News and Media
Relations contact: Jimmy Hart, 615-898-5131 or Jimmy.Hart@mtsu.edu
MTSU Development
contact: Nick Perlick, 615-904-8409 or Nick.Perlick@mtsu.edu
MURFREESBORO — MTSU
held the inaugural 1911 Society Luncheon recently to recognize those community
members who have made financial commitments to the university for the long
term.
The group, named in honor of MTSU’s founding year,
celebrates individuals and families who have created gifts to the university
through their estate plans.
Also honored at the April 19 event were members of the
Signal Society, which honors annual donors who have supported the university in
20 or more years. The group is named for Middle Tennessee Normal School’s first
newspaper/magazine, The Signal, which was originally published in 1912.
Attending the luncheon were 24 members of the 1911 Society
and 17 Signal Society members. (A YouTube video from the event at http://youtu.be/_7XGf-Y2muY)
The Signal Society members honored at the luncheon inside
the Tom Jackson Building were those members who have donated for at least 40
years.
“We’re here to honor you,” said President Sidney A. McPhee.
“‘Thank you’ is inadequate. But we will try to express our gratitude to you.
“It’s humbling to me to see and to experience and to
recognize that so many of you care so deeply about our university … that you
have made us part of your long-term estate plans.”
McPhee noted that earlier the same day, the university
celebrated the transfer of ownership of property on Bell Street from Middle
Tennessee Medical Center to the university. The purchase of that property for
$11.1 million was made possible in large part because of a donation from an
alumnus.
Don Witherspoon, co-chair of the Centennial Campaign and
1911 Society member, updated the crowd on the campaign’s goal of raising $80
million. The Centennial Campaign, announced a year ago, is the largest such
effort in the university’s history.
Witherspoon said the campaign already has reached the $62
million mark, with several other projects in the works to get closer to the $80
million goal. He noted that 16,000 donors have made contributions to the
campaign so far.
Among them are he and wife Hannah, longtime supporters who
met on the MTSU campus.
“We think it was one of the most important decisions of our
lives to come here, and now we have the opportunity with you to help other
people realize their dreams and achieve their goals through our support of
MTSU,” he said.
He reminded the crowd that the campaign had four distinct
goals: maintaining a strong student population with scholarships, fellowships,
travel abroad opportunities and research grants; ensuring the “highest quality”
faculty and staff; improving the physical plant of the campus; and increasing
the competitive level of the athletic program.
Music student William T. Duke, a recipient of the Linse Bock
Scholarship, thanked the crowd for their contributions, which help students
like him pursue their undergraduate and graduate degrees without having to take
on even more student loan debt.
“What really helps me out is that this scholarship … is not
only paying for my undergraduate (classes), but that money is also going toward
my graduate school, which is required of a vocal performance major like me if I
want to have a job.”
The Murfreesboro native, a sophomore vocal performance
major, said the scholarship allows him to focus on his studies more because he
could work a part-time job and still pay for school, unlike some of his friends
who had to take on full-time jobs.
“Your support means a lot for people like me and for so many
of my peers,” he said.
In presenting the day’s awards, Joe Bales, vice president
for development and university relations, noted: “We are extremely grateful for
the tremendous support provided by our 1911 Society and Signal Society
donors. Their contributions have established a legacy of lifetime support
that will ensure the continued prosperity of the university.”
Members of the 1911 Society receive a framed rendering of
Kirksey Old Main, one of the original buildings on campus, while Signal Society
donors are presented with an engraved medallion reflecting their years of
support.
For more information about making donations, go to www.mtsu.edu/development/ and
choose from the selection of tabs about giving on the left.
About MTSU
Founded in 1911 as
one of three state normal schools for teacher training, MTSU is now the oldest
and largest public university in Middle Tennessee. With an enrollment of more
than 25,000 students, MTSU is the largest undergraduate university in
Tennessee.
MTSU remains
committed to providing individualized service in an exciting and nurturing
atmosphere where student success is the top priority. With a wide variety of
nationally recognized academic degree programs at the baccalaureate, master's
and doctoral levels, MTSU takes pride in educating the best and the brightest
students from Tennessee and around the world.
Note to media:
—
YouTube
available for embedding at http://youtu.be/_7XGf-Y2muY
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MTSU is committed to
developing a community devoted to learning, growth, and service. We hold these
values dear, and there’s a simple phrase that conveys them: “I am True
Blue.” Learn more at www.mtsu.edu/trueblue.
For MTSU news anytime, visit www.MTSUNews.com.
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