Emory Report
November 23, 2009
Volume 23, Number 11



   

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November 23, 2009
Campaign Emory
$4.5M gift to Oxford, Candler honors 'extraordinary legacy'

By Maria Lameiras

Oxford College and Candler School of Theology have received gifts totaling more than $4.25 million from the Charles Edwin Suber Foundation.

Oxford College received a $3.35 million gift, the largest cash gift in the college’s history, and Candler School of Theology received a gift of $903,177. Both gifts were unrestricted to be used for the most pressing needs of the schools.

The Suber Foundation was established by the estate of Charles Edwin “Ed” Suber. A 1942 graduate of Oxford College who passed away in November 2007, Suber attended Emory University and was retired from the Fulton County Superior Court system as court clerk.

A portion of the Oxford College gift, $100,000, will be used to establish a scholarship in Suber’s name. The remaining $3.25 million will be used to support Oxford’s building program, including a new science facility, which would replace the current facility built in 1965, and a new library, replacing the current 1970 building.

Oxford College Dean Stephen Bowen says, “We have needed a major gift to create momentum in raising funds for these building projects. This is that gift. When we look back after 10 years, we will recognize this as a pivotal moment in the development of Oxford College.”

Candler Dean Jan Love says she will assess where the gift can best be applied in light of funding needs for phase two of Candler’s building, as well as student support and faculty enhancement.

“The generosity of this lifelong United Methodist layman is overwhelming and will benefit the Candler community for generations to come. We are deeply grateful for this remarkable gift,” Love says.

Suber was a lifelong resident of Atlanta’s Ben Hill community, where his family owned and operated the C.P. Suber Grocery Store. He served in the Army during World War II.

Jim Campbell, executor of Suber’s estate, says his first cousin was an ordinary man who has left an extraordinary legacy.

“Ed indicated a direction through the gifts he made through his will, and we followed through with that direction,” says Campbell, who chose Oxford College and Candler School of Theology to receive gifts from Suber’s estate. “He was very kind and he had a great sense of humor. He loved to travel and square dance. He lived a very simple life, but he was very generous to those people and causes he cared about. He was a great person, and his life will go on even if he is not here.”