Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Estate gift to provide UAMS tuition scholarshi­ps

- JAIME ADAME

A scholarshi­p covering a year of tuition costs for an incoming medical student will be given out next fall after the establishm­ent of a first-of-itskind endowment at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.

The endowment is being created with a $1.5 million estate gift from Carl Stout, the university announced Monday.

The R. Louise Stout Simmons, M.D. Endowed Scholarshi­p, named in honor of Stout’s daughter, will be given out based on financial need, said Leslie Taylor, the university’s vice chancellor for communicat­ions and marketing.

Simmons was a UAMS graduate who died in 1970, according to the university.

Annual medical school tuition at UAMS for an Arkansas resident is $33,010, and for outof-state students it is $65,180. Since the 2015-16 academic year, tuition has increased by 24 percent for in-state students and 23 percent for out-of-state students, based on a

analysis.

Previous UAMS scholarshi­ps to medical students have covered tuition costs, but the Stout estate gift for the first time creates an endowment whose investment earnings can pay for full-tuition scholarshi­ps, according to the university.

“UAMS is an academic institutio­n as well as a health sciences center, and we take our job seriously to attract, teach and train tomorrow’s health care leaders,” Dr. Cam Patterson, the chancellor, said in a statement.

The first award from the Stout gift will go out in fall 2019, Taylor said. In future years, two students annually may receive the scholarshi­p, she said.

Not all UAMS students leave medical school with debt, but those that do must pay back an average of $190,000, according to the university.

Carl Stout worked for Alcoa and died in 1994, according to the university, with a trust he created providing for another daughter, Dorothy Aldridge, until her death. The remainder was designated to go to UAMS, according to the university.

Aldridge, described in the announceme­nt as a longtime supporter of UAMS, died in January. Her career included work as a medical researcher.

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