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Create a Legacy Gift

A deep commitment to U Biology… Through a Legacy Gift

My wife Tanya Williams and I are happy to be able to provide a planned gift to the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Utah. We moved to Utah in 2010 to establish my Biodiversity and Conservation Ecology laboratory. I am thankful for the research, teaching and service opportunities provided to me by the University of Utah’s School of Biological Sciences, and Tanya is grateful to be able to serve her patients at the U’s School of Medicine.

Our work has benefited greatly from the generosity, resources and collegiality provided by the U, its faculty, alumni and other benefactors. This support has enabled me to study, conserve and teach about the world’s endangered biodiversity and helped Tanya provide healthcare to some of the underserved populations in this beautiful state.

We hope to “pay it forward” by providing a modest legacy gift for SBS. Planned gifts of this kind will help SBS continue to attract and support the best PhD students in biodiversity research, conservation biology, environmental science, ornithology and wildlife ecology during this time of rapid and devastating global change that requires all hands on deck.

We hope you will join us in making a legacy gift to the School of Biological Sciences.

—Çağan H. Şekercioğlu, PhD and Tanya M. Williams, MD

To donate, visit biology.utah.edu/giving | Gifts in any amount are gratefully received.

Learn more about legacy (planned) giving and the Crimson Laureate | Legacy Societies at biology.utah.edu or 801.587.9020

Detail of illustration featured in De Humani Corporis Fabrica by Belgian anatomist, physician, and author Andreas Vesalius (1514–1564).

Detail of illustration featured in De Humani Corporis Fabrica by Belgian anatomist, physician, and author Andreas Vesalius (1514–1564).