| Rosskam
Scholarship True Example of Creative Financing
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| Edith Rosskam
displays some of her pottery at her studio in Arizona. |
Scholarships and foundations
are usually the province of the wealthy, but philanthropy isnt
limited to the rich. Sometimes, it just takes imagination and a desire
to help others.
Edith Rosskam dedicated the William B. Rosskam II Memorial Scholarship
in Food Science in 1989 to the memory of her husband, a 1942 alumnus.
Even though she
wasnt rich, she still wanted to memorialize a college romance that had
lasted several decades.
We met at Penn State and graduated from there, she says. Bills
interest in food science truly is a family tradition; his father was in the industry
and our sons have continued with the family business, David Michael & Company,
a flavor and ingredients manufacturer.
I wanted to have my husband memorialized and felt Id rather have
it be a living memorial. I also decided that I wanted it to be for graduate students,
because by that time in their lives, they know where they want to go. Scholarships
are needed more in these areas because these students already have settled on
the field as a goal, so my contribution can be more helpful than with a first-year
undergraduate student.
Rosskam says when she decided on founding the scholarship, she had no idea
how to fund it. The principal accumulated slowly from her contributions, as
well as donations from family members and other people.
But years before, Bill had started me working with clay as a hobby, she
remembers. It happened, after taking lots of classes, that I discovered
a flair for ceramics that I didnt know about. I started with pots, and
it grew into many other things. I had work accepted at galleries, then a jeweler
heard about my pieces and asked if he could use them in his store windows to
drape diamonds. I decided if people wanted to buy my work, it must be okay. It
grew and grew, so this is how I fund the scholarship.
Rosskam donates all pottery sales proceeds to the scholarship. For
her 80th birthday, she asked friends and family to donate to the scholarship
instead
of buying her gifts. Her hobby is now displayed regularly at the
Minds Eye Gallery of Scottsdale, Arizona, which generates regular donations
to her husbands memorial.
If I sell a piece, I have the check made out to the Rosskam Fund at Penn
State, she says. We get money for the scholarship and they get a
tax deduction. Basically thats how we get most of our funds. If I want
to honor or memorialize someone, Ill send a donation to the scholarship
in their name.
Involvement in Penn State also spans generations in the Rosskam family.
Both sons are involved with the scholarship, and one son, Skip Rosskam,
is active
in fund-raising for the new Food Science Building and serves as an instructor
for the annual Penn State Ice Cream Short Course. Clearly, they agree with
mother Ediths credo: Its a good feeling to help someone else.
I think the greatest results that I get are the letters from recipients, she
says. They write letters thanking me for the scholarship and telling me
their career plans. For one student, it was terribly important for him to have
a new computer for his thesis. The scholarship gave him a chance to buy one.
Some are able to go into research. There have been so many over the years. Thats
what I want: someone to gain benefit from what I provide.
Ive reached my 80th birthday and Im still doing pottery and
lots of other things. My hope is that, when Im gone, it will become the
Edith and William Rosskam Memorial Scholarship, so that were doing it together,
in a sense. But I hope thats not too soonI have too much more to
do with my life.
Gary Abdullah
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