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(page 4136 of 4158)

Government Grants Available for Technology

The Commerce Department is giving out $17-million this year through its Telecommunications and Information Infrastructure Assistance Program. The goal of the project is to improve education, health care, libraries, and other such services by using technology. The National Urban League in New York,…

Grant Maker Showcases Islamic Art on the Web

The Rockefeller Foundation is hoping its Web site will broaden understanding of Islamic art. The New York grant maker is displaying “Modernities & Memories,” a collection of works by 13 different Islamic artists from nine countries, on the Internet. The original exhibit, which the Rockefeller…

‘Motley Fool’: Serious Fund Raising

Share Our Strength is thankful to be associated with a group of on-line Fools. The Washington antipoverty organization is $120,000 wealthier after an on-line fund-raising drive conducted in its behalf by The Motley Fool, an Internet investment publication that reaches about 750,000 people each…

‘Harvard Business Review’: Entrepreneurial Pitfalls

Many pitfalls await the growing number of non-profit organizations now seeking commercial revenue, warns an article in the Harvard Business Review (January-February). Rising costs and increased competition for philanthropic support are prompting many such groups to behave more like for-profit…

‘The New Republic’: Turner’s Problematic Gift

Ted Turner’s gift to the United Nations will finance many worthy causes but also sets a disturbing precedent, says The New Republic (January 26). Under the United Nations Charter, the 185 member nations of the U.N. General Assembly should bear the full cost of U.N. activities to maintain world…

‘Fortune’: a Ranking of 1997’s Top Donors

With his $1-billion pledge to the United Nations, Ted Turner topped Fortune magazine’s (February 2) list of the country’s most-generous philanthropists in 1997. The second annual ranking includes 40 donors, up from the 25 it named a year ago. The magazine said it decided to increase the size of its…

Charity Not Bound by Disclosure Act

A social-services charity in Connecticut that receives substantial government financing does not have to release its administrative records under the state’s Freedom of Information Act, a state Appellate Court has ruled. The ruling made clear that Domestic Violence Services of Greater New Haven is…

Charities Prevail in Utah Ruling

The Salt Lake County Commission may continue to award contracts to charities that provide social services to indigent residents, a judge has ruled. Third District Judge Robert Hilder rejected arguments by County Attorney Doug Short that the contracts were tantamount to gifts of taxpayer funds to…

San Francisco Considers Disclosure Law for Charities That Receive City Funds

San Francisco charities that receive city funds would be required to open all their meetings to the public and take numerous other steps to disclose information about their finances and operations, under a plan being pushed by a city legislator. The controversial proposal, which was created in…

A Cause That’s Lost Its Appeal

Lawyers for death-row inmates form charities to continue work after federal funds are eliminated From a locked and sterile concrete room on Missouri’s death row, Joe Amrine calmly recalls the crime that landed him here -- murdering a man with an ice pick. As he speaks, he taps his long fingernails…