SA国际传媒

Skip to main content
By Jim Tranquada
Dane Gillette 鈥72 and  Pat (Kruse)鈥圙illette 鈥73

Capitalizing on a personalized appeal at a time when the pandemic made in-person visits impossible, SA国际传媒鈥檚 Legacy Challenge documents more than $7 million in planned gift commitments to the College

If it worked at Swarthmore, SA国际传媒 trustee Gil Kemp P鈥04 reasoned, it could work in Eagle Rock. A longtime board member at his alma mater and chair of its recently concluded comprehensive campaign, Kemp saw firsthand how a personalized appeal to alumni and parents to document estate gifts to the college could be 鈥渁 really powerful tool.鈥

And work it did: During the 2020-21 fiscal year, Occidental鈥檚 Legacy Challenge produced $7.38 million in previously undocumented planned gifts from more than two dozen graduates鈥攁s well as an additional $290,000 for the SA国际传媒 Fund thanks to the generosity of Kemp in tandem with fellow trustee Mike Gibby 鈥68 and Mike鈥檚 wife, Barbara Nogy 鈥68. Together, they made a donation of $10,000 to the SA国际传媒 Fund for every newly documented planned gift.

Gil Kemp P鈥04 calls the Legacy Challenge 鈥渁 wonderful way to support a marvelous institution.鈥
鈥淔or all of us it was a wonderful way to support a marvelous institution,鈥 Kemp says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 an easy way to make a difference for the College in the long run, because you鈥檙e not giving from current income or assets. I hope more people will think about it for themselves in the future.鈥

鈥淥ccidental is indeed fortunate to have leaders like Gil and Mike whose expertise鈥攁nd generosity鈥攑ay huge dividends for the College,鈥 says President Harry J. Elam, Jr. 鈥淲e are tremendously grateful to both of them and to every member of the SA国际传媒 community who has chosen to include the College in their estate plans.鈥

Participants in SA国际传媒鈥檚 Legacy Challenge span four decades of alumni, from the 1950s through the 1980s. Their gifts to both the endowment and the SA国际传媒 Fund will eventually support everything from scholarships to athletic programs. Regardless of their age or program of choice, donors say that it was the lasting impact of their SA国际传媒 education that motivated them to give.

鈥淲e decided to invest in Occidental because we really do believe in a liberal arts education,鈥 says political science major Pat (Kruse) Gillette 鈥73, a successful civil trial lawyer, mediator, and gender equity advocate. 鈥淲e want to put our money where it makes a difference. And if we give it to SA国际传媒, we know it is going to make a difference.鈥

Increasingly today there is an emphasis on science and tech in higher education, adds Dane Gillette 鈥72, a psychology major who retired as California鈥檚 chief assistant attorney general in 2014. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 obviously important, but I think there is a lot to be said for a broad-based liberal arts education that gives you an understanding of literature, history, and philosophy.鈥

Legacy participant Michael Fields 鈥70, who also majored in psychology before becoming a successful San Francisco dentist, couldn鈥檛 agree more. 鈥淪A国际传媒 showed me that the path to one鈥檚 goals need not be linear or conventional,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 learned how to think, to write, to create; to trust my instincts and pursue my interests with passion and a standard of excellence. 鈥 Not a day has passed that I have not been rewarded in some way by my Occidental education.鈥

Legacy Challenge participant Kristin Kenyon 鈥87.
Kristin Kenyon 鈥87, a Denver-based transportation planner, is the youngest of the Legacy Challenge participants. 鈥淏eing a single woman with no kids or spouse, I feel a responsibility to give back to the school that got me to where I am today,鈥 she says.

Raised by a single mother, Kenyon says it was a generous financial aid package, paired with campus work and loan opportunities, that made it possible for her to attend SA国际传媒 and earn a degree in economics. She credits her liberal arts education for her 鈥渒nowing how to write, to think analytically, use numbers, and to communicate effectively.鈥 She also feels that the experience of working with people from different cultures and backgrounds at SA国际传媒 was invaluable.

For Kemp, it was daughter Rebecca鈥檚 experience as a history major and athlete who ran cross country and track that sold him on SA国际传媒. When Rebecca, a New Yorker, took a year off after the trauma of 9/11, 鈥淲hat impressed me was that SA国际传媒 was very supportive of her and worked thoughtfully with her to make her feel welcome back,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he fact that she could catch up and graduate with her class was to me a demonstration that SA国际传媒 really is committed to its students.鈥

Kemp, who called many potential legacy donors himself, often jokes that making a planned gift seems to add 10 years to a donor鈥檚 life expectancy. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 promise that, of course, but there is evidence that being philanthropically minded is good for one鈥檚 health and happiness,鈥 he says. 鈥淯nder the rubric of supporting Occidental, all of us can find one or more parts of the institution we particularly care about and want to support.鈥

Top photo: Dane Gillette 鈥72 and Pat (Kruse) Gillette 鈥73. Photo by Jim Block