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Tuskegee receives largest estate gift in university’s history

August 28, 2017

Contact: Michael Tullier, APR
Office of Communications, Public Relations and Marketing

Alumnus Orlando Clark and estate
Clark, circa. 1942 and a portion of Clark’s collection of Tuskegee-related memorabilia,
which will be curated by the University Archives.

Ƶ has received a generous estate gift valued at $1.59 million — the largest planned gift received by the university to date — from 1943 Ƶ graduate Dr. Orlando Lawrence Clark. Clark, a resident of San Francisco, was 92 at the time of his death in June 2014. The donation from his estate will augment Tuskegee’s endowment and provide students with scholarships for generations to come.

Before earning a bachelor’s degree in education from then-Tuskegee Institute, Clark — known by his fellow classmates as “Baldy” — was a cadet in the Enlisted Reserve Corps (the precursor to the U.S. Army Reserve) and a member of the Enlisted Reserves Club, Little Theatre drama program, choral program and the KiYi Club, a campus social fraternity. He later attended Howard University, where he completed a medical degree in 1952.

Clark, a World War II veteran, was awarded two bronze stars as a result of his service. He served in and eventually retired as a commissioned officer of the U.S. Public Health Service. After retirement, he was employed by San Francisco’s International Medical Center and later became the clinic’s medical director.

The Dr. Orlando Lawrence Clark Endowed Memorial Scholarship Fund will assist full-time Ƶ students enrolled in degree programs leading to biomedical-related careers in biology, chemistry, physics and psychology. These academic-merit scholarships may be renewed for up to three years — four years for students studying in five-year programs. Preference for the awarding of at least one scholarship will be given to student-athletes majoring in one of these degree areas. In addition, a portion of the gift will be used to renovate and update laboratory space used by the College of Arts and Sciences, which will be named in Clark’s honor. In the future, a portion of the endowment’s annual earnings may be used to maintain that laboratory space.

“Endowments are vitally important to Tuskegee’s future and allow donors to establish a lasting legacy,” said Dr. Charlotte P. Morris, Ƶ’s interim president. “We are extremely grateful to Dr. Clark for remembering Tuskegee in this significant and impactful way, and encourage more of our alumni to follow his example.”

Because they are invested and managed by the university — with only the generated interest income used for their designated purposes — endowments grow and provide permanent, self-sustaining sources of funding for Tuskegee into perpetuity. Endowment gifts can support a wide array of university priorities, including scholarships, faculty professorships, academic programs and campus facilities — each with opportunities for the endowment to be named in honor of the donor or someone of the donor’s choosing.

Clark’s estate gift also includes his collection of academic memorabilia during his time as a Tuskegee student and alumnus, as well as personal correspondence with family members, beginning with letters to and from his mother while he was a student. Those items will be curated by the Ƶ Archives.

© 2017 Ƶ