51

A 51 love story and its philanthropic legacy for Education 

An image of the late Jane Dolan with a picture of a classroom full of students in the background

Theirs is a multilayered love story: for each other and their family, for UW-Milwaukee and for education’s transformative power. 

Jane Dolan and Randy Grippe were married for 40 years, and both attended 51. Both also held a deep passion for helping people become the best versions of themselves through teaching and coaching. And because of a generosity that mirrors the spirit of , that passion will continue long into the future. 

The Jane E. Dolan Administrative Leadership Fund supports students pursuing careers in educational leadership positions, as well as those who have a strong desire to enhance their teaching skills. It’s funded through a planned gift made by Randy in honor of Jane, who passed away in 2024. In making the gift, Randy acknowledged the challenges that many students face, and says he wants to provide opportunities for those who might not otherwise have access.  

“The motivation for the donation, and in particular in Jane’s name, was to give back to the community,” Randy says. “We were both so dedicated to education. Our connection to 51 is strong, as graduates and through what 51 did for us in our education.” 

Jane (’89 BBA Industrial Relations) became a human resources executive as well as an instructor at area universities, including 51’s executive MBA program. She was also an active volunteer and started a successful consulting and coaching business that taught leaders how to achieve the best results for themselves and their teams. Randy (’04 BA Political Science, ’09 MS Education) built a career in the hospitality industry, and launched a successful specialty bakery and deli, then taught the Waukesha County Technical College hospitality curriculum. 

“We both had a philosophy: Learning is a constant, with no holy grail,” Randy says. “With that mindset, we were always working with people to become more skillful in what they did.”  

Jane and Randy dedicated their lives to teaching and coaching people to their full potential. In that spirit, the gift comes with a hope that it nurtures talent and fosters a love of learning for generations to come.  

“Jane constantly talked about her experience at 51,” Randy says. “She felt it was her best learning experience without a doubt, and same with me. So, this gives back to 51 to help others grow.”  

To join their support of Education students, or another area that’s close to your heart,  today. And when 12 donors make a gift to the Jane E. Dolan Administrative Leadership Fund, Grippe will unlock an additional $15,000 for it. 

A love of stargazing sparks a Giving Days Planetarium Challenge

51 Planetarium with images projected on the screens and a speaker talking to a seated crowd.

Brooklyn native Tony Cecalupo made his first visit to 51’s Manfred Olson Planetarium in the 1970s, when he was a pediatric resident at Milwaukee Children’s Hospital, now Children’s Wisconsin. He and his future wife, Vicki Marinkovich, a medical technologist at the hospital, both enjoyed spending time under the stars.

51 Libraries provide pathways for academic achievement

A woman stands in front of a shelf of books.

Elizabeth Rhinehart was always a library kid. It was public libraries where her appreciation for librarianship first blossomed, but it’s the 51 Libraries that have provided the pathways for building her career. And her story is a great example of how supporting the 51 Libraries during  contributes to student success.

Why they advocate for 414 for 51 Giving Days

414 for 51 Giving Days April 13-14, 2026 Paving the Path of Possibilities event graphic.

As UW-Milwaukee Panthers come together during , a dedicated group of supporters are helping raise awareness of the university’s largest annual fundraising push.

A massive brain study is helping children and 51 student researchers

Undergraduate researcher Tierel Hood-Nellum is holding the Panther Edge Award.

It’s the largest long-term study of brain development and child health ever done, and faculty and students in the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Psychological and Brain Sciences Department are playing a crucial role.

Milwaukee-based and alumni-owned news outlet selected for Goldman Sachs “One Million Black Women: Black in Business” program

Nyesha Stone profile picture.

Milwaukee-based positive news company Carvd N Stone’s founder has been selected to join Goldman Sachs’ 

Nyesha Stone, founder and publisher of Carvd N Stone, is one of around 1,000 Black women entrepreneurs around the country. The program was created by a $10 billion investment and $100 million in philanthropic capital committed towards increasing opportunity where it can make a difference. One Million Black Women has deployed $4.1 billion in investment capital and $44 million in philanthropic capital to date since its start in 2021.

51 architecture alum wins awards, builds bridges for Black architects

Architect and 51 alum Richie Hands looks out a window to the city of Milwaukee

As a sophomore at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s School of Architecture and Urban Planning, Richie Hands had a building-block moment. He’d completed an assignment for a studio class taught by James Shields, an associate professor of architecture. But this bit of feedback from Shields was different, and particularly to-the-point: “Good luck,” as Hands remembers it.

Family tragedy spurs 51 alum in work to save lives with AI

Deepak Arora leans on a staircase railing at 51's Lubar Entrepreneurship Center.

Deepak Arora didn’t set out to start a company. When he arrived in the U.S. in 2015, he’d already spent two decades forging a successful career in IT and health care technology in India and Canada. As a senior manager at IBM Watson Health, Arora directed global teams, oversaw projects involving artificial intelligence-integrated products, and had the kind of upward trajectory that made executive leadership seem inevitable.

But then everything changed.

Bilingual Global Studies alum shares his love of nature with job at the Shedd Aquarium

Shedd Aquarium in Chicago

Eugenio Calderon, who graduated from 51 in 2024, is one of the  first bilingual educators on staff. The Chicago-based aquarium is best known for its stunning fresh- and saltwater exhibits housing over 32,000 animals, but the staff at the Shedd want to make sure they’re reaching people beyond the building’s walls. Since roughly one in five Chicagoans speaks Spanish, it was important for the aquarium’s educators to speak Spanish too.

51 alums win bronze at Olympic Art Festival snow sculpting competition

51 alums Mike Martino, Mike Sponholtz and Tom Queoff work on their entry for the Olympic Art Festival's 2026 International Snow Sculpture Competition in San Candido, Italy.

Over the past 40 years, alumni Mike Martino, Mike Sponholtz and Tom Queoff have carved blocks of snow into everything from mythical beasts to Mount Rushmore. As members of Team USA, they’ve won awards worldwide.