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For further information contact:
Carnegie Corporation of New York
Public Affairs 212-207-6273
Kurt L. Schmoke, Dean of Howard University School of Law and former
Mayor of Baltimore, joins Carnegie Corporation of New York Board
of Trustees
New
York, NY —May 29, 2007. Kurt L. Schmoke, Dean of the
historic and prestigious Howard University School of Law, has been
elected to the board of Carnegie Corporation of New York, effective
June 14th, 2007. Schmoke, a Rhodes Scholar and dynamic urban leader,
is the twenty-first member of the board and joins a group of three
university presidents, three former governors, as well as current
and former leaders from the World Bank, who serve as trustees to
the Corporation.
“I
am pleased that Kurt Schmoke, the former Mayor of Baltimore, has
accepted our invitation to join our board. His experience as a big-city
mayor and educator, as well as his commitment to social justice
and his lifelong involvement in education and public service will
serve to strengthen Carnegie Corporation’s leadership in the
coming years,” said Vartan Gregorian, president of Carnegie
Corporation of New York.
Before
his appointment to Howard in 2003, Schmoke was a partner with the
international law firm of Wilmer, Cutler and Pickering. He served
as Baltimore’s mayor from 1987 to1999, initiating a number
of groundbreaking programs in the areas of housing, education, public
health and economic development. During his tenure, the Clinton
Administration designated Baltimore an empowerment zone city, citing
Schmoke’s programs in economic development and public housing.
He was also awarded the National Literacy Award for his efforts
to promote adult literacy.
Schmoke
began his career in public service during the Carter Administration,
serving as Assistant Director of the White House Domestic Policy Staff. From
1982 until he was elected mayor in 1987, Schmoke was the State’s Attorney for Baltimore City.
He received his undergraduate degree in history from Yale University and earned his J. D. from Harvard Law School. He was appointed Honorary Fellow of Balliol college, Oxford University.
Carnegie
Corporation of New York was created by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to
promote “the advancement and diffusion of knowledge and understanding.”
For over 95 years the Corporation has carried out Carnegie's vision
of philanthropy by building on his two major concerns: international
peace and advancing education and knowledge. As a grantmaking foundation,
the Corporation will invest more than $90 million this year in nonprofits
to fulfill Mr. Carnegie’s mission, “to do real and permanent
good in this world.” The Corporation's capital fund, originally
donated at a value of about $135 million, had a market value of
$2.5 billion on September 30, 2006.
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