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Yagen makes $100M donation to Military Aviation Museum

Gerald “Jerry” Yagen, founder of the Aviation Institute of Maintenance and Centura College, has made a $100 million gift to Virginia Beach’s Military Aviation Museum, including his private collection of 70 vintage military aircraft, the museum announced last week.

In the 1990s, Yagen began collecting aircraft from the first 50 years of aviation history, from the Wright Brothers’ flight in 1903 to the Korean War in the early 1950s, planes that were originally stored in hangars in Suffolk. In 2008, he opened the Military Aviation Museum in Virginia Beach, allowing the public to see the collection. Yagen’s gift includes the 130 acres where the museum sits, an airfield at 1341 Princess Anne Road, and $30 million to start an endowment for the museum. The gift was announced Oct. 5 at the museum’s annual Warbirds Over the Beach air show.

Gov. Glenn Youngkin thanked Yagen, his wife, Elaine, and their family for the gift in a statement. “It’s due to great Virginians like the Yagens that our commonwealth is the best place to live, work and raise your family.”

The museum, which now has about 250 volunteers, is run by Keegan Chetwynd, the museum’s director and CEO, who has shepherded it from a private collection to an independent nonprofit. About 85,000 visitors come to the museum annually, according to the announcement. Many of the aircraft are still flyable, and on Thursday, a World War II-era plane from the collection carried a load of baby formula, diapers and other necessities to western North Carolina to assist victims of Hurricane Helene, in partnership with the Virginia Beach Fire Department.

“In the beginning, I saw this as my personal challenge to preserve history and these beautiful warbirds,” Yagen said in a statement. “I just didn’t want to see them disappear to time. I never believed so many would volunteer so much to help Elaine and I do this. I realize it is no longer an individual challenge.”

Taubmans give $25 million for Carilion cancer center

Carilion Clinic will soon break ground on a new building for an expanded cancer program thanks to a $25 million gift from a Star City family, the largest ever made to the nonprofit health care system.

The gift from former Advance Auto Parts CEO Nicholas Taubman, also a past U.S. ambassador to Romania, and his wife, Jenny, will help establish the Carilion Taubman Cancer Center.

The seven-story facility will be located at Carilion’s Riverside Campus. It is a planned upgrade for the current Carilion cancer treatment center, which was built in 1980 and sits on South Jefferson Street.

“We wanted not just to replace the cancer center but create a new environment — a whole ecosystem for advanced clinical care, new therapies and research — with our partner Virginia Tech,” says outgoing Carilion CEO Nancy Howell Agee, who announced her retirement in July. Carilion President Steve Arner is set to succeed her as CEO on Oct. 1.

Agee, who will serve as CEO emeritus through September 2025, focusing on phil-anthropy, should have plenty to keep her busy. With the Taubmans’ gift, Carilion has raised more than $70 million of the expected $100 million cost of the cancer center, and Agee says Carilion is “actively fundraising” for the remainder.

For the Taubmans, their gift was an opportunity to drastically change the cancer treatment options for the 1 million people in Virginia and West Virginia served by Carilion. The new cancer facility will provide people in the Roanoke Valley and adjacent areas a closer option for treatments they currently travel out of the region to receive.

“People who have cancer, they have jobs, families. They have obligations. They can’t take a week to drive somewhere and get treatment,” Nicholas Taubman says. “It needs to be here.”

The Taubman family supports local health care in part because of an obligation to their former Advance Auto employees, according to Nicholas Taubman. Roanoke was the company’s headquarters from its founding in 1932 by Taubman’s father, Arthur, until 2018, when it moved to Raleigh, North Carolina.

“The people who worked for us live in this area … and all of these people need medical care,” says Nicholas Taubman, who says he no longer has a financial stake in Advance Auto.

Agee says Carilion will break ground on the new facility in October and expects doors to open in late 2026 or early 2027.  

W&M gets $100 million boost for coastal research

Jane Batten, the matriarch of a Hampton Roads family known for philanthropy, pledged $100 million to William & Mary in July to boost coastal and marine science research toward finding global solutions for flooding and sea-level rise.

The newly named Batten School of Coastal & Marine Sciences will expand the Virginia Institute of Marine Science and allow it to hire more scientists whose research could have a worldwide impact, officials say.

Batten, whose late husband, Frank Batten, co-founded The Weather Channel and was chairman and CEO of Landmark Communications, set a record for the 331-year-old university’s largest donation. W&M officials also say the gift is “by a factor of four” the largest donation ever made to any research institution focused on marine and coastal science.

W&M hopes to raise $100 million more through private, state and federal sources to complement Batten’s donation, which will go toward the creation of a bachelor’s degree in coastal and marine sciences and building out the VIMS facility on the York River in Gloucester Point. President Katherine Rowe says about $50 million will go toward new learning and research spaces, although W&M is still determining whether to renovate existing structures, construct new buildings or both.

Rowe says that she and Batten have been discussing the gift for the past five years, and both women saw the possibility of expanding VIMS’ marine research to benefit coastal communities worldwide.

“There is no institution better positioned to address the environmental threats, the economic challenges that are faced in the world’s coastlines and oceans,” Rowe says. “We see the Batten School as powering at a much higher level the kinds of ‘science for solutions’ that William & Mary has been producing for decades, and to do that for Virginia, and more broadly to do that globally.”

Batten, whose family has made significant donations in the past to Old Dominion University, the University of Virginia, W&M and other institutions, said in a statement that she is “confident that this will spark significant change, building resilience in coastal communities in the commonwealth and across the globe for generations to come.”

Derek Aday, VIMS’ director and dean of the Batten School, says he hopes other philanthropists will follow Batten’s lead and contribute funding toward climate change research, coastal resilience and other environmental factors. “There will be imitators, as there should be.”  

Philanthropy: Accelerating advances

Over the past year, Virginia philanthropists continued to support medical research and higher education, with several demonstrating their commitment through subsequent donations.

Northern Virginia philanthropists Dwight and Martha Schar carried on their longtime support of Falls Church- based Inova Health System, providing a $75 million matching gift to the health system in May 2023. Inova will use the gift to support research, outreach, prevention and early diagnosis of cardiovascular ailments, including hiring more health care professionals and expanding specialty services. Counting this most recent gift, the Schars have donated $126 million to Inova since 1993. Dwight Schar founded Reston-based Fortune 500 company NVR, one of the nation’s largest homebuilders and mortgage banking companies.

To support cancer and neuroscience research, the Red Gates Foundation, established by the estate of Richmond philanthropist Bill Goodwin’s late son, Hunter, committed $50 million to the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC in September 2023. Hunter Goodwin’s parents and estate made a $250 million donation in 2021 to kickstart a national cancer research foundation.

In the past year, Virginia universities reported record gifts, multiple of which funded scholarships.

In October 2023, philanthropists David and Kathleen LaCross added $50 million to their October 2022 donation of $44 million for the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business. David LaCross, who founded and sold financial tech company Risk Management Technologies, earned his MBA from Darden, and Kathleen LaCross earned her bachelor’s degree from U.Va. Their 2022 gift launched Darden’s Artificial Intelligence Initiative, and the $50 million donation will help pay for additional AI research and instruction, as well as a residential college at Darden.

U.Va. Darden also received a $5 million commitment from Stephen and Phyllis Bachand in December 2023 to establish a professorship focused on business ethics. The university will match the gift from the former president and CEO of Canadian Tire Corp. and his wife to reach the endowment required to establish a professorship.

Additionally, donors supported U.Va.’s McIntire School of Commerce, with Ramon W. Breeden Jr., founder and chair of Virginia Beach-based developer The Breeden Co., giving U.Va. $50 million to be divided between the university’s renovation and expansion of McIntire and work on a new athletics complex.

U.Va. alumnus John Connaughton and his wife, Stephanie, donated $10 million in March 2023, funding need-based undergraduate scholarships for McIntire students. John Connaughton is co-managing partner of Bain Capital, and Stephanie Connaughton is an angel investor and senior adviser to several startups.

In Northern Virginia, George Mason University’s business school received a $50 million bequest from the late Donald G. Costello, a Loudoun County native and business owner, in April 2023. The largest individual gift in George Mason’s 75-year history, the bequest establishes an endowment for undergraduate and graduate business student scholarships, and the university renamed its business school for Costello.

In October 2023, Virginia Tech announced it had received a $10 million donation from Preston White, the founder of Virginia Beach-based contractor Century Concrete, and his wife, Catharine, to create the Preston and Catharine White Endowed Diversity Scholarship.

The late Irene Piscopo Rodgers, a 1959 graduate of the University of Mary Washington, bequeathed $30 million to her alma mater, the largest donation in the university’s 115-year history. The gift, announced in March 2023, will grow UMW’s undergraduate research program and support four new scholarships.

University of Richmond alumni and previous donors Carole and Marcus Weinstein gave to the university twice last year, donating $25 million to support a student learning center and $3 million for the chaplaincy to support Jewish life. In September 2023, UR’s Robins School of Business reported a $10 million gift from an anonymous alumnus to establish an endowed scholarship fund.

As in previous years, the commonwealth’s philanthropists remain forward-looking, supporting the immediate and future development of both health care and education. 

 

Virginia Tech research institute receives $50M gift

A foundation established by the estate of Richmond philanthropist Bill Goodwin‘s late son, Hunter, has made a $50 million commitment to support cancer and neuroscience research at the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC, Virginia Tech announced Tuesday.

The gift is one of three record $50 million donations Virginia Tech has received, including the 2018 donation from the Horace G. Fralin Charitable Trust and Heywood and Cynthia Fralin that renamed the Fralin institute. The other was Boeing’s $50 million commitment for Virginia Tech’s Innovation Campus, announced in May 2021.

The Red Gates Foundation was established in 2020 by the estate of Hunter Goodwin, who died of cancer at age 51 in January 2020. His parents announced a $250 million donation in March 2021 to kickstart a national cancer research foundation called Break Through Cancer.

“The Red Gates Foundation is committed to funding innovative research that has the potential to make a real difference in the world,” Jeff Galanti, the foundation’s executive director, said in a statement. “The Fralin Biomedical Research Institute is a world-renowned research institution that pushes the boundaries of what is possible. We are confident that their nimble approach to research, which is focused on the intersections of science, medicine, engineering and data analytics, will help them make significant breakthroughs that benefit humanity in the years to come.”

The Red Gates Foundation donation spans the course of five years; the institute has received the first $10 million round and will receive $10 million each year for four more years, according to Michael Friedlander, executive director of the Fralin Biomedical Research Institute.

Virginia Tech President Tim Sands said in a statement: “We are grateful for this extraordinary gift from the Red Gates Foundation supporting Virginia Tech’s commitment to health and biomedical sciences. As we work to significantly increase the impact of our biomedical research, this gift will accelerate our timeline and help recruit world-leading researchers to join us in fighting diseases that impact millions of people worldwide.”

The institute will use a majority of the gift to recruit 14 researchers mainly focused on cancer, with some also focused on neuro-engineering — applying engineering tools to studying how the brain works — and computational neuroscience, which creates computer models of brain functions to research the brain and its responses to stimuli. Eleven of the new hires will be tenured or tenure-track faculty, and three will be non-tenure-track.

Most of the researchers will be based at the institute in Roanoke, but a few will be based in the Children’s National Research & Innovation Campus in Washington, D.C. Fralin has a clinical partnership with the hospital focused on pediatric brain cancer, allowing researchers to work with clinicians and their patients directly.

The gift will help the research institute increase its faculty-led research teams by about one-third, since faculty members will bring or hire research teams, including technicians and postdoctoral fellows.

About a third of the gift will support six research projects on cancer and brain disorders in adults and children. The projects are each led by a senior institute faculty member based in Roanoke. The donation will help move the projects out of the lab into their next phases, according to Friedlander, which vary by project but could include phase 1 clinical trials, which test for safety.

Those projects are:

  • A new therapeutic approach to reducing side effects of radiation treatment in cancer patients;
  • A new technique that targets and destroys invasive brain cancer cells;
  • A smartphone app that helps the brain consider future events to reduce smoking and incidence of lung cancer among veterans;
  • Combination therapies and delivery routes that target mitochondrial dysfunction in nerve cells to slow and prevent Parkinson’s disease progression;
  • New machine learning applications to quickly measure neurochemicals in the brain for precision diagnosis and tracking of therapeutics to treat epilepsy in children;
  • And development of a compound that mimics exercise for preventing and treating non-communicable diseases, including cancer. 

“This gift is truly transformative because it will enable us to move … at a pace greater than we could if we just followed normal standard operating procedures,” Friedlander said. “That is, we’re always competing for grants; our investigators are always writing grants … and we do very well … but it’s incremental and it takes a while, and it’s step-by-step.”

While that system is fair, “if you really want to move the needle sometimes, you need a real shot in the arm. And that’s what this is,” he said.

Roughly 10% of the donation will support other aspects of research, such as lab renovations and administrative support, according to Friedlander.

The gift will have a local impact as well, Friedlander said: “I think it’ll be something that will make a difference for Virginia Tech and frankly for … the city of Roanoke and the area. … It really adds to the overall ecosystem of biomedical research and entrepreneurship.”

Great expectations

In the mid-1990s, Diane and Paul Manning were thinking about moving from New Jersey with their three children. Like many families, they took many factors into consideration.

“One of the kids was really big-time into swimming, so we needed a place that had a good swim team,” Diane says. Also, “I always prefer a college town because it has more of a beat to it, [is] more interesting, [has] more things to do, and Virginia is gorgeous.”

But a third consideration was their children’s health, she adds. One child had Stargardt disease, a genetic eye ailment, and two had type 1 diabetes. “So, we needed good medical facilities.”

Charlottesville fit the bill, and the Mannings moved south. In 1997, Paul Manning founded Gordonsville-based PBM Products, which became the world’s largest privately owned infant formula and baby food business. In 2010, he sold the company to Perrigo Company plc for an estimated $808 million and set up PBM Capital, a health care-focused private equity firm that invests in pharmaceutical and life sciences startups.

Nearly 30 years later, the couple are now among the University of Virginia’s biggest private donors. Their $100 million gift in January will help launch the Manning Institute of Biotechnology, a $300 million project that’s expected to make Central Virginia a biotech hub in the next decade.

The institute’s primary goal will be to develop targeted treatments for diseases that either have no cure or involve therapies that make life hard on patients, such as chemotherapy and radiation. In short, the Mannings hope to fund a medical revolution that will lead to longer, healthier lives.

“When we launch, we will be best in class globally for biotech, because we’ll be the new, shiny penny,” Paul Manning says. “Three years from now, we’ll be on the cutting edge. We’re expecting that biotech, large pharma, will come in and set up satellite facilities here to take advantage of this ecosystem that’ll be here in Charlottesville.”

And yet, the impetus for this grand idea started at home.

“We’re very definitely motivated in the science direction because of having kids with issues, and we decided early on … that was our goal: to try to make a change in those diseases and, obviously, just moving technology forward in medicine. For us, it was a pretty, pretty easy decision,” Diane Manning says.

“Diane’s right, because we had a defined mission. It was given to us because of the kids,” Paul adds. “It’s not as glamorous as other types of philanthropy where you fund a theater, or you fund an art program. Not that that’s not important, but for us, health was critical for people.”

Life experience

Paul and Diane Manning’s philanthropic focus on health care was driven by their experiences with their children, one of whom had a genetic eye ailment and two of whom had type 1 diabetes. “We decided early on ... that was our goal: to try to make a change in those diseases and ... moving technology forward in medicine,” says Diane Manning. Photo by Jeneene Chatowsky/U.Va.
Paul and Diane Manning’s philanthropic focus on health care was driven by their experiences with their children, one of whom had a genetic eye ailment and two of whom had type 1 diabetes. “We decided early on … that was our goal: to try to make a change in those diseases and … moving technology forward in medicine,” says Diane Manning. Photo by Jeneene Chatowsky/U.Va.

The Mannings are like many significant philanthropists in that their gifts stem from personal experience or passions. For example, last year, a former Virginia Commonwealth University liver disease specialist, Dr. Todd Stravitz, donated $104 million to VCU to establish a liver research institute. This year, a former chemist, Irene Piscopo Rodgers, left $30 million to her alma mater, the University of Mary Washington, to support scientific research and scholarships. The list goes on.

One way in which the Mannings stand out from other benefactors is the fact that they didn’t graduate from or work for U.Va., although they have built powerful ties to the university since moving to the Charlottesville area in the 1990s.

A University of Massachusetts Amherst graduate, Paul Manning and his wife, Diane, have contributed more than $6 million toward diabetes and COVID-19 research at U.Va. They started funding diabetes research more than two decades ago, Paul Manning says.

“It was probably in the early 2000s, because the baby formula company took off in small-town America and Gordonsville,” he recalls. “I guess as we started growing that business, certainly [U.Va.’s] development people knew about us. We were interested in funding science. We met lots of the diabetic community here.”

Over the years, he served on several UVA Health and university committees and boards, including the President’s Advisory Committee.

And in May 2020, U.Va. announced a $1 million gift from the Mannings to establish the Manning Fund for COVID-19 Research, which was used to fast-track research on expanding testing and developing therapies and vaccines for the coronavirus, which was then still a new threat.

Melur “Ram” Ramasubramanian, U.Va.’s vice president for research, remembers the first days of the pandemic, before vaccines were available, and the relief he felt after the Mannings’ gift was announced. “We had nothing. We had no mass testing available yet. [Paul Manning] talked about testing possible treatments [and] wanted to reopen society.”

After receiving 52 COVID-related proposals, U.Va. awarded funding to nine projects. Some of those Manning-funded projects include a collaboration between Dr. Steven Zeichner of UVA Health and Virginia Tech’s Dr. Xiang-Jin Meng to develop a COVID-19 vaccine that would likely cost $1 per shot. For another project, U.Va. faculty members Dr. Kenneth Brayman and Dr. Bill Petri identified three possible therapies for treating acute and long COVID.

As with the biotech institute, Manning’s emphasis in the COVID fund was translational research — moving possible treatments past the idea stage into clinical trials and, ultimately, commercial production.

“He’s incredibly knowledgeable and incredibly well-connected,” Ramasubramanian says of Manning. “His own company invests in these types of technology anyway.”

Targeted treatments

Through his work in backing health care startups since 2010, Paul Manning says, he’s learned that cellular medicine is the key to treatments for many different medical conditions, including those that currently lack a cure.

For example, with diabetes, “it’s taken 25 years to get to this point. … They’ll be able to implant cells in the body that will make insulin. They’ll be able to manipulate these cells to be able to not be attacked by the immune system. That research is going on now,” Manning says, pointing to a Harvard researcher’s work with stem cells that can be changed to islet cells that produce insulin, which helps control the level of glucose in a patient’s blood.

“The first few patients … did extremely well, and now they are going into a bigger study with a major pharma company in order to use that cellular medicine to fix diabetes,” he notes. “My guess is that genetics is 80%, 90% of the reason people come down with diseases, including cancers and Alzheimer’s [and] ALS — even, I think, depression and other mental illnesses are all genetics. I think we’re getting closer to finding out why.”

The idea for the institute arose in mid-2021. “Diane and I wanted to do a major philanthropic project that is impactful,” Manning explains. “We’ve done a lot of things here, incrementally. We’ve put millions of dollars into incremental research at U.Va. and other places in order to move this cellular science forward, but … sometimes in order to be able to have an impact, you have to make a large investment.”

But also, he and U.Va.’s leaders wanted to persuade state legislators to include $50 million in their 2022-24 budget for the project. They succeeded in that, although it took about 20 visits to Richmond during the 2022 General Assembly session.

“Massachusetts and North Carolina and Maryland have invested billions of dollars in next-generation medicine, and Virginia needed to do that,” Manning says. “Meeting the legislators, having to educate them why this is important to the state and why it’s important to their constituents was necessary, but it was a lot of work.”

Ultimately, U.Va. pledged $150 million toward the project as well.

Dr. Craig Kent, UVA Health’s CEO and U.Va.’s executive vice president for health affairs, says that the biotech institute, which the university expects to open in 2027, will employ about 100 researchers and their core staffs, and, in addition to between 30,000 and 40,000 square feet of lab space, the institute will include a biomanufacturing center to produce treatments and medications in-house. Currently, U.Va.’s manufacturing space is just 7,500 square feet and is used to produce treatments for type 1 diabetes and Parkinson’s disease.

Ramasubramanian says that five years ago, when he was hired by U.Va., “I wasn’t thinking about translational research. The focus was on the need for wet lab space.” But now, as one of six university leaders who have hired an architect and are tasked with “moving this project to completion,” Ramasubramanian says, he realizes that the institute will help create jobs and give U.Va. the ability to produce drugs on a much greater scale.

“The vision is that we will have faculty and scientists working in the lab,” he says. “Clinical trials from other companies would take place there, also people scaling up innovations. It’s going to attract like a magnet.”

As for the Mannings, “they could have chosen anywhere,” Ramasubramanian says. “Their passion for Virginia came through.”

The personal side

Paul and Diane Manning have a funny story about how they met nearly 40 years ago. “We met on a street corner,” Diane says with a laugh — clearly, it’s a story they’ve told more than a few times.

“We met in Washington, D.C.,” Paul adds. “I was going to work one Saturday morning, and Diane was going to nursing school there, anesthesia school. I was driving up towards work, and I saw her standing there early Saturday morning, near Adams Morgan at a little music festival. I pulled the car over, and I walked across the street and introduced myself.”

“A little different than the average,” Diane notes.

After marrying, the couple settled in central New Jersey, where Paul Manning was involved in pharmaceutical manufacturing, and they had three children. In 1996, they moved to the Charlottesville area, and in addition to building PBM Products, they got involved with several nonprofits, including the local Boys & Girls Clubs chapter, food banks and the Paramount Theater.

Living in the countryside of eastern Albemarle County, the Mannings are starting a winery, raising horses and enjoying spending time with their grandchildren. Their daughter temporarily lives in Barcelona, and one son lives in Manhattan, but they come back to Virginia for visits, and their other son lives locally. Diane Manning and a friend also recently finished hiking the Appalachian Trail in sections — 2,200 miles total.

“We would go anywhere from 10 days if we were in Virginia and the weather looked great,” she says. “Twenty-eight days was the longest we went out.”

The couple also is fond of deep-sea fishing.

It’s clear that the Mannings enjoy the fun side of life, but as for their legacy, they have major ambitions for medical research.

“There’s five or six diseases we would like to cure,” Paul says. “Certainly, diabetes and genetic blindness, but also ALS and Alzheimer’s, and try to have people be able to have cancer as a chronic [disease] or to cure that. That’s the kind of thing this institute should help with.”

Other philanthropic gifts

Virginia’s other major philanthropic gifts in the past year came from familiar sources — if not to the public at large, then definitely at the institutions receiving the donations.

Longtime University of Richmond donors Carole and Marcus Weinstein, both UR alumni, gave $25 million in March to the private university to establish a learning center in their name at Boatwright Memorial Library. It’s the school’s second largest private donation.

The learning center will help support students academically through tutoring and programs focused on writing and public speaking, explains Martha Callaghan, UR’s vice president of advancement. 

“This is intended for all students, not just those who are struggling,” Callaghan says. Also, the center will make use of underused space in the library, which is no longer the hub of activity it was in pre-internet days.

As for the Weinsteins, who started commercial real estate company Weinstein Properties in Henrico County decades ago, “this is the biggest gift they’ve ever made, but they’ve been generous, steadfast and now transformational donors at Richmond,” Callaghan says.

Irene Rodgers chats in 2018 with Matt Tovar, who earned a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry from Mary Washington in 2019 and received the Irene Piscopo Rodgers and James D. Rodgers Student Research Fellowship. He’s set to graduate in 2023 from the George Washington University School of Medicine & Health Sciences.
Irene Rodgers chats in 2018 with Matt Tovar, who earned a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry from Mary Washington in 2019 and received the Irene Piscopo Rodgers and James D. Rodgers Student Research Fellowship. He’s set to graduate in 2023 from the George Washington University School of Medicine & Health Sciences.

Similarly, the late Irene Rodgers, a 1959 graduate of what was then known as Mary Washington College of the University of Virginia, was a longtime supporter of her alma mater — making her first $50 donation in 1980. Over the next 40 years, she donated $9 million and bequeathed $30 million in her will. Rodgers died last year at age 84.

The gift is the university’s largest single donation by far, says President Troy Paino. A Bronx native who majored in chemistry at the Fredericksburg college and then earned her master’s degree in chemistry at the University of Michigan, Rodgers was a chemist and electron microscopist, spending four decades as a consultant to FEI Co., a subsidiary of Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.

The $30 million bequest is targeted toward UMW’s undergraduate research program for students majoring in biology, chemistry, physics, environmental sciences, computer science and math, as well as four scholarships that provide full rides to out-of-state students for up to four years. Rodgers previously funded eight Alvey scholarships, which are named for the late Edward Alvey Jr., a historian and Mary Washington dean.

“One of the things Irene was committed to was bringing out-of-state students to the school,” Paino says, as well as being “very committed to women in the sciences.”

Her $30 million gift, he adds, establishes a “significant endowment for research in the sciences. Something we value and promote here is access to our faculty and allowing students to conduct in-depth research with our faculty.”

Shreya Murali, a Mary Washington senior from Henrico County majoring in biochemistry, received funding through one of Rodgers’ earlier gifts that helped her pursue research on stomach acid drugs as a method for killing cancer cells.

With the funding, she was able to present her project at an American Chemical Society conference in March in Indianapolis, as well as purchase testing supplies.

“It’s been amazing,” says Murali, who’s been accepted to U.Va.’s public health master’s degree program. “It’s given me the opportunity to pursue my love of research. I didn’t think it was possible until this past year.”

There’s another reason why Rodgers’ $30 million donation is special.

Although Mary Washington went coed more than 50 years ago, it has a longer history as an all-women’s institution, dating back to its founding in 1908 as the State Normal and Industrial School for Women in Fredericksburg. Women’s wages still lag behind those of white men in the United States, and even an alumna with the resources to make major gifts might be married to a man who wants to donate to his own institution, causing “split loyalties,” Paino says.

“But alums are showing a significant interest,” he adds. “They see the impact at Mary Washington, as opposed to larger schools. We believe that a transformational gift should help us, particularly students in the sciences. We’ve already heard from some students that this has tipped their [college] decision in our favor.”  

Check the numbers: Donations by companies and corporate foundations; donations by individuals and family foundations; total corporate donations

U.Va. commerce alum donates $10M for scholarships

A University of Virginia alumnus, John Connaughton, and his wife, Stephanie, have donated $10 million to fund need-based undergraduate scholarships for McIntire School of Commerce students, the university announced Thursday.

U.Va. will match the couple’s gift, which establishes the Connaughton Bicentennial Scholars Fund. Portions of the Connaughtons’ gift will go toward the launch of “Commerce for the Common Good,” a strategic initiative for the McIntire School, and establish a speakers series named for the couple. John Connaughton will be the first speaker in the series in April.

A 1987 McIntire graduate, John Connaughton is co-managing partner of global private investment firm Bain Capital, and Stephanie Connaughton is an angel investor and senior adviser to several consumer startups. The couple is based in Boston.

“John and Stephanie’s generous gift supports expanded access to the school through need-based scholarships for historically underrepresented students while also providing funding for transformative educational experiences throughout the school,” McIntire School of Commerce Dean Nicole Thorne Jenkins said in a statement. “This extraordinary commitment will facilitate an array of essential, inventive programming in connection with Commerce for the Common Good.”

According to the university’s announcement, the Connaughtons’ gift is the first major contribution toward the commerce school’s initiative, which will turn the school’s focus to global business and its impact on society, expand its course offerings and research opportunities, and provide more finance-related curriculum opportunities to U.Va.’s full community.

The Connaughtons previously donated $5 million to the McIntire School in 2019 to create a professorship fund.

“We’re at an interesting crossroads right now. The role of business in society is being questioned,” John Connaughton said. “Businesses are being challenged to define how their work impacts all stakeholders, not just shareholders. U.Va. and the McIntire School are developing and inspiring the next generation to create more well-rounded businesspeople who are ready to have a substantial impact as leaders in our communities.”