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Private giving to Johns Hopkins in fiscal 1999 broke all previous
records for both cash receipts and commitments, as the Johns
Hopkins Initiative topped its expanded goal of $1.2 billion.
New campaign commitments during the year were up 53 percent and
exceeded the previous single-year record set in fiscal 1996 by 41
percent. Cash receipts--up for the fourth straight year--were 12
percent higher than in fiscal 1998.
With a full year before the campaign's conclusion on June 30,
2000, the Johns Hopkins Initiative total stood at $1.258 billion,
105 percent of its expanded goal. The original $900 million goal
was surpassed in April 1998, and the next month the University's
Board of Trustees set an expanded goal of $1.2 billion for the
campaign. That expanded goal was reached in May 1999 thanks to
remarkable support from alumni, friends, corporations,
foundations, and other organizations.
The top priorities of the expanded Johns Hopkins Initiative
campaign are endowment for student aid and the libraries, as well
as support for facilities whose funding is not yet completed.
During its final year, the campaign will continue to focus on
these goals as well as on addressing crucial divisional
priorities. The Initiative campaign is co-chaired by Lenox D.
Baker Jr. and R. Champlin Sheridan, both trustees and alumni.
Cash receipts from private donors--including new gifts and
payments on pledges--totaled $207 million in fiscal 1999,
continuing the steady increase of the previous three years. Gifts
from individuals accounted for $96 million; from foundations, $72
million; from corporations, $18 million; and from other
organizations, $21 million.
During fiscal 1999, campaign commitments--both cash received and
pledges of future gifts--totaled $303 million, an all-time
single-year high. At the end of fiscal 1999, campaign commitments
for endowment and facilities stood at $718 million, and $129
million had been committed to support student aid.
Pledges announced by Michael R. Bloomberg, an alumnus of the
Whiting School and chairman of the Board of Trustees, were key
contributors to the record set in fiscal 1996 and surpassed in
fiscal 1999. Mr. Bloomberg announced plans for an initial gift of
$55 million in the fall of 1995 and pledged an additional $45
million in the fall of 1998 to complete his campaign commitment
at $100 million, the largest gift in the University's history.
Mr. Bloomberg designated two-thirds of the $45 million commitment
for student aid and the remainder for the School of Public Health
and other projects, including the Sheridan Libraries. A number of
other exceptional gifts and pledges announced in fiscal 1999 also
contributed to the record-breaking campaign totals.
A significant number of donors made planned gifts, which account
for 10 percent of the campaign total. Hopkins received
outstanding support from a broad mix of local,
national, and international foundations and corporations.
Two challenges issued early in the campaign were met and exceeded
during fiscal 1999. A $5 million challenge gift from Champ and
Debbie Sheridan attracted an additional $718,000 to the
Eisenhower Library's endowment, bringing the total of matching
gifts to $5.1 million. Zanvyl Krieger's $50 million challenge
gift attracted $15.7 million in new commitments to the School of
Arts and Sciences' endowment, bringing the total of matching
gifts to $64.5 million.
More than 41,000 alumni, parents, patients and other friends, and
faculty and staff made annual contributions to the University and
Johns Hopkins Medicine in fiscal 1999. More than 18,800 alumni
made annual gifts, 10.3 percent more donors than in the previous
year.
Gifts received during fiscal 1999 directly benefited teaching,
research, student life, and patient care. In addition, these
gifts helped to increase the financial stability and provide the
flexibility the Johns Hopkins institutions need to ensure
continued excellence and innovation.
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SCHOOL OF PROFESSIONAL STUDIES IN BUSINESS AND
EDUCATION
Downtown Center
The School of Professional Studies in Business and
Education's new Downtown Center will be located at the
corner of Charles and Fayette Streets in Baltimore's
business district. A landmark electronic news ticker between
the first and second floors will wrap around the east and
north faces of the three-story 35,000-square-foot building,
which will house classrooms, faculty offices, a library,
business case study rooms, and a 180- seat auditorium. The
building will also serve as administrative headquarters for
the School's graduate division of business and management.
The site of a former men's clothing store, the building will
undergo about $6.1 million in renovations and is scheduled
to open in January 2001.

MONTGOMERY COUNTY CENTER
The Montgomery County Campus Building II, which opens in
January 2000, is a three-story teaching and research
facility with 19 "smart" classrooms and four computer
laboratories, a bookstore, and a coffeehouse. The building
accommodates four Hopkins divisions (Arts & Sciences,
Business & Education, Engineering, Public Health) with the
additional classrooms and labs necessary for the growth of
programs and enrollments. The third floor of the building is
designed to house a biotech research institute affiliated
with the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, reflecting the
campus mission of collaborating with, and becoming part of,
the technology, business, public health, and education
communities it serves.
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