UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Through a $1 million gift, Penn State alumnus Ken Young, of Tampa, Florida, is creating a professorship to support a faculty member focused on enhancing the health and well-being of vulnerable children, especially survivors of child maltreatment.
Young plans to add another $1 million through his estate to ultimately elevate the Ken Young Family Professorship for Healthy Children in the College of Health and Human Development (HHD) to a chair.
“As I have gotten more involved in the college in recent years, I have had the opportunity to meet faculty members and listen to them talk about their work,” Young said. “I have been so impressed with the people I have met and their dedication to their research. Jennie Noll, director of the Child Maltreatment Solutions Network and professor of human development and family studies, was especially impressive. I thought a lot about what she said about the science of resilience and how it is influencing recovery for survivors of child maltreatment. Then I was able to meet with her and learn more about the work she and others are doing to make children healthier. I decided I wanted to contribute to that.”
Young graduated from Penn State in 1972 with a degree in food service and housing administration and began his first managerial job in the food services industry at the Providence Civic Center. His early career saw him directing food and beverage services at preeminent sporting events such as the Olympics, the Super Bowl, the World Series and major political conventions. In 1997, Young, along with Todd Wickner, began a food and beverage company, Ovations (now Spectra), which has grown into one of the most successful in the industry. Young’s love of sports and sporting events also led him to acquire ownership of five minor league baseball teams.