UCLA Library Receives $2 Million Gift from Alumna's Estate

LOS ANGELES (CNS) - UCLA Library has received a $2 million gift from the estate of Irla “Lee'' Zimmerman Oetzel, who earned three degrees from the university, including a doctorate in psychology in 1953, and was instrumental in the creation of a widely used language skills assessment tool for children.

UCLA officials said the unrestricted gift will help the Louise M. Darling Biomedical Library build, maintain, preserve and promote its collection of nearly 700,000 print volumes and thousands of electronic resources, including journals, databases and other materials.

“Lee's bequest reflects her professional background and appreciation for her time spent conducting extensive research in the biomedical library, both as a student and in recent years with intermittent reference requests,'' said Virginia Steel, UCLA's Norman and Armena Powell University Librarian.

“The library is extremely grateful to Lee and her estate for this generous gift, and with it, the opportunity to achieve our new strategic directions more quickly,'' Steel said.

The biomedical library is used by students, faculty and medical staff from the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, the schools of Dentistry and Nursing and the UCLA College life sciences division, as well as UCLA research centers and institutes, and Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center.

Oetzel, a Southern California resident for most of her life and longtime supporter of the biomedical library, died in January 2020 at the age of 96.

According to the university, “her legacy includes research that led to the creation of Preschool Language Scale, a language skills assessment tool for children. Oetzel developed the test with a speech therapist and an early childhood educator she met while working as a consultant for Head Start, the federally funded child development program.''

The first version of the test was published in 1969.

The fifth edition of the assessment, the PLS-5, was published in 2011 and is now the most widely used preschool language assessment in schools and health care settings in the U.S., the United Kingdom and Australia, according to UCLA. A copy of the second edition, from 1979, is housed in the biomedical library.

“Lee always felt very strongly that, had she not gone to UCLA and gleaned the knowledge in her undergraduate and graduate work, she would not have had the ability to develop the PLS test,'' said Ellen Baskin, a close friend and the trustee of Oetzel's estate. “She knew and respected the value of hard work, and her wealth came in large part from the test royalties, and so she wanted to give back to UCLA, and specifically to the library, in recognition of all she had learned there.''

Photo: Getty Images

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