Philip & Cheryl Milstein Give $20M to Columbia Univ. Med. Center

Newswise NEW YORK, NY (March 18, 2013) Continuing their familys multigenerational connection to Columbia and support of its leadership in medicine, Philip (CC 71) and Cheryl Milstein (Barnard 82) have made a $20 million commitment to Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC). The pledge, through their family foundation, is the latest gift from the Philip Milstein family and is intended to support the medical centers campus revitalization, specifically, the new Medical and Graduate Education Building.

The new Medical and Graduate Education Building has been designed to support the intense training students receive at the College of Physicians and Surgeons (P&S) and the biomedical departments of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. The stunning design by Diller, Scofidio + Renfro includes innovative classroom and study spaces that will incorporate state-of-the-art information technology while facilitating collaborative, team-based learning. Work on the new building began in August 2012 and is expected to be completed by 2016. The Medical and Graduate Education Building is part of a larger plan to revitalize the medical center campus, which will also add green urban spaces for the benefit of everyone in the community, including patients who come to Columbia University Medical Center and its affiliate, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia, for care.

Over a lifetime of exceptional accomplishment, Philip Milstein has maintained an enduring commitment to his alma mater, and for that Columbia will be forever grateful, said University President Lee C. Bollinger. The Milstein familys contributions to the University encompass everything from the Philip L. Milstein Family Library to financial aid and athletics. But nowhere has this generosity been more powerfully felt than at Columbia University Medical Center. This latest gift extends the familys ongoing commitment to ensuring world class medical training and the highest quality health care that saves lives and finds new cures.

With this gift, Philip and Cheryl Milstein continue their familys tradition of extraordinary philanthropy to support the advancement of medicine at Columbia University Medical Center, said Lee Goldman, MD, dean of the Faculties of Health Sciences and Medicine and executive vice president for Health and Biomedical Sciences at Columbia University. As a University Trustee since 1996 and a member of the CUMC Board of Advisors, Philip is a great friend to our institution, and we are grateful for his and Cheryls important contribution to the revitalization of our shared CUMC and NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia campuses.

Philip Milsteins familys interest in health care can be traced back to his maternal grandfather, Joshua M. Leiner, who was a neurologist and the first practicing psychiatrist in Bronx County. Philips parents, Vivian and Seymour Milstein, began their association with Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital in the 1950s. The familys support of medicine through the University includes the funding of research in the Mesothelioma Center and endowed professorships, including the Seymour Milstein Professorship of Cardiology, held by Allan Schwartz, MD.

Philip Milstein was named a trustee of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital in 2012 and his father, Seymour, served as chairman of the board of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital from 1989 to 1996. Together with his brother, Paul, and his sister, Gloria Milstein Flanzer, Seymour provided the lead gift for the Milstein Hospital Building, the main building of NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia. The Vivian and Seymour Milstein family made the transformational gift in 2005 toward the creation of NewYork-Presbyterians Vivian and Seymour Milstein Family Heart Center, a 142,000-square-foot state-of-the-art facility that features advanced cardiac diagnostic technology and provides treatments that are frequently less invasive, more accurate, and require less healing time. Philips wife, Cheryl, serves as vice chair of the Barnard College Board of Trustees. Philips sister, Connie, has been a trustee of NewYork-Presbyterian since 2000, and his niece, Abby Elbaum (CC 92), serves on the Heart Center Steering Committee and the Sloane Hospital for Women Advisory Committee of NewYork-Presbyterian, and is an emeritus member of the Columbia College Board of Visitors.

The Vivian and Seymour Milstein familys visionary leadership and steadfast support has helped NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital become a leader in heart care, said Dr. Steven J. Corwin, CEO of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. We are immensely grateful to the family for their support over the years, and we know that this latest gift will further advance medicine at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center.

Philip Milstein served as president and co-chairman of the Board of Trustees of Emigrant Savings Bank from 1987 to 2003. In 2003, together with his sister and niece, he founded Ogden CAP Properties, LLC, which owns and manages residential apartment buildings, commercial office and retail space, and The Jefferson Hotel in Washington, DC. Since graduating from Columbia College, he has been an active volunteer and generous benefactor of the College. He has been president of the Columbia College Alumni Association, and he served on the Columbia College Board of Visitors before becoming a University Trustee. He has provided support and leadership for countless efforts at the College, including the Philip L. Milstein Family Library, the Philip and Cheryl Milstein Scholarship Fund, the Columbia Tennis Alumni and Friends Head Coach of Mens Tennis, and the William Campbell Sports Complex. He also serves on CUMCs Board of Advisors, chairing the Capital Planning Committee.

As chair of the Capital Planning Committee, Philip Milstein has provided invaluable leadership in the creation of the new Medical and Graduate Education Building, said P. Roy Vagelos, MD (P&S 54), chair of the CUMC Board of Advisors. Dr. Vagelos, together with his wife, Diana Vagelos (Barnard 55), have made a major gift in support of the new building.

For Philip and Cheryl Milstein, their family connection to Columbia can be traced back more than half a century. It is wonderful and fitting that they would continue their legacy of generosity with the most important project for the future of medical and graduate education at CUMC, said Dr. Vagelos.

See original here:
Philip & Cheryl Milstein Give $20M to Columbia Univ. Med. Center

Philip & Cheryl Milstein donate $20m for Medical and Graduate Education Building

Public release date: 18-Mar-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Elizabeth Streich estreich@columbia.edu 212-305-3689 Columbia University Medical Center

NEW YORK, NY (March 18, 2013) Continuing their family's multigenerational connection to Columbia and support of its leadership in medicine, Philip (CC '71) and Cheryl Milstein (Barnard '82) have made a $20 million commitment to Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC). The pledge, through their family foundation, is the latest gift from the Philip Milstein family and is intended to support the medical center's campus revitalization, specifically, the new Medical and Graduate Education Building.

The new Medical and Graduate Education Building has been designed to support the intense training students receive at the College of Physicians and Surgeons (P&S) and the biomedical departments of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. The stunning design by Diller, Scofidio + Renfro includes innovative classroom and study spaces that will incorporate state-of-the-art information technology while facilitating collaborative, team-based learning. Work on the new building began in August 2012 and is expected to be completed by 2016. The Medical and Graduate Education Building is part of a larger plan to revitalize the medical center campus, which will also add green urban spaces for the benefit of everyone in the community, including patients who come to Columbia University Medical Center and its affiliate, NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia, for care.

"Over a lifetime of exceptional accomplishment, Philip Milstein has maintained an enduring commitment to his alma mater, and for that Columbia will be forever grateful," said University President Lee C. Bollinger. "The Milstein family's contributions to the University encompass everything from the Philip L. Milstein Family Library to financial aid and athletics. But nowhere has this generosity been more powerfully felt than at Columbia University Medical Center. This latest gift extends the family's ongoing commitment to ensuring world class medical training and the highest quality health care that saves lives and finds new cures."

"With this gift, Philip and Cheryl Milstein continue their family's tradition of extraordinary philanthropy to support the advancement of medicine at Columbia University Medical Center," said Lee Goldman, MD, dean of the Faculties of Health Sciences and Medicine and executive vice president for Health and Biomedical Sciences at Columbia University. "As a University Trustee since 1996 and a member of the CUMC Board of Advisors, Philip is a great friend to our institution, and we are grateful for his and Cheryl's important contribution to the revitalization of our shared CUMC and NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia campuses."

Philip Milstein's family's interest in health care can be traced back to his maternal grandfather, Joshua M. Leiner, who was a neurologist and the first practicing psychiatrist in Bronx County. Philip's parents, Vivian and Seymour Milstein, began their association with Columbia University Medical Center and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital in the 1950s. The family's support of medicine through the University includes the funding of research in the Mesothelioma Center and endowed professorships, including the Seymour Milstein Professorship of Cardiology, held by Allan Schwartz, MD.

Philip Milstein was named a trustee of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital in 2012 and his father, Seymour, served as chairman of the board of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital from 1989 to 1996. Together with his brother, Paul, and his sister, Gloria Milstein Flanzer, Seymour provided the lead gift for the Milstein Hospital Building, the main building of NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia. The Vivian and Seymour Milstein family made the transformational gift in 2005 toward the creation of NewYork-Presbyterian's Vivian and Seymour Milstein Family Heart Center, a 142,000-square-foot state-of-the-art facility that features advanced cardiac diagnostic technology and provides treatments that are frequently less invasive, more accurate, and require less healing time. Philip's wife, Cheryl, serves as vice chair of the Barnard College Board of Trustees. Philip's sister, Connie, has been a trustee of NewYork-Presbyterian since 2000, and his niece, Abby Elbaum (CC '92), serves on the Heart Center Steering Committee and the Sloane Hospital for Women Advisory Committee of NewYork-Presbyterian, and is an emeritus member of the Columbia College Board of Visitors.

"The Vivian and Seymour Milstein family's visionary leadership and steadfast support has helped NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital become a leader in heart care," said Dr. Steven J. Corwin, CEO of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. "We are immensely grateful to the family for their support over the years, and we know that this latest gift will further advance medicine at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center."

Philip Milstein served as president and co-chairman of the Board of Trustees of Emigrant Savings Bank from 1987 to 2003. In 2003, together with his sister and niece, he founded Ogden CAP Properties, LLC, which owns and manages residential apartment buildings, commercial office and retail space, and The Jefferson Hotel in Washington, DC. Since graduating from Columbia College, he has been an active volunteer and generous benefactor of the College. He has been president of the Columbia College Alumni Association, and he served on the Columbia College Board of Visitors before becoming a University Trustee. He has provided support and leadership for countless efforts at the College, including the Philip L. Milstein Family Library, the Philip and Cheryl Milstein Scholarship Fund, the Columbia Tennis Alumni and Friends Head Coach of Men's Tennis, and the William Campbell Sports Complex. He also serves on CUMC's Board of Advisors, chairing the Capital Planning Committee.

More here:
Philip & Cheryl Milstein donate $20m for Medical and Graduate Education Building

Paterno questions linger at trustees meeting

HERSHEY - Penn State's trustees heard Friday - if they didn't already know - that the firing of football coach Joe Paterno soon after Jerry Sandusky's arrest on child molestation charges remains an open wound among the school's vast ranks of alumni.

The subject was briefly debated by board members, but in a half-hour public comment section alumni were more heated, including calls for trustees to resign and for the NCAA to rescind its harsh sanctions imposed on the school last year.

The main target of criticism was the university's internal report into how university officials handled reports in 1998 and 2001 that Sandusky, a former assistant coach, was behaving inappropriately in team showers with boys. Sandusky was convicted of 45 criminal counts last year and is in state prison.

The report, produced by a team led by former FBI director Louis Freeh, has been a target of critics, including Paterno's family.

Paterno's firing, said alumnus Philip LaPorta of Leesburg, Va., has "wreaked havoc" on Paterno's family, the football program and the university.

"It is evident by the things that you have said and the things that you have failed to say regarding the Freeh report, your moral failure is cataclysmic," LaPorta told the board during a meeting at Hershey Medical Center. "Your failure in leadership is inexcusable."

Trustee Ken Frazier, for the second day, defended the Freeh report as independent and complete, based on available evidence and witnesses.

Frazier said the school had to "deal fairly and responsibly with the undeniable reality of harm to children on our campus by a former Penn State coach," and the documentary evidence that Freeh turned up was part of that process.

"We cannot put our heads in the sand and pretend that children were not hurt or that the documents do not exist," he said.

Frazier cautioned against investigating the Freeh report, warning it would be an attempt to rewrite history that would damage efforts to move the school past "this horrible event."

See original here:
Paterno questions linger at trustees meeting

Education Digest, March 17, 2013: Registration open for SLV Elementary School

FELTON

Registration open for SLV Elementary

Registration is now open for kindergarten to fifth-grade and for transitional kindergarten for the 2013-2014 school year at San Lorenzo Valley Elementary School.

To be eligible for kindergarten, children must be age 5 by Oct. 1. To be eligible for Transitional Kindergarten Academy, children must turn 5 between June 1 and Dec. 1. You can pick up a registration packet at the SLVE office at 7155 Highway 9, Felton, between 8 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Be sure to bring a copy of your child's birth certificate, immunization records and proof of residency. Kindergarten and first-grade students will also need to have a physical and oral health exam. For information, call 831-335-4475 or go to http://www.sle.slvusd.org.

SANTA CRUZ

Open house slated

Santa Cruz Children's School (K-6) will hold an open house 4-5 p.m. on April 2 at the school, 366 Gault St., Santa Cruz.

This event is an opportunity for parents to meet the kindergarten teacher and tour the school. Refreshments will be served.

For information, go to http://www.scchildrensschool.com call 831-429-8444.

WATSONVILLE

More here:
Education Digest, March 17, 2013: Registration open for SLV Elementary School