|
August 19, 2002
UCSC raises over $13 million from private donors
By Louise Donahue
Environmental research, graduate student fellowships, and library improvements
were among initiatives receiving strong support from private donors
at the University of California, Santa Cruz, during the 2001-02 fiscal
year.
Overall, the campus received $13.1 million in private support.
"This generous support for research and teaching at UCSC is particularly
impressive in a time of economic uncertainty," said Chancellor
M.R.C. Greenwood. "It recognizes our commitment to increase understanding
of our environment, and promotes the enhancement of our library collections
and of graduate education, among many other important priorities."
UCSC received significant support from local donors.
Santa Cruz businessman Ramesh Bhojwani established the Bhojwani Family
Endowed Graduate Fellowship to help financially needy students who are
the first in their families to attend graduate school. In addition to
his $200,000 award for the fellowship, Bhojwani contributed $100,000
toward construction of the new University Center at UCSC. In consideration
of the gift, Ramesh Bhojwani has requested that the University Center
dining room be named for his father, Hemandas Doulatram Bhojwani.
Another key campus initiative benefited from local generosity. The
estate of longtime library supporter Dorothy Emigh provided $128,483,
the first major donation to the McHenry Library Expansion Campaign.
Planned library enhancements include an interactive computer center
where librarians work in partnership with students and a digitization
and preservation laboratory for Special Collections.
UCSC's environmental research also drew considerable support, including
$1 million from the W. M. Keck Foundation of Los Angeles for ongoing
research on the environmental toxicology of trace metals. The grant
will enable the campus to purchase state-of-the-art equipment for conducting
trace metal research, an area in which UCSC has been a world leader
for many years.
New instrumentation obtained with the grant will enable UCSC researchers
to continue to make major advances in understanding the global cycling
of trace metals throughout the environment and their effects on biological
systems. Trace metals include toxic elements such as lead and mercury,
as well as biologically essential elements that can be toxic at high
concentrations.
"This award builds on the strengths of the UCSC campus for interdisciplinary
research on trace metals in the environment," said Russell Flegal,
professor and chair of environmental toxicology, who will coordinate
the award.
Integrating science, technology, engineering, policy, and society ("STEPS")
to solve environmental problems was the goal of a $500,000 gift from
alumnus Gordon Ringold and his wife, Tanya Zarucki. Their donation helped
launch the new STEPS Institute for Innovation in Environmental Research.
The institute will focus on the three global environmental changes
caused by human activities over the past century: climate change enhanced
by our expanding industrial societies; the genetic restructuring of
all ecosystems caused by the global transport of species and changing
global environments; and transformation of all the Earth's major water
systems through alteration of rivers and lakes, increased use of oceanic
resources, and diffusion of environmental toxins.
"The STEPS Institute is one that I feel really builds on the tremendous
diversity and strength in the environmental sciences that UCSC has already
established," said Ringold.
Renowned nature photographer Philip Hyde added another element to UCSC's
environmental resources by donating the archive of his 50-year career--valued
at more than $1 million--including prints, negatives, correspondence,
and field notes. "I liked the idea of my archive being held in
the library of a university that has ties to the environment and has
a strong environmental program," the photographer said.
Medical research at UCSC garnered private funding as well, with environmental
toxicologist Karen Ottemann receiving a grant from the Ellison Medical
Foundation New Scholars Program in Global Infectious Disease. The grant,
providing $50,000 per year for four years, supports Ottemann's research
into a common bacterium that can cause stomach inflammation and ulcers
and increases the risk of stomach cancer.
Individual donors provide crucial support to the campus each year.
In the last fiscal year, such gifts to the Annual Fund, including gifts
from UCSC Alumni Association councilors, other alumni, UC Santa Cruz
Foundation trustees, parents, and friends, totaled over $1.3 million.
This includes $93,493 for the Alumni Association Scholarship Fund.
Trustees of the Foundation, which supports UCSC through its private
fundraising efforts, gave over $1.1 million to the campus this past
year.
"We are extremely grateful to the many individuals and organizations
that have provided crucial support for UCSC," said Ronald P. Suduiko,
UCSC's vice chancellor for University Relations. "Although we are
a public institution, only about 40 percent of campus funds are provided
by the state of California. We rely upon private philanthropy to ensure
a top-quality learning environment for our students and support for
our academic initiatives."
The bulk of the private contributions to UCSC during the 2002 fiscal
year came from the following sources: foundations, $4.7 million; individuals,
$4.6 million; and the business sector, $1.9 million. Other sources,
including community and campus organizations, gave a total of $1.9 million.
Return to Front Page
|