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headed the development campaign for the School of Engineering and made a leadership gift of $1 million for expansion of what was formerly known as Dillon Hall. To honor the hard work and generosity of Herak and his wife – their giving also supports the Fund for Gonzaga, the James McGivern Scholarship Fund, the Dussault Foundation, the Jepson Center for the School of Business Administration, the athletic department and a variety of memorial funds and unrestricted endowments – the University rechristened the building the Donald and Carol Herak Center for Engineering. What’s good for Gonzaga is good for Spokane and good for industry as well, Herak said. “I believe Gonzaga provides an invaluable link between industry and education. Gonzaga is doing a superb job of educating future engineers – those engineers so desperately needed to keep our nation’s technological achievements at the cutting edge. I want to see this excellent work continued.” GonzagaGiving This story is excerpted from “Celebrating Gonzaga: The University and Its People,” a hardbound book coming out this fall that recounts many of the stories that have provided the tapestry and texture of Gonzaga’s glorious 125 years. Blessings with interest Surge in Endowment Giving Support is up over last year Tradition & Transformation Gonzaga honors the past and plans for the future Annual Campaign Update Fund for Gonzaga still important Q&A Vice President for Mission Fr. Frank Case, S.J. Growing up in Western Montana, Don Herak learned from his father about the importance of giving back. “He was an immigrant to this country who became a Summer 2012 Don Herak (’46) very successful farmer,” Herak said. “My father taught us that hard work was a big part of success but that good fortune also played a role. If you were blessed with good fortune – opportunities that came your way or a certain place or people who helped you improve your lot – you needed to repay that blessing.” Herak counts Gonzaga among the blessings in his life – and he has repaid that blessing with interest. The 1946 civil engineering graduate has long given generously of time and money to the University. A member of the Board of Trustees since 1984, he To reserve your limited-edition book today, go to: gonzaga.edu/anniversarybooks

Gonzaga Giving Newsletter, Summer 2012

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Gonzaga Giving provides you, our valued donors, with information about how your gifts are hard at work. No matter your level of giving, every dollar helps provide the very best young people with an opportunity to transform themselves into men and women for others through their Jesuit education. Gonzaga Giving is mailed out twice a year, with monthly email updates provided through its sister online publication, the Gonzaga Giving blog. We welcome your feedback about the newsletter and ideas for what you would like to know about how your gifts are used at Gonzaga. Please contact Stephanie Rockwell at [email protected] or (509) 313-6404 with your comments.

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Page 1: Gonzaga Giving Newsletter, Summer 2012

headed the development campaign for the School of Engineering and made a leadership gift of $1 million for expansion of what was formerly known as Dillon Hall. To honor the hard work and generosity of Herak and his wife – their giving also supports the Fund for Gonzaga, the James McGivern Scholarship Fund, the Dussault Foundation, the Jepson Center for the School of Business Administration, the athletic department and a variety of memorial funds and unrestricted endowments – the University rechristened the building the Donald and Carol Herak Center for Engineering.

What’s good for Gonzaga is good for Spokane and good for industry as well, Herak said. “I believe Gonzaga provides an invaluable link between industry and education. Gonzaga is doing a superb job of educating future engineers – those engineers so desperately needed to keep our nation’s technological achievements at the cutting edge. I want to see this excellent work continued.”

GonzagaGiving

This story is excerpted from “Celebrating Gonzaga: The University and Its People,” a hardbound book coming out this fall that recounts many of the

stories that have provided the tapestry and texture of Gonzaga’s glorious 125 years.

Blessings with interest

Surge in Endowment GivingSupport is up over last year

Tradition & TransformationGonzaga honors the past and plans for the future

Annual Campaign UpdateFund for Gonzaga still important

Q&AVice President for MissionFr. Frank Case, S.J.

Growing up in Western Montana, Don Herak learned from his father about the importance of giving back. “He was an immigrant to this country who became a

Summer 2012

Don Herak (’46)

very successful farmer,” Herak said. “My father taught us that hard work was a big part of success but that good fortune also played a role. If you were blessed with good fortune – opportunities that came your way or a certain place or people who helped you improve your lot – you needed to repay that blessing.”

Herak counts Gonzaga among the blessings in his life – and he has repaid that blessing with interest.

The 1946 civil engineering graduate has long given generously of time and money to the University. A member of the Board of Trustees since 1984, he

To reserve your limited-edition book today, go to:

gonzaga.edu/anniversarybooks

Page 2: Gonzaga Giving Newsletter, Summer 2012

By the numbers

$936amount, in silver dollars, used to purchase the land that established Gonzaga College in 1887

Thank you to all the alumni, parents and friends of Gonzaga who annually support scholarships and budget-relieving priorities through the Annual Campaign. Your generosity enhances the student learning environment, provides access to education and sustains the Gonzaga experience. The critical priorities for the Annual Campaign are the Fund for Gonzaga and the Gonzaga Scholars Program; both funds directly impact students with financial aid support. We are pleased to share that in the 2012 fiscal year ending May 31, $6.3 million in scholarship funds were generously given, representing a $1.8 million increase from 2011. Please enjoy a snapshot of our GU Telefund student callers as they celebrate your support.

[Update]

October 1, 1912with the motto “A First Class Law School, or None at All” Gonzaga School of Law opened its doors

615number of active

funds within GU’s Endowment Fund

Gonzaga through the years

13number of new and renovated campus buildings added since 2000

$16.4 in donor support, June 1, 2011- May 31, 2012MILLION

[Planned Giving]

Forethought for others

“I bequeath unto Gonzaga University all of my property and possessions, both real and personal, whatsoever this may include.” Bud Driessel, class of 1912, wrote that statement in his will in 1973, ultimately establishing the Driessel Family Endowed Scholarship. The scholarship is directed for “young men and women who are industrious, worthy and in need of some assistance to obtain a college education, particularly at Gonzaga University.”

Lindsay DeLong (’13)

First awarded in 1983, the Driessel Family Scholarship has blessed bright and industrious students such as Lindsay DeLong (’13). Studying special education and philosophy, DeLong volunteers at numerous schools in the Spokane area, as well as Center Pointe, a local non-profit organization that provides positive social, recreational and educational activities for people of the Spokane community with diverse disabilities. “I can’t imagine living a life without service and I know this will always be an important aspect of who I am,” she says.

Through Driessel’s long-term planning and generous estate gift, this scholarship continues to provide students such as DeLong access to their dreams. To date, the Driessel scholarship has made 526 awards totaling $862,664.

Estate gifts open the door to unique giving opportunities and are easy to set up. Learn how you can create the kind of legacy Driessel established by contacting Judy Rogers in the Planned Giving office at (800) 388-0881 or visiting gonzaga.edu/plannedgiving.

Baltus “Bud” Driessel (4) at the 40th Reunion of the graduating class of 1912. [Photo courtesy of Gonzaga University Archives.]

Annual Campaign

Page 3: Gonzaga Giving Newsletter, Summer 2012

&Q AWhat have you identified as an opportunity for your office? It’s clear that people on campus, whether students, faculty or staff, all embrace the mission of Gonzaga. But they also feel the need for a clearer idea of what it means to be Catholic and Jesuit. I have been trying to meet with a number of groups on campus to help them understand their roles in carrying out the mission.

What is an area of focus for you? One of my goals is to have everyone on campus share in the responsibility of living and spreading the mission. The mission doesn’t belong in one office on the first floor of College Hall; it is for everyone associated with the University, including all our alumni, parents and friends.

How is Gonzaga maintaining its Catholic identity?

There are many ways, but in short, the University’s Core Curriculum and academic commitment is squarely within the Catholic intellectual tradition. The Society of Jesus remains a religious order of the Catholic Church and we foster a positive relationship with the bishop of the Spokane Catholic Diocese. As for student life, the University Ministry office provides a wide array of retreat and worship services including daily Mass.

Gonzaga’s mission has endured 125 years; how will it carry into the future? I chair the committee that is reviewing the University’s Mission Statement. While the statement may end up being altered, the mission itself will remain intact as we continue to do serious strategic planning in its light in order to achieve the aspirations and goals encompassed by the mission.

[Meet Fr. Frank Case, S.J., Vice President for Mission]

We are pleased to announce a surge in giving to the Gonzaga University Endowment Fund, with giving up 158% over last academic year.

Thank you to the 38 donors who created 48 new named endowments this year alone, representing $3,896,625 in gifts and $1,955,750 in pledges.

Of these new endowments:

» 42 funds create scholarships » Four provide faculty or academic support » Two support athletics operations

Visit blogs.gonzaga.edu/gonzagagiving/endowment to see a complete list of the endowments created this year.

[Endowment]Report card

More Q&A with Fr. Frank Case, S.J., at: blogs.gonzaga.edu/gonzagagiving/QA

Gonzaga University’s Endowment Fund performed with a strong return on investment for donor intentions and University priorities in 2011. Gonzaga achieved a 24.2% one-year investment return, measured as of June 30, 2011, when reviewed by the NACUBO-Commonfund Study of Endowments® (NCSE), the most comprehensive study of the nation’s institutions of higher education with endowments. This outcome bested the 19.2% average return of 823 participating college and university endowments and foundations.

Through the tremendous generosity of benefactors and prudent investment, the Gonzaga Endowment Fund has grown to over $150 million. While this is an impressive figure, the fund is significantly lower than endowments of institutions with which Gonzaga most often competes for students and faculty. The Endowment Fund is strategically managed by a 19-member Investment Committee from the University, which is comprised of members of the Board of Trustees and the Board of Regents who have expertise in financial markets and investment management.

Endowment performance beats average

Historical pooled endowment returns

Gonzaga University’s Endowment Fund is managed for the long term, therefore performance over three- and five-year periods is most meaningful.

*The policy index represents the composite benchmark for the

pooled endowment fund.

For additional information, or to make an endowment gift, visit gonzaga.edu/endowment or contact Pat Reese at (509) 313-6134.

Page 4: Gonzaga Giving Newsletter, Summer 2012

Snapshot

125th Anniversary Celebration Week Sept. 12-20, 2012

Zagapalooza All-Class Alumni Reunion & Fall Family Weekend

Oct. 19-21, 2012

National Gonzaga Day Winter 2012-13

125 Service Projects Year-round opportunities

For a complete list of events, visit: gonzaga.edu/125

For the 10th consecutive year, Gonzaga University graduated its largest class ever during its 119th commencement exercises May 11-13. [Photo by Rajah Bose.]

Development Office, Gonzaga University, 502 E. Boone Ave., Spokane, WA 99258-0098

(800) 463-6925gonzaga.edu/supportgu

[Campus Life]

Did you know? Gonzaga-in-Florence (G-I-F) turns 50! Celebrate in 2013 with the 6,000 alumni who have participated in the Gonzaga-in-Florence study abroad programs.

G-I-F reunion dates and celebration details are now available online at gonzaga.edu/gif50th.

Today’s college students are facing unique challenges. Growing up in a different world, these students are technologically savvy; they crave authentic teachings and they are confronted with fierce competition for limited career opportunities. These are the students who are shaping the way Gonzaga approaches its education and plans for the future.

Gonzaga has commenced what will be one of the largest transformations the University has undertaken, starting with a slate of 125th Anniversary celebrations over the next year. With a theme of “Tradition and Transformation,” Gonzaga moves forward by honoring the traditions of the past, yet focuses on the transformations needed to propel the University into the future. This includes, but is not limited to, providing world-class academics through quality faculty and programming, access to scholarships for the best and brightest students and reimagining the delivery of Jesuit education in line with a 21st century student experience. To accomplish these goals, initiatives such as developing the first master campus plan in 100 years, a new strategic plan, an updated Core Curriculum and a review of the University’s Mission Statement are all under way.

Students at Gonzaga are already transforming the University, seeking innovative teaching and technology, study abroad opportunities and practical application. To meet them where they are, the University must transform as well – and that starts with you. Thank you for being part of this chapter in Gonzaga’s story.

Students today transform Gonzaga’s futureUpcoming Events