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Fresno Attorney Leo Kolligian Dies At 90

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  • Fresno Attorney Leo Kolligian Dies At 90

    FRESNO ATTORNEY LEO KOLLIGIAN DIES AT 90
    By Jim Steinberg

    Fresno Bee
    March 20 2008
    CA

    He was instrumental in bringing University of Calif. to Merced.

    Lawyer Leo Kolligian, 90, of Fresno, who used his influence and
    charm as a gentle persuader to win approval of the UC Merced campus,
    died Thursday.

    Mr. Kolligian had suffered leukemia without letting news of his
    condition reach many people, said son Lee.

    As a UC regent for a dozen years beginning in 1985, he was instrumental
    in bringing the University of California to the San Joaquin Valley.

    "He was very proud of his community and of bringing the University
    of California here," Lee Kolligian said Thursday. "It took a lot
    of horse-trading."

    Mr. Kolligian prevailed on the state Legislature and Governor's
    Office to set priorities so that the San Joaquin Valley secured the
    first new campus built by the UC system in decades. UC Merced helped
    redress the Valley's chronic second-rung status in higher education
    among the regions of California.

    In business, he was a partner with Ed Kashian and Harold Zinkin in
    developing the River Park shopping center.

    Mr. Kolligian grew up poor and never let later success in law,
    business and politics affect his approach to anybody he met, from
    American presidents and governors to people on the street, said nephew
    Bob Koligian.

    Koligian, who uses a different spelling of his last name, called
    his uncle "a regular guy" who preferred minimizing the contributions
    he made.

    Lawyer O. James Woodward III, a longtime friend, said Mr. Kolligian
    valued high among his achievements his service as a university regent,
    as well as working to establish the Fresno Metropolitan Museum and
    assisting Saint Agnes Medical Center.

    "Above all that," Woodward said, were "his personal characteristics.

    He was a good friend. We shared lunch every few weeks."

    Mr. Kolligian never let cancer dominate his life, Woodward said:
    "He didn't talk much about it. He wanted to hear about you."

    Approaching the end of his life, Mr. Kolligian told his nephew,
    Koligian, that money was all a game, fun like a hunt, meaning
    nothing. He kept 40-year-old furniture in the home he shared with
    his wife, June.

    Dorothy "Dottie" Kolligian, Mr. Kolligian's first wife, died in 2000.

    They had great fun together, Woodward said, but Mr. Kolligian rejoiced
    in his second wedding and throughout his marriage to June Kolligian.

    Father Arshen Aivazian of St. Paul Armenian Church recalled how Mr.

    Kolligian and his second wife had talked in depth with him about
    their impending marriage:

    "They had sought support of his entire family. They all were in
    support of him," said Aivazian, including "Mannix" television star
    Mike Connors, Dottie Kolligian's brother, who grew up in Fresno as
    Krekor Ohanian.

    "Mike was here when he remarried," Aivazian said. "Leo took it with
    so much fun."

    Lee Kolligian said his father had enjoyed a wonderful time at his
    90th birthday party in August. UC Merced Chancellor Sung-Mo "Steve"
    Kang met Mr. Kolligian last year, and was struck by his kindness
    during Kang's inauguration in November. Mr. Kolligian was ill, but
    didn't let that spoil his excitement over the inauguration.

    "He was so pleased to be able to attend," Kang said.

    At the chancellor's inauguration, Mr. Kolligian and Gov.

    Schwarzenegger recalled their first meeting years before Schwarzenegger
    entered politics and was making a reputation with his muscles, his
    nephew said. The two remembered how the young Schwarzenegger had
    asked Mr. Kolligian whether he could help him make it in Hollywood.

    Schwarzenegger told Mr. Kolligian he vividly remembered that meeting,
    but he corrected him on the number of years that had elapsed, Mr.

    Kolligian's nephew said:

    "Thirty years ago, a friend brought this muscle-bound guy to meet
    my uncle," Koligian said. "Schwarzenegger said, 'Leo, if you give me
    $3,000 to $4,000 per month for expenses, I will give you 10% for the
    rest of my life.' "

    Mr. Kolligian offered to send Schwarzenegger to Hollywood for a
    screen test, Lee Kolligian recalled, but it was an era before action
    films. Hollywood thought this man with the thick Austrian accent
    never could make it.

    Years later, recalling the unmade deal, Schwarzenegger made Mr.

    Kolligian a joking counteroffer: Make the 10% deal retroactive on
    the condition that Mr. Kolligian fund the state budget deficit.

    Mr. Kolligian felt far more comfortable with such banter than with
    the trappings of wealth, said his nephew:

    "Someone told me the other day he was the only person he would do
    business with on a handshake. Twenty-five years ago, he went to England
    and came back with a Rolls-Royce. He drove it here five months, but
    didn't like it for what it stood for. He traded it for a Firebird,
    I think."

    Services for Mr. Kolligian will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday in
    St. Paul Armenian Church in Fresno.
    From: Baghdasarian
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