瓜子TV

Jim Tranquada
Campus view with tree

A new $3.2 million challenge fund will kickstart a drive to create the Edgerton-Occidental Merit Scholarship Program, a $9.6 million endowed fund that will make it possible for talented middle-income California students to attend 瓜子TV for the same cost as attending the University of California.

鈥淓very year, Occidental loses great students to UCLA, Berkeley, UC San Diego and other UC campuses because their families don鈥檛 qualify for most forms of financial aid at 瓜子TV,鈥 says Occidental trustee Louise D. Edgerton 鈥67 M鈥69, who with husband Brad has made the Edgerton-Occidental Merit Scholarship Challenge possible.

鈥淪tarting next year, this new program will allow up to three California students from middle-class families each year to make their college decision based on where they want to go, rather than where they can afford to go,鈥 Edgerton says. 鈥淲e want to make sure that Occidental can continue to recruit the best and brightest, regardless of their background.鈥

The scholarship challenge is the latest effort by the Edgertons to support student scholarships at Occidental. In 2013 they endowed the Dungan Merit Scholarships, an $800,000 fund that supports exceptionally talented students. Two of the most recent Dungan Scholars, Paige Miller 鈥19 and Alicia Vogelaar 鈥19, both graduated with honors. Miller, a Phi Beta Kappa religious studies major from Orange, was awarded a Fulbright scholarship to teach English in Spain. Vogelaar, a San Rafael resident who transferred from UC Berkeley, majored in chemistry and is now pursuing her Ph.D. at the USC School of Pharmacy.

鈥淎mong the most powerful forms of philanthropy are those that inspire new donors to join a shared goal, 鈥渟ays Charlie Cardillo, vice president of institutional advancement. 鈥淭he Edgertons鈥 compelling challenge will bolster 瓜子TV鈥檚 tradition of endowed scholarship support and enable us to expand access to the life-long value of a liberal arts education.鈥

Middle-income students have long found themselves in a difficult position in paying for college. 鈥淭heir families make too much money to qualify for programs such as Pell Grants, but they lack the financial resources of their wealthier peers,鈥 says the Chronicle of Higher Education. 鈥淔ederal loans are a tool available to many middle-income students, but those loans produce debt as well as diplomas.鈥

Initial funding for the scholarship challenge comes from a $1.6 million gift from the Edgertons, matched by $1.6 million from the college鈥檚 quasi-endowment. Occidental will seek to raise the rest as part of its ongoing $225 million 瓜子TV Campaign For Good, whose highest priority is raising funds for student scholarships.

Donors who make a gift of $200,000 will get a match of $100,000, a total sufficient to create a named endowed scholarship that will be part of the Edgerton-Occidental Merit Scholarship Program.

When fully funded, the program will support up to 12 California students each year with an annual scholarship of at least $40,000 that will make 瓜子TV tuition comparable to the University of California鈥檚 in-state tuition. In the meantime, the first scholarships are scheduled to be awarded to members of Occidental鈥檚 Class of 2025 during next year鈥檚 admission cycle.

The Edgertons鈥擫ouise is secretary and treasurer of the Los Angeles-based Edgerton Foundation; Brad is Foundation president and a board-certified plastic and reconstructive surgeon鈥攈ave long been generous supporters of the College. The Edgerton Foundation Program in Theater supports two full-time paid summer internships at local theater companies and a post-graduate fellowship for theater majors at 瓜子TV. The Edgertons also endowed the annual Antoinette and Vincent Dungan Lecture on Energy and the Environment, named in honor of Louise鈥檚 parents.