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The 1996 SLATE 60
The 60 largest American charitable contributions of 1996.

Posted Sunday, Jan. 26, 1997, at 12:15 AM ET

Introduction

The 1996 SLATE 60
The 60 largest American charitable contributions of 1996.

HONORABLE MENTIONS
Other known gifts of over $1 million in 1996.

The Top 10 Anonymous Gifts of 1996

New 1997 Gifts

1. SAMUEL SKAGGS and ALINE SKAGGS--$100 million to San Diego's SCRIPPS RESEARCH INSTITUTE from this Utah grocery and drugstore magnate and his wife. The gift will be used to establish the Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology. It will also help fund the study of new approaches to pharmaceutical design. The Skaggs' donation matches the largest gift made to medical research, a $100 million donation to the University of Utah made by chemical-industry executive JON M. HUNTSMAN in 1995. The Skaggs also donated $5 million to the College of Science at the UNIVERSITY OF UTAH for the Aline Wilmott Skaggs Biology Building. Total: $105 million.

2. GEORGE SOROS--$50 million to create the EMMA LAZARUS FUND to help legal immigrants become U.S. citizens. Soros was himself a legal immigrant to the United States in 1956. He now runs the Quantum Fund in New York City. Last year (1995), he gave away $350 million through the Soros Foundation and its Open Society Institute for countries undergoing the transition to democratic regimes. ALSO--Soros has given or pledged nearly $15 million to help change the nation's drug policy, and has spent at least $35 million in 1996 on charitable projects that benefit Russia. This includes $5 million to create a new foundation, which will work to improve Russian charities' access to the Internet. The rest of the money will be distributed by the Open Society Institute (Moscow), an organization created by Soros. TOTAL: close to $100 million. (See also Susan Soros, No. 7, below.)

3. KLAUS G. PERLS and AMELIA PERLS--at least $60 million worth of 20th-century art to the METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART (N.Y.). The 13 works are by masters such as Picasso, Modigliani, Braque, and Léger. The Perlses have been Manhattan dealers in 20th-century art, as well as avid collectors, for more than 60 years.

3. ROBERT W. GALVIN--$60 million pledged to the ILLINOIS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY from the chairman of the executive committee of Motorola. Galvin is a trustee of the institute.

3. PRITZKER FAMILIES--$60 million pledged (over five years) to the ILLINOIS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY from the families of ROBERT A. PRITZKER, a 1946 graduate who now serves as the chair of the board of trustees, and JAY A. PRITZKER, a Chicago attorney. Robert Pritzker is CEO of the Marmon Group, a Chicago-based international conglomerate.

6. GONDA (GOLDSCHMIED)--$45 million to the UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT LOS ANGELES for a neuroscience- and genetics-research facility that will be named the Gonda (Goldschmied) Neuroscience and Genetics Research Center. The donor's full name is being kept private. This is the largest charitable gift from an individual in University of California history. Dr. Gerald S. Levey, provost of the UCLA School of Medicine, praised the donor for "showing not only tremendous generosity, but great vision for the betterment of human health and understanding." Levey refused to give any details about the donor's identity, or to explain the unusual use of parentheses in the building's name. "There will be a lot of people in the community who will know. But I am bound to him not to say anything else. The donor feels very strongly about that." The donor was described in a UCLA statement as having long been committed to advancing medical progress against disease.

7. RICHARD FISHER, SUSAN SOROS, and LEON LEVY--a total of $42 million to BARD COLLEGE (N.Y.) from these trustees. This gift allows the college to more than double its endowment of $22 million. Fisher is chairman of the Morgan Stanley Group Inc. Levy is general partner of Odyssey Partners, an investment firm. Soros is director of Bard's Manhattan-based Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts. She is married to the financier George Soros. (See No. 2, above.)

8. ARISON FAMILY--$40 million worth of Carnival Corp. stock to the NEW WORLD SYMPHONY (Miami) from the founders of the cruise-line concern. The gift from the Arison family, Carnival's majority shareholders, will be used to establish a New World Symphony Foundation to support the organization's education program for young musicians. The New World Symphony was established in 1987 by conductor Michael Tilson Thomas and Carnival founder Ted Arison to help top music-school graduates perfect their skills. (NOTE: Arison, like some other wealthy Americans, has given up his U.S. citizenship for tax purposes.)

9. GORDON S. MARSHALL--$35 million to the UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA School of Business from the chairman of the board of Marshall Industries and a USC business school alumnus (class of 1946). In recognition of his generosity, university trustees have voted to rename the school the Gordon S. Marshall School of Business.

10. ROBERT M. BASS and ANNE T. BASS--$20 million to YALE UNIVERSITY (Conn.). This donation from the 1971 Yale graduate and his wife will help renovate Yale's aging residential colleges. ALSO--$10 million to DUKE UNIVERSITY (N.C.) to enable a "sale on chairs." The Basses are giving the gift so the university can make chairs for full professorships available for only $1.1 million, instead of the usual $1.5 million. According to a Sept. 29, 1996, article in the New York Times, "[The Basses] hope that like any sale, cutting the price of a chair will draw in more customers, persuading 20 to 25 other potential donors to endow professorships." The Basses will also give an additional $1.4 million to be used to bring the professors together in a group known as the Bass Fellows. Previously, the Basses have given $25 million to Stanford University (Calif.) and $20 million to Yale (Robert Bass attended both schools), and $4 million to Smith, Anne Bass' alma mater. 1996 TOTAL: $30 million.

Posted Sunday, Jan. 26, 1997, at 12:15 AM ET
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