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    Copernicus Cultural Foundation gifts $130,000 to UWSP College of Fine Arts and Communication

    By Shereen Siewert,

    11 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4Omv3e_0ui7JVIl00
    Pictured are members of the Copernicus Foundation Board of Directors, including Lawrence Leviton, from left, John Kolinski, Chrismary Pacyna, Paul Anderson and Tom Mrozinski, as well as Aber Suzuki Center Director AnnMarie Novak, Music Chairman and Professor Mathew Buchman, COFAC Dean Valerie Cisler and Music Associate Professor Andrew Moran. Photo courtesy University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point.

    STEVENS POINT – The Aber Suzuki Center and students within the Department of Music at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point will benefit from gifts from a local foundation funded by notable Stevens Point businessman Edmund Bukolt.

    The Copernicus Cultural Foundation of Stevens Point gifted the UW-Stevens Point College of Fine Arts and Communication with $130,000, with $80,000 supporting the Suzuki program for instrument repair, new instruments and guest artist visits, as well as $50,000 for a music department scholarship endowment.

    This is the third gift from the foundation to support music at UWSP; others in 2021 and 2023 funded a $1 million endowed professorship for cello and music education advocacy and music scholarships. The collective gifts from Edmund and Kathryn Bukolt and the foundation they established now reach more than $1.16 million, said Valerie Cisler, COFAC dean.

    “We are so very pleased to have been honored once again by the Copernicus Cultural Foundation with their recent gifts to support Music Student Scholarships, the Aber Suzuki Center and the 75-year anniversary of the Central Wisconsin Symphony Orchestra,” Cisler said. “This support of music, dance and the arts has had a profound impact on the quality of programs on our campus and, by extension, the quality of life in the community.”

    “I think I speak for the region when I express our sincere gratitude to the Bukolt family and the Copernicus Cultural Foundation board for their lifelong support of our students and programs as well as their holistic advocacy for artistic accessibility and educational opportunities,” Chancellor Thomas Gibson said.

    The Copernicus Cultural Foundation was established by Bukolt in 1959. He was a longtime area businessman and president of the Lullabye Furniture Co., and had a strong interest in the musical arts throughout Wisconsin. He collected valuable instruments with impressive pedigrees that were used for many years by UW-Stevens Point string faculty members, who also performed with them as part of the Central Wisconsin Symphony Orchestra. Bukolt played violin with CWSO along with several other regional symphony orchestras. He died in 1964.

    Source: UW-Stevens Point.

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