Largest-Ever Gift to UVA Engineering will Support Teaching and Research Excellence

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., Nov. 8, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- University of Virginia School of Engineering Dean Craig H. Benson announced Friday the largest gift in the school's history.

Greg Olsen, a 1971 Ph.D. alumnus of the Materials Science and Engineering Department, has pledged $25 million to recruit and retain star engineering faculty, attract outstanding Ph.D. students and provide the dean of engineering and the chair of the department with additional funding to support strategic initiatives. The total impact of Olsen's gift will be $36.5 million when combined with $11.5 million in matching funds from UVA's Bicentennial Scholars Fund and Bicentennial Professors Fund.

"As a world-class researcher himself, Greg Olsen exemplifies the power of engineering to make the world a better place," Benson said. "With his generous, future-focused investment, Greg is ensuring that UVA Engineering's capacity to attract outstanding scholars and produce future engineering leaders is very strong for generations to come."

Olsen's historic gift follows the University's public launch of Honor the Future, a $5 billion fundraising campaign. UVA Engineering launched its portion of the campaign on Oct. 11 with a goal of raising $250 million.

"The School of Engineering has been building momentum for years now, and this gift will help them take another giant leap," said UVA President Jim Ryan. "I am grateful to Greg Olsen for his generosity, and for his belief that the best way to pay back a life-changing experience is to give a new generation of students the same opportunity."

Olsen's investment, with its $36.5 million total impact, enables:

    --  A $15 million endowment for Olsen Bicentennial Professorships, providing
        resources for UVA Engineering to recruit and retain leading scholars who
        will drive collaborative research, create knowledge and technologies to
        benefit humanity and cultivate an environment of educational innovation.
        From this funding, $5 million will be designated for a professorship in
        the Department of Materials Science and Engineering.
    --  A $16.5 million endowment for Olsen Graduate Fellowships, helping UVA
        Engineering recruit the world's top Ph.D. students to hone their skills
        and accelerate their drive for discovery, while gaining exposure to
        modern research problems and a broad understanding of the practical
        applications of their research. From this funding, $10.5 million will go
        toward fellowships in the Department of Materials Science and
        Engineering.
    --  A $5 million Dean's Strategic Investment Fund, giving Benson and
        Materials Science and Engineering Department Chair John R. Scully
        resources to respond quickly to opportunities, such as providing
        hands-on learning experiences for students, developing innovative
        courses, boosting graduate student recruitment, enhancing diversity
        programs and modernizing facilities.

Olsen's gift comes at an important time for UVA Engineering, when the school's sponsored research program has grown by 75% since fiscal year 2016, driven in part by a 30% increase in the number of faculty and a 64% increase in Ph.D. students since 2014. The Department of Materials Science and Engineering has added 12 faculty members since 2016.

"Greg is a great advocate and a tremendous external adviser for UVA, the Engineering School and the Department of Materials Science and Engineering," said Scully, the Charles Henderson Chaired Professor of Materials Science and Engineering and department chair. "He understands that to have an excellent department, you must have excellent faculty, outstanding students and superb facilities and capabilities. In this regard, he is helping us earn the equivalent of a triple crown."

Scully said his department has approximately 70 to 80 Ph.D. students in a given year now, and Olsen's gift will help the department progress toward a goal of 125 Ph.D. students or more.

"Ph.D. students are enablers at universities," he said. "They enable research, develop novel ideas and generate new science. They are also lab instructors and role models for undergraduate students. Greg's commitment to helping us grow our Ph.D. program will have an enduring impact."

Olsen is dedicating his gift to his own former Ph.D. adviser, materials science and engineering Professor Emeritus William A. Jesser. Olsen was Jesser's first doctoral student back in 1968, and Jesser went on to chair the department for 12 years.

"He gave me confidence in myself because he helped me with my Ph.D. thesis. And when I was finished, I felt I had really accomplished something, and I could go out into the world and be a professor or researcher. I have an incredible amount of gratitude toward him."

Jesser said he is extremely honored by and appreciative of Olsen's recognition. "Greg is just that kind of person. He feels good about doing good."

After earning his Ph.D. at UVA in 1971 and completing a post-doctoral research assignment in South Africa, Olsen went to work as a research scientist for RCA Laboratories' David Sarnoff Research Center, advancing the understanding of how atoms moved in semi-conductors and LEDs.

In 1984, Olsen co-founded EPITAXX, a manufacturer of fiber-optic detectors, which are like tiny solar cells that turn light into electrical signals; Olsen made the detectors less expensive to produce, and now anyone who has fiber-optic cable, internet or phone service at home is probably benefitting from EPITAXX's technologies. The company sold for $12 million in 1990.

In 1992, Olsen co-founded Sensors Unlimited, a near-infrared camera manufacturer that enabled technologies such as night vision and cameras that can detect the difference between ice and water on aircraft wings. That company initially sold for $600 million in 2000.

In October 2005, Olsen became the third private citizen to orbit the Earth during a trip to the International Space Station. Through his current company, GHO Ventures, Olsen invests in entrepreneurial ventures.

All told, Olsen has been awarded 12 patents and has written more than 100 research papers. He is a fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers and was elected to the National Academy of Engineering - the profession's highest honor - in 2010.

During his career, he has remained close to Jesser, to the Department of Materials Science and Engineering and to the University as part of the UVA Alumni Association.

In 2000, Olsen made what was then the largest-ever gift to the Engineering School - $15 million toward the construction of Wilsdorf Hall, named for two of his other esteemed professors, Kuhlmann-Wilsdorf and her late husband Heinz Wilsdorf.

"Greg is a role model for alumni engagement," said UVA Engineering's Associate Dean for Advancement Niles Eggleston. "He gives the gifts of his time, talents and treasure, and it is an inspiration to all of us."

About UVA Engineering: As part of the top-ranked, comprehensive University of Virginia, UVA Engineering is one of the nation's oldest and most respected engineering schools. Our mission is to make the world a better place by creating and disseminating knowledge and by preparing future engineering leaders. Outstanding students and faculty from around the world choose UVA Engineering because of our growing and internationally recognized education and research programs. UVA is the No. 1 public engineering school in the country for the percentage of women graduates, among schools with at least 75 degree earners; the No. 1 public engineering school in the United States for the four-year graduation rate of undergraduate students; and the top engineering school in the country for the rate of Ph.D. enrollment growth since 2015. Learn more at engineering.virginia.edu.

Media Contact:
Elizabeth Mather, Executive Director of Communications
eat6bx@virginia.edu; 757-319-3664

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