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News

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 Progress show visits Boilers' back 40

 Sprinkler system helps researchers fight wheat blight

 Connections wins awards

 Hardwood tree gift has roots in chance meeting

 Purdue outstanding senior scales trees, academic heights

 Payback time for Purdue student trustee

 Ag econ student wins school's top award

 Fish fry changes face and place in 2002

 Indiana State Fair Photos
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Hardwood tree gift has roots in chance meeting

A portion of the estate given to Purdue's hardwood Tree Improvement and Regeneration Center overlooks the Yaquina River along Oregon's central coast.

By TOM CAMPBELL

The second largest gift to the College of Agriculture has been given by a man who never set foot on Purdue's West Lafayette campus.

Fred van Eck left a gift of $21 million to be used by the Hardwood Tree Improvement and Regeneration Center (HTIRC).

The van Eck gift is second only to the $24 million John S. Wright endowment, established in 1964. The Wright and van Eck gifts both were made to Purdue's Department of Forestry and Natural Resources.

"We are very grateful to Mr. van Eck for this wonderful gift," says Vic

Lechtenberg, dean of Purdue's College of Agriculture. "It will elevate our research program in hardwood tree improvement and make Purdue the place to go for research and education in this important area."

A New York-based financier, van Eck decided to put the Department of Forestry and Natural Resources and its Hardwood Tree Improvement and Regeneration Center (HTIRC) in his will shortly before he died March 15, 2000.

The estate was officially settled at the end of June. His gift was prompted by a presentation by the center's director, Charles Michler (pronounced MICK-ler).


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