Philanthropy (magazine)

Philanthropy is a quarterly magazine published by the Philanthropy Roundtable.[1] First published as a newsletter in 1987, Philanthropy became a glossy magazine in 1996. The magazine's primary focus is philanthropy, with a special interest in donor intent and philanthropic freedom. The magazine is headquartered in Washington, D.C.[2]

Philanthropy
FrequencyQuarterly
Year founded1987
CompanyPhilanthropy Roundtable
CountryUnited States
Based inWashington, D.C.
LanguageEnglish
Websitewww.philanthropyroundtable.org/magazine/
ISSN1535-4709

Content

Donors featured in Philanthropy have included Charles G. Koch, Bernie Marcus, Tom Monaghan, Gerry Lenfest, Andrew Grove, Truett Cathy, Phil Anschutz, Roger Hertog, Charles Bronfman, Peter G. Peterson, Adrienne Arsht, and Nancy Brinker.

Personnel

Philanthropy is edited by Caitrin Nicol Keiper. The masthead also includes the Philanthropy Roundtable's vice president for publications, Karl Zinsmeister, and contributing editors Arthur C. Brooks and John J. Miller.[2]

Philanthropy authors have included Matthew Bishop, James K. Glassman, Jonathan Last, Yuval Levin, Myron Magnet, James Panero, Kyle Smith, Bret Stephens, Alvin Townley, and Juan Williams.

gollark: Not sure where you'd expect it to get the times from, though.
gollark: I can probably program something if you're specific about your requirements.
gollark: There are projects you could do which might *actually* be useful and not too hard to do, and you should consider those instead of trying to blindly ape Windows and stuff for the 129712815261th CC OS.
gollark: <@630513495003103242> Useful "OS"es are hard to develop because they involve somewhat fiddly programming stuff generally, like, well, screen sharing, networking, that sort of thing. If you don't have a decent knowledge base making a useful OS is going to be hard, and OSes, being complex, are not a good way to learn.
gollark: How come PotatOS now works in CCEmuX but loops infinitely in Copy Cat?

References

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