Donor Stories | Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Ƶ students walking through Lubbock campus courtyard.
Bill and Donna Scott-Tilley

Bill Tilley and Donna Scott-Tilley, PhD

Annual Giving: Planned Gift Helps Ensure Scholarships for Future Nursing Students

For several years, Bill Tilley (TTU Business Administration ’93) and Donna Scott-Tilley, PhD, (Nursing ’97, ’91), had discussed including a charitable gift in their estate planning. Their goal was to support scholarships at their alma maters. Someday, the couple thought, we’ll make the gift official by completing the paperwork.

The Friday after Thanksgiving 2017, Bill’s heart stopped beating. More

Robert and Jan Taylor

Robert and Jan Taylor and The United Family

Return on Investment
Keeping communities healthy gets a personal and professional commitment. 

If quality health care is absent in a community, a healthy workforce is, too. 
As The United Family's retired CEO and president and current senior advisor, it's a concept Robert Taylor fully grasps and champions. More

image of white male in cowboy hat smiling at camera

Jewel Benton Endowed Scholarship in Nursing

A Jewel of a Gift
First endowed scholarship in the School of Nursing still impactful

Returning to the Rio Grande Valley as a health care provider was Scot Brown's plan since leaving for college. Brown, CRNA, (Nursing ’03) is now the first nurse anesthetist at Socorro General Hospital to live in the community for more than 40 years. The critical access hospital serves the residents of Socorro and Catron counties — a population of just more than 21,000 — and those traveling I-25 between Mexico and Albuquerque, New Mexico, as well as other local highways and back roads. The Jewel Benton Endowed Scholarship in Nursing was one of the many scholarships Brown received while earning undergraduate degrees in agricultural sciences at TTU and nursing at Ƶ — and the only one he can still remember by name almost 20 years later. More

Image of two medical residents seated in a room

Thurmond Eye Associates

Visionary Gift
Ophthalmology alumni donate to help future eye doctors

After Wade Graham, M.D., (Resident '99, Medicine '95) graduated from the School of Medicine and finished his ophthalmology residency, he joined the faculty of his alma mater to guide others through the process. As an assistant professor and director of the ophthalmology residency program, Graham saw firsthand the struggles residents faced — the professional problems as well as the personal ones. Today, he partners with two other alumni in private practice. Their practice, Thurmond Eye Associates, has been a successful one. So, when the three men decided they were in a position to help current ophthalmology residents, they did. More

Xcel Energy

Xcel Energy Foundation Helps Amarillo Community Stay Clean

Thanks to the Excel Energy Foundation, Amarillo residents have an alternate way to dispose of unused medications. The foundation supports community Medication Cleanout events hosted by the Texas Panhandle Poison Center, which is managed by Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center School through the School of Pharmacy. MORE

cyndi mendez

Running for the Love Her Life

Every time Cyndi Mendez, PT, laces up her running shoes, she has a goal in mind: to finish the race. Not to just physically cross the finish line, but also to, and perhaps more importantly, keep alive the memory of her late fiancé, Jorge Fernandez (SON '10), and honor two things he valued most in life: higher education and living a healthy lifestyle. MORE

Logan Price

Alumnus Helps Students Achieve their Dreams

Logan Price, AuD, (SOAHS ’13, ’09) has always believed in giving back. He received a $5,000 scholarship from James Avery Craftsman Inc., and was so grateful that his first order of business after securing a paid internship was buying a necklace from the jewelry store. And he hasn’t stopped there. His appreciation for his education from Ƶ has inspired him to help other students achieve their dreams. MORE

Alan McCarty

Investing in the Future of Medicine

Alan McCarty, MD, (SOM ’00) believes in giving credit where credit is due. And because the School of Medicine took a chance on him in 1996 McCarty, in return, has made a lifetime pledge to help further its mission. Although he has been a loyal donor since 2004, last March McCarty set up a perpetual gift of $100 per month through an automatic draft after realizing his initial one-year pledge to the School of Medicine Fund for Excellence had expired. When he noticed the payments had stopped, McCarty contacted the development officer at Ƶ at Amarillo to make sure his gift continued. MORE

Ritchie Family

Ritchie Family Supports Pediatric Brain Injury Research

Race and Shawna Ritchie are beyond thankful they still have two perfectly healthy children. However, just more than a year ago, the fate of their then 3-year-old son, Rynden remained uncertain. Jan. 31, 2013, was a typical weekday at the Ritchie's home as Shawna juggled take-out dinner and children's schedules. That's when she noticed Rynden missing from the kitchen where she had left him about 10 minutes earlier. MORE

Tammy McNeeley

Tammy McNeeley's Dreams Live on Through Scholarship

Tammy McNeeley (SOAHS '97) valiantly fought through her master's coursework all the while battling cancer. When graduation day came, Tammy walked across the stage with her original class, and then was admitted to a Fort Worth hospital two days later. She died the following day, but her legacy lives on through an endowed scholarship begun by her classmates and members of the National Student Speech-Language-Hearing Association. MORE

andy shakespeare

Donors Help Students Triumph Over Difficulties

During his first year of medical school, Andy Shakespeare experienced one of the most difficult times of his life. His 26-year-old sister, Casey, was diagnosed with cervical cancer. 

Merrill Nursing Endowment

Endowment to Advance Nursing Studies and Practice

The School of Nursing recently received a generous gift from The CH Foundation to establish The CH Foundation Endowed Professorship in Advance Practice Registered Nurse Studies. 

Verizon

Verizon Gift Supports Children's Diabetes Program in Rural West Texas

In an effort to help children in rural West Texas better manage their diabetes, the F. Marie Hall Institute for Rural and Community Health has established the Verizon Foundation Children's Diabetes Monitoring Program. The institute received a gift from Verizon to help fund the program. MORE

Kenneth Scott

Endowments are Forever; Hopefully Cancer Won’t be

Kenneth Scott grew up on a livestock farm in the Texas Hill Country just outside of Lampasas. The rural, agrarian life often reflected Thomas Edison’s familiar phrase “early to bed, early to rise” in that you put in a full day’s work just to get the job done. When high school graduation came, Scott thought he’d discover a more suitable direction for his career. Today, he gently laughs at his prodigal choice of schools and college major – the University of Texas and engineering. MORE

Dalton Wagner

Teen’s Service Project Helps Children Battling Cancer

Seventeen-year-old Dahlton Wagner shoots straight from the heart. He needed an Eagle Scout project, and the Ƶ pediatric oncology clinic at Amarillo needed some sprucing up. On his first visit to the Ƶ pediatric oncology clinic, Dahlton said he immediately knew this was his Eagle Scout project. MORE

 
Sandra Davidson

James A. “Buddy” Davidson Charitable Foundation Supports Health Care Initiatives

Sandra Davidson and the staff of the James A. “Buddy” Davidson Charitable Foundation continue the work began by her husband more than three decades ago. Mr. Davidson gained an appreciation for nursing from his mother, who was a registered nurse. Today, the foundation that bears his name supports nursing students at Ƶ as well as many other health care initiatives. MORE

Jean Stockton

Jean Stockton Tells her Story of Generous Gifts to Ƶ

Her generous gifts throughout the past 20 years have provided scholarships for Ƶ students and enabled its academic programs to prosper. She has contributed to the Garrison Institute on Aging as well as to the schools of Health Professions, Medicine, and Nursing. Additionally, Mrs. Stockton has made a planned gift to the School of Pharmacy at Abilene. MORE

myrna armstrong

Myrna L. Armstrong Endowed Scholarship for Nursing

Even though Myrna Armstrong has retired from Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center (Ƶ) School of Nursing, her giving spirit continues to live on through a scholarship she established. The Myrna L. Armstrong/ Elizabeth (Hanslik) Montalvo School of Nursing Endowed Scholarship will award scholarships to RN to BSN students in the counties surrounding Marble Falls. MORE

 
Littleton Family

Littleton-Anglin Families Endowment Fund for Parkinson’s Disease Research

Their gift has established the Littleton-Anglin Families Endowment Fund for Parkinson’s Disease Research at the School of Medicine at Lubbock. LZ and Zada Anglin, James A. Littleton, Jr., and J.A. and Rene Littleton, this gift will support clinician salaries, specialized equipment and scholarships as well as training and other educational programs. MORE

 
Avery Rush

Mrs. J. Avery “Janie” Rush Endowed Chair of Excellence in Women's Health and Oncology

J. Avery Rush, M.D., says his philanthropic spirit comes from the example exhibited by his parents, who were altruistic leaders in Amarillo. Their emphasis on community first, inspired him to invest in Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. His gift established The Mrs. J Avery “Janie” Rush Endowed Chair of Excellence at the School of Medicine at Amarillo. MORE

 
Glenna Roberts

Corbett L. and Cecilia T. Roberts Scholarship Endowment in Nursing

Glenna Roberts came to Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center 26 years ago, amidst a West Texas thunderstorm, planning to establish a scholarship for nurses. She remembers the day clearly. “I hadn’t watched the news, and a very nice man helped me get into the building. His suit was soaked; I still owe him a new suit,” Roberts recalls with a rueful smile. MORE

 
Ron Salas

Corinne Payne Wright Endowed Chair in Alzheimer’s Disease

With every paycheck, Ron Salars makes a modest contribution to the Corinne Payne Wright Endowed Chair in Alzheimer’s Disease, optimistic that someday it will help add up to a medical breakthrough. He understands firsthand the struggles faced by those with neurological diseases – his daughter has Down syndrome. MORE

Clay Crofoot

Crofoot Family Endowment Fund in Epilepsy

“That’s all we can do here for your child.” Terry and Kelly Crofoot heard those despairing words nine years ago and have since made numerous trips to specialty clinics throughout the country seeking help for their son, Clay, who has epilepsy. MORE

 
F. Marie Hall

F. Marie Hall Institute for Rural and Community Health

From the back seat of her father’s car, Marie Hall formed some of her earliest memories of her father’s work. An only child, she remembers riding along as he made evening house calls to the residents in the rural areas around Big Spring. Ms. Hall’s father, G.T. Hall, M.D., was a rural primary care physician and surgeon in Big Spring. Armed with a stethoscope and a black medical bag, his most important medical tool was a compassionate heart. MORE