Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,585,946 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Business Wire Founder Gives $20 Million to SCU; Gift from Lorry I. Lokey is Largest in University's History; Donation Is for New Campus Learning Center and Scholarships.


Business & News Editors/Education Writers

SANTA CLARA Santa Clara, city, Cuba
Santa Clara (sän`tä klä`rä), city (1994 est. pop. 217,000), capital of Villa Clara prov., central Cuba.
, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--April 3, 2001

Santa Clara University today announced that Lorry I. Lokey, (broadcast: pronounced low-kay) founder and president of San Francisco-based Business Wire, has pledged $20 million to help transform the 150-year old institution's library into a technology-infused learning center, and to fund endowed scholarships.

SCU SCU Santa Clara University
SCU Southern Cross University (New South Wales, Australia)
SCU Southern California University of Health Sciences (Whittier, California)
SCU Serious Crimes Unit
SCU Special Care Unit
 President Paul Locatelli Rev. Paul Locatelli, S.J. is president and professor of accounting at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California. He is a Jesuit priest and a Certified Public Accountant, earning his undergraduate degree at the University of Santa Clara, now Santa Clara University, in 1960 , S.J., said the gift by Lokey is the largest single gift in the University's history.

Locatelli thanked Lokey and praised his vision: "Lorry is a rare and wonderful individual, a man who understands not only the value of money but the value of education to change lives. His philanthropy is consistent, inspirational, and far-sighted far·sight·ed or far-sight·ed  
adj.
1. Able to see distant objects better than objects at close range; hyperopic.

2. Capable of seeing to a great distance.

3.
."

Lokey, 74, is a Stanford graduate and member of the Santa Clara University Board of Trustees board of trustees Politics The posse of thugs who oversee an institution's administration. See Board of directors. . He said he made his gift in recognition of the value of education to improve the lives of individuals and create stronger societies.

"Nearly everyone is born with a perfectly good brain," he said, "and the more Santa Claras there are, the better our world is bound to become. There's no reason Santa Clara cannot become another Stanford or Harvard in the excellence of its product -- the students."

Lokey's gift will provide $15 million to help create a new, modern technology-infused campus learning center, and $5 million to endow scholarships. The University is planning a new learning center that will combine the physical resources and professional support of a traditional university library with wide access to new technologies for its students and faculty. No date has been set for construction.

The current main University library, Orradre Library, opened in 1964 and is named after the late Michel Orradre. The library has approximately 1.3 million books and documents, and 5,200 subscriptions.

Locatelli said the new center will serve a wide range of campus needs: "Books remain vital to learning, but there is, right now, a revolution taking place in how we access the information in books, journals, and databases.

"We aim to create a world-class resource where our faculty and students can gather information from around the world in unprecedented volume. Santa Clara must be part of this new wave of accessibility," Locatelli said. "Lorry Lokey's lead gift moves us far along that path, and will inspire other donations."

Lokey founded Business Wire, the fastest-growing and largest independent commercial news wire in the world, in 1961. By his own account, he had no idea that the service he envisioned reaching possibly to Reno, Portland and Seattle would, 40 years later, have 500 employees and offices in 26 American cities and in London and Brussels, along with affiliated operations in Tokyo, Toronto, and Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. .

In recent years, Lokey has given more than $85 million to a number of non-profit institutions including Stanford University Stanford University, at Stanford, Calif.; coeducational; chartered 1885, opened 1891 as Leland Stanford Junior Univ. (still the legal name). The original campus was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. David Starr Jordan was its first president. , Bellarmine College Preparatory Bellarmine College Preparatory is an all-male, private secondary school located in San Jose, California, USA. Founded in 1851, it is the oldest secondary school in California. The school is a Roman Catholic school in the tradition of Saint Ignatius of Loyola.  School, Mills College Mills College, at Oakland, Calif.; for women; est. 1852 as the Young Ladies' Seminary at Benicia, Calif., moved 1871, chartered as Mills College 1885. The first women's college in the Far West, it has programs in English literature and creative writing, foreign , and the Leo Baeck School in Haifa, Israel. Other grantees include the Peninsula Jewish Community Center, the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra The Israel Philharmonic Orchestra (abbreviation IPO; Hebrew: התזמורת הפילהרמונית הישראלית, , and the Environmental Defense Fund.

A 1949 journalism graduate of Stanford University, Lokey is a former night wire editor of United Press. He has six grandchildren, and three grown daughters, one of whom, Ann Lokey, is corporate secretary and vice president of technology research and development at Business Wire. He still works full time and is known for taking groups of employees along on his vacation trips to Hawaii, Europe, and Israel because "I hate to see them missing such great times, and their company adds to our enjoyment."

His belief in the importance of continuing education continuing education: see adult education.
continuing education
 or adult education

Any form of learning provided for adults. In the U.S. the University of Wisconsin was the first academic institution to offer such programs (1904).
 has led him to create frequent opportunities for longtime employees to continue their education at the company's expense or to take on professional development challenges within the company.

Joanne Harrington, a member of SCU's Board of Fellows and the individual who introduced Lokey to the University, said he has "a passion for life. He loves being around stimulating people, visiting other countries and environments, and seeing where he can help people make the most out of their lives through education."

The University will honor Lokey at a private event on April 4 on the school's campus. Lokey's gift also is the largest pledge or gift by a non-alumnus. The Leavey Foundation, created by the late Thomas E. Leavey, a 1922 SCU alumnus ALUMNUS, civil law. A child which one has nursed; a foster child. Dig. 40, 2, 14. , has given $30 million to the University since 1989, in three separate gifts, with the largest, $15 million, in 2000 to rebuild the Leavey Center. The University also has received $16.9 million since 1995 from the Arline and Thomas J. Bannan Foundation. Thomas Bannan was a 1923 SCU alumnus.

Santa Clara University is a Catholic, Jesuit university located in the heart of Silicon Valley, with 4,300 undergraduate and 3,050 graduate students. The university offers a rigorous undergraduate curriculum and nationally recognized graduate and professional schools. For the 11th consecutive year, it has been ranked second among all regional universities in the West by U.S. News & World Report U.S. News & World Report

Weekly newsmagazine published in Washington, D.C. U.S. News was founded in 1933 by David Lawrence (1888–1973) to cover important domestic events; he founded World Report in 1945 to treat world news. The two magazines were merged in 1948.
. California's oldest institution of higher education, SCU celebrates its 150th anniversary in the 2000-01 academic year.

Reporters: To arrange an interview with Locatelli or Lokey, call Barry Holtzclaw, media relations, at 408/554-5126, or email news@scu.edu. Photos are available on request. For more information about Santa Clara University, see www.scu.edu.

About Business Wire

Founded in San Francisco in 1961 by its president, Lorry I. Lokey, veteran journalist and public relations public relations, activities and policies used to create public interest in a person, idea, product, institution, or business establishment. By its nature, public relations is devoted to serving particular interests by presenting them to the public in the most  executive, Business Wire delivers more news from more sources to more destinations than any other service in the world.

With content from more than 34,000 organizations, including major U.S. corporations, Fortune 1000 and NASDAQ NASDAQ
 in full National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations

U.S. market for over-the-counter securities. Established in 1971 by the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), NASDAQ is an automated quotation system that reports on
 companies, Business Wire remains the fastest-growing and largest independent commercial news wire in the world. The company electronically disseminates full-text news releases for public and investor relations Investor relations

The process by which the corporation communicates with its investors.
 professionals simultaneously to the news media, the Internet, online services and databases, and the investment community worldwide. Business Wire combines a brick-and-mortar foundation with the vision of an Internet company.
COPYRIGHT 2001 Business Wire
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Publication:Business Wire
Date:Apr 3, 2001
Words:987
Previous Article:California Lottery Revs-up With Harley-Davidson Sportster; Play the Scratchers Win A Motorcycle.
Next Article:Iwerks Extreme Screen Theater Unveiled in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Topics:



Related Articles
UO School of Music gets $2 million gift.
Two UO programs receive donations.
Donor gives $12.5 million for UO education building.
Donor ups his donation to UO music.
Gift to UO will affect all our lives.
Donation boosts science buildings.
UO fund drive right on track.
UO's biggest donor adds $15 million for science building.
Setting UO's priorities.
Eugene's business community is healthy, vibrant and growing.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles