Olsons donate $1 million


By Roman Veytsman
Arizona Daily Wildcat
Tuesday, January 25, 2005

Hoops coach, family plan to make pledge to Arizona Cancer Center

Lute Olson, head coach of the UA men's basketball team announced yesterday the Olson family plans to make a $1 million contribution to the Arizona Cancer Center. The donation is a gift from the family and will benefit the Bobbi Olson Endowment for Ovarian Cancer Research.

Olson said the donation "will set the stage" for a community that leads the world in women's cancer research, and "help things really happen."

Dr. David S. Alberts, Bobbi Olson's physician and the director of the Arizona Cancer Center thanked Olson and said he felt grateful Bobbi's memory is helping to find the cure for this disease.

He also said that the Arizona Cancer Center is one of the highest ranked centers in the world and that it would only get better.

Olson called the center and the Tucson community an "oasis in the desert," a sentiment echoed by Setsuko K. Chambers, M.D.

"As director of the Division of Women's Cancers at the Arizona Cancer Center, I am most grateful to the Olson family for this generous donation," Chambers said in a press release.

"I am firmly committed to developing this new clinical and research division. This gift is an important first step in helping realize our shared vision," she said.

Bobbi Olson passed away from ovarian cancer Jan. 1, 2001, after a 2 1/2 year battle with the disease.

"Bobbi's wish was that we would do everything we could do to cure this disease," Olson said.

The goal of the fund raising effort is to raise $50 million dollars, according to Alberts, which would make the Arizona Cancer Center the "center of the world" for research on women's cancer.

"(Bobbi) told me that I had to continue to fight and I told her that we would do that, but we would really gear up," Alberts said.

The money will go to infrastructure, including hiring new clinicians and researchers as well as building a new structure on North Campbell Avenue at the University Medical Center North Campus.

"It's a great day," Alberts said.