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Alumna and Husband Give Cal State Northridge Record $7.3m Donation

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  • Alumna and Husband Give Cal State Northridge Record $7.3m Donation

    AScribe
    July 20 2005

    Alumna and Husband Give Cal State Northridge Record $7.3 Million
    Donation; Largest Cash Gift Will Expand Student Scholarships, Aid
    Performing Arts Center

    NORTHRIDGE, Calif., July 20 (AScribe Newswire) -- A former San Fernando
    High School art teacher who graduated from Cal State Northridge
    and her husband have donated their entire $7.3 million estate as
    a bequest to the university for expanding student scholarships,
    marking the largest cash and alumni gift in the university's history.

    The endowment created by longtime San Fernando Valley residents
    Mary and Jack Bayramian -- who passed away in November 2002 and
    January 2005, respectively -- will fund two major new university
    scholarship programs, including a $2.3 million portion to launch
    student scholarships for the future Valley Performing Arts Center
    project on the campus.

    "This remarkable gift from Mary and Jack Bayramian will empower the
    university to support outstanding students," said Cal State Northridge
    President Jolene Koester. "The Bayramians, who were devoted to each
    other during more than 60 years of marriage, now have extended that
    caring to improve the lives of hundreds of our students."

    To honor the gift, the California State University Board of Trustees,
    meeting today in Long Beach, is scheduled to consider renaming the
    university's Student Services Building as Bayramian Hall. President
    Koester called the dedication a fitting tribute, because the building
    houses the university's scholarship, financial aid and other student
    support services offices.

    "Because Aunt Mary graduated from Cal State Northridge, she had a great
    feeling for the university," said Don Barsumian, Mary Bayramian's
    nephew, who is the couple's trustee. "I think she had a real love
    for young people and for education. Mary believed in education and
    she wanted to help. This was her way of helping," Barsumian said.

    Mary and Jack Bayramian each had Armenian parents from Aintab, Turkey,
    who came to the United States to escape persecution. The two lived
    near each other as teenagers and graduated together from Hamilton
    High School in West Los Angeles in 1939, marrying in 1942.

    After Navy service during World War II, Jack had a 20-year career as
    a Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. technician.

    After the war, the couple first lived in Reseda and later bought a
    Northridge house several blocks west of today's university campus. A
    homemaker who returned to college in her late 30s, Mary Bayramian
    attended from 1960 to 1963, earning a bachelor's degree in art and
    a teaching credential from San Fernando Valley State College, which
    later became Cal State Northridge.

    After graduating, Mary Bayramian went on to teach art at nearby San
    Fernando High School, where she was affectionately known as "Mrs. B,"
    until the couple retired in 1971. At age 50, they moved to Laguna Beach
    in Orange County and lived there another 30 years, investing, improving
    and managing real estate, and settling in an ocean-front home.

    The Bayramians led an extraordinarily active life. Mary was an active
    cook and author of published cookbooks, designed and created her own
    jewelry, painted and played golf well into her 70s. Barsumian described
    Jack as the unofficial greeter of Laguna Beach and a "firecracker"
    who in his younger years was an avid handyman skilled in electrical,
    carpentry and concrete work.

    The couple's $7.3 million endowment will create the Bayramian Family
    Scholarship Fund at Cal State Northridge and support two major new
    programs. The earnings from $5 million of the endowment will fund
    the newly named Mary and Jack Bayramian Presidential Scholars and
    related scholarships within the university's premier Northridge
    Scholars Program.

    The Bayramian Presidential Scholar awards, the most prestigious
    granted by the university, will ultimately go each year to two dozen
    or more high-achieving upper-division students through a competitive
    process. Recipients will partner with faculty members on scholarly
    projects. The scholarships include a $5,000 award, bookstore discount,
    priority registration and other perks.

    Earnings from the other $2.3 million will fund Mary Bayramian Arts
    Scholars and become the largest gift yet toward Imagine the Arts,
    the fundraising campaign for the 1,600-seat Valley Performing Arts
    Center planned for the campus. These scholarships will support upper
    division and graduate students involved in the project through their
    courses, internships or related activities.

    "Mary Bayramian was an art student at Cal State Northridge, an arts
    teacher at San Fernando High School, and an artist herself," said Judy
    C. Knudson, CSUN's vice president for university advancement. "She
    was deeply engaged in the arts, and especially in opening the world
    of art to others, a goal that will be advanced by the Performing Arts
    Center project."

    CSUN earlier this month launched the campaign for private funds to
    match the state dollars that will build/operate the Valley Performing
    Arts Center, due to open within the next five years.

    Planned as a signature facility, the center will be the largest
    venue of its kind in the San Fernando Valley and open the region to
    high-caliber performances not currently able to perform there.

    The university learned only recently that the couple had given CSUN's
    largest-ever cash gift after the husband's passing in January 2005. The
    university's prior largest cash gift came from The Eisner Foundation
    in 2002 when Disney CEO Michael D. Eisner and his wife Jane gave $7
    million to create a new teacher-training program at the campus.

    Lili Vidal, the associate director of CSUN's Financial Aid and
    Scholarship Department, said the Bayramians' gift will provide a major
    boost to the university's scholarship programs, which last year aided
    about 1,600 CSUN students based on their talent and achievements. "To
    have this gift is really fabulous for our students," Vidal said. "We
    will help many students with it."
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