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BYU announces $10 million donation for engineering global leadership center

Brigham Young University alumni Dave and Rachel Weidman have donated $10 million to fund a new center for global leadership at their alma mater.

The Weidman Center for Global Leadership will be part of the Ira A. Fulton College of Engineering and Technology, where Dave earned a bachelor’s degree. Rachel also has a bachelor’s degree from BYU.

“In an increasingly global world, today’s engineering and technical talent must be capable of operating on a global stage, leading multi-cultural teams and creating new markets to help companies meet and satisfy customer needs,” stated Dave Weidman, chairman and CEO of Celanese Corporation, a Dallas-based Fortune 500 manufacturer of specialty materials and chemical products used in most major industrial and consumer applications. “Establishing a leadership center dedicated to enabling BYU to develop talented engineers and technologists will help contribute in a meaningful and purposeful way to building tomorrow’s global business, engineering and technology leaders.”

The Weidman Center joins the ranks of recently established leadership-focused programs at top engineering schools at MIT, Stanford and Michigan. It will prepare engineers to leave BYU with not only strong technical skills, but also the ability to lead teams across cultures and time zones.

“The challenges of competing in a global economy and addressing the problems facing humankind will require globally competent leaders with strong technical skills,” said Alan Parkinson, dean of the Ira A. Fulton College. “The Weidmans’ remarkable generosity will allow us to accelerate our efforts to teach and practice leadership in a global context.”

The donation is complete, so the center is fully endowed. The next step will be to hire a director to establish and coordinate even more international experiences for engineering students. The college already sends more than 100 students abroad every year.

The Weidman Center, which will be housed in the Clyde Building, will create more opportunities similar to these two recent examples:

-- As part of a consortium sponsored by GM, BYU engineers led students at 20 institutions spanning 16 time zones and speaking 8 languages in the design and construction of a Formula One racecar.

-- A student team was engaged by a non-profit to design an innovative and cost-effective apparatus that enables poor East African women to turn abundant coconuts into valuable coconut oil. They delivered their oil press to Tanzania and trained women how to use it.

The Center will also support faculty in developing curriculum and establishing international academic and industrial contacts.

One reason BYU’s engineering and technology college is uniquely suited for developing global engineering leaders is the fact that nearly 70 percent of the college’s 3,080 undergraduates and 360 graduate students are fluent in a second language.

This is not the Weidmans’ first donation to BYU. They have been members of BYU’s President’s Leadership Council, a group of generous donors involved with the university, since 2009.

“The Weidman Center will play a critical role in advancing our abilities to prepare BYU students for global leadership,” said university President Cecil O. Samuelson. “Dave and Rachel are great friends to BYU. They don’t seek attention for their good works, but we want them to know we couldn’t be more grateful for their support.”

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Thank You So Much!
  3/6/2011 12:47 PM by Brock

I wont be going to the Fulton College branch of BYU but regardless I am so happy to see so much generosity. Thank you so much for giving back so much to BYU.

Awesome!
  3/5/2011 9:35 AM by Timothy

Thank you for supporting and helping BYU! Its the Weidmans and others like them that make the world a better place! Thanks again!

Thanks!
  3/4/2011 4:26 PM by Jennifer

Many thanks to the Weidman family for their generosity. So appreciative of people who are willing to invest their funds in this university.

10 million and all you can do is criticize
  3/4/2011 3:51 PM by David

I am disappointed to see people criticize this level of generosity. Be it $10 or $10 million, I thank the Weidmans for contributing to BYU. I'm not an engineering student, but I am still grateful to you for improving the education of my fellow students. You could have spent the money many other ways; however, you chose to give to BYU. Thank you!

How Remarkable!
  3/4/2011 2:09 PM by Dallin

The Weidmans are remarkable people. I appreciate their donation. What great examples. I am not in the engineering department, but I think it is phenomenal that they have received this funding. It's all about building the Kingdom. If our engineering program can become nation and world-known, placing students in great positions both nationally and internationally, how remarkable that would be. Becoming up-to-date in technology and leadership training is a great step in building the Kingdom.

Thank you
  3/4/2011 1:53 PM by Nicole

It makes me realize how many people are working behind the strings for my education right now at BYU. I want to take better advantage of all of the opportunities available.

Of course more $$ for engineering
  3/4/2011 12:10 PM by Allan

Thanks for the generous donation.

@Andrew

The people with money donate back to the programs they graduated from. I don't think its a coincidence that the engineers and businessmen have the money to donate.


  3/4/2011 11:34 AM by Steven

Remarkable. Thank you Weidmans.

More $$ for Engineering?
  3/4/2011 10:51 AM by Andrew

I am grateful for the generous donations of alumni. I just wish alumni would donate money to BYU colleges and academic departments that don't already have lots of money like the Marriott School and the Fulton College do.

demanding entitlement?
  3/3/2011 10:36 PM by Jordan

@ Alexander

Take that attitude anywhere else and they'll give you $50,000 to $70,000 of student debt for it.

thats why we study here
  3/3/2011 8:42 PM by Alexander

They make us smart so we'll get rich become fat and give back our money to them in tithes and alumni donations :) smart men at the top neh?

What a guy!
  3/3/2011 4:26 PM by Steven

What an amazing thing to do. One million thanks to the Weidmans. No, how about ten million thanks..


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From left: Alan Parkinson, dean of the Ira A. Fulton College, thanks Rachel and Dave Weidman for their $10 million donation to fund a new center for global leadership at their alma mater.

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The center was announced today before a crowd at the de Jong Concert Hall.

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Dave Weidman, chairman and CEO of Celanese Corporation, a Dallas-based Fortune 500 manufacturer of specialty materials and chemical products.
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