UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — During a Sept. 30 ceremony held at the residence of Penn State President Eric Barron, Penn State trustee Keith E. Masser and his wife, Helen E. Masser, signed documents to create a professorship in the Penn State College of Agricultural Sciences and a scholarship in the Penn State College of Medicine.
The gifts represent the Massers’ commitment to Penn State’s $1.6 billion comprehensive fundraising campaign, “A Greater Penn State for 21st Century Excellence,” which seeks contributions in support of three major imperatives: keeping the doors to higher education open to hard-working students regardless of financial well-being; creating transformative experiences that go beyond the classroom; and impacting the world by fueling discovery, innovation and entrepreneurship.
“Keith and Helen are wonderful friends and devoted members of the Penn State family,” said Barron. “Their decades of service to our institution, support for our land-grant mission, and generous philanthropy have been transformative. This gift demonstrates that once again they are willing to step up to contribute to 'A Greater Penn State.'”
Keith Masser is a 1973 Penn State alumnus who holds a bachelor of science degree in agricultural engineering. Helen Masser graduated from Penn State in 1974 with a degree in nutrition from the College of Health and Human Development. Mr. Masser is chairman and chief executive officer and Mrs. Masser is the chief administration officer of Sterman Masser Inc., a Pennsylvania-based, family-owned company that grows and distributes potatoes for retail and food service. The company is recognized nationally for its innovative approach to the industry, combining eight generations of farming experience with new technologies, integrated state-of-the-art operations, sustainable agricultural and supply chain practices, new products, and more.
To ensure the continued growth and evolution of the potato industry, the Massers, through a future gift, made a commitment to create the Masser Family Faculty Chair in Potato Research, which will support a faculty member in the College of Agricultural Sciences whose research and teaching focuses on advancing the potato industry in the Commonwealth.
The Massers have long supported the college through annual gifts to the Agriculture Fund and through two scholarships, the Kim L. Masser Memorial Trustee Matching Scholarship and the Kim L. Masser Memorial Scholarship for the Agricultural Sciences, both of which honor the memory of Keith Masser’s brother, who passed away as a teenager.
“The Sterman Masser company represents the gold standard in the potato industry,” said Rick Roush, dean of the College of Agricultural Sciences. “Keith and Helen, and their children, have continued the family’s legacy of excellence through their innovative approaches to growing and production, contributing to the economic stability of the Commonwealth, and employing our graduates and fellow Pennsylvanians. By creating an endowed professorship in potato research, they are ensuring the future of the industry while also allowing us to explore new ways to think about this staple crop in feeding a growing world population. We couldn’t be more grateful to the Massers for their generosity.”