Estate bequest of over $2 million to fund UMaine scholarship

Mrs. Veronica PendletonThe University of Maine Foundation has received more than $2 million from the Veronica Pendleton estate to fund the Raymond K. and Veronica Pendleton Fund at the University of Maine. Mrs. Pendleton created the fund several years ago with a plan to provide an eventual gift from her estate.

The bequest gift to the Raymond K. and Veronica Pendleton Fund was announced at the University of Maine Foundation’s annual meeting and luncheon Oct. 16 by foundation President Jeffery Mills.

The endowed fund will provide monetary support to students who choose to study forestry, agriculture or marine sciences in the College of Natural Sciences, Forestry, and Agriculture. It is expected that the fund will provide $100,000 in scholarships annually.

“Our work at the foundation is very rewarding on a day like today, when you have assisted someone in planning a legacy and witness it become a reality,” says Mills. “University of Maine students will benefit from this generosity every semester, in perpetuity.”

The scholarship will be awarded to undergraduate students who demonstrate financial need or academic excellence. During even-numbered years, a preference shall be given to students studying agriculture or forestry, and during odd-numbered years to students studying marine sciences.

“The college is delighted to receive the Pendleton bequest. It will assist students who will become future natural resources managers in sectors important to Maine’s economy and quality of life,” says Edward Ashworth, dean of the College of Natural Sciences, Forestry, and Agriculture.

Mrs. Pendleton, who passed away in August 2014, established the planned gift at the University of Maine Foundation. She and her husband, Dr. Raymond Pendleton, who attended UMaine, lived on Islesboro for many years.

Distribution of the fund, which will be administered by the UMaine Office of Financial Aid, will begin for the fall 2016 semester.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

UMaine Black Bear license plates program raises more than $1 million for scholarships

Black Bear Plate AnnouncementThe University of Maine Black Bear license plate program has raised more than $1 million for scholarships to support UMaine students, according to University of Maine Foundation President Jeffery Mills.

Mills made the announcement at the University of Maine Foundation’s annual meeting and luncheon Oct. 16 on campus.

Mills presented commemorative plaques to the Hon. Mary Cathcart for her involvement in the creation of the plate as the original bill sponsor in the Maine Legislature, and to Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap for his continued support of the program.

Mills also thanked the Hon. William O’Gara, who was unable to attend, for his support as the committee chair who sponsored the final bill that created the commemorative license plate.

The Black Bear license plate became available in Maine in 2003.

“People often look at the foundation and think that you have to have wealth in order to make a difference in the support of our programs. This project proves that you can make a difference at any level,” says Mills. “Along with the scholarship support, we are providing an additional way to show our Black Bear pride.”

The initial fee for a Black Bear license plate is $20. Renewals are $15, of which $10 supports the UMaine general scholarship fund. New UMaine students receive a voucher covering the initial cost of a Black Bear plate.

More information about the Black Bear license plate program is online (maine.gov/sos/bmv/registration/bbplate.html).

Westbrook Businessman Honors Son with University of Maine Endowed Professorship

Saunders Family

University of Maine Foundation President/CEO Jeffery Mills has announced that Westbrook businessman Henry Saunders has created the Kenneth W. Saunders and Henry W. Saunders Professorship in Engineering Leadership and Management at the University of Maine to honor the memory of his son, who passed away in January 2014.  

The gift of $250,000 to the University of Maine Foundation, from Saunders and his daughter, Leslie S. McManus will encourage a legacy of support for future engineers at the the university.

Henry Saunders grew up in his family’s business, Saunders Brothers in Westbrook, Maine. As a former president and business owner, he knows the value of leadership and management skills, and understands the value of the technical expertise he acquired as a 1950 engineering graduate of UMaine.

Saunders’ son, Kenneth, passed away suddenly in 2014 from viral pneumonia. Kenneth’s engineering career spanned almost 30 years, starting at MIT Lincoln Labs in Massachusetts. He was an acknowledged leader in various projects for NASA, including aircraft collision avoidance, the so-called “Star Wars” development for destruction of enemy missiles, and other government and private entities. For the last five years of his life, he was an engineer at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces.

Kenneth received numerous awards for his achievements and academics, the latest of which were two New Mexico State University Research Achievement Awards for his work with rocket telemetry at White Sands Missile Range. Kenneth’s passion for engineering, learning and his natural leadership skills carried over into everything he did.

Kenneth was valedictorian of the Class of 1978 at Westbrook High School, graduated magna cum laude from Princeton University and received a master’s degree from Purdue University.

Dana Humphrey, dean of the UMaine College of Engineering, has been named the first Kenneth W. and Henry W. Saunders Professor, serving a five-year term. The focus is on helping engineering students go beyond technical competence to prepare for leadership roles in their fields.

Henry Saunders stresses the importance of developing stronger leadership skills in business and in government. These skills require improvements and greater competence in human relations, technical knowledge and managerial abilities; they include stronger levels of trust, greater courage and vision, and the ability to execute these seven leadership skills. He especially believes that UMaine Engineering students will gain a huge advantage in their careers by learning these skills in leadership and management and thinks Dean Humphrey is an excellent choice.

“Dean Humphrey is not only an accomplished academic leader, he is passionate about teaching leadership,” says UMaine Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Jeffrey Hecker. “He developed a minor in engineering leadership and management and teaches the foundational course in the curriculum. Funds such as the Saunders Professorship are important for UMaine because they provide awards to retain the best faculty and the support needed for them to continue to excel. The advantage of an endowed fund such as this one, is that the support is ongoing.”

Pictured from left, are the late Kenneth Saunders and his parents, the late Marjorie Saunders and Henry Saunders. Henry Saunders and daughter, Leslie S. McManus gifted $250,000 to the University of Maine Foundation to support future engineers at the University of Maine.

Bequest to Increase Skoufis Scholarship Fund

Skoufis Check Presentation

Left to right: University of Maine Foundation President/CEO Jeffery Mills, UMaine President Susan Hunter,
George Predaris, John Rozos

 

University of Maine President Susan Hunter and University of Maine Foundation President/CEO Jeffery Mills recently accepted a check for $300,000 from the Helen Skoufis estate. Helen Skoufis and her husband Peter, a member of the UMaine Class of 1941, were longtime supporters of the University. Peter and Helen’s nephews George Predaris of Rye, NH, and John Rozos of Poland Spring, ME presented the check.

In 1996, the Skoufises established the Helen M. and Peter J. Skoufis Scholarship at the University of Maine Foundation. Distributions from the fund provide scholarship assistance for undergraduate students who are graduates of Bangor High School and John Bapst Memorial High School in Bangor.

“Bequests provide much-needed private support to the University of Maine while allowing donors to continue their philanthropic work and establish their legacies in perpetuity,” Jeff Mills said, “we are very grateful to Helen and Peter for this generous gift.”

Although his work in the U.S.Foreign Sevice took him around the globe interacting with world leaders, Peter Skoufis never forgot his roots in his hometown, Bangor, Maine, or his alma mater, the University of Maine, where he earned a bachelor’s degree in history.

Peter was born in 1919 to John and Katina Skoufis in Greece, they immigrated to Bangor where Peter was raised. After graduating from the University of Maine, Peter attended George Washington University Law School, and left to join the war before receiving his degree. He served in the Army Air Corps in the Pacific during World War II.

After the war, he worked at the Veterans Administration in Washington and then as veterans affairs officer at the U.S. Embassy in Paris, where several thousand American veterans were studying under the G.I. Bill. He then served as veterans’ affairs attaché in Rome. After joining the Foreign Service, he served in Pretoria, South Africa, the Hague, Paris and London. During tours of duty in Washington, his assignments included assistant executive director of the Bureau of Security and Consular Affairs, executive officer to Secretary of State Dean Rusk, and deputy inspector general of the Foreign Service.

He became a Foreign Service inspector and for three years traveled to Asia and Europe. He received the State Department Superior Honor Award in 1971. He was a former board member of DACOR (Diplomatic and Consular Officers, Retired). In 1971, he joined the United Nations. He served for seven years as assistant director general of the Food and Agricultural Organization in Rome. He retired from the U.N. in 1984, and settled in Washington, D.C.

Helen was born in Nanty Glo, Pennsylvania. Her mother, Johanna Krzeczkowska and family were of Polish and Austrian Empire descent. After five years with the Veterans Administration in Washington, she was assigned in early 1947 to the newly opened VA office at the American Embassy in Paris. Following her marriage to Peter in Paris in 1949, she accompanied him to Foreign Service posts around the world. This was followed by a seven-year assignment in Rome where her husband served as Assistant Director General of FAO of the United Nations.

At all posts abroad she did volunteer work for local charities. Following her husband’s retirement, she was an active member of the Womens’ Committee of the National Symphony Orchestra, The Welcome to Washington International Club and the Association of American Foreign Service Wives.

Peter passed away in 2005 and Helen in 2014, and as part of their estate planning they provided these additional resources to support their scholarship.

 

 

The Spring/Summer 2015 Issue of UMaine Today is Available Online

We are sure you will be impressed with all that is happening with the students and faculty in the UMaine classrooms and laboratories that you so generously support. Read about it in the Spring/Summer 2015 issue of UMaine Today.

Cover of UMaine Today Spring 2015 issue

Highlights include:

• 50th anniversary of the Darling Marine Center, established in 1965 with the donation of a 127-acre saltwater farm by Ira C. Darling, who worked through the University of Maine Foundation to make the gift.

• The President Susan J. Hunter Fund, established at the Foundation in 2015, will benefit UMaine’s ADVANCE Rising Tide Center.

 

Creating Your Legacy – Planned and Deferred Gifts

SarahSarah McPartland-Good
Director of Planned Giving
University of Maine Foundation

I recently received a copy of a University of Maine student’s thank you letter to the family of the donor who had created a scholarship fund through her will. 
The letter states, in part:


“To receive this level of help from a stranger has been overwhelming to say the least. The scholarship funds will go a long way in easing the financial burden on me so that I can concentrate on my studies. More so than that, though, is the intangible support you have given to me. Your gift has shown me that there are other people out there, who believe my personal goal to be a worthy one. That truly means the world to me, especially at a time when I am far from my family and friends trying to make a home and a better future for myself in a new place.”

Letters like this one remind me of the difference that bequests can make in the lives of students. Many students would not be able to graduate without the assistance that comes from the planned gifts that have been endowed with the University of Maine Foundation. Scholarship support is crucial.

Many of our supporters like you have chosen to create a legacy through a bequest, charitable gift annuity or charitable trust to help students to attain their degrees. Our planned giving staff is ready to help you and your advisors to craft language that will create a legacy for you while helping students to achieve their goals in perpetuity. We exist to assure that our donors’ wishes are adhered to and we have a great deal of experience in protecting our donors’ privacy. Contact us today to explore how planned gifts can help both you and University of Maine students to achieve your goals.

For more information on planned and deferred gifts, or Legacy Society membership,
contact our Planned Giving staff at 207.581.5100 or 207.253.5172.