| Campus: San Francisco State University -- December 22, 2004
Bernard Osher Foundation Donates $1 Million to SFSU for Scholarships
Funds will support Presidential Scholars, SFSU's top academic award program for freshmen
The Bernard Osher Foundation recently donated $1 million to San Francisco
State University to augment funding for the Presidential Scholars program,
which awards four-year scholarships to the University’s top incoming
freshmen every year.
“This gift is in recognition of the significant role that San
Francisco State University has played in providing a great education
to students from California and elsewhere,” said Stephen M. Dobbs,
executive vice president of the Bernard Osher Foundation. “The
scholarship assistance is directed toward students of high academic
achievement and promise.”
The Osher Foundation has donated to several SFSU programs, including
a previous million-dollar gift to the Presidential Scholars program
in the mid-1990s and several grants of $100,000 each for the Osher Lifelong
Learning Institute, a College of Extended Learning program for people
age 50 and up.
“On behalf of the entire San Francisco State University community,
I want to express my gratitude for the Osher Foundation’s continued
generosity,” SFSU President Robert A. Corrigan said. “This
latest gift will further enable us to provide aid and support to some
of the best, brightest and most enthusiastic undergraduates in California.”
A Presidential Scholarship is the University’s most distinguished
academic award for first-time freshmen. The total value of each scholarship
is about $17,000 over four years. Students in the program receive support
for up to eight semesters of full tuition fees, aid for housing and
textbooks and priority course registration. They take two general education
courses together as a freshman cohort and attend special seminars and
cultural events to develop academic skills and expand their intellectual
experiences.
Admission to the program is based on academic and personal achievement,
extracurricular activities in high school and the community, leadership
potential and the ability to express oneself effectively. It is open
to first-time freshmen and California residents only. Most applicants
have a grade-point average of 3.8 or higher and an SAT score of 1200
or higher.
Since Corrigan founded the program in 1995, many of its graduates have
gone on to successful careers and prestigious graduate schools such
as UCLA and Stanford University. Nick Krautter, of the incoming class
of 1997, has started his own flourishing musician management company.
Nelly Lau, incoming class of 1998, received a National Science Foundation
Graduate Fellowship in electrical engineering ? one of only 46 awarded
in the nation ? and entered Stanford’s doctoral program in electrical
engineering last fall. John Dilley and Kit Fox, incoming class of 1998,
became close friends and made a short film that screened at the 2003
Sundance Film Festival.
The Presidential Scholars program is also funded by a million-dollar
gift from Evergreen Group founder and Chairman Y.F. Chang as well as
other smaller donations. An additional annual gift of $100,000 from
Chang provides housing funds for students in their first year.
For details on the SFSU Presidential Scholars program, call (415) 338-2789
or visit: www.sfsu.edu/~scholars.
One of the largest campuses in the California State University system,
SFSU was founded in 1899 and today is a highly diverse, comprehensive,
public and urban university.
The Bernard Osher Foundation, established by Osher in 1977, seeks to
improve the quality of life for residents of the San Francisco Bay Area
through programs in the arts and humanities and in K-12, post-secondary
and environmental education. Bernard Osher is a businessman and community
leader whose philanthropy has benefited Bay Area organizations and the
people they serve for more than two decades.
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