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Gifted The University of Arizona Foundation Generations of Giving

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Page 1: UAF Gifted FINAL

Gifted

The University of Arizona FoundationGenerations of Giving

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GiftedGifted is a publication of the University of Arizona

Foundation that celebrates donors and the ways their

generosity benefits specific areas of the University of

Arizona. This issue spotlights those friends of the University

whose families have given of their time, talents and

treasures over multiple generations. The donors’ stories are

followed by examples of the great things happening today

within the areas they support.PublisherJames H. Moore, Jr.President & CEO

Associate PublisherMark Harlan Senior Vice PresidentCentral Development

Executive EditorJohn C. BrownDirector Communications & Marketing

EditorLisa Lucas Assistant DirectorCommunications & Marketing

DesignPam Stone – Day Nite Design

PhotographyDS PhotographyWill Seberger

CoverThe multi-generational supporters of the University of Arizona featured in this issue of Gifted help to ensure the institution remains strong and competitive.

Gifted is published by the University of Arizona Foundation, a nonprofit corporation that has supported excellence at the University of Arizona since 1958. Please send all correspondence to [email protected] or call 520-621-5581.

uafoundation.org

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ContentsMansfeld DescendentsNo one can claim a longer tradition of supporting the University of Arizona than the descendents of Jacob S. Mansfeld.

Donor ProfileDescendents of UA’s first Regent, Jacob S. Mansfeld, share why this Wildcat family considers philanthropy – and education – a way of life.

Program ProfilePrivate gifts help to fund graduate assistants in the University Libraries, providing opportunities for students to translate theory from the classroom into real life experiences.

Boice FamilyFred and Ann Boice were raised in families with ties to the University of Arizona, and have maintained those relationships by supporting a wide spectrum of University programs and scholarships.

Donor ProfileWildcat pride runs through several generations in the Boice family – all five of Fred’s and Ann’s children have attended the University.

Program ProfileThrough the College of Education’s Project SOAR, UA students reach out to local middle-school students and encourage them to consider higher education as a real possibility.

Groseta FamilyFather-daughter alumni Andy and Katy Groseta were raised on philanthropy and believe in the mantra, “You give back to the people who got you there.”

Donor ProfileAndy Groseta and his oldest daughter, Katy Groseta, are dedicated to supporting their alma mater, the University of Arizona’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

Program ProfileWhen young alumni, like Katy Groseta, support the UA, they pave the way for other students to pursue their dreams of higher education.

Navarrette and Martin Families Sisters Elena Navarrette and Patricia Preciado Martin, and their families, are passionate about helping Hispanic students succeed at the University of Arizona.

Donor ProfileThe Navarrette and Martin families include a number of UA alumni and supporters, and are strong advocates of giving back to the UA Hispanic Alumni Club.

Program Profile A full tuition scholarship from the UA Hispanic Alumni Club was a deciding factor for alumna Janis Gallego to attend the University, and was integral to her success in the classroom and in life.

Estes FamilyFor the Estes family, giving back is a responsibility they embrace wholeheartedly.

Donor ProfileThe family of the late Bill Estes Jr. credits the University of Arizona for its success, and supports the institution and the community through gifts of time and treasure.

Program ProfileThe non-traditional learning environment at the Wildcat School helps its middle-school students advance and prepares them for college.

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Mansfeld Family

Jacob S. Mansfeld’s wife, Eva, and their children Sam, Phyllis, Hannah and Monte, circa 1894.

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The University of Arizona Foundation

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Mansfeld Descendents Consider Philanthropy a Part of LifeBy Edie Jarolim

No one can claim a longer tradition of

supporting the University of Arizona than

the descendents of Jacob S. Mansfeld. In

1885, when the Arizona Territorial Legislature

appropriated $25,000 to establish a state

university in Tucson, it was Mansfeld

who convinced two local gamblers and a

saloonkeeper to donate the land required to

secure the funds. A few years later, Mansfeld

became the UA’s first Regent.

Speaking about her great grandfather, who grew

up in Germany, Janna-Neen Cunningham said,

“Education was a way of life for him in Europe.

When you come to someplace as remote as

Tucson was, you want to bring elements of

civilization... and that meant education.”

Over the generations, the facets of education

the family held in particular esteem began

to crystallize.

Mansfeld’s granddaughter, the late Ann-

Eve Mansfeld Johnson, graduated from the

University and was the founding president of the

UA’s Friends of the Library. She was the driving

force behind the Ann-Eve and Emery Johnson

Library Endowment, created to purchase books

in the fine arts. Her daughter Janna-Neen

Cunningham, also a UA alumna, has donated

both time and money to the library, which she

calls, “the backbone of the University.”

Anita Scales, Ann-Eve Johnson’s niece, serves

on the Board of Trustees of the Friends of the

Library and heads the committee that organizes

its annual fundraising book sale. “The money we

make goes to buy books and online resource

materials for a lot of different disciplines, not just

the fine arts,” Scales explained. “The board gets

wish lists from deans of the different schools

and department chairs.”

Nor is the effort restricted to a single event. The

gathering and sorting of donated books for the

sale goes on year round, with Scales heading an

ever-growing team of volunteers.

Along with the library, public culture is a favorite

family cause. Ann-Eve Cunningham, a UA

alumna and now director of development for

the UA’s Arizona Public Media, recalls listening

to NPR and watching PBS throughout her

childhood – and remembers that her mother,

Janna-Neen, always gave generously to them.

“Improving the everyday life of the community,

especially the library and the arts, was very

important to my family,” Ann-Eve Cunningham

said. “Philanthropy was a part of life for us.”

Janna-Neen Cunningham concurs, noting that

supporting the things they prize always seemed

like a natural thing to do. “What my great

grandfather did was hard,” she said. “What

we do is easy.”

Jacob S. Mansfeld

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Graduate Assistants in the University Libraries

University Libraries graduate assistants funded by Kate Willock in 2008-09: Kassandra Rodeheaver, Rebecca Bliquez, Robin Green, Christine Eve Seliga, John Cook and Kimberly McClure.

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Graduate Students Gain Professional Experience Through AssistantshipsBy Erica Piper

class and you think you understand it, but in

your graduate assistantship you see how it’s put

into practice, and that can’t really be taught in

the classroom setting.”

McClure agrees, adding that faculty mentors

enhanced her learning experience. “I gained

valuable professional experience that looks great

on a resume and I learned the practical side

of the profession from people who were really

interested in being positive mentors,” she said.

“Academically, my work reinforced everything I

was learning in my classes.”

Graduate assistantship opportunities in the

University Libraries are due, in large part, to

private funding. “Gifts we receive from private

foundations, organizations and individuals help

to fund these types of programs,” said graduate

assistant Kassandra Rodeheaver. “These

programs probably would not exist without

private funding.”

By engaging students and increasing their

enthusiasm about their studies, graduate

assistantships may also encourage them

to someday give back to the institution. As

McClure said, “You never know when one of

those former graduate assistants will ‘pay it

forward’ and return the favor to future students!”

To learn more about graduate assistantships,

visit http://grad.arizona.edu/financial-resources/ga.

University of Arizona alumna Kimberly McClure

is putting into practice what she learned through

her graduate assistantship with the University

Libraries.

During her 2008-09 academic year position,

which was funded by Kate Willock, the School

of Information Resources and Library Sciences

grad gained practical exposure in a protected

space. “I think I would have been ‘knocked for

a loop’ if I had come into my current position

without having experienced that first,” said

McClure, who is a curatorial/museum specialist

with the Arizona State Museum.

The graduate assistantship program, offered by

the University Libraries and supplemented with

private gifts, provides graduate students with

part-time employment in teaching, research,

outreach, or other administrative or technical

positions. The program not only enables

students to attend school with reduced tuition

costs and free health insurance, but also allows

them to translate theory from the classroom into

real life experiences.

“It’s a great marriage of theory and practice,

and the synergy between the two enriched my

education for a better experience, overall,” said

graduate assistant Christine Eve Seliga. “It’s just

so valuable getting an understanding of what

actually happens. You can hear something in

5 The University of Arizona Foundation

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“I think I would have been ‘knocked for a loop’ if I had come into my current position without

having experienced [a graduate assistantship] first.”

KiMBERLy MCCLURE

CURATORiAL/MUSEUM SPECiALiST

WiTH THE ARizONA STATE MUSEUM

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Boice Family

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Fred and Ann Boice (far right) with their son, Henry Boice (third from right), and his family, at grandson Bradley’s graduation from the University of Arizona.

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Wildcat Pride Runs Deep for Boice FamilyBy Eric Swedlund

P. Kelley Memorial Scholarship, and in memory

of her brother, through the Victor Bruce Kelley

Memorial Scholarship.

Wildcat pride runs through several generations

in the Boice family – all five of Fred’s and Ann’s

children have attended the UA. The family’s

deep connections have inspired them to

continue giving back.

Jennifer Boice, who received her MBA from the

University, said “the UA has defined Tucson and

has contributed not only to the quality of life, but

the bottom line here, more than people realize.

“My ties are so strong, in part because the UA is

a fabulous resource in Tucson. I just admire so

many of the people at the UA and what they’re

trying to do. So often you read something in

the paper about what’s going on there and you

say, ‘Wow, this is happening in Tucson.’”

Henry Boice, who earned a degree in business

administration in 1976, and his wife are both

UA graduates, as are three of their four children.

Henry’s son, Michael, a 2005 biochemistry

graduate now pursuing a doctorate at Cornell,

is continuing the family’s tradition by donating

to a scholarship fund.

“It’s been very easy to support something that

has helped as much in our lives as the UA has,”

Henry said.

Fred Boice can say he’s literally been there from

the beginning.

Before McKale Center opened in 1973, he

had tickets for Wildcat basketball games in

Bear Down Gym, and was invited to select his

seats for the new arena. Fred and his wife Ann

are still sitting there today as Wildcats for Life

and longtime donors to athletics, education,

business, agriculture and scholarships.

“We go to the basketball games, we take in

baseball games, we take in softball games,

women’s basketball games. We go to the dance

recitals, we go to the plays,” said Fred, a past

president of the Arizona Board of Regents. “I

wouldn’t live by choice anywhere there wasn’t

a major university. There are just too many

interesting things and people that I like to be

associated with.”

Fred, who took some graduate courses at the

UA, grew up south of Tucson, in a ranching

family with ties to the agriculture college. His

wife practically grew up on campus.

“My father was a professor in the College

of Education for 40 years and the University

campus was always the biggest part of our

lives,” Ann said.

A UA graduate and schoolteacher for 25 years,

Ann supports scholarships in memory of her

parents, through the Victor H. Kelley and Mary

7 The University of Arizona Foundation

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Project SOAR Mentors

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University of Arizona undergraduate students and Project SOAR mentors Natasha Sinha, Amit Srivastava and Roxanne Olivera.

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Local Middle-School Students SOAR Their Way to Higher Education By Erica Piper

admissions and the opportunities offered in

college,” said Natasha Sinha, a senior biology

major and mentor at Hohokam Middle School.

“This information was especially important to

many of these students who are the first in their

family to even think about going to college.”

Under Lee’s guidance, Project SOAR has

grown from a small, noncredit, informal activity

to a year-round, highly demanded UA course.

Marx believes this development is crucial to the

community.

“[Project SOAR] provides opportunities for these

youngsters at a time when, through public

policy and financial problems in the state, it’s

increasingly difficult for them to get to college,”

Marx said.

Through generous gifts from private donors,

including Emily L. Meschter and the Helios

Education Foundation, approximately 600

students have been trained over three years as

mentors, and now serve seven middle schools.

“Private funding is essential to maintain the level

of current operations,” Lee said. “Additional

funding would allow us to further expand the

program to reach more students at more middle

schools. SOAR has the potential to become a

national model for other programs throughout

the U.S.”

To learn more about Project SOAR, visit

www.soar.web.arizona.edu.

Scholarship support, like that provided by

the Boice family, helps University of Arizona

students achieve their dreams of obtaining

higher education. But instilling the seed of that

dream often is done long before students step

onto campus.

Project SOAR is a College of Education (COE)

program created to help promote the value

of a higher education to local middle-school

students, some of whom grow up just miles

from the University.

“Many Tucson middle- and high-school students

have never set foot on campus,” said Jenny J.

Lee, a COE associate professor, and director

of Project SOAR and the Center for the Study

of Higher Education. “Many more do not have

family members who have ever attended the UA

or any college, despite generations of living in

Tucson.”

SOAR, which stands for Student Outreach,

Access and Resiliency, has been in the College

of Education for more than a decade. The

current version was developed by Lee with

support from Dean Ronald W. Marx. Through

the program, undergraduates from a variety of

majors make weekly visits to local schools

to mentor and encourage young, college-

aspiring students.

“Last semester, we focused on introducing

our students to concepts involving college

9 The University of Arizona Foundation

Gifted

“Many Tucson middle- and high-school students have never set foot on campus.”

JENNy J. LEE

COLLEGE OF EDUCATiON ASSOCiATE PROFESSOR,

AND DiRECTOR OF PROJECT SOAR AND THE

CENTER FOR THE STUDy OF HiGHER EDUCATiON

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Andy and Katy Groseta

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11 The University of Arizona Foundation

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Agriculture Alumni Raised to Give Back, Help OthersBy Elena Acoba

The cattle-ranching Groseta family was raised

on philanthropy.

Third-generation Arizona cattleman Andy

Groseta and his oldest daughter, high-school

agriculture teacher Katy Groseta, have regularly

supported their alma mater, the University

of Arizona’s College of Agriculture and Life

Sciences (CALS). Katy started giving three years

before she graduated with a bachelor’s degree

in animal sciences in 2005.

“I’ve been blessed and given much,” said Katy,

who teaches at Buckeye Union High School.

Giving “is an opportunity to do good for others.”

She picked up the practice from her parents,

Andy and Mary Beth. “As early as I can

remember, my parents were very giving,” she

said. “I’ve always seen them serve and volunteer

and help others.”

The couple instilled the virtue of volunteerism in

their children by getting them involved as peer

teachers and event workers for 4-H and the

Future Farmers of America.

Like his daughter, Andy Groseta learned about

giving from his rancher parents. “I was raised

to give back to the community, give back to the

schools, and give back to the state,” he said.

“You give back to the people who got

you there.”

CALS got Andy to a career as a high-school

agriculture teacher and to leadership within

the Arizona cattle industry as the owner of

his family’s 62-year-old W Dart Ranch in

Cottonwood. In 2008, he was president of

the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association.

Andy earned bachelor’s degrees in agriculture

education and animal sciences in 1972, and

a master’s degree in agriculture education in

1978.

“The UA gave me a great education for me to

succeed in life,” he said. “We want to continue

to provide opportunity to young people,

particularly to continue in agriculture.”

Ties to cattle and Wildcats remain strong with

the Grosetas. Katy’s siblings also have CALS

degrees. Her brother, Paul, and his family live on

the ranch to continue the family’s 88-year legacy

of raising cattle in the Verde Valley. Sister Anna

Aja provides public relations and marketing for

the Gowan Company, a Yuma-based crop-

protection firm.

Andy and Mary Beth also support the UA by

rooting for Arizona Athletics. They have season

tickets to Wildcat basketball and encourage the

youngest Grosetas, Paul’s four children who

range in age from 3 to 9 years, to cheer for red

and blue.

As for Katy, she tries to attend homecoming

every year. “I love the UA,” she said. “I am so

proud of being part of the University.”

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Young Alumni

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Young Alumni Pave the Way for UA StudentsBy Lisa Lucas

always really important to us as a group, and to

her, personally.”

Hundreds of students and young alumni decide

to give to the University every year. The number

of alumni who make gifts is not just a bragging

point; some national rankings are based on the

percentage of alumni who give.

How much they give is not as important as the

act of giving. In CALS, Dean Sander’s funding

priorities for smaller gifts tend to support

student activities, including student travel and

scholarships.

“Some people think, why give unless you can

give millions, but even a small gift can make

a difference,” said Susan McGinley, a science

writer and editor in educational communications

and technologies. “It all adds up. Just look at

what they did with the text donations for Haiti –

and those were only $10 each.”

Giving back is an investment in the UA degrees

young alumni hold, and ensures future students

can pursue their dreams of higher education.

“I know a lot of people give because they’re

grateful for what they got from their major,”

McGinley said. “Giving back gives other people

a chance to have that, too.”

To learn more about CALS,

visit http://cals.arizona.edu.

For Katy Groseta, life as a Wildcat didn’t stop at

graduation.

The 2005 alumna of the College of Agriculture

and Life Sciences (CALS) is one of many young

alumni who opt to give back to the University. In

fact, Groseta began her philanthropic activities

before she graduated.

“When students give before they graduate it

means we’re essentially doing an excellent job

of providing their education,” said CALS Dean

Eugene G. Sander. “It’s very important that we

maintain relationships with our younger alumni,

because someone who gets involved while

in college may later on become even more

involved. Katy, I think, falls in that category.”

Since her graduation, Groseta has remained

connected to the University by attending events,

joining the UA Alumni Association, giving to

CALS, and staying involved with Sigma Alpha,

her professional agriculture sorority. She is a

past national board member of the organization,

which focuses on scholarship, leadership,

service and fellowship.

“Katy was always a big part of our philanthropic

events, so it doesn’t surprise me to hear she

is giving back as an alumna,” said Heather

Jepsen, one of Groseta’s sorority sisters who

now is a recruitment and instructional specialist

in agricultural education. “Philanthropy was

13 The University of Arizona Foundation

Gifted

“Some people think, why give unless you can give millions, but even a small gift can make

a difference.”

SUSAN MCGiNLEy

SCiENCE WRiTER AND EDiTOR iN EDUCATiONAL

COMMUNiCATiONS AND TECHNOLOGiES

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Navarrette and Martin Families

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Back row (L-R): Daniel “Jim” Martin and Diego Navarrette; Front row (L-R): Patricia Preciado Martin, Elena Martin, Patricia Navarrette Mars and Elena Navarrette

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Wildcat Family Passionate about Helping Hispanic AlumniBy Jane Erikson

the UA and graduated,” said Elena Navarrette.

“In some ways it was their passion for education

that inspired us to give back.”

Patricia Preciado Martin explained why she

gives to the Hispanic Alumni Club. “These are

my roots… I want to do what I can to help our

young Mexicano/Hispano students achieve their

goals. That is my passion.”

The Hispanic Alumni Club was started in 1982,

when Hispanics made up less than 10 percent

of UA undergraduate and graduate students.

They now comprise 16.8 percent of all students.

Elena and Diego Navarrette invited their

daughter Dr. Patricia Navarrette Mars to join

UAHA when she returned to Tucson in 1997,

after completing her plastic surgery residency

at the University of Southern California.

“I benefited from having parents who are

dedicated to education. I knew, probably in

grade school, that I would go to college,”

said Mars, who received her bachelor’s degree

(’85) and doctorate in medicine (’89) from

the University.

“So many young people don’t have that, but

Hispanic Alumni gives them a family atmosphere

to support them as they go through school.

And so many of them stay and give back to the

community. It’s ‘paying it forward.’ Being able to

donate to that and hear their stories each year is

really wonderful.”

They are generations of givers – parents and

children for whom higher education is not just

a priority, but a passion.

They measure their success not by what they

have received in life, but by what they are able

to give – particularly, for them, to the University

of Arizona Hispanic Alumni Club (UAHA).

“Hispanic Alumni is one of the three things

I am most proud of in my life,” said Diego

Navarrette, a fourth-generation Tucsonan and

first in his family to graduate from the UA, with a

bachelor’s degree (’60) and a master’s degree in

higher education (’92).

“My family is first. My teaching is second. And

being part of Hispanic Alumni is third.”

Diego’s wife, Elena, received her master’s

degree in library science from the UA. The

couple’s four children – a surgeon, a lawyer, an

engineer and a computer analyst – also are UA

graduates.

So is Elena’s brother, Al Preciado, and her sister,

author Patricia Preciado Martin. Patricia’s son,

Daniel “Jim” Martin, graduated from the UA

with a master’s degree in library science and

is an associate librarian with the UA Science-

Engineering Library. His sister, Elena Martin,

PhD, has taken courses at the University.

“Our parents were so supportive and proud of

the fact that my brother, sister and I all went to

15 The University of Arizona Foundation

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Janis Gallego

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UA Hispanic Alumni Club Scholarships Provide Encouragement and OpportunityBy Jane Erikson

By 1997, Elias and others recognized that

students needed more than financial support

to achieve their academic goals. In response,

Marty Cortez, then UAHA president, co-

initiated the Hispanic Alumni Student Scholars

Leadership/Retention Program that still exists

today. The program offers student support by

way of annual orientations for new and returning

scholars, as well as monthly meetings for all

UAHA scholarship recipients.

In 2002, Gallego was named UA Hispanic

Senior of the Year. Now an associate attorney

with Mesch, Clark & Rothschild, P.C., she serves

on the board of the Tucson Hispanic Chamber

of Commerce Foundation, is a member of

the Arizona Women’s Lawyers Association,

and serves on the UA President’s Hispanic

Advisory Council and its Intercollegiate Athletics

Committee. She previously served on the UAHA

Board of Directors.

“The UA Hispanic Alumni was there for me,”

Gallego said. “They were the extra voice

encouraging me every step of the way.

The impact they’ve made on my life

is immeasurable.”

Elias, who retired 10 years ago after serving

Tucson for 38 years as Postmaster, is still

involved with UAHA. Of the group who started

it all back in 1982, Elias said, “We were just

the ones who saw the challenge. We saw the

opportunities, and we pursued them.”

To learn more about UAHA,

visit http://arizonaalumni.com/uaha/.

Janis Gallego was a high-school junior when

Harvard, Stanford and other top-ranked

universities began asking her to apply.

Gallego and her parents met with college

after college. All were attractive, but almost

all required tuition beyond what her family

could afford.

By the time Gallego graduated from prestigious

University High School in Tucson, she had

chosen the University of Arizona. A full tuition

scholarship from the UA Hispanic Alumni Club

(UAHA) was the deciding factor.

“My parents are very pro-education. They

always encouraged me to go to college,” said

Gallego, who has two UA degrees: a bachelor’s

in journalism (’02) and a law degree from the

James E. Rogers College of Law (’05). “Having

the support of the UA Hispanic Alumni was an

integral part of my achieving my goals.”

Founded in 1982, UAHA began awarding

scholarships to young Hispanic men and

women in 1986. Seven students received

scholarships that year. Through 2009, nearly

1,200 scholarships totaling $4.48 million have

been awarded.

“We thought it would be of great value to

provide opportunities to kids with the ability

and the desire to attend the University,” said

alumnus Arnold Elias, ’59, who was the alumni

group’s first president.

17 The University of Arizona Foundation

Gifted

“Having the support of the UA Hispanic Alumni was an integral part of my achieving my goals.”

JANiS GALLEGO

UA ALUMNA AND ASSOCiATE ATTORNEy

WiTH MESCH, CLARK & ROTHSCHiLD, P.C.

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Estes Family

Standing (L-R): Shirley Estes, zack Estes, Bill Estes iV, J.K. Baker, Leah Estes, Kelly Estes; Seated (L-R): Bill Estes iii, zara Estes, K.C. Estes, Shannon Estes

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For the Estes Family, Education isEverythingBy Lisa Lucas

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“You have to learn something new, every day, or

you can’t go to bed.”

According to William “Bill” Estes III, that was a

life motto of his late father, William “Bill” Estes

Jr., ’84, who passed away in August 2009. It

perhaps originated from a similar belief held by

Bill Estes Jr.’s father.

“My grandfather was offered a scholarship to

Washington State University, but he never went,”

said Bill Estes III. “I think he regretted it, so he

always impressed upon Dad the importance of

education.”

Bill Estes Jr. became the first in his family to

attend college, graduating from the University of

Arizona in 1961. It was there he met his future

wife, then Shirley Vanskike, also a UA grad.

He used his UA education to better the lives of

his family and his community.

“We owe everything to the UA,” said Joe Estes,

’88, a son of Bill Estes Jr. “My grandfather

started a small homebuilding business in 1946.

Then Dad went to the UA and made The Estes

Co. a huge success.”

Joe’s sister, Leah Estes, added: “My dad was

successful in his business not only because

of the education he got at the UA, but also

from the connections he made in college. To

graduate from the University and be locked

into that network was vital to the growth of

the company.”

Advocating for and supporting education

became a priority for Bill Estes Jr. He promoted

its value within his family – both of his sons are

UA grads – and to the entire community. He

served on the Arizona State Board of Education

and founded the Wildcat School, a nonprofit

charter school that serves Tucson middle-school

students.

Education, including higher education, is one of

the Estes family’s many philanthropic priorities.

They support the University by giving to a variety

of units on campus, allowing their individual

passions to determine the areas they support.

“We decide where our gifts go as a family,”

Shirley Estes said. “And our whole family gives

of time, even our grandchildren.”

The family supports the entire community, from

the arts to agriculture. Bill Estes III was named

the 2008 Western Region 4-H Volunteer of

the Year and serves on the board of Casa de

los Ninos. His daughter, Kelly Estes, opted

to donate her Christmas gifts one year to the

children at Casa. She later decided to get a

degree in social work to advocate even more

for children.

“To our family, giving is expected and a

responsibility,” Shirley Estes said. “As

businesspeople it’s important for us to

stand up and make contributions.”

The University of Arizona Foundation

Gifted

“We decide where our gifts go as a family.”

SHiRLEy ESTES

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20

K.C. Estes

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The University of Arizona Foundation

Gifted

The late William “Bill” Estes Jr. was never one to stay idle. A respected Tucson businessman, family man, and University of Arizona alumnus, he was consistently on the move even after his “semi-retirement” from The Estes Co. in the late 1990s. This was particularly true once he decided to found the Wildcat School in 2006.

“My mother was trying to get Dad to take more time off, and telling my partner and our staff to send Dad home, but we would only see him once or twice a week because he was so busy with all of the educational things he had going,” said his son William “Bill” Estes III. “It was a joke around the office because we knew he wouldn’t listen to us – he was so passionate about what he was doing.”

The Wildcat School is a nonprofit, college-preparatory charter school. As a first-generation college graduate, Bill Estes Jr.’s goal was to make sure each of its middle-school students, no matter their socioeconomic status, had an opportunity to see the value of higher education.

“The Wildcat School is different from other charter schools because it helps the underserved part of society get ready for college,” said Christopher “Kip” Volpe, a member of the Governing and Corporate Boards of the Wildcat School.

Students are taught the basic skills needed to attend college, and are encouraged to learn and achieve at their own pace. Because the school is designed for the advancement of its students, classes are flexible.

“The 7th and 8th graders are not separated,”

said K.C. Estes, a teacher at the Wildcat School and the wife of Bill Estes III. “This allows teachers to tailor instruction to the needs of each student. If a student is missing some skills from previous years, the student is given opportunities to work on those, while a student who has already acquired those skills can work on the next skill, even if it is technically above his or her grade level.”

The UA has direct ties to the school. College of Education graduate students help to prepare class curricula, while undergraduate students from a variety of majors provide mentoring services. The University also hosted Cats in the Community Day 2009-2010 at the school site, during which faculty, staff, student and family volunteers helped paint, clean, organize and garden.

“The site of the Wildcat School was not in great condition,” said Holly Altman, director of outreach and community partnerships at the UA. “Overall, this will improve the learning environment and make the school more functional. We hope to attract more students with these improvements because parents will be more inclined to send their children here.”

The project also provides an immediate benefit to Wildcat School students.

“The students got to see how large projects must be thoroughly thought through and planned before being executed,” K.C. Estes said. “They also had the opportunity to see that giving back to the community can be rewarding and fun, even if it is a lot of work.”

To learn more about the Wildcat School,visit www.thewildcatschool.com.

The Wildcat School, an Investment in Arizona’s FutureBy Erica Piper and Lisa Lucas

21

“The Wildcat School is different from other charter schools because it helps the underserved part

of society get ready for college.”

CHRiSTOPHER “KiP” VOLPE

A MEMBER OF THE GOVERNiNG AND

CORPORATE BOARDS OF THE WiLDCAT SCHOOL

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