Bold Investments From Humble Leaders

With more than a century's worth of combined service, two couples have established endowments that prove pivotal in the goals of Bold & Blue.

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Story published August 2023



A centerpiece of the people-centered, half-billion-dollar Bold & Blue fundraising campaign was an ambitious goal for funding endowed leadership positions.

At the campaign’s start in 2017, SDSU had commitments for 13 endowed positions – established with gifts of $1 million or more. University and campaign leadership established the target of growing that number to 50.

In August 2023, gift agreements were finalized for the 50th and 51st positions.

Appropriately, two couples with 108 ½ years of combined service to SDSU made financial commitments to push the university’s Bold & Blue comprehensive campaign past that important milestone.

Dean Emerita Roberta Olson funded the Roberta K. Olson Endowed Dean of the College of Nursing, a position she held from 1994 to 2013. Dr. Olson’s late husband, David, worked at SDSU in rural community development for 16 years before his passing in 2016.

Dr. Dan Kemp, an Emeritus Professor of Mathematics, and his wife, Michele, are providing a gift for the Kemp Endowed Professorship of Honors Mathematics. Dan taught at SDSU for 43 ½ years; Michele served as the administrative assistant for the College of Arts and Sciences for 29 years.

Left photo: Mary Anne Krogh stands smiling next to Roberta Olson in a skills lab classroom. Right photo: Dan Kemp smiles with his arm around Michele Kemp, standing outside in the Honors Hall courtyard.
Left: Dean Mary Anne Krogh and Roberta Olson / Right: Dan and Michele Kemp


An endowed position is the highest academic award that a university can bestow on a faculty member or academic leader, with the fund lasting as long as the university exists. It serves as an honor to the named holder of the appointment and an enduring tribute to the donor who establishes it.

The endowments associated with these positions presently range from $1 million to $5 million. The endowments generate an annual flow of revenue that can be used to support the endowment holders’ area of responsibility – everything from funding graduate students, research support, equipment, and travel.

They are viewed as a powerful tool for the university to retain and recruit top talent.

LEARN MORE ABOUT ENDOWMENTS


The idea for an endowed dean first occurred to Olson during her time as associate dean at the University of Kansas.

She became aware of the practice through interaction with peers around the country. Olson had earned her undergraduate degree from SDSU in 1964. “Wouldn’t it be nice…,” she recalls thinking, “if we had one of those at SDSU.”

Mary Anne Krogh wears her endowed position medallion, while smiling and standing next to a smiling Roberta Olson.
Dean Mary Anne Krogh and Roberta Olson

By 1993, she was named SDSU’s Dean of Nursing. The thought of an endowed dean never left, but it remained a distant dream.

It started with a $1,000 gift by Olson in 2014 to start the process. She championed the cause by making personal gifts of between $35,000 to $40,000 over the next five years. Eventually, she committed $1.94 million more to reach the goal.

When Olson left the dean’s position in 2013, the college had a budget of about $6 million. Five years later, she returned for one year as interim dean. The budget had doubled to $12 million.

The endowment’s annual distribution will provide the additional resources that a dean needs to strategically deploy; the position will enable SDSU to continue attracting and retaining strong leaders.

"It makes a statement on the quality of the program."

Dean Emerita Roberta Olson

It is the third academic college at SDSU with an endowed dean’s position.

There’s a unique twist to the Olson Endowed Dean of Nursing. Current Dean Mary Anne Krogh will be the first holder. Krogh earned her Ph.D. at SDSU in 2011 – the same year her daughter, Ellen, earned her bachelor’s degree in nursing. Olson was their dean.

Now, Krogh carries on the tradition of her former dean, armed with an endowed deanship funded by Olson.


The Kemps’ pathway to funding an endowed position came on far more recently.

The couple has been a fixture at SDSU and Brookings since 1976, when Dan joined the faculty as an assistant professor and, later, a full professor. His recognition included Teacher of the Year within the College of Engineering twice, the Edward Patrick Hogan Excellence in Teaching Award in 2009, and the Honors College Teacher of the Year in 2016. Michele studied English and psychology at the University of Texas; the two met when Dan was a lieutenant in the Army.

Initially, they worked out details on an endowment to provide a $2,000 scholarship in perpetuity. That led to discussions about what else they might do. Dan Kemp taught Honors Calculus from 1995 to 2019 and for more than four decades overall at SDSU. “I didn’t run out of enthusiasm,” Dan says. “I just ran out of energy.”

Their affinity for SDSU and Dan’s passion for the Honors College and mathematics made the named professorship a natural fit. It keeps the Kemp name linked to Honors and mathematics forever and prioritizes classroom instruction for the Honors Calculus Series. The Kemp Professorship is the first endowed Honors faculty position, with an Honors College goal of creating an Honors Imagination Center representing faculty from each academic college at SDSU.

Smiling together after the University Leadership Honors Ceremony is Dr. Christine Larson (Kemp Endowed Professor in Honors Mathematics), Dan and Michele Kemp, and Dean of the Fishback Honors College Rebecca Bott-Knutson.
L to R: Dr. Christine Larson (Kemp Endowed Professor in Honors Mathematics), Dan and Michele Kemp, and Rebecca Bott-Knutson (Dean of the Fishback Honors College)

The Kemps will fund it annually, with the endowment eventually created as part of their estate plan. Neither had ever considered the idea or thought they’d be in a position to do it.

“You think you have to be Bill Gates,” Michele joked. Added Dan: “We learned that there were options to doing it.”

For former students of Dr. Kemp, the professorship is a reflection of a gentle and quiet commitment to student instruction and a fitting legacy for Dr. Kemp, who is affectionately called, “The Man, The Math, The Legend.”


Endowed Faculty at SDSU

As of October 2023, the SDSU Foundation has commitments in place from donors for 53 endowed positions, ranging from endowed directors, deans, chairs, and professors.

James Amell, Ph.D. Julie Stevens and Dale Evenson Faculty Scholar

Wenfeng An, Ph.D. Markl Faculty Scholar in Oncology Research

Joseph Cassady, Ph.D. South Dakota Corn Dean for the College of Agriculture, Food and Environmental Sciences

Christina Castillo Larson Family Director of the Oscar Larson Performing Arts Center

David Clay, Ph.D. South Dakota Corn Chair in Precision Agriculture

Laura Diddle, Ph.D. Paul E. and Doris J. Moriarty Professor of Choral Activities

Matthew Diersen, Ph.D. Griffith Chair in Agricultural Finance

Carie Green, Ph.D. Profilet and DeJong Family Director of Early Childhood Education

Tim Hansen, Ph.D. Harold C. Hohbach Professor in Electrical Engineering

Wiyaka His Horse Is Thunder Larson Family Director of the American Indian Student Center

Anne Karabon, Ph.D. Wendell and Marlys Thompson Director of the School of Education, Counseling and Human Development

Mary Anne Krogh, Ph.D. Roberta K. Olson Dean of the College of Nursing

Sanjeev Kumar, Ph.D. Jerome J. Lohr Dean of the Jerome J. Lohr College of Engineering

J.R. LaPlante, Esq. Larson Family Associate Vice President of Wokini

Christine Larson, Ph.D. Kemp Professor in Honors Mathematics

Yucheng Liu, Ph.D. Duane Sander Professor in Engineering Innovation and Entrepreneurship Funded in honor of Duane Sander

John McMaine, Ph.D. William Mibra Griffith and Byrne S. Griffith Chair in Agriculture and Water Resources

Maneesha S. Mohan, Ph.D. Alfred Chair in Dairy Education

Kasiviswanathan Muthukumarappan, Ph.D. Klingbeil Department Head of Agricultural and Biosystems Engineering

Ananda Nanjundaswamy, Ph.D. Richard and Janice Vetter Professorship in Biology and Microbiology

Junjian Qi, Ph.D. Harold C. Hohbach Professor in Electrical Engineering

Komal Raina, Ph.D. Kevin and Lorie Haarberg Chair in Oncology Research

Joseph Santos, Ph.D. Ness Director of the Ness School of Management and Economics

Craig Silvernagel, Ph.D. Milton Nies Faculty Scholar

Robert Thaler, Ph.D. Farm Credit Services of America Chair in Swine Production

Nicholas Uilk Klingbeil Educator in Precision Agriculture

Zhiguang “Gerald” Wang, Ph.D. Everett and Bernetta DuBois Professor in Business Finance and Investments Analysis

Nadim Wehbe, Ph.D. John M. Hanson Structural and Construction Engineering Professor

David Wright, Ph.D. Klingbeil Department Head of Agronomy, Horticulture and Plant Science

Thank you to the donors that have provided commitments to support an endowed position.

Beavers Charitable Trust
Ed and Jennifer Bick*
Marcia K. and David L. Chicoine
Dr. Sam M. Cordes*
Tate Profilet and Mary DeJong
Everett D. and Bernetta L. DuBois*
Gary J. Duffy*
Lynette Durheim*
Farm Credit Services of America
Van D. and Barbara B. Fishback
Tom R. and Marilyn G. Gannon*
William Mibra and Byrne Griffith Foundation
Kevin C. and Lorie L. Haarberg*
Dr. Carl T. Hansen*
John. M. Hanson
Alan D. Fenner and Marlys Hauck-Fenner*
William R. Hoch Family
Harold C. Hohbach
Daniel C. and Michele A. Kemp*
Maynard Klingbeil
Dale and Pat Larson Family
Jerome J. Lohr
Barry L. and Sharon J. Markl*
Ethel Austin Martin
Susan L. Moe in honor of Dennis L. Moe*
Larry and Diane Ness
Milton Nies
David and Sela Nagelhout*
Roberta K. Olson*
LuVerne R. Peterson*
Brenda Ronning
SA Education Foundation/Rudy Nef Family/Max Gonzenbach Family
Vern L. and Deanna D. Schramm*
South Dakota Corn
Julie C. Stevens*
David A. Thompson
Wendell and Marlys Thompson
Richard J. and Janice M. Vetter*
Paul and Maria Wintrode

*The donors have commitments in place through their estate to support the endowed position.