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Giving Surpasses $264 Million
Duke received $264,580,049 in charitable gifts
this 2001-02 fiscal year, a slight increase over the previous year.
The total came from 87,716 donors, including 43,049 alumni, both
small decreases from the previous year's record donor numbers. Funds
received were about $155,000 more than in 2000-01.
"The past months have been very difficult for our country,
and it is easy to understand why financial priorities have shifted,"
says President Nannerl O. Keohane. "We are grateful that so
many people continue to support Duke, even in such circumstances.
Their generosity has helped us to make steady progress toward meeting
the university's highest-priority goals, which remain essential
in any economy."
In February 2001, Duke's trustees adopted a strategic plan, "Building
on Excellence," that seeks new funds for faculty support, strengthening
science and engineering, promoting diversity in the student body
and staff, and expanding the university's reach both locally and
globally, among other key institutional priorities. Much of the
year's giving was directed to those needs.
The $264.6 million received in the twelve months between July 1,
2001, and June 30, 2002, was the second-largest philanthropic giving
total in Duke history, behind only 1999-2000, when Duke received
more than $300 million.
The largest donor to Duke in the fiscal year that just ended was
The Duke Endowment of Charlotte, the charitable trust created by
university founder James B. Duke, which gave more than $33.5 million
for a variety of purposes, including scholarships and academic and
community-outreach programs. Also included in the year's receipts
were portions of a $35-million commitment from the Bill and Melinda
(French '86, M.B.A. '87) Gates Foundation for an undergraduate science
facility and student-life initiatives, and portions of the $25-million
challenge grant from Peter M. Nicholas '64 and Virginia "Ginny"
Lilly Nicholas '64 of Boston that created the Nicholas Faculty Leadership
Initiative.
The Nicholases are co-chairs of the Campaign for Duke, the university's
$2-billion fund raising effort. The campaign, which began in 1996
and is scheduled to end in December 2003, stood at more than $1.8
billion in pledges and cash receipts at the end of the fiscal year.
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