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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, June 11, 2001
James Grant
Office (209) 724-4406
Cell (209) 658-4406
Sheryl
Lichtig Wyan
Office (209) 724-4408
Cell (209) 658-9101
UC Merced Library to be Named for Leo And Dottie Kolligian
FRESNO
- One of the three initial buildings on the University of California,
Merced campus will be named in honor of Leo Kolligian, a Fresno
native and former University of California Regent, and his late
wife, Dottie. UC Merced Chancellor Carol Tomlinson-Keasey today
will announce a substantial naming gift from Leo Kolligian and his
extended family during a celebration to be held beginning at 2 p.m.
at the UC Center, Fresno.
In
recognition of this generous commitment and the Kolligians' advocacy
and support of UC Merced, the main library on campus will be named
the Leo and Dottie Kolligian Library. Also serving as an information
technology center, the Kolligian Library will house an array of
new and traditional information resources and services, computer
laboratories, instructional technology support, multimedia services
and library service instructional rooms.
Kolligian,
an attorney and developer who graduated from California State University,
Fresno and UC Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law, practiced law
in Fresno for more than 50 years. He served as Deputy California
Attorney General under Robert Kenny and as a former Chairman of
the UC Board of Regents. As Chair of the Board, he championed the
cause for the first University of California campus in the San Joaquin
Valley. In 1988, he moved for up to three new UC campuses, with
the first one to be built in the Valley, and the Regents unanimously
passed his motion.
Asked
to serve as the first two members of the UC Merced Foundation Board
of Trustees, Leo and Dottie Kolligian in turn persuaded other leaders
throughout the San Joaquin Valley to join this key advisory board
of the UC Merced campus.
"Leo
Kolligian has earned the reputation as the 'father' of the UC Merced
campus for his steadfast support of the campus and his unrelenting
commitment to ensure that it be located in the San Joaquin Valley,"
said Chancellor Carol Tomlinson-Keasey. "His dedicated and
devoted wife, Dottie, was his partner in their advocacy for the
new campus and was named UC Merced Trustee of the Year in December
2000. It is thus fitting that one of our first buildings at UC Merced
honor their legacy."
Most
notable in that legacy is the Kolligians' lifelong commitment to
educational and charitable causes and activities.
"I am honored, elated and greatly appreciative of the respect
that our family will be permanently associated with a world-class
university, which will serve generations of outstanding young students
from the Central Valley," said Leo Kolligian. "I am grateful
and particularly pleased and thankful that the library, which I
consider to be the heart of a university, will bear our names."
Leo
Kolligian served for 12 years on the UC Board of Regents, including
service as Chairman. He is past Chairman of the Saint Agnes Medical
Center Board of Directors, past president of Boys Club of Fresno
and the former President of the Armenian General Benevolent Union.
In addition, he is a former member of the Board of Directors of
the Fresno County Heart Association, Fresno Cancer Society, Sequoia
Council of Boy Scouts and Fresno Arts Center, and a Trustee of the
Boalt Hall School of Law at UC Berkeley. In 1998, he was Knighted
in New York by the Sovereign and Venerable Order of St. John Priory
in the United State of America.
Named
Trustee Emeritus of the Fresno Metropolitan Museum in 1990 and the
Saint Agnes Medical Center in 1997, he also was appointed as a Trustee
Emeritus of the Professional Office Corporation of the Medical Center
and was a member of the Board of Directors of the Fresno Historical
Society.
Also
a Fresno native and community leader, Dottie Kolligian founded the
Fresno Chapter of Child Help USA, a community service organization
for abused children, and volunteered at Fresno Community Hospital
for 35 years. She belonged to the Fresno Historical Society's VIP
support group, the La Comida Guild and Service Alliance of Fresno.
In addition, she was active with the Fresno Symphony League, the
Fresno Metropolitan Museum and the Fresno Cancer Society.
Dottie
Kolligian attended the CSU Fresno campus and later established student
scholarships at Harvard University, Stanford University and the
University of California. A talented artist and musician, she was
invited to play in the first violin section of the Fresno Symphony.
Founding
Librarian
In
addition to the tribute to the Kolligians and brief testimony by
Leo Kolligian on behalf of the Kolligian family, Monday's program
will include a presentation by UC Merced Founding Librarian Bruce
Miller. He will discuss "The Research Library of the 21st Century"
and share his vision for the UC Merced library's services and open
spaces. An initial artist's conception of a view of the Kolligian
Library also will be presented.
California
Governor Gray Davis' 2001-2002 budget proposal allocates $162.4
million for the initial creation of infrastructure and the first
three buildings at UC Merced, including $56.5 million for the library/information
technology center.
Leo
Kolligian and his extended family are committing their financial
gift to establish a permanent endowment for the library. As University
Librarian, Miller will administer the annual income from the endowment
and direct the funds to support the library's most critical needs.
Literacy
Celebration
In
honor of the naming announcement, a literacy celebration will follow
with a reading of passages from a book by Gary Soto, a Fresno native
and writing professor at UC Riverside and UC Berkeley. Listening
to the story as part of their first day in UC Merced's Malaga Summer
Program will be approximately 40 kindergarten through third-grade
students, who each will receive one of Soto's "Too Many Tamales,"
"The Old Man and His Door" or "Chato's Kitchen"
books for children.
Serving
95 low-income, first-generation, college-bound students who live
in Malaga, the Malaga Summer Program is in its second year. The
program is a joint effort between the Malaga County Water District,
UC Merced, the Sheriffs Activity League, Fresno EOC and Chevron,
with the University responsible for the academic portion of the
camp, including leadership, computer applications and language-development
classes. The University also coordinates the weekly field trips
students take to such places as the Monterey Aquarium, UC Berkeley
and Hearst Castle.
The
Kolligian naming gift will be announced during a celebration at
2 p.m. today (Monday, June 11) in the Inyo-Kern Room of the UC Center,
Fresno at 550 East Shaw Avenue (across from Fashion Fair mall) in
Fresno.
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