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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, Oct. 7, 2003
Patti Istas
UC Merced
(209) 724-4483
pistas@ucmerced.edu
UC Merced breaks ground
on Kolligian Library
Campus construction goes vertical
MERCED - With a complex and extensive infrastructure
in place, vertical construction of the University of California,
Merced campus is set to begin shortly after a kick-off event today
(Oct. 7), with the first building groundbreaking of the Leo and
Dottie Kolligian Library.
Construction crews and equipment at the campus
site will continue buzzing in the background as a group of UC Merced
supporters and elected officials join to celebrate the symbolic
groundbreaking of the library building pad.
“This is a gratifying day for all UC Merced
supporters from throughout the San Joaquin Valley,” said Chancellor
Carol Tomlinson-Keasey. “After 15 years of an enormous Valley-wide
effort to bring the University of California to the region, students
and their families are finally seeing visual proof of the opportunity
to obtain a world-class education without leaving home.”
Kolligian, as chair of the UC Board of Regents,
championed the cause for the first University of California campus
in the San Joaquin Valley. In 1988 the Regents approved the creation
of a Valley-based UC campus to enhance access to higher education
for the traditionally underserved region.
In addition, UC Merced will serve the state’s
growing enrollment to free up space elsewhere in the higher education
system as other UC campuses are dealing with enrollment limitations.
The $280 million in capital projects, the bulk
of which was secured through lease revenue bonds in 2001-02, provides
financial support for the first phase of construction consisting
of site preparation, infrastructure, and four buildings –
including the Kolligian Library.
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 and his unrelenting commitment to ensure that it be located
in the San Joaquin Valley,” said 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.”
UC Merced is planning to accept a limited number
of graduate students in fall 2004, emulating UC San Diego, which
in the 1960s started with graduate students only. Most of these
students are doctoral candidates who will transfer as their faculty
mentors join the UC Merced founding faculty.
Faculty recruitment will continue this year toward
the hiring of additional faculty in 2004-05 and 2005-06. Sixty full-time
faculty members must be on board by fall 2005 to serve the initial
student population.
UC Merced, the 10th campus of the UC system
and the first major research university to be built in the United
States during the 21st century, is scheduled to open in fall 2005
with 1,000 students, ultimately growing to a student population
of 25,000. The university has a special mission to serve the educational
needs of San Joaquin Valley residents, and is already serving area
students through a concurrent admissions program at three Valley
community colleges and by offering UC summer session courses in
Fresno, Bakersfield and Atwater. UC Merced currently employs approximately
165 educators and professionals who are working on developing the
physical and academic infrastructure of the campus.
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