Diederich College of Communication receives $3.5 million gift
Donation from alumna’s trust will fund capital improvement projects
MILWAUKEE – Marquette University’s Diederich College of Communication today announced it has received a $3.5 million gift from the Bernice Shanke Greiveldinger Charitable Trust to fund capital improvement projects in the college’s Johnston Hall. This is the trust’s second gift to the university this year. In July, the Greiveldinger Trust donated $1 million toward the construction of Marquette’s new Jesuit Residence.
Johnston Hall, which has been the college’s home for more than 100 years, is Marquette’s oldest building and part of the university’s Historic Core, which also comprises Marquette and Sensenbrenner halls.
“Significant renovations are needed to put the college on a pace to lead young journalists and media professionals for years to come,” said Geoffrey Greiveldinger, trustee of the Greiveldinger Charitable Trust. As early examples, he cites a build-out of a “creative content” suite on the building’s second level, as well as revamped space for participants in the college’s prestigious O’Brien Fellowship program.
“The foundational work of the O’Brien Fellowship was instrumental in the Greiveldinger Trust’s decision to make this gift,” Greiveldinger said. “That program represents a vision on the part of the college that augured so well for the future achievements of the Diederich College of Communication.”
According to Bergen, phased renovations will start in January 2015 and run through August 2018 – she added that faculty, student and staff input will be important to shaping the vision for the new space.
The Greiveldinger Trust gift capitalizes on the college’s significant philanthropic activity over the past decade, including J. William and Mary Diederich’s $28 million legacy gift in 2005, and an $8.3 million donation in 2013 from Peter and Patricia Frechette to establish the Perry and Alicia O’Brien Fellowship in Public Service Journalism.
About Bernice Shanke Greiveldinger
Shanke Greiveldinger, who died on March 27, 2008, in Milwaukee, was born to a train engineer and a German immigrant in a blue-collar Milwaukee neighborhood less than two miles from Marquette University’s campus. She graduated from Marquette’s School of Journalism in 1942.
Shanke Greiveldinger worked for 43 years at the then Milwaukee Journal in the advertising department. She followed in the footsteps of her brother, Edwin, who also graduated from Marquette in 1932 from Marquette’s School of Journalism. He was a foreign correspondent for the Associated Press, based in Berlin, Germany, and later in London and Stockholm, during and after World War II.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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