Covington, KY H. C. B. Niehoff* Cincinnati, OH Michael J. Paxton* Naples, FL Ellen Rieveschl* Covington, KY Yvonne C. Robertson* Cincinnati, OH
Alvin F. Roehr* Cincinnati, OH James A. Schiff* Cincinnati, OH James E. Schwab* Tucson, AZ Tony L. Shipley* Cincinnati, OH Randall E. Smith* Cincinnati, OH John M. Tew* Cincinnati, OH Richard E. Thornburgh* Palm Beach, FL Woodrow H. Uible* Cincinnati, OH Myron E. Ullman* Montrose, CO Margaret K. Valentine* Cincinnati, OH Michael D. Valentine* Cincinnati, OH Sandra S. Wiesmann* Bethesda, MD Jeffrey P. Williams* New Canaan, CT Steven A. Wilson* Cincinnati, OH Frank C. Woodside* Cincinnati, OH Jeffrey L. Wyler* Milford, OH Wilbert L. Ziegler* Crestview Hills, KY Anthony Zingale* Los Gatos, CA
29
30 FUTURE FORWARD
Photos left to right: Larry and Rhonda Sheakley at the groundbreaking of the Indoor Practice Facility and Performance Center. Their gift, the largest in UC Athletics history, spearheaded the project. A UC student in psychology class at the new Clifton Court Hall. UC Health celebrates the updated UC Medical Center entrance and lobby. 31
The University of Cincinnati Foundation PO Box 19970 Cincinnati, OH 45219-0970
(513) 556-6781 | (888) 556-8889
32 FUTURE FORWARD
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