Seton Hall’s Buccino Leadership Institute Receives Gifts Totaling More Than $7 Million
Thursday, March 12, 2020
The Buccino Leadership Institute at Seton Hall University has received a total of $7.1 million in gifts in recent months to develop the next generation of leaders. $5.7 million in donations and estate gifts were donated to further the work of the Institute and three of its Centers, along with an additional $1.4 million in preferred scholarship support for students in the program.
Launched in fall 2018, the Buccino Institute is the first interdisciplinary undergraduate leadership program of its kind in the United States. Within the Institute there are distinctive leadership centers in six schools and colleges at the University — each a thought leader for a specific aspect of leadership based on the philosophy and work of that academic discipline.
"One of the things that makes our program stand out is its combination of cross-disciplinary and intra-disciplinary leadership development," said Lieutenant Colonel (Ret.) Bryan C. Price, Ph.D., founding executive director of the Buccino Institute and one of the nation's top leadership experts. "Students in a variety of majors learn about the principles of leadership and learn from each other as a cohort, and then receive leadership development that is specifically tailored to their future profession. You then add peak performance psychology on top of that, and you have a leadership development program that is unlike any other in the country."
For five years in a row, the Gerald P. Buccino '63 Center for Leadership Development in Seton Hall's Stillman School of Business has received national recognition, earning a #1 ranking in the LEAD Awards sponsored by HR.com. The Business Center's success served as the catalyst for creating the university-wide leadership institute.
Invested in the Institute's success, the following donors have stepped forward to fund and further advance the innovative program.
Buccino Institute
Gerald P. Buccino, a 1963 graduate of the University who is widely regarded as a global
visionary in the turnaround management profession, provided the lead gift of $2 million
to the Institute which was named in his honor. For more than 30 years, Buccino has
consulted with stakeholders at every level, leading to an array of successful corporate
turnarounds and reorganizations. He has worked with companies in numerous industries
ranging in size from middle market to major publicly held corporations and has held
a variety of C-Level positions including chairman, CEO, COO and CFO. A founding member
of the Turnaround Management Association, Buccino has five decades of board service
for business and not-for-profit organizations.
In addition to Buccino's gift to the Institute, three of its Centers have received additional support.
Arts and Sciences
The College of Arts and Sciences Leadership Center has received $1 million from the estate of Louis Gentile. A 1958
graduate of the College, Gentile was a veteran of the United States Army and worked
for many years in the insurance industry. A loyal supporter of the University during
his lifetime, and out of gratitude for the values-based education received at Seton
Hall, Gentile generously remembered his alma mater in his estate plan. In honor of
the gift, the College's center has been named "The Louis and Vivienne Gentile Arts
and Sciences Leadership Center."
Diplomacy and International Relations
The Henry F. Roman and Maryann Roman Family Trust donated $1 million to the School of Diplomacy and International Relations, which has named its leadership center in the couple's honor. Henry Roman '54 served
two tours of duty in the Army, and he and his wife shared a love of travel and foreign
cultures.
Communication and the Arts
The College of Communication and the Arts has received a $1 million pledge commitment from the estate of Lloyd McBride to establish
the Lloyd A. McBride Communication and the Arts Leadership Center. McBride was a 1953
graduate of the University who majored in communication arts and served as a department
head and chief announcer for WSOU, Seton Hall's student-run radio station. He went
on to serve as a professor of communication at the University for more than 40 years.
Additional support for the Buccino Leadership Institute has been received from the Estates of Dorothea Huber '66 ($252,963); George Conrad '49 ($154,475); Carolyn J. Scott, M.A.E. '60 ($50,000); Olga Tedeschi '49 ($47,621); and the Charitable Remainder Trust of Edmund B. Piasecki '41 ($161,067).
Endowed scholarships, with a preference for leadership students, also have been established from estate distributions in memory of Patricia O'Callaghan '53 and Timothy Kelly '51 ($1 million); Joseph R. Toma '49 ($200,000); James '61/Law '64 and Anita M.A.E. '92 Ventantonio ($110,408); Richard J. Passanant '52 ($50,000); and the Damasceno Family P'19 ($50,000 pledge).
"The Buccino name has been synonymous with leadership excellence for a long time in the Stillman School of Business. With Jerry's generous gift, coupled with the estate gifts and scholarship support, we can now develop a new generation of leaders across the University and in every discipline and industry," said Price. "When people think of leadership development, I want them to think of Seton Hall and the Buccino Leadership Institute."
Related: NJBiz, "Donations at work: Seton Hall University receives $7.1M in gifts to enhance a leadership program"
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