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CHANGED ANNUAL REPORT OF GIVING 2019 -2020 CHANGING WORLDS 2020: THE CAMPAIGN FOR UNM SUMMARY
Ta b l e o f C o n t e n t s Message from the UNM President
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Message from UNM Foundation Leadership
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UNM Foundation Board of Trustees
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The Year in Numbers
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How We Report Your Gifts
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Gratitude at a Glance
7
Changing Worlds 2020: The Campaign for UNM 8 Presidential Scholarship Program
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The Power of Endowment
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Tom L. Popejoy Society
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New Horizons Society
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Ways to Give to UNM
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UNM Foundation Contacts
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F R O M
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U N M
P R E S I D E N T
From the UNM President
A Photo: Jodi Newton
s we near the end of 2020, it is safe to say that we have all been challenged in ways we could not have imagined as the season was starting to turn last spring. The global pandemic has tested our economy, our health care systems and, at times, our sense of optimism and purpose. It has also revealed strengths we never thought we had, spurred incredible invention and brought people closer — albeit at a safe distance or reduced to the size of a Zoom window.
The University of New Mexico responded to the crisis with a whirl of scientific research, driving toward a treatment and vaccine against this novel coronavirus, Garnett S. Stokes as our hospitals opened their doors to COVID-19 patients from neighboring states and the Navajo Nation. Meanwhile, our faculty, staff and students all pivoted to different learning models and worked to reopen campus in the Fall semester on a safe, hybrid in-person and online system informed by science, adhering to the highest health and safety protocols, and at all times ensuring that the health and safety of our Lobo community remained our top priority. You, as a supporter of UNM, are a vital part of that community. Your dedication to our mission and generous financial support help us offer a first-class education; provide cutting-edge research, as the state’s only R1 institution, in fields as diverse as anthropology and engineering, history and pharmacy; and offer New Mexicans the best and most compassionate patient care at our clinics and hospitals. In these uncertain economic times, your generosity has never been more important. To see the enthusiasm with which you have responded to UNM’s Changing Worlds 2020: The Campaign for UNM fundraising campaign makes me prouder than ever to count myself as a member of the Lobo pack. More than 77,000 of you responded to the call and our campaign raised more than $1.16 billion — a record-breaking amount. In this last fiscal year alone, despite COVID, you committed more than $94 million to UNM. I am truly inspired by your support and, on behalf of the entire UNM community, sincerely thankful for your generosity. As we enter 2021 tested by and united in the unprecedented events of 2020, let’s stand together in our resolve to ensure UNM continues to engage, inspire, motivate and lead. GARNETT S . STOKES PRESIDENT The University of New Mexico 1
F R O M
U N M
F O U N D A T I O N
L E A D E R S H I P
Photo: Kim Jew Portraits
Photo: Frank Frost Photography
From UNM Foundation Leadership
R AN DY VE L AR DE
J E F F TODD
CHAIR, BOARD OF TRUSTEES UNM Foundation
PRESIDENT and CEO UNM Foundation
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year when we closed out Changing Worlds 2020: The Campaign for UNM, which raised more than $1.16 billion over the course of the past 14 years.
On behalf of The Foundation, we want to say thank you for all you have done to support UNM — one of the most important drivers of knowledge creation, economic progress, health and wellness in New Mexico.
As this ambitious campaign progressed, the question was asked,
Maybe your generosity and commitment to helping UNM was
“Whose world will you change?” You answered with astonishing generosity and with gifts that have provided direct and tangible results — from laboratories to community programs to scholarships that have touched thousands of lives and opened doors to bright futures.
motivated by the way the University helped you, a friend or a loved one achieve a goal, follow a dream or regain health. Philanthropy often starts with an inspiration that leads to a donation, which in turn inspires others to give.
he University of New Mexico achieved a key milestone for this
We tip our hats to Henry Nemcik, who served as the UNM Foundation’s president and CEO for nine years before retiring in 2019 and who was instrumental in helping the campaign reach its goal. 2
In the midst of the pandemic, the world is more unpredictable and demanding than ever before. We hope you stay safe and find comfort in your families, friends and communities. We hope you continue to support the students, staff, faculty and caregivers at UNM that inspire us every day.
U N M
F O U N D A T I O N
L E A D E R S H I P
UNM Foundation Board of Trustees Former Board Chairs
AS OF JUNE 30, 2020 CAROLYN ABEITA
LAMECK LUKANGA
JERRALD ROEHL
LAURIE MOYE
MARY D. POOLE
Isleta Pueblo, New Mexico 2015-2023
NATIONAL VICE CHAIR Los Angeles, California 2015-2023
Albuquerque, New Mexico 2019-2023
2017-2019
2000-2002
ALEX O. ROMERO
MICHELLE COONS
ANN RHOADES
MARTHA McGREW
2015-2017
1998-2000
Albuquerque, New Mexico 2019-2023
CARL ALONGI
DICK MORRIS
2013-2015
1996-1998
Brooklyn, New York 2012-2020
GARY L. GORDON
WAYNE DAVENPORT
2011-2013
1994-1996
TODD SANDOVAL
ANNE YEGGE
MARALYN BUDKE
Albuquerque, New Mexico 2019-2023
2009-2011
1992-1994
THELMA DOMENICI
MAXINE FRIEDMAN
ROBERT SCHWARTZ
2007-2009
1988-1992
UNM REGENT Albuquerque, New Mexico
ROBERT L. BOVINETTE
JERRY GEIST
2005-2007
1984-1988
ROBERT M. GOODMAN
JACK RUST
2002-2005
1980-1984
PAUL CASSIDY Albuquerque, New Mexico 2019-2023
DON CLAMPITT Dallas, Texas 2019-2023
CAROL MAYO COCHRAN Albuquerque, New Mexico 2019-2023
CHAD COOPER PRESIDENT, UNM ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Albuquerque, New Mexico 2020-2021
TOM DAULTON
EXECUTIVE VICE DEAN, UNM HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER Albuquerque, New Mexico 2019-2021
LAURIE MOYE IMMEDIATE PAST CHAIR Albuquerque, New Mexico 2012-2021
RYAN MUMMERT VICE CHAIR, CHAIR-ELECT Albuquerque, New Mexico 2014-2022
ANTHONY PACHELLI
Dallas, Texas 2019-2023
Albuquerque, New Mexico 2014-2022
FELICIA FINSTON
MARK J. PECENY
SECRETARY Placitas, New Mexico 2017-2021
GREG FOLTZ ASSISTANT TREASURER Corrales, New Mexico 2016-2024
CHERYL FOSSUM GRAHAM
DEAN, COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES Albuquerque, New Mexico 2019-2021
SHERRY PRUD’HOMME PARSONS * Taos, New Mexico 2012-2020
NANCY RIDENOUR
Santa Fe, New Mexico 2016-2024
St. Louis, Missouri 2013-2021
WILLIAM P. LANG
TOMMY ROBERTS
Corrales, New Mexico 2015-2021
Denver, Colorado 2014-2022
KURT ROTH *
GARNETT S. STOKES PRESIDENT, UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO
JEFF TODD PRESIDENT AND CEO, UNM FOUNDATION 2019-Present
RANDY VELARDE CHAIR Houston, Texas 2011-2023
LINDA WARNING Taos, New Mexico 2015-2023
JUDY ZANOTTI Albuquerque, New Mexico 2013-2020 *End of Service Term - June 30, 2020 2019-2020 officers’ names in RED
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T H E
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N U M B E R S
Private Giving
GIFTS & PLEDGES BY PURPOSE DONOR RESTRICTIONS
F Y 201 9 -2020
M
ore than $94 million in private support was given to The University of New Mexico during the July 1, 2019 - June 30, 2020 fiscal year.
Private support includes gifts and pledges received for the benefit of UNM's students, schools, colleges, departments and programs. Along with you, more than 8,900 donors provided more than 27,000 gifts that support UNM’s mission of student and faculty success, worldclass research and exceptional patient care at clinics and hospitals.
ACADE MIC DIVISIONS
OTHE R RESTRICTE D
21.1%
20.8%
STU DE NT FINANCIAL SU PPORT
20.1% ATHLETICS
5%
RESEARCH
PU BLIC SE RVICE
20.5%
9.4% OTHE R
3.1%
PRIVATE SUPPORT TOTALS
D G E S BY SO U
FOUNDATIONS CORPORATIONS
15.9% $15M
11.8% $11. 2M
$40M
OTHER ORGANIZATIONS
28.4% $26.9M
TOTAL $94 ,604 , 388 4
$60M
$94.6
$80M
$41.4M
$ 8 7. 2
GI
43.8%
$91.4
CE
ALUMNI & FRIENDS
$101 . 2
$100M
$ 8 7. 0
TS
LE &P
R
F
Your generosity builds the future at The University of New Mexico. We are grateful for your trust, and we thank you for your support.
$20M
$0M
FY
FY
FY
15 16
16 17
17 18
FY
18 19
FY
19 20
T H E
Y E A R
Consolidated Investment Fund
I N
N U M B E R S
CIF SPENDING DISTRIBUTION BY DONOR-DESIGNATED PURPOSE
CIF PERFORMANCE
F Y 201 9 -2020
As of June 30, 2020
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he UNM Board of Regents has delegated authority to the UNM Foundation Investment Committee to oversee and manage the endowment assets of the University and the Foundation. The pooled assets are combined for investment purposes and operated as a unitized pool known as the Consolidated Investment Fund (CIF). The CIF is managed in accordance with the Consolidated Investment Fund Investment Policy, which is approved by both the UNM Foundation Board of Trustees and the UNM Board of Regents.
FY 2019 -2020
-0.2%
3 -YEAR
4.0%
5 -YEAR
4.5%
10 -YEAR
6.9%
CIF investments are invested for the long term using a diversified approach, with the principal goal of maximizing the return at a commensurate and acceptable level of risk, to benefit UNM. Investment strategy is guided by the concept of complementary managers that are responsible for specific asset categories and management styles in a diversified portfolio.
CI
The CIF finished fiscal year 2020 with a $444.6 million market value at June 30, 2020, and an investment return of -0.2 %. Investment markets continued to improve after June 30. The CIF gained 6.3% in the first quarter of fiscal year 2021, closing with a market value of $466.0 million at September 30, 2020.
F
S E T ALLOC AT AS IO
15.5%
OTHE R
21.2%
11 12
FY
12 13
7.4%
PRIVATE INVESTME NTS
14.3% REAL ASSETS
U. S . EQUIT Y
25.6%
4.3%
$16.5
$16.0
$15.5
$15.0
$14 .9
$13.8
$13.5
$14 .0
$14 .9
$444.6
$459.9
$454.9
$10M
$15.9
CIF SPENDING DISTRIBUTION
$425.3
$395.1
$405.8
$415.2
$329.5 FY
$358.4
$336.0 FY
10 11
25.3%
15.0%
RESEARCH
INTE RNATIONAL EQUIT Y
FACU LT Y
PROG R AMS
$15M
$400M
$0M
1.6%
19.1%
$500M
$100M
N
MARKETABLE ALTE RNATIVES
CIF MARKET VALUE
$200M
50.7%
FIXE D INCOME & CASH
In addition to customary investment management expenses, a development funding allocation of 1.85% is assessed against each participating fund to assist with operational expenses.
$300M
STU DE NT SU PPORT
$5M FY
13 14
FY
14 15
FY
15 16
FY
16 17
FY
17 18
FY
18 19
FY
19 20
FY
$0M
10 11
FY
11 12
FY
12 13
FY
13 14
FY
14 15
FY
15 16
FY
16 17
FY
17 18
FY
18 19
FY
19 20 5
T H E
Y E A R
I N
N U M B E R S
How We Report Your Gifts F Y 201 9 -2020
T
he UNM Foundation complies with various standards when reporting private gifts, depending on the purpose of the report and the requirements of the requesting organization.
This UNM Foundation’s Annual Report of Giving reports the total effort of the UNM community in engaging private donors. Based on UNM Foundation campaign counting standards, qualifying bequests, cash and in-kind gifts donated directly to UNM-affiliated units, as well as pledges meeting the criteria, are counted and recognized in the annual total. Our audited financial statements report your gifts in accordance with Generally Accepted Accounting Principles. Unlike campaign reporting, gifts of bequests, cash and in-kind gifts donated directly to UNM-affiliated units, as well as pledges outside the criteria for Generally Accepted Accounting Principles, are omitted. Given their differing objectives, each of these standards reports the gifts received by UNM differently. Campaign reports are distributed monthly and through this annual Report of Giving. Our audited financial statements are available on our website at unmfund.org. We welcome your questions at (505) 313-7600.
Gift Commitments to UNM F Y 201 9 -2020 R E P O R T E D O N T H E U N M F O U N DAT I O N ’ S A U D I T E D F I N A N C I A L S TAT E M E N T S Cash
$34 , 569,043
In-Kind Gifts
$469, 552
Pledges
$735 ,000
N O T R E P O R T E D O N F I N A N C I A L S TAT E M E N T S B U T R E C O G N I Z E D A S C A M PA I G N G I F T S Cash
$24 , 201 ,704
In-Kind Gifts
$2 ,912 ,070
Pledges and Estate Commitments
$31 ,7 17,019
T O TA L G I F T C O M M I T M E N T S
$94 ,604 ,388
GIFTS FOR UNM’S CURRENT USE Cash In-Kind Gifts TOTAL GIFTS FOR UNM’S CURRENT USE
$48 ,953 , 57 1 $3 , 381 ,622
$52 , 335 ,193
GIFTS FOR UNM’S FUTURE Cash Gifts to UNM’s Endowment Pledges and Estate Commitments
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$9, 817,176 $32 , 452 ,019
TOTAL GIFTS FOR UNM’S FUTURE
$42 , 269,195
T O TA L G I F T C O M M I T M E N T S
$94 ,604 ,388
G R A T I T U D E
A T
A
G L A N C E
About Our Donors FY 2019 -2020 AT AÂ GLANCE Total number of donors Number of individual donors
7,619
8,914 Number of corporation and foundation donors
Number of first-time donors
1,295 1,917
Number of donors per highest giving levels:
$1 MILLION + $500,000-$999,999 $100,000-$499,999 $50,000-$99,999
31 11 82 65
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CHANGED CHANGING WORLDS 2020: THE CAMPAIGN FOR UNM SUMMARY
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hanks to you — all 77,022 of you — Changing Worlds 2020: The Campaign for UNM exceeded its ambitious fundraising goal of $1 billion.
The combined gifts from a large and generous extended family of UNM supporters totaled $1,164,785,722 when the campaign closed out on June 30, 2020. In 2006, UNM launched the third giving campaign in its history. It was called The Campaign for UNM and its goal was ambitious: to raise $675 million in private donations in eight years. That campaign exceeded its goal and was extended until 2020 with a new name and a larger goal. Now, with more than $1.16 billion achieved, it is a perfect time to reflect on what those donations translate into and what they can inspire. Your donations have already planted seeds that are beginning to grow across UNM campuses in the form of scholarships and financial aid to help UNM students, grants to help UNM faculty and labs and centers devoted to discovery, improved care for patients at UNM’s hospitals and clinics and enhanced programs for community neighbors across New Mexico.
It means students studying the French horn, pharmacy, engineering, the cello, chemistry and bilingual education can worry less about money and concentrate more on their studies, thanks to endowed scholarships. It means access to fresh produce and healthy food for people living along the San Juan River in northwestern New Mexico, thanks to a health disparities donation to the UNM Office for Community Health. It means a boost for the UNM Anderson School of Management’s New Mexico for Good initiative to encourage students to pursue socially responsible business ventures. And it means one UNM undergraduate student living with a disability will receive tuition assistance to honor the legacy of an alumna who navigated UNM as a student in a wheelchair. Every donation tells a story. And you can read about more donors, what inspired them to support The Campaign for UNM and how their gifts changed worlds in the following pages.
What does your record-setting generosity mean?
If you saw the promise that UNM holds for New Mexico and opened your heart to help, thank you.
It means that children with cerebral palsy, scoliosis and other musculoskeletal disorders at UNM’s Carrie Tingley Hospital gait and motion analysis lab no longer have to travel to Arizona or Colorado for therapy, thanks to a new state-of-the art oxygen sensor.
If you’re inspired by UNM, and can join the thousands of supporters whose donations are vital to the University’s continued excellence and growth, please consider a gift. Large or small, it can plant a seed and from a seed remarkable things can grow.
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PURPOSE Academic Divisions
UNMF GIFTS TOTAL
PERCENTAGES
$256,197,119
22.0%
$96,969,247
8.3%
Faculty and Staff
$51,491,084
4.4%
Library
$19,180,574
1.6%
Other Restricted
$202,149,139
17.4%
Physical Plant
$39,325,323
3.4%
Public Service
$107,375,346
9.2%
Research
$180,210,542
15.5%
Student Financial Aid
$206,988,618
17.8%
$4,898,731
0.4%
Athletics
Unrestricted Total SOURCE
$1,164,785,722 UNMF GIFTS TOTAL
PERCENTAGES
$473,620,842
40.7%
Corporations
$213,704,159
18.3%
Foundations
$213,157,611
18.3%
$264,303,110
22.7%
Alumni and Friends
Other Organizations Total
C H A N G E D
$1,164,785,722 9
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THE NEXT GENERATION A FAMILY’S LEGACY OF LOBO PHILANTHROPY ENDURES By Leslie Linthicum
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om Daulton’s father always donated anonymously to various causes and never talked much about his philanthropy. “He kept that private,” Daulton says. “And he liked it that way.” His father, Paul, was a man of few words and led by example. That example lives on in his son, who today carries the Daulton family’s tradition of philanthropy, especially in regard to UNM.
Sue and Paul Daulton both attended UNM in the 1940s. Paul was raised by a single mother and came to UNM from Colorado on an ROTC scholarship. He took a break to serve in the Pacific in the U.S. Navy in World War II and returned to UNM to graduate with a degree in English in 1947. Sue left college just short of a degree and went to work after the couple married.
Tom Daulton
After Paul graduated, he went into the family business, the 7UP Bottling Co., joining Sue’s brother, John C. Marshall, also a UNM graduate. When Sue’s father died in 1952, the Daultons and Marshall took over operations. In 1980, the family sold the business. Daulton’s parents started giving money to UNM in the 1980s. “UNM allowed my dad to go to college, to come to Albuquerque and meet my mom and have a livelihood that ultimately was successful,” Daulton says. “He felt loyalty to UNM.” Sue Daulton took a special interest in the College of Nursing and donated annually. She also gave to the School of Architecture & Planning and always funded at least three Presidential Scholars each year. Daulton is an only child, and after his parents died he established the Daulton Family Fund at the Albuquerque Community Foundation. Through the fund, gifts continue to be made to the UNM nursing program, three Presidential Scholarships and other local causes. 10
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“The praise goes to Mom,” Daulton says. “I’m just keeping it going.” As part of Changing Worlds 2020: The Campaign for UNM, Daulton himself recently made a generous gift to the University in his will and he is in the last of a three-year annual pledge to support the women’s swim team. Daulton came to UNM to swim and play water polo and, by the time he graduated in 1977, he had captained the water polo team and earned two degrees — in business and in mathematics.
“I needed a role model, and I saw how generous my parents were. So I’m still learning about philanthropy from them.”
“Even though there isn’t a men’s swim team anymore, I wanted to support the sport,” says Daulton, who made the pledge when the swim team was in danger of being cut.
After he graduated, Daulton earned his MBA at the University of Texas at Thomas Daulton Austin. He worked in banking in Dallas for eight years and another seven as CFO of a printing firm before going out on his own as a private equity investor in 1995. With their three children educated and launched as adults, Daulton and his wife, Jan, knew it was time for them to continue the Daulton family legacy. “For a long time, the thought of giving my own money away didn’t resonate at all with me,” says Daulton. “I needed a role model, and I saw how generous my parents were. So I’m still learning about philanthropy from them.”
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DIGGING DEEP TO HELP MINERS
least once a month, but via the Internet he is also capable of quickly completing a diagnosis from his office at UNM.
ENDOWED CHAIR BRINGS UNM TO THE FIGHT AGAINST BLACK LUNG DISEASE
The mobile program, Miners’ Colfax’s Mining Advisory Council, of which Sood is a part, and the Miners’ Wellness TeleECHO Programs have been recognized by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services for their innovation.
By Glen Rosales
The honors speak to the success that the program has seen since its inception.
In the West, particularly in the tiny villages sprinkled through the backcountry of the Rocky Mountains, miners frequently inhale coal dust that can lead to lung disease called pneumoconiosis — better known as black lung disease. It varies in severity, but sufferers may experience shortness of breath and scarring of lung tissue, which can cause ongoing respiratory issues. “Black lung has increased all across the country, but the capability of rural health centers to treat it has decreased,” says Akshay Sood, MD, a tenured professor in The University of New Mexico Health Sciences Akshay Sood, MD Center’s School of Medicine. “Many medical schools don’t even teach about black lung disease adequately. Not only did it not become extinct, it came back with a vengeance.” The Miners’ Colfax Medical Center in Raton, N.M., is the leading health center for treating black lung disease in the Rocky Mountain region, thanks in large part to an endowed chair it created at UNM’s School of Medicine in 2015. Through a $1.5 million endowment, Miners’ Colfax is able to retain Sood as its Miners’ Colfax Medical Center Endowed Chair in Mining-Related Lung Disease. The endowment enables Sood, a noted pulmonologist for 30 years, to conduct research, train younger physicians, treat miners and provide outreach. “There’s four legs to the stool,” Sood said of what he does. “I have to be able to conduct, manage and supervise the clinical responsibilities, the educational responsibilities, the community advocacy responsibilities and the research responsibilities. That’s what the chair really does and I think we’ve accomplished all four of these responsibilities really well.” One of the attributes that makes the program so successful is a mobile screening capability in the form of a decked-out, 18-wheeled rig that is able to visit the remote, generally poor, post-extractive towns. Sood visits patients in Raton at
The endowed chair is actually a continuation of a pulmonary program Miners’ Colfax started in 1980 in conjunction with UNM, said Charles Pollard, who manages the program. The endowed chair now allows that program to exist in perpetuity. “We’ve been working at this for a long time,” he said. “We got our first mobile unit in the early ’80s. We take that program and we go throughout the state and the Western states to provide occupational lung disease screening. We look specifically for coal miners, but work with all miners with any sort of lung disease.” When Sood arrives at a black lung diagnosis, it sets off a chain of actions going beyond medical care for the patient. The miner is connected with a benefits counselor to begin immediate claims preparation, Pollard said. And because mine owners generally contest the claims, legal representation is consulted, as well. Photo: Miners’ Colfax Medical Center
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anking minerals from the ground, even in the best of cases, is a backbreaking, health-draining occupation. And all too often, it can lead to long-term illness and even death.
“It’s a new and innovative approach to training individuals in the care of miners, fulfilling a critical gap.” Akshay Sood
“We can help the miners out during their claims process and help with all the paperwork,” he said. “And we prepare them to a point to where they can comfortably go in front of a court to make their case known. It’s the backbone of our legal program. We can see what these miners have wrong with them, assess them and further their claim.” The ongoing collaboration between Miners’ Colfax and UNM allows research to continue even as the miners are being treated, Sood said. “It’s a new and innovative approach to training individuals in the care of miners, fulfilling a critical gap,” Sood said.
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C H A N G E D
GENEROSITY IS ALWAYS ON THE MENU
recently, the couple made a major endowed gift to the School of Architecture’s Indigenous Design + Planning Institute, which offers degree programs and works with communities to foster culturally responsive design and planning.
FRONTIER OWNERS DOROTHY AND LARRY RAINOSEK DO WELL BY DOING GOOD
Larry, also a fixture at the Frontier and at the couple’s four Golden Pride BBQ, Chicken & Ribs restaurants, says the couple’s parents taught them by example that there’s always a little money available for charity if you dig deep enough in your pocket.
By Le s l i e Li nth i c u m
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ust about every college town has a beloved local joint that students and professors treat as a campus annex and alumni return to, often with their children and grandchildren, to relive their college days.
Larry, one of five kids raised on a dairy farm in Central Texas, and Dorothy, who grew up in Austin, where her father drove a cab, knew their parents didn’t have much. “But every Sunday there was a little bit for the church,” Larry says.
For The University of New Mexico, that place is the Frontier Restaurant. And its owners, Larry and Dorothy Rainosek, have done more than feed the UNM community and keep the coffee cups full for nearly 50 years. From their first lean weeks in business, when they didn’t know a breakfast burrito from a bowl of posole, these Texas natives have built a thriving operation that has knitted tightly with the campus across the street. And starting in the early 1980s, with their first gifts supporting the Presidential Scholarship Program, the Rainoseks have given generously to UNM. Dorothy, bustling around the cavernous dining rooms in her turquoise jewelry and Southwestern garb, says modestly that the couple’s four decades of philanthropy to UNM have been part of a relationship of mutual generosity.
“What really motivates us is that the community has been so good to us. We have been so blessed.”
Dorothy and Larry Rainosek
The Rainosek family, 1973
When Larry graduated from high school, he went to work for a chain of restaurants in Austin, married the former Dorothy Garza and they had two children. When Larry wanted to strike out on his own, they rented the 99-seat space at the corner of Central and Cornell. They hoped to become a university gathering place.
“What really motivates us is that the community has been so good to us,” she says. “We have been so blessed.”
Selling burgers and breakfast staples, it took the Rainoseks a few years to learn about green chile and breakfast burritos and to begin making their own tortillas.
The list of UNM buildings, programs and individual students that have benefited from the Rainoseks’ generosity over the years is almost as long as the Frontier’s breakfast menu. They have endowed two Presidential Scholarships and fund another four each year. Their names, in recognition of sponsorships, appear on a gallery at the School of Architecture + Planning and in the foyer at The Pit. Most
“We really didn’t have much connection to the campus until the early 1980s when our son decided to go to UNM and received a Presidential Scholarship,” says Dorothy. When they told their son, Mark, they could afford to pay his tuition, he suggested they sponsor a Presidential Scholarship themselves, allowing another student to benefit.
Dorothy Rainosek
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That was the beginning of a long relationship between the Rainoseks and UNM. When then-President Richard Peck’s wife, Donna, wanted to raise money to help the UNM Marimba Band replace aging instruments, she called on Dorothy for help. And when Donna invited the Rainoseks to sit with her and her husband at a Lobo basketball game, the native Texans raised on football got bit by the basketball bug. When their daughter, Shannon, also received a Presidential Scholarship and attended UNM, she introduced her parents to the women’s basketball team and they became fast fans and supporters of that as well. As the restaurants did better, the Rainoseks first bought the property to the west, then the Frontier building and expanded to the east, becoming next-door neighbors to the original School of Architecture. “Those students were in here all the time,” says Dorothy. “They were good customers.”
C H A N G E D
First, they decided to offer a scholarship to an architecture student. Soon they realized there should be two scholarships since it is the School of Architecture + Planning. “Then they added landscape as a major,” Dorothy says, laughing, “so we thought we’d better do three scholarships.” Both of their children received advanced degrees from UNM — Mark an MD and Shannon a JD — and they also donate to the University. The Rainoseks, who were awarded honorary degrees in 2014, encourage others to give to UNM, too, no matter the amount. “Especially the Presidential Scholars,” Dorothy says. “So many of our scholars have said, ‘If it weren’t for this scholarship, I wouldn’t be able to go to college.’ They’re great, great students and they’re our future. It just makes us feel good that we can help.”
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HARD WORK PAYS OFF LEAN YEARS INSPIRE GENEROUS GIFT TO SUPPORT GRADUATE STEM STUDENTS By Leslie Linthicum
I
t took Chuck Griffith six years to complete his bachelor’s degree in psychology at UNM. Paying his own way, he chipped away at a degree while working at Kmart and gratefully accepting the homemade meals his concerned coworkers brought him. There was no way he could afford graduate school, even though he would have loved to continue his studies.
C H A N G E D
group, working to develop a new more efficient class of piezoelectric polymer components. She hopes to one day create a technology that might be wearable — for example a patch that could sense a wearer’s heart rate or blood sugar level. That is exactly the kind of student Chuck, 68, and Michael, 69, had in mind when they decided to make gifts to UNM. They hope Irma and others who benefit from their endowed graduate fellowships for decades to come might help make the world a better place. The two met in Oakland in 1979. Chuck was working for the Social Security Administration and Michael was at ADT Security. Their offices were blocks apart. They were in the Bay Area at the birth of the tech industry and both picked up programming and made careers in computer science.
“That informed my whole life,” Chuck says. After Chuck received his BA in 1976 he went to work, making a living in the tech industry in San Francisco before retiring to Arizona with his husband Michael Lawrence, where they turned their lifelong hobby of making quilts into a small business. “Education has always been important in Chuck’s world view because of what he had to go through to get his degree,” Michael says. “He understands how difficult it can be and how that impacts your studying.” Chuck and Michael (an NMSU grad in political science in 1978) have made a $3 million estate and immediate cash gift to UNM to fund graduate students in STEM fields, hoping to ease the burden of promising innovators and allow them to pursue the advanced degrees Chuck couldn’t afford. Irma Rocio Vasquez is the first recipient of the Charles Griffith Graduate Fellowship in Science and Technology, and she knows a bit about scrimping through lean undergraduate years. Vazquez moved with her parents to Albuquerque from the Mexican state of Chihuahua when she was three years old. As she was graduating from West Mesa High School and making plans for college, she found that her immigration status as a Dreamer prevented her from accessing federal financial aid. So she cobbled together some scholarships and waited a lot of tables. “Every single weekend, double shifts,” she says. “It was hard, but I learned from it and grew from it.” She received a BS in mechanical engineering with honors in 2019 and decided to immediately pursue a PhD. “When I received this scholarship, I was incredibly grateful,” she says. It covers her full tuition, allowing her to put her waitressing apron away and concentrate on her work with Assistant Professor Nathan Jackson’s research 14
Irma Rocio Vasquez
“We were fortunate to be at the right place at the right time for the tech boom,” says Michael, who worked with Microsoft as a software analyst while Chuck worked for pharmaceutical companies. “And we lived below our means. That’s just kind of who we grew up as. And we were fortunate and we just want to give that back.”
The couple lived and worked in San Francisco for 40 years and married in 2013. They have no children and decided together that UNM would be the best recipient of their living trust. “UNM has a history of putting out really talented people,” Michael says. They chose to direct their donations to scholarships to have an immediate impact. “We believe that a person makes differences,” says Michael. “If you can invest in a person, that can be 60 years’ worth of them giving back to society.” And they restricted their gift to the hard sciences, because they believe that is where innovations can occur that might solve some of the world’s most pressing problems. “We focused specifically on graduate fellowships, because at that point they’ve proven themselves to some degree. If we can help them in fields that are important to us — science, technology, engineering and math — we think they might be able to contribute and make a difference.”
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C H A N G E D
HONORING LIVES WELL LIVED
$200,000 will be awarded to the Popejoy Hall Excellence Fund, the first endowment for programming, operations and outreach.
PARENTS FROM THE GREATEST GENERATION INSPIRE $1.7 MILLION ESTATE GIFT TO UNM STUDENTS AND POPEJOY HALL
The Jay J. Harris Memorial Scholarship supports promising and deserving undergraduate students in the department of Earth & Planetary Science in the College of Arts and Sciences by assisting them with the cost of their education. Donating in the memory of Mary Cathren’s parents gave the couple such joy they decided to continue giving with a third scholarship in their names and in a tribute to Tom’s 38-year career as an engineer at Sandia National Laboratories.
By Maryellen Missik-Tow
M
ary Cathren Harris’s parents valued hard work and saving a dollar.
The Tom Barger II and Mary Cathren Harris Scholarship in Engineering will support students pursuing STEM degrees.
Her father, Jay J. Harris, a native of Mississippi, was born in 1911, the son of a railroad engineer, and proudly served in World War II. He graduated from Texas Christian University and began a successful career in the Southwest as a consulting geologist. He was resourceful, diligent and hardworking.
Harris and Barger hope the UNM scholarship recipients will achieve their career goals, value the importance of hard work and make a difference in their community, just like Cathren Schnorr Harris and Jay J. Harris did so many years ago.
Mary Cathren Harris, a UNM alum, and her husband Tom Barger, a University of Florida graduate, both earned master’s degrees and had successful careers. They met each other dancing in Albuquerque of all things, married in 1981 and share a love of the arts, ballroom Cathren Schnorr Harris Jay J. Harris dancing, and a passion for animals. They also have discovered the rewards of sharing their success with others. The couple started planning an estate gift initially to honor Mary Cathren’s mother, after she passed away at the extraordinary age of 103 in 2018. The Cathren Schnorr Harris Endowed Scholarship will benefit a UNM undergraduate student working as an intern at Popejoy Hall. In addition,
Photo: Kim Jew Portraits
Her mother, Cathren Schnorr Harris, the daughter of a Kansas coal miner, was an accomplished writer, poet and loved all things connected with Native Americans. She would frequently share stories with Mary Cathren about her life and the struggles her family endured during the Great Depression and World War II. Mother and daughter co-owned the Turquoise Lady of Old Town and worked together side-by-side for nearly 30 years.
Mary Cathren Harris and Tom Barger 15
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ENGINEERING A LEGACY G I F TS O F $ 4 . 4 M I LLIO N R E FLEC T DANA WOO D ’ S PA S S IO N S By Amanda Gardner
H
is colleagues called UNM engineering alumnus Dana Wood the “Code Master.” That’s because he was so fast at writing computer code, says his brother, Doug Wood. Sadly, Dana Wood, who received both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in civil engineering from UNM, died of cancer in 2013. But his gifts to UNM — a total of $4.4 million over the course of Changing Worlds 2020: The Campaign for UNM — are helping train new generations of Code Masters and ensuring that the UNM School of Engineering and other departments stay at the top of their fields. “There is no doubt that this generous gift by the Dana Wood family has been a game-changer,” says Civil, Construction & Environmental Engineering Chair and Distinguished Professor Mahmoud Reda Taha. The most recent gift from the Dana Wood Estate was $3 million given in 2018 to the School of Engineering. The lion’s share of that — $1.5 million — went to the UNM Formula Society of Automotive Engineers (FSAE) LOBO motor sports program, now named the Dana C. Wood FSAE Racing Lab. The program, one of the few of its kind, gives students course credit for designing, building and Dana C. Wood ultimately racing Formula-1/Indy-style race cars, which program founder John Russell, PhD, describes as “Indy-500 cars cut in half.” “The biggest impact is room to build the cars,” says Russell, who is also professor of mechanical engineering. The program now has just over 7,000 square feet (up from 1,000) in which to simultaneously build internal combustion vehicles and its first electric car, set to debut in 2022. The funds also enable the program to purchase equipment and supplies to build the cars in-house.
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Race cars were one of Dana Wood’s passions. He flew his jets (another passion) to events around the country. “He met both the older and younger Unsers at races and he flew to the Indianapolis 500 two or three times,” remembers Doug. Another portion of the gift — $500,000 — has gone to the Dana C. Wood Materials, Structures and Computer Lab at the School of Engineering, which opened in May. Two new 3D concrete printers, as well as 3D carbon fiber printing technology, place UNM firmly in the forefront of creating a radically different future for construction. 3D may pave the way for new materials to replace cement. That, in turn, may one day help build settlements on Mars or the moon. “You just need to send the robot and the 3D printer,” says Taha. The remaining $1 million creates an endowed department chair in the Department of Civil
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Engineering. Wood’s estate has also donated money for scholarships at the School of Engineering. After doctors diagnosed Wood, a Gallup native, with cancer, he sought treatment at some of the biggest names in cancer care, including MD Anderson Cancer Center and the Mayo Clinic, but eventually came home to New Mexico, where doctors at the UNM Comprehensive Cancer Center cared for him. In gratitude, his estate bequeathed $750,000 to create an endowed chair at the Center and, more recently, $200,000 for general operating expenses. Wood took a job at Bohannan Huston Inc. right out of college and was instrumental in a spinoff company called Diginetics, where he helped develop one of the first Computer Aided Design programs for civil engineering. He eventually rose to lead Diginetics and later developed a software called PowerMerge that synced files on different computers — a precursor to the Internet and cloud storage. He and associates later launched Leadertech, a software firm with offices in Albuquerque and Los Angeles. As his career flourished, Wood kept tight ties with the place that built the foundation of his career in engineering innovation. “Dana was passionate about UNM,” says Doug Wood.
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P R E S I D E N T I A L
S C H O L A R S H I P
“Honored, Blessed and Fortunate” Presidential Scholarship beneficiary now sponsors a Presidential Scholar By Hilary Mayall Jetty
C
ommitted to going to college, Dave Standridge worried about how he’d ever be able to afford it. His mother, who had been paralyzed during a medical procedure, was often hospitalized, and the family’s finances were strained. With encouragement from a counselor at Albuquerque High School, he applied for the UNM Presidential Scholarship Program and was accepted. It meant his tuition, books and fees were covered.
Dave & Debbie Standridge
“The Presidential Scholarship was a godsend for me,” Standridge says, “A phenomenal experience that allowed me to get an education without incurring a whole bunch of debt.”
The support of the Presidential Scholarship also gave Standridge opportunities to be active in campus life. He served in Associated Students of UNM as a senator, then vice president and president. And his desire for a career in politics led him to join the Young College Republicans, and enroll at the UNM School of Law. “I thought of law school primarily as a stepping stone to running for office,” Standridge says. “I never thought I’d end up practicing, but here I am twenty years later.” Standridge now runs three successful practices. One is dedicated to family law, another to business law. But most of his work these days is with his third office, serving disabled veterans.
“With all my mom went through,” he says, “it helped me develop empathy and made me more aware of the challenges that people with disabilities face in society.” He has hired and mentored UNM Law School graduates and student law clerks, and he’s a loyal fan of Lobo Baseball. Grateful for the opportunities afforded to him in his undergrad years, Standridge and his wife, Debbie, recently became full sponsors of a Presidential Scholar — an Albuquerque High School graduate majoring in chemistry. “It is the best investment to make,” Standridge says. “These are serious students with bright futures, who can be strong contributors to our community and our state. Given my personal story, the Presidential Scholarship Program was a huge impact for me. I’m honored, blessed and fortunate to be able to help somebody realize their dreams too.” 18
P R O G R A M
Since the UNM Presidential Scholarship Program began in 1976, it has helped 4,741 students attend UNM. Presidential Scholars receive an annual award of $9,800, which covers full tuition, books and fees. Scholars come to UNM from communities in every county in New Mexico and from diverse economic and social backgrounds, races and ethnicities. Many of our scholars are the first in their family to attend college. One common thread among scholars’ families is that they place a high value on education.
A N N U A L
G I V I N G
O P P O R T U N I T I E S
Annual Giving Opportunities
P
rivate support makes a significant difference in the quality of our students’ experience both inside and outside the classroom at The University of New Mexico. The UNM Foundation Office of Annual Giving oversees programs to engage the University’s alumni and friends.
Presidential Scholarship Program
M
any of New Mexico’s highest achieving and most committed high school graduates attend UNM each year due to the UNM Presidential Scholarship. These scholars earned the right to be called Presidential Scholars through their academic performance and community service. They enrich New Mexico and are exemplars of student success as Lobos on the UNM campus throughout their college careers and long after they graduate. With a gift of $2,600 each year, you may join our program as a full sponsor of a Presidential Scholar. UNM leverages your gift more than 3 to 1 to provide an award of $9,800 that covers a student’s tuition, fees and books and is renewable for four years. As a sponsor, you are matched with a Scholar, attend special invitation-only annual events, and have an opportunity to make a personal connection with the student whose life you are helping to change.
PRESIDENTIAL SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
4 ,741 Scholars since 1976
417 FY 2019-2020 scholars
92
Alternately, you may make a gift of any size to the UNM Presidential Scholarship Program and “share a scholar” with other generous donors. These gifts make a difference annually by providing many additional Presidential Scholarships. For giving in perpetuity, an investment of $50,000 or more establishes an endowed Presidential Scholarship, which can bear the name of the donor, or the name of a living or deceased loved one, colleague or mentor. You may create an endowment with a one-time gift or pay over a period of three years or less. For more information, please contact Presidential Scholarship Program Director Terry Mulert at Terry.Mulert@ unmfund.org or (505) 313-7679.
NM high schools represented
$9M In endowments
300 orf 420 Sponsors
Scholars
33
PSP alumni sponsors
New sponsors FY 2019-2020
56 19
E N D O W M E N T S
The Power of Endowment
A
n endowed fund is a gift that lasts in perpetuity. It provides continuing support to the University in the areas of the donor’s interest. Endowed funds may support student scholarships, faculty, the general needs of the University or any school, college or program within the University. The UNM Foundation works with donors to develop guidelines for how their endowments are to be used, ensuring that donor intent and University policies are honored.
FY 2019-2020 ENDOWMENTS FOR UNM Total number of endowments through FY 2019-2020
Endowments established during FY 2019-2020
1,908
49
New endowments during FY 2019-2020 supported academic units across campus: Air Force ROTC, American Indian Student Services, Anderson School of Management, Army ROTC, Athletics, College of Arts & Sciences, College of Education and Human Sciences, College of Fine Arts, College of Nursing, College of Pharmacy, College of University Libraries and Learning Sciences, Comprehensive Cancer Center, Gallup Branch, Harwood Foundation, Naval ROTC, Provost Academic Affairs, Scholarship Office, School of Architecture & Planning, School of Engineering, School of Law, School of Medicine
PURPOSES: ACA D E M I C D I V I S I O N S
AT H L E T I C S
F A C U LT Y A N D S TA F F
HARWOOD M U S E U M
LI B R ARY
RESEARCH
11
2
3
2
1
1
STUDENT FINANCIAL SUPPORT
29
20
CAMPAIGN ENDOWMENTS FOR UNM (2006-2020) New campaign endowments:
794 - $152 million
T O M
L .
P O P E J O Y
S O C I E T Y
TOM L . POPEJOY SOCIETY Established in
1982 33
Charter members
87
Total number of new members in FY 2019-2020
1,455 Total living members (including anonymous)
$ 8M Total amount of donations represented during FY 2019-2020
Tom L. Popejoy Society
F
ounded in 1982, the Tom L. Popejoy Society recognizes philanthropic leaders whose cumulative giving over the course of their lifetimes exceeds $50,000. This esteemed group of donors has grown to more than 1,400 active members who represent all aspects of The University of New Mexico.
As the first native New Mexican to hold the position of president of The University of New Mexico, Tom L. Popejoy left a far-reaching legacy. Popejoy’s 20 years as president (1948-1968), a time fondly known as the Popejoy era, capped a career that made him a UNM legend. During his tenure, the campus was greatly expanded to include the School of Medicine, KNME-TV, Jonson Gallery,
the first Bratton Hall, and The Pit, to name a few, all of which helped shape the UNM footprint today. We are grateful to those who echo President Popejoy’s passion and commitment to the University and who are changing worlds each and every day. Thanks to Tom L. Popejoy Society members, the greatest impact on student success and opportunity, faculty support and research, campus programs, and capital projects and facilities can be achieved. For more information on this prestigious society, please contact Donor Relations Director Jill Slaby at Jill.Slaby@unmfund.org or (505) 313-7650.
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N E W
New Horizons Society
T
he UNM Foundation created the New Horizons Society to recognize individuals and families who have included The University of New Mexico in their estate plans. Members are honored at an annual lunch that celebrates the impact of estate gifts on University programs, students and faculty. If you name The UNM Foundation as the beneficiary of an estate gift of any size, we want to welcome you as a New Horizons Society member. Estate gifts include a provision in a will or trust, a beneficiary designation (on a bank account, retirement plan or life insurance policy), or any arrangement providing lifetime income to the donor. For more information, please contact Associate Vice President of Planned Giving Bonnie McLeskey at Bonnie. McLeskey@unmfund.org or (505) 313-7610.
NEW HORIZONS SOCIETY Total number of NHS members
Total number of new members in FY 2019-2020
616
53
New estate commitments in FY 2019-2020
$30, 8 86 , 5 81 Received from estates in FY 2019-2020
$ 8 ,656 , 974 22
H O R I Z O N S
S O C I E T Y
W A Y S
AN N UAL G IVI NG PROG R AM
T O
G I V E
T O
U N M
Ways to Give to UNM
The Annual Giving Program solicits gifts from alumni and friends. You may designate your
To support UNM and its work with students, faculty and patients, please contact the UNM Foundation office at:
gifts to any area, college, school, department or program within the University or give unrestricted gifts. See page 19.
(505) 313 -7600
Contact Annette Hazen at Annette.Hazen@ @ unmfund.org or (505) 313-7686.
OR VISIT
E N DOWM E NTS
unmfund.org
You may establish endowed funds to support a specific purpose in perpetuity. See page 20. Contact Charlotte Wall-Smith at Charlotte. Wall-Smith@ @ unmfund.org or (505) 313-7652.
For more specific giving opportunities, please see the list of programs and contacts on this page or refer to page 24.
GIFTS OF REAL PROPERTY
MEMORIALS AND HONORARIA Memorials and honoraria gifts honor family and friends. @ unmfund.org Contact Jill Slaby at Jill.Slaby@ or (505) 313-7650.
PLANNED GIVING PROGRAM The Planned Giving Program provides you with information and helps you establish gifts through bequests, charitable trusts, gift annuities, retirement accounts and life insurance policies. The Foundation’s planned giving experts will work with you and your advisers to ensure the needs of the University and your wishes are fulfilled. Contact Bonnie McLeskey at Bonnie. @ unmfund.org or (505) 313-7610. McLeskey@
The Gift Acceptance Committee of the UNM Foundation reviews gifts of real property, including real estate, works of art, equipment and other in-kind gifts.
PRESIDENTIAL SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
Contact Suzanne Awen at Suzanne.Awen@ @ unmfund.org or (505) 313-7668.
@ unmfund.org or (505) 313-7679. Contact Terry Mulert at Terry.Mulert@
ONLINE GIVING
UNIVERSITYWIDE GIVING SOCIETIES:
You may give online to an area of your choice through the UNM Foundation’s secure website at unmfund.org.
C H E R R Y & S I LV E R S O C I E T Y
GIVING SOCIETIES AND DEAN’S CIRCLES Giving societies and dean’s circles receive gifts in support of specific programs or initiatives at UNM. Membership and gift thresholds vary by school, college or program. Contact the appropriate school, college or program development officer.
M AT C H I N G G I F T S P R O G R A M The Matching Gifts Program includes both national and local corporations that match their employees’ gifts to the UNM Foundation, enabling donors to double or even triple their gifts. Contact Jenny Frame at Jenny.Frame@ @ unmfund.org or (505) 313-7641.
The Presidential Scholarship Program supports scholarships for some of New Mexico’s highest achieving high school graduates. See page 19.
Recognizing alumni who give within 12 months of graduation and then at least once every calendar year thereafter. @ unmfund.org or (505) 313-7686. Contact Annette Hazen at Annette.Hazen@
NEW HORIZONS SOCIETY Recognizing donors who have included the University in their estate plans. See page 22. @ unmfund.org or Contact Bonnie McLeskey at Bonnie.McLeskey@ (505) 313-7610.
T O M L . P O P E J OY S O C I E T Y Recognizing cumulative giving to the University. See page 21. @ unmfund.org or (505) 313-7650. Contact Jill Slaby at Jill.Slaby@ 23
T H E
U N M
F O U N D A T I O N
Schools, Colleges and Programs
Athletics
ANDERSON SCHOOL OF MANAGEMENT
Kristine Mazzei (530) 219-1507
Joe Weiss (505) 249-6977 SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND PLANNING PRESIDENT AND CEO
Jeff Todd (505) 313-7667 VICE PRESIDENT OF UNIVERSITY DEVELOPMENT
Larry Ryan (505) 313-7626 VICE PRESIDENT OF HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER DEVELOPMENT
Bill Uher (505) 681-6279
THE PROFESSIONAL STAFF AT THE UNM FOUNDATION CAN ANSWER QUESTIONS OR HELP CRAFT A GIFT THAT MATCHES YOUR WISHES WITH THE NEEDS OF THE STUDENTS AND UNM FACULTY AND STAFF WHO PROVIDE SUPERB EDUCATION, RESEARCH, HEALTH CARE AND COMMUNITY SERVICE.
UNM FOUNDATION, INC. Two Woodward Center 700 Lomas Blvd. NE Albuquerque, NM 87102
(505) 313-7600
unmfund.org @unmfund
24
unmfoundation
@unmfund
Laurie Roche (505) 277-6442 COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
Yolanda Domínguez (505) 277-3194 Diana Martinez (505) 277-0817
MAJOR AND PLANNED GIFTS
Health Sciences Center UNM CANCER CENTER
Leigh Rowland (505) 925-0471 Arlene Espinoza-Armijo (505) 272-4609 SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
COLLEGE OF NURSING
COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
Markella Pavlakos (505) 272-3657
Leslie Currie (505) 277-0230
COLLEGE OF POPULATION HEALTH
Sonya Davis (575) 758-9826 NEW MEXICO PBS (PUBLIC TELEVISION)
East Coast Regional Development Chris Albrecht (513) 378-4040
West Coast Regional Development Central Development Office
Maggie Schold (505) 313-7663
SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING
HARWOOD MUSEUM OF ART
Brittany Padilla (505) 925-8550
Betsy Smith (505) 313-7623
Mary Wolford (505) 277-1088
Kristine Purrington (505) 277-7320
UNM VALENCIA
Kristine Mazzei (530) 219-1507
Ann-Mary MacLeod (505) 272-0200
COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS
Louis Moya (575) 737-3737
Megan Dugan (505) 313-7621
COLLEGE OF EDUCATION AND HUMAN SERVICES
Leslie Armell (505) 277-2051
UNM TAOS
ANNUAL GIVING
Annette Hazen (505) 313-7686 CORPORATE AND FOUNDATION RELATIONS
Betsy Till (505) 313-7678 DONOR RELATIONS | TOM L. POPEJOY SOCIETY
Megan Dugan (505) 313-7621
Jill Slaby (505) 313-7650
PROJECT ECHO
ENDOWMENT RELATIONS
Lisa Ellis (505) 750-3246 HSC INITIATIVES
Ken Thompson (505) 362-3310 UNM HOSPITALS
Charlotte Wall-Smith (505) 313-7652 GIFT & RECORDS PROCESSING
Judith Davenport (505) 313-7651
Anndee Wright Brown (505) 313-7608
MATCHING GIFTS
Theresa Spencer (505) 277-1225 KUNM (PUBLIC RADIO)
Carla Anaya (505) 313-7671
MEMORIALS AND HONORARIA
Chanda Shaw (505) 277-4806
CHILDREN’S MIRACLE NETWORK (UNMCH)
Jill Slaby (505) 313-7650
Lauren Oberlin (505) 272-7393
Bonnie McLeskey (505) 313-7610
SCHOOL OF LAW
Nickie Vigil (505) 277-0554 POPEJOY HALL
Victoria Garcia (505) 272-7394
Jenny Frame (505) 313-7641
PLANNED GIFTS
Elizabeth Harcombe (505) 313-7620
Maryellen Missik-Tow (505) 277-2159
UNM Branch Campuses
COLLEGE OF UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES AND LEARNING SCIENCES
UNM GALLUP
PRESIDENTIAL SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
Dr. James Malm (505) 863-7519
Terry Mulert (505) 313-7679
UNM LOS ALAMOS
PRINCIPAL GIVING
Carol Kennedy (505) 277-5632
Dr. Cynthia Rooney (505) 661-4689
Wendy Stires (505) 313-7616
P U B L I C AT I O N C R E D I T S PHOTOS University Communications & Marketing unless otherwise noted SENIOR MANAGER OF MARKETING & COMMUNICATIONS Mario Lara EDITOR Leslie Linthicum DESIGN & PRODUCTION Wayne Scheiner + Co. CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Amanda Gardner Hilary Mayall Jetty Leslie Linthicum Maryellen Missik-Tow Glen Rosales
Produced by The University of New Mexico Foundation All gifts made to the UNM Foundation are tax deductible to the extent allowed by law.
unmfund.org
T H E U N I V E R S IT Y O F N E W M E X I CO F O U N DAT I O N
TWO WOODWARD CENTER, 700 LOMAS BLVD. NE, ALBUQUERQUE, NM 87102