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UNO Alumni Association

Dick Holland receives UNO Alumni Citation

The UNO Alumni Association bestowed its Citation for Alumnus Achievement upon Richard Holland during the university’s winter commencement Dec. 21 at the Omaha Civic Auditorium.

 

Holland received a bachelor’s degree in art from the University of Omaha in 1948. He established a long and distinguished career as an advertising agency executive and, with his wife, Mary, carried out many philanthropic efforts. He has continued his charitable endeavors since his wife’s death in 2006.

 

The Citation, inaugurated in 1949, is presented at each UNO commencement. The association’s highest honor, it encompasses career achievement, community service, involvement in business and professional associations, and fidelity to UNO. Association President Lee Denker presented the award to Holland, the 145th Citation recipient.

 

“The Hollands’ admirable and generous philanthropy has enriched numerous Omahans young and old, directly and indirectly,” said Denker. “Since establishing a distinguished career in advertising, Mr. Holland has continued to a second career of giving. He remains intimately engaged in the benefit of others and is as willing to give of his time and talent as he is of his treasure. That extends to wide-ranging support of the university, furthering its mission and pursuit of excellence.”

 

An Omaha native, Holland attended Omaha University after graduating from Central High School in 1938. He majored in chemistry at OU but his studies were interrupted by service during World War II as an officer in the chemical corps. After the war he returned to Omaha University and switched majors, studying art. He graduated then took over the advertising business of his father, Lewis Holland.

 

In 1957 Richard Holland helped establish the Holland, Dreves, Reilly advertising agency in Omaha. In 1979 it merged with a Lincoln agency and became Swanson, Rollheiser, Holland, Inc. Holland remained a principal member until his retirement, at which time the agency was Omaha’s second largest advertising company.

 

Holland has been active in numerous organizations. He was president of Opera Omaha from 1966 to 1970. He currently is vice chairman of the board of the Opera Omaha Foundation and vice chairman of Omaha Performing Arts. He and his wife served on other boards for organizations such as Omaha Symphony, Center for Western Studies–Joslyn Art Museum, Weitz Series Funds, The Nature Conservancy, All Our Kids Inc. and Child Saving Institute.

 

The couple’s Holland Foundation also gave generously to these and other organizations. Their most notable contribution was a multi-million-dollar grant to Omaha’s $90-million Performing Arts Center, which opened in the fall of 2005 bearing the names of Richard and Mary Holland.

 

The couple also has provided substantial gifts to the University of Nebraska Medical Center and to the University of Nebraska at Omaha. Their contributions at UNO include funding the Robert T. Reilly Chair honoring Holland’s former advertising partner. The endowment made that Communication School professorship among the most rewarding at UNO. More recently, Holland was a major donor to the installation of a supercomputer at the Peter Kiewit Institute. Housed in the newly named Holland Computing Center, it is touted as one of the most powerful computers in the world.

 

Holland’s UNO ties run deep. His father is mentioned in the 1924 Gateway yearbook as an assembly speaker during his tenure as advertising manager for Orchard & Wilhelm Company. Richard had three siblings who also graduated from Omaha University: William (1938), John (1942) and Jean (1946). John Holland, who became a leading researcher in the field of career development and who now is a professor emeritus at Johns Hopkins University, received the Citation for Alumnus Achievement in 1981. The Hollands are the third set of brothers to receive the Citation, joining Glenn and Robert Cunningham and Howard and Norman Sorensen.

 

Holland and his wife, Mary, had three daughters, Barbara, Mary Ann and Nancy, and five grandchildren.

 

 

 

 



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