| Roseburg
couple makes $5 million gift
EUGENE, Ore.—"Welcome home" is the message
University of Oregon officials plan to send alumni, students,
faculty, and visitors with the planned construction of the
university's first alumni center.
University of Oregon President Dave Frohnmayer announced
June 12 that Cheryl Ramberg Ford '66 and her husband, Allyn,
president of Roseburg Forest Products, have made a $5 million
lead gift for the new center. The gift launches a drive
to raise a total of $15 to $20 million in private donations
to fund the project. Cheryl Ford is the incoming president
of the University of
Oregon Alumni Association (UOAA).
"Because of the generosity of the Fords and future
donors, alumni and other visitors will now have a home base
on campus," Frohnmayer said. "The new center will
serve as a bridge to bring all parts of the University of
Oregon family together and to strengthen the bonds that
tie all of us to the university's rich heritage and bright
future. The alumni center will also form part of a more
inviting new east entryway to the campus."
In addition, the center will bring the university up to
par with the rest of the Pac-10 Conference universities,
all of which have alumni centers.
The proposed location for the new center is a site along
Franklin Boulevard between Agate Street and 13th Avenue.
The site is now occupied by an employee parking lot.
"It's important for alumni to have a place to gather
and call their own," said Cheryl Ford. "We want
more alumni to get involved with the university and the
new center will encourage that involvement."
"The future of the university is very much tied to
its alumni because increasingly, they are the ones providing
the leadership and resources for the university to move
forward," said Allyn Ford. "The new alumni center
will provide a focus point for this very important group
of people."
"An alumni center on the University of Oregon campus
has been a dream of many for several years," said Jeff
Nudelman '83 of Lake Oswego, outgoing president of the UOAA.
"The construction of a first-class alumni center is
critical to enable the UOAA to continue to serve as the
premier constituency organization for the University. This
incredibly generous gift from the Fords will allow the university
to maintain and strengthen connections with its students,
faculty, alumni and the community for generations to come."
At their recently concluded meetings, both the UOAA and
the University of Oregon Foundation boards voted to support
fundraising and construction of the Alumni Center. "Our
aspiration is to be among the top 25 public research universities
in the United States," said Bob Kraus '63, chair of
the University of Oregon Foundation Board. "To achieve,
that, we need the tools to generate the resources to fuel
that vision. The Alumni Center is essential to achieving
that vision."
The new center, which has not yet been designed, will contain
an assembly hall/ballroom with catering facilities, conference
and meeting room space, display areas to recognize university
history and alumni accomplishments, and offices for the
Alumni Association, University of Oregon Foundation and
the university's Office of Development. These organizations
are currently housed in Agate Hall, a building originally
constructed as an elementary school in 1924 that is not
equipped to meet the long-range needs of the university's
outreach operations.
The timeline for construction of the new center has not
yet been determined.
Posted: June 12, 2006
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