UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Penn State alumni and longtime benefactors Dave and Tricia Rogers have made a $1 million commitment to create the J. Randall Woolridge Professorship in Finance in the Smeal College of Business.
The professorship, named for longtime Smeal faculty member J. Randall “Randy” Woolridge, the Goldman, Sachs and Co. and Frank P. Smeal University Fellow, will help Smeal recruit and retain exceptional faculty members in finance.
Dave Rogers called faculty support a priority for the couple.
“The biggest and best thing you can do for students is give them good instruction, good teachers, and good counsel. If our students aren’t being taught by people with the right knowledge and skills, and with the right kind of commitment, then it’s all going to be for naught,” he said.
Dean Charles H. Whiteman said that the Rogers have been integral to Smeal’s success in launching students’ careers on Wall Street.
“I am grateful for their support. The Rogers’ philanthropy — which includes the Rogers Family Trading Room, faculty support, student scholarships, and support for construction of the Business Building — has helped make Smeal one of the most respected sources of new investment banking talent,” Whiteman said. “Their gift to create the J. Randall Woolridge Professorship in Finance is yet another signal of their ongoing commitment to our students and our pursuit of academic excellence.”
Rogers earned both a bachelor’s degree in accounting and an MBA from Smeal in 1978 and 1980, respectively. He founded his own investment firm, J.D. Capital Management — a private investment portfolio structured as a limited partnership — in 2001. Prior to that he was a partner at Goldman, Sachs & Co. where he served on the Equity Division Operating Committee, was head of Equities Division Trading and Risk Management, and a former co-head of Global Equity Derivatives.
He received the MBA Alumni Distinguished Achievement Award in 1995, the Alumni Fellow Award in 2000, and the Distinguished Alumni Award in 2017.
Rogers said that he believes that as the beneficiary of a great education, he has an obligation to share his time and talent with the University. He is currently a member of the Smeal Board of Visitors, the Nittany Lion Fund Advisory Board, and the Penn State Investment Council.
Tricia Rogers earned her bachelor’s degree from Penn State in mechanical engineering in 1979. She worked for PPG Industries and Clairol Inc. and went on to earn an MBA from the University of Connecticut. She left Clairol in 1985 to focus on raising the couple’s two children, both of whom are Smeal graduates, and to volunteer for nonprofit organizations in the Stamford, Connecticut, area.
Dave Rogers said that the decision to name the professorship after Woolridge was an easy one.