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for $40,( $757,000 Donation For Stadium By DICK RICHARDSON Bee Staff Writer The fund drive for the new 30,000- seat football-soccer stadium for Fresno State University was given a big boost Monday with the donation of $757,000 by Duncan Enterprises of Fresno. The gift was the largest ever made to the university for any purpose. The gift is in the form of all the stock in the Picker Parts Corporation, a company owned by Duncan Enterprises. FSU is expected to sell the stock which is valued at $757,000. Including the gift from Duncan Enterprises, $5,005,834 has been raised from donations. With the $1.3 million from the sale of Ratcliffe Stadium, the drive total stands at $6,305,834. The stadium cost is estimated at $7.3 million, meaning the drive has about $1 million to go. Norman Baxter, university president, said the contribution "makes the stadium almost a reality for us." He said architectural drawings for the stadium should be completed in about 30 days, at which time he said it is hoped the remaining $1 million will have been raised. He said the university cannot seek bids for the stadium until all the funds have been raised. Russell Giffen, a chairman of the See Stadium, Back Page ~FfL&s^o Hee Sv^er >o r?7f See City, Back Page Bee Photo by Richard J. Darby Robert Duncan, Leon Peters, Norman Baxter and Russell Giffen, from left, at FSU stadium fund announcement. Stadium: A Big Gift ■I Continued From Page Al stadium drive, said that to his knowledge the Duncan donation is the single largest amount ever contributed in this part of the valley. Robert Duncan, president of Duncan Enterprises, the nation's leading manufacturer of ceramic supplies, said, "We think a great deal of the university and what it means to the community, and what it means to the Scaffold Tragedy Report Protested WILLOW ISLAND, W.Va. (AP) A Families of some of the workers killed in a scaffold collapse here are unhappy with Secretary of Labor Ray Marshall's claimed satisfaction with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's inspection record at the site and its report on the disaster. "We ... are not that tolerant," R.V. Bowser, chairman of the Willow Island Disaster Organization, said Sunday. "By its own admission, OSHA must accept a fair share of the responsiblity for this reckless, useless waste of precious human life." The group wants an independent investigation of the April 27 accident that killed 51. community from an economic standpoint. We think the athletic program is important in helping the university grow." Duncan, who also is a member of the stadium steering committee, added, "We would hope the faith we are showing in the university would be an inspiration to other companies and families to do something of a similar nature. It just would not take too many more contributions to raise the rest of the money and get a first- class facility." Leon Peters, co-chairman of the steering committee along with Giffen and Lewis S. Eaton, who was not present, said the contribution "exemplifies the type of people Fresno has today, people not forgetting the community in which they live. They (the Duncan family) are the kind of people who make a community grow." Other members of the family, including Duncan's mother, Irma, were present at a press conference at Duncan's facilities are at 5673 E. Shields Ave. The board of directors of Duncan Enterprises is composed primarily of Duncan family mem- hers The natural turf stadium is planned on a location south ofBar- stow Avenue between Cedar and Mil- lbrook avenues. It will be surrounded by 40 acres of turfed athletic fields that will be used for parking during stadium events. 20,000-oeat Stadium 'Go' By BOB MCCARTHY Bee Sports Writer Reducing the scope of the project and eliminating some of the "esthetics," Fresno State University now plans to build a 20,000-seat ^ New stadium sketch, El campus football-soccer stadium with completion, hopefully, by the start of the 1980 season. That means a reduction of 10,000 seats from the original concept of a 30,000-seat stadium and a delay of as much as six months before the start of construction. Leon Peters, cochairman of the Stadium Steering Cbmmittee, announced Tuesday that the project architect, Robert Stevens Associates, has been directed to redesign the stadium for 20,000 seats and "eliminate some of the frills." Those "frills," plus inflation, resulted last month in a low bid of $10.4 million by Robert G. Fisher Co. Inc. of Fresno for construction of the' complete 30,000-seat facility, more than $3 pillion higher than Stevens' $7.3 million estimate. The Fisher bid for a basic stadium, seating 20,000 and including field, lights, restrooms, concession stands, press box and earth berm, was $8,025,000, and the new design will incorporate those features, with some modifications to reduce costs. While some items are being shaved to lower the $8 million figure, Peters noted, the Stadium Fund Drive will be extended to help bridge the dollar gap. To date, the fund totals $6.5 million, including $5.2 million in seat-option sales and major donations and $1.3 million from the proceeds of the sale of Ratcliffe Stadium. William "Bill" Holmes, FSU executive vice president, said he anticipates "the complete redesign of the stadium would take five to six months," at which time the plans would have to be submitted to the State Colleges and Universities' Board of Trustees for approval. FSU officials hope construction could then begin by June. Holmes said there may be "a net See Stadium, Back Page
Object Description
Title | Scrapbook |
Object type | Photo album |
Physical collection | Leon S. Peters papers |
Folder structure | Biographical_information |
Description
Title | Page 07 |
Date Created | 1978 |
Physical description | 35.8 cm. x 32.2 cm. |
Full text search | for $40,( $757,000 Donation For Stadium By DICK RICHARDSON Bee Staff Writer The fund drive for the new 30,000- seat football-soccer stadium for Fresno State University was given a big boost Monday with the donation of $757,000 by Duncan Enterprises of Fresno. The gift was the largest ever made to the university for any purpose. The gift is in the form of all the stock in the Picker Parts Corporation, a company owned by Duncan Enterprises. FSU is expected to sell the stock which is valued at $757,000. Including the gift from Duncan Enterprises, $5,005,834 has been raised from donations. With the $1.3 million from the sale of Ratcliffe Stadium, the drive total stands at $6,305,834. The stadium cost is estimated at $7.3 million, meaning the drive has about $1 million to go. Norman Baxter, university president, said the contribution "makes the stadium almost a reality for us." He said architectural drawings for the stadium should be completed in about 30 days, at which time he said it is hoped the remaining $1 million will have been raised. He said the university cannot seek bids for the stadium until all the funds have been raised. Russell Giffen, a chairman of the See Stadium, Back Page ~FfL&s^o Hee Sv^er >o r?7f See City, Back Page Bee Photo by Richard J. Darby Robert Duncan, Leon Peters, Norman Baxter and Russell Giffen, from left, at FSU stadium fund announcement. Stadium: A Big Gift ■I Continued From Page Al stadium drive, said that to his knowledge the Duncan donation is the single largest amount ever contributed in this part of the valley. Robert Duncan, president of Duncan Enterprises, the nation's leading manufacturer of ceramic supplies, said, "We think a great deal of the university and what it means to the community, and what it means to the Scaffold Tragedy Report Protested WILLOW ISLAND, W.Va. (AP) A Families of some of the workers killed in a scaffold collapse here are unhappy with Secretary of Labor Ray Marshall's claimed satisfaction with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration's inspection record at the site and its report on the disaster. "We ... are not that tolerant," R.V. Bowser, chairman of the Willow Island Disaster Organization, said Sunday. "By its own admission, OSHA must accept a fair share of the responsiblity for this reckless, useless waste of precious human life." The group wants an independent investigation of the April 27 accident that killed 51. community from an economic standpoint. We think the athletic program is important in helping the university grow." Duncan, who also is a member of the stadium steering committee, added, "We would hope the faith we are showing in the university would be an inspiration to other companies and families to do something of a similar nature. It just would not take too many more contributions to raise the rest of the money and get a first- class facility." Leon Peters, co-chairman of the steering committee along with Giffen and Lewis S. Eaton, who was not present, said the contribution "exemplifies the type of people Fresno has today, people not forgetting the community in which they live. They (the Duncan family) are the kind of people who make a community grow." Other members of the family, including Duncan's mother, Irma, were present at a press conference at Duncan's facilities are at 5673 E. Shields Ave. The board of directors of Duncan Enterprises is composed primarily of Duncan family mem- hers The natural turf stadium is planned on a location south ofBar- stow Avenue between Cedar and Mil- lbrook avenues. It will be surrounded by 40 acres of turfed athletic fields that will be used for parking during stadium events. 20,000-oeat Stadium 'Go' By BOB MCCARTHY Bee Sports Writer Reducing the scope of the project and eliminating some of the "esthetics," Fresno State University now plans to build a 20,000-seat ^ New stadium sketch, El campus football-soccer stadium with completion, hopefully, by the start of the 1980 season. That means a reduction of 10,000 seats from the original concept of a 30,000-seat stadium and a delay of as much as six months before the start of construction. Leon Peters, cochairman of the Stadium Steering Cbmmittee, announced Tuesday that the project architect, Robert Stevens Associates, has been directed to redesign the stadium for 20,000 seats and "eliminate some of the frills." Those "frills," plus inflation, resulted last month in a low bid of $10.4 million by Robert G. Fisher Co. Inc. of Fresno for construction of the' complete 30,000-seat facility, more than $3 pillion higher than Stevens' $7.3 million estimate. The Fisher bid for a basic stadium, seating 20,000 and including field, lights, restrooms, concession stands, press box and earth berm, was $8,025,000, and the new design will incorporate those features, with some modifications to reduce costs. While some items are being shaved to lower the $8 million figure, Peters noted, the Stadium Fund Drive will be extended to help bridge the dollar gap. To date, the fund totals $6.5 million, including $5.2 million in seat-option sales and major donations and $1.3 million from the proceeds of the sale of Ratcliffe Stadium. William "Bill" Holmes, FSU executive vice president, said he anticipates "the complete redesign of the stadium would take five to six months," at which time the plans would have to be submitted to the State Colleges and Universities' Board of Trustees for approval. FSU officials hope construction could then begin by June. Holmes said there may be "a net See Stadium, Back Page |