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Carnegie Mellon Professors Participate in FCC Hearing

 

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No man can become rich without himself enriching others

Thoughts on giving

 


Andrew Carnegie was a penniless Scottish immigrant who became a steel-maker, controlling over 25% of American steel production by 1899. By 1902, he was the richest man in the world.

But if that was his only legacy, by his own words, Carnegie would have “died disgraced.” “There is no class so pitiably wretched,” he said, “as that which possesses money and nothing else.”

Over the course of his lifetime, Andrew Carnegie would give away over $350 million dollars. In today’s economy, those gifts would surpass a half billion.

Most of us don’t have $350 million dollars, much less a half a billion, but we can make choices about how to use the money we do have.

We can decide to make an impact.

We ask you to build upon Andrew Carnegie’s legacy. Endow a building. Equip a laboratory. Establish a fellowship to support research, as Carnegie once did for a struggling scientist named Marie Curie.

The inscription on Andrew Carnegie’s tombstone reads, “Here lies a man who knew how to enlist the service of better men than himself.”


Be one of them. Make a choice. Make an impact.

From Phillip Dowd

 

"If you want to get involved in something on the side...a university is perfect. Everywhere you look there are people doing interesting things."


"I support graduate students....You get involved in a project, like a fellowship at CIT, and you see that it produces value and ideas which give rise to new products and industries."

 


"Trying to make a difference—that’s the accomplishment. It’s also nice having someone say 'Thank you, you really did a nice job.' That’s what really drives me forward."

 

 

 

 

 

 
     
       
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