Philanthropic partners are the engine that gives Corporate Accountability International the vitality and ability to wage and win lifesaving campaigns. And not surprisingly our supporters are an impressive lot. There is Bill Scheide who made Brown v. Board of Education possible... Betty Morningstar who is quietly transforming the lives of Eastern European immigrants... Bill Loesch who marched alongside Martin Luther King... and so many more. Read about these and other remarkable supporters here.
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Long-time member Marcia Levine joined Corporate Accountability International’s first campaign with a deep desire to help people. And with the launch of the campaign Challenging Big Tobacco, she witnessed what the organization could accomplish. “When we began this work, I wouldn’t have bet a nickel that it was possible to impact the tobacco industry. Even after we helped secure the global tobacco treaty, I thought that we’d never get countries to sign on. That it now protects more than 87 percent of the world’s population is incredible.” Read more about Marcia Levine's commitment to social change and community leadership. |
Edmund A. “Ted” Stanley, Jr., a long-time Corporate Accountability International supporter, quiet benefactor of a range of causes, and highly-regarded businessman died at the age of 85 this winter. Throughout his life, Stanley set an example of how to conduct business with integrity and a fidelity to the greater good. Read the full story of his personal commitment to business ethics and a more just economy.
One day in 1993, Edie Allen's phone rang. It was an organizer from Corporate Accountability International (then INFACT), whose work on nuclear weapons she had been supporting since 1987. This time, the organizer was asking for her support on a new campaign to take down Big Tobacco. Allen joined the campaign that instant. And to this day she has remained one of Corporate Accountability International’s strongest supporters.
During the late 50s and early 60s, Judith spent much of her time outside her university, selling one dollar tickets to baked bean fundraisers or handing out buttons at shopping centers. Judith later found herself running local campaigns in and around Princeton, New Jersey. William had long been a collector of early printing and music, including the Gutenberg Bible, Emancipation Proclamation and Declaration of Independence. His father, and grandfather before him, had worked for Standard Oil. Both men turned their fortune first to collecting books, and then to libraries and schools. William and Judith have supported Corporate Accountability International “since the beginning.”
