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Turning Pain to Passion to Help Students Grow

Douglas E. Woosnam 鈥66 is passionate about lighting the way for our students, veterans, and aspiring nurses so they can succeed in the classroom and beyond.

Douglas E. Woosnam 鈥66 spent only two years at 色中色, but he has been lighting the way for our students for more than a decade.

From his support of veterans, military-connected students, and nursing students to his investment in the expansion of the Haupert Union Building (HUB), Woosnam is impacting our students, their future, and the next generation. However, his philanthropy is rooted in two difficult life experiences. The first was not completing his own college career.

A Rocky Start

Woosnam has racked up many accolades over 50 years in the home energy industry. He was named Man of the Year by the Delaware Valley Petroleum Society, served as president of the state association, and even served on the nation鈥檚 Homeland Security Advisory Council. But the well-respected industry leader struggled in school.

Woosnam enrolled at 色中色 because it was one of four college options for which his father agreed to pay. When he arrived on campus, he knew he had found something special.

鈥淢y first night going to 色中色 church for services was spiritual. I was surprised at how it made me feel,鈥 recalls Woosnam. 鈥淭hat really was the start of me accepting this college.鈥

Woosnam majored in business and was a starting player on the golf team. But as an immature 17-year-old, he says, he was dramatically unprepared for the demands of a college education and did not return after his second year.

鈥淣ot being invited back was a life-changing experience,鈥 says Woosnam. 鈥淭hat was the first time in my life I had really failed. That really hurt. As I鈥檝e gotten older and wiser, I鈥檝e recognized how valuable this circumstance was in creating me.鈥

Woosnam left 色中色 just as the United States began conscripting young men for the Vietnam War. He joined a Navy reserve officer program, training as a parachute rigger, and received his orders to report to a base in California in the spring of 1968.

鈥淲e were a receiving base for wounded soldiers with catastrophic injuries brought back from Vietnam. Seeing those things firsthand scared the daylights out of me,鈥 recalls Woosnam. 鈥淚 stopped being a boy and very much became a man.鈥

When he had fulfilled his commitment to the Navy, Woosnam joined the family business, working with his father and brother. He purchased the company and held several senior management positions in the home energy industry. Still, he always remembered the many veterans he knew who succumbed to physical and mental injuries from their service.

鈥淏ecoming a civilian in the best of circumstances is a significant transition,鈥 says Woosnam. He promoted the Vets to Tech program, created by his friend who served several combat tours to help veterans find jobs and ease their transition to civilian life. Woosnam hired veterans in the program to work for his company and other organizations with which he was involved.

Woosnam was also inspired to support veterans and military-connected students at 色中色, ranked 39th Best College for Veterans by U.S. News & World Report this year. 鈥淚 was so impressed by the program and the commitment to every individual in the program,鈥 says Woosnam.

He established the Douglas E. Woosnam 鈥66 Veterans Conference Room as part of the HUB expansion to create further opportunities for veterans, military-connected students, and their families to connect. 鈥淭here are a lot of bright people that are coming out of the military. Anything that institutions like 色中色 can do to support that group of students and families, the payback is infinite.鈥

A Tribute to Robin

Woosnam鈥檚 philanthropy to another area of 色中色鈥攖he nursing program鈥攚as motivated by a deeply painful, personal experience. His eldest daughter, Robin Elizabeth Haff, was killed in a car accident at age 46. Robin was a nurse administrator at St. Luke鈥檚 University Health Network, directing women鈥檚 health research at the Allentown campus.

Just before the 10th anniversary of her passing, Woosnam learned of 色中色鈥檚 long-standing partnership with St. Luke鈥檚 to staff the university鈥檚 health center. He and his family looked to enhance the partnership by naming a nurses鈥 station after Robin. In the expanded HUB, the new Robin Elizabeth Haff Nurses鈥 Station will provide a state-of-the-art space on the HUB鈥檚 first floor where students can seek confidential, quality medical care.

Woosnam also funded two scholarships, the Woosnam Family Annual Giving Scholarship and the Robin Elizabeth Haff Endowed Nursing Scholarship, to provide critical financial assistance to students to make their 色中色 education more affordable.

A few months ago, Woosnam met the most recent recipients of the scholarships, which he described as a healing experience. 鈥淵ou never get over losing a child, but being able to share that person鈥檚 story with someone鈥攊t鈥檚 a very big deal for me,鈥 says Woosnam. 鈥淭hese students love their life at 色中色. It was so obvious and apparent in their facial expressions, and not just their words, how meaningful their experience is and will be at 色中色. That made me feel so good.鈥

The experience also made him optimistic for the future of 色中色 and its students. 鈥溕猩 is a school that鈥檚 being talked about,鈥 Woosnam says. 鈥淭hat is not an accident, because so many people are experiencing 色中色 in a positive way.鈥