Schools

Towson University Announces $1 Million Faculty Planned Gift

The gift to TU comes from retired physics professor and former department chair Eddie Loh.

Towson University students have benefited over the years from the generosity of former physics department chair Eddie Loh.
Towson University students have benefited over the years from the generosity of former physics department chair Eddie Loh. (Towson University)

Press release from Towson University: Towson University students have benefited over the years from the generosity of former physics department chair Eddie Loh.

If we could manipulate the space-time continuum to travel to the future, we would
find Towson University students still benefiting from a gift by retired physics professor
and former department chair Eddie Loh, Ph.D.

TU has received $1 million from Loh—the largest planned faculty gift in the university’s
history—to fund scholarships for TU physics students.

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Loh retired from TU in 2010 after more than 40 years of teaching. His passion for
instruction and scholarship began early, at Virginia Tech where his father was a physics
professor. “It offered me the opportunity to be around students at a very early age,”
Loh says.

He enjoyed it so much he earned his doctorate in physics from Johns Hopkins and launched
a career in physics education, first as a part-time teacher in a lab and then as a
teacher at Towson State College in 1970.

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“I enjoyed teaching, and I was given the freedom to do what I wanted, so I developed
courses in physics,” he says. “When I started at TU, there wasn’t a physics department.
Enrollment was low, but we worked to build a department and undergraduate and graduate
programs.”

Today, Towson University graduates about 19 physics students annually.

“I started a number of courses with labs connected to them. I enjoyed developing experiments
and working one-on-one with students,” Loh said.

Through those interactions he developed a deep respect for his students. He knew the
value they placed on education and understood that came with financial challenges.
That, in part, moved him to, as he says, “give a little bit back” to the department
he calls his family and especially to the students.

“Most students who come to TU have to work hard to afford it. I’ve seen some students
who had to drop out because of finances. I thought, ‘I am going to help them.’”

More than three years ago, Loh committed to supporting physics scholarships. In the
last year, his dedication became even more significant when he decided to explore
planned giving options during his retirement.

"The Eddie Loh graduate scholarship makes a tremendous positive impact on our Applied
Physics Master's program. Scholarship recipients have won graduate research awards,
joined prominent PhD programs and have built rewarding careers in industry and government,"
said Raj Kolangani, professor of physics and a former colleague of Loh.

This story is one of several related to President Kim Schatzel’s priorities for Towson University: TU Matters to Maryland and Culture of Philanthropy.


This press release was produced by Towson University. The views expressed here are the author’s own.