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During fiscal year 2002,
Johns Hopkins received a history-making commitment of $150 million for
cancer research and clinical care, and publicly launched a new campaign
with a goal of $2 billion.
Significant Campaign Progress
The Campaign for Johns Hopkins: Knowledge for the World was publicly announced
on May 4, 2002, with more than 36% of the $2 billion goal already committed;
the total committed had increased to 39% of the goal by the close of fiscal
year 2002. May 4 also marked the dedication of the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive
Cancer Center, named in honor of Philadelphia businessman Sidney Kimmel,
whose $150 million commitment is the largest single gift in the history
of Johns Hopkins.
The Knowledge for the World campaign is headed by trustees
J. Barclay Knapp, George L. Bunting Jr., and Gail J. McGovern. The “quiet
phase” of the campaign began on July 1, 2000, just one day after
the conclusion of the $1.52 billion Johns Hopkins Initiative. Johns Hopkins
is one of the first major American higher education institutions to mount
such back-to-back campaigns.
In announcing the new campaign, University President William R. Brody
said: “We seek to build on the momentum of our last campaign to
address both the unprecedented opportunities and unprecedented challenges
before us. We pledge a ‘return on investment’ that will make
Hopkins’ philanthropic partners proud to be part of one of the world’s
great enterprises.”
The campaign addresses priorities in all the academic divisions of the
University, as well as several of its centers and institutes. Half of
the $2 billion goal is sought for priorities at Johns Hopkins Medicine,
which encompasses the School of Medicine and the Johns Hopkins Hospital
and Health System.
Campaign priorities include building and upgrading facilities on all
campuses; advancing research, academic, and clinical initiatives; and
strengthening endowments for student aid and faculty support. While private
gifts in recent years have added greatly to Johns Hopkins’ endowment,
the annual income from endowment still provides a far smaller percentage
of operating costs than at many peer institutions.
Capital priorities at Johns Hopkins Medicine include new research buildings,
a new children’s and maternal hospital, and a cardiovascular and
critical care hospital. Elsewhere, capital priorities include completion
of campus renovations at the Peabody Institute and renovation of Gilman
Hall at the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences.
During fiscal year 2002, $373.3 million was committed to the campaign,
bringing total commitments to the campaign (over the course of two fiscal
years) to $782.3 million. More than one-fourth of the total is earmarked
for endowment.
Commitments from alumni account for 33% of total campaign commitments;
30% has come from friends, 26% from foundations, 7% from organizations,
and 4% from corporations. These campaign commitments are designated as
follows: 49% for program support, 24% for research, 11% for facilities
and instrumentation, 7% for faculty support, and 5% for student aid. An
additional 4% was for unrestricted use.
Near-Record FY 2002 Gifts and Pledges
Totals for both cash receipts and new commitments in fiscal year 2002
were the second-highest in the history of Johns Hopkins. The cash total—which
includes outright gifts plus pledge payments received during FY 2002—was
$319 million. The total for new commitments—which includes outright
gifts plus new pledges made during FY 2002—totaled $373 million.
Both figures were only slightly below the remarkable records set in fiscal
year 2001.
Leadership and principal commitments during fiscal year 2002—in
addition to the $150 million pledged by Jones Apparel Group founder Sidney
Kimmel—included:
- At Johns Hopkins Medicine, $15 million from a friend of Johns Hopkins
Medicine for cancer research; $5 million from Hopkins trustee emeritus
Harvey Meyerhoff and his children to support inflammatory bowel disease
research and treatment; $2 million from Medicine friends to create a
professorship in cardiology; $1.8 million from the W. M. Keck Foundation
for the basic sciences at the School of Medicine; and up to $10 million
from the Robert Garrett Fund for the Surgical Treatment of Children
toward construction of a new children’s and maternal hospital
building.
- A $9.9 million grant from the Pew Charitable Trusts to the Phoebe
R. Berman Bioethics Institute to establish the Genetics and Public Policy
Center
- More than $3 million from trustee emeritus and presidential counselor
Ralph S. O’Connor—in addition to his earlier substantial
support—for the new recreation center named in his honor
- $5 million from the Leonard Stulman and Helen R. Stulman Charitable
Foundation to establish a Jewish Studies Program at the Krieger School
of Arts and Sciences
- $3 million from a trustee for a bioethics professorship at the School
of Nursing and initiatives at Johns Hopkins Medicine
- Two $1 million gifts to the Whiting School of Engineering to support
biomedical engineering
- A $1.3 million planned gift to the Sheridan Libraries to endow a
fund for acquisitions in the humanities
- $1.6 million from the Goldman Sachs Foundation to the Center for Talented
Youth to expand its support for high-achieving youngsters from underrepresented
backgrounds to enroll in the center’s programs
- $1.5 million from two trustees to support the creation of a Society
of Black Alumni Professorship for Prominent Scholars
- $1.4 million to the Institute for Policy Studies from the William
and Flora Hewlett Foundation to support development of a management
information system focused on the foundation’s programs promoting
responsible fatherhood
- $1 million from the Lipitz Family Foundation to establish the Center
for Health Policy and Practice at the Bloomberg School of Public Health,
which will focus on assuring that faculty discoveries are rapidly translated
into policies and practice
- $975,000 from the Freeman Foundation to the Nitze School of Advanced
International Studies to support Southeast Asia Studies
Increased Alumni Involvement
Programs and outreach by the Johns Hopkins Alumni Office dramatically
increased alumni involvement during FY 2002. More than 7,500 individuals
attended 168 alumni chapter events around the world; 385 individuals participated
in Hopkins-sponsored international travel programs; and more than 2,000
alumni were active as University volunteers. Twenty-one alumni and friends
were honored with awards from the Alumni Association.
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