There are thousands of IU causes that you can support through the Indiana University Foundation.
That’s a whole lot of IU programs, projects, campuses, schools, facilities, groups, communities, and individuals benefiting from the generosity of the IU family!
Here we highlight a few of the many ways philanthropy—giving, volunteering, mentoring—impacts Indiana University, its people, and the world.
Academy Awards
IU is home to four Academy Awards won by the legendary motion picture director John Ford, thanks to a 2017 gift from his grandson Dan Ford. Alumnus Hoagy Carmichael’s Academy Award—along with more than 3,500 of the songwriter’s other belongings—was gifted to the university by Carmichael’s sons.
Adaptive ballet
Camp Riley creates life-changing experiences for children with physical impairments and medical conditions by making summer camp activities like water skiing and horseback riding accessible to all. Thanks to a grant from IU’s Women’s Philanthropy Leadership Council, the camp added an adaptive ballet program in summer 2019. Read more about the adaptive ballet program.

African art

The outstanding sub-Saharan African art collection at IU’s Eskenazi Museum of Art has now gotten even stronger, thanks to a gift of more than 500 ethnographic objects from Bill Itter, IU professor emeritus of fine art.
American Democracy Project
Civic and political engagement are the goals of IU South Bend’s American Democracy Project, which brings together college students and community members to learn, grow, and make a difference.
Anonymous
Some IU donors prefer to let their gifts speak for themselves, choosing to give anonymously, like some generous fairy godparent did in 2017 with a $5 million gift to the IU Lilly Family School of Philanthropy. All told, more than $96 million has been given to IU anonymously by more than 9,000 donors since 1964. The Kelley School of Business, Jacobs School of Music, and IU School of Medicine are the top recipients of anonymous gifts to IU.
Arboretum

In addition to making the largest personal gift in IU history to create the life-changing Cox Scholars Program, Jesse H. Cox, BS’44, and his wife, Beulah Chanley Cox, funded the creation of the Cox Arboretum and Pavilion, a beautiful greenspace in the heart of the IU Bloomington campus where IU’s original football stadium once stood.
Archaeology
From funding for a hands-on archaeological lab at IU East (video) to the ongoing work of the Glenn Black Lab, countless archaeology students, faculty, and researchers benefit from the generous support of IU donors.
Arts
How can we possibly capture all of the ways that IU philanthropists support the arts? From volunteer ushers at the IU Cinema to patrons of the theater on Broadway at IU Northwest, there are enough examples to fill a thousand articles!
Astro-orthopedics
In space, your bones become their own worst enemies. So IU School of Medicine researchers are studying how bones react to space travel to help people on Earth, like gunshot victims, regenerate their skeletal systems.
Have an idea for something that you’d like to see highlighted in this series? Drop us a line.