"Two years ago when I created JoinLeeNow, the purpose was to raise money for one project that showed great promise in type 1 diabetes research. Since then I have become aware of additional human clinical efforts so we have made a commitment to continue fundraising to support these and additional projects. Click the 'donate now' icon above to help!"
Donate Now
There are two ways to donate to JoinLeeNow, online or through the mail. For online domestic donations, please click the below button to go to Network For Good, the official online donation center for JoinLeeNow and the Iacocca Foundation.
If you are outside of the United States and would like to donate online to Dr. Faustman's research, please visit the .
If you prefer, you can mail your tax-deductible donations to:
The Iacocca Foundation Join Lee Now 17 Arlington Street Boston, MA 02116
Please make all checks payable to: Iacocca Foundation
Note that for donations under $100, your canceled check will serve as your receipt. For donations of $100 or more, written acknowledgement will be mailed. Note also that we do not share donor information with any outside agency or organization. Finally, note that 90% of your donation will go directly to diabetes research.
NEW - With the expansion of JoinLeeNow, please designate your donations "Nathan-Faustman project" OR "diabetes research." This is effective with donations beginning August 2006. Through the end of 2006, all non-designated donations were given to the Nathan-Faustman project. Beginning January 1, 2007, all non-designated donations will be given to our general diabetes fund, for other projects.
The Iacocca Foundation strives to make donating online safe, easy and secure, but also as convenient as possible. We are excited to share that you can now donate using an online check in addition to the existing credit card processing. This option is especially effective for larger donations where you can minimize transaction fees.
The Iacocca Foundation is a supporting organization formed under the laws of the State of California. As a supporting organization, granted tax exemption pursuant to I.R.C. Section 509(a)(3), we are a public charity and file an annual Form 990. The deductibility of any donations made to the Iacocca Foundation is governed by Internal Revenue Code section 170(b)(1)(A)(viii).
Early life
Iacocca was born in to Nicola and Antoinette (Perrotto) Iacocca, immigrants who had settled in Pennsylvania's steel making belt. Iacocca graduated from Allentown's and in neighboring , with a degree in industrial engineering. He is an alumnus of Fraternity. After graduating from Lehigh, he won the Wallace Memorial Fellowship and went to , where he took his electives in and . He then began a career at as an engineer. Eventually becoming dissatisfied with that job, he switched career paths at Ford, entering the company's sales force. He was quite successful in sales, and he moved up through the ranks of Ford, moving ultimately to product development.
Iacocca was married to Mary McCleary in 1956. McCleary died in 1984 after a decades-long struggle with diabetes. Both before and after her death, Iacocca became a strong advocate for better medical treatment of diabetes patients, who frequently faced debilitating and fatal complications. Iacocca married his second wife Peggy Johnson on 17-Apr-1986 and they were divorced in 1987. He had his marriage to Peggy Johnson annulled after 19 months of marriage. He married a third wife, Darrien Earle, in 1991. They were divorced 3 years later in 1994.
Chrysler
Iacocca started as Chrysler's chairman, and began a heavy restructuring of Chrysler. At the time Iacocca took over, Chrysler was on the verge of bankruptcy, as it was focusing most of its money on large, fuel thirsty cars that the public didn't want due to a fuel crisis at the time. First, Iacocca announced plant closures, job layoffs, and his plans for the company. His next move was cutting several large models, which were heavily unprofitable, and put the subcompact and into production. The Omni and Horizon became instant hits, selling over 300,000 units each their debut year, showing what was to come for Chrysler - yet somewhat ironically the Omni and Horizon had been designed by the European division of the company which Iacocca had axed in 1978.
Realizing that the company would go out of business if it did not receive a significant amount of money to turn the company around, Iacocca approached the in and asked for a loan guarantee. While it is sometimes said that Congress lent Chrysler the money, it, in fact, only guaranteed the loans. Most thought this was an unprecedented move, but Iacocca pointed to the government bail-outs of the airline and railroad industries, arguing that more jobs were at stake in Chrysler's possible demise. In the end, though the decision was controversial, Iacocca received the loan guarantee from the government.
After receiving this reprieve, Chrysler released the first of the line, the and in 1981, compact automobiles based on design proposals that Ford had rejected during Iacocca's tenure there. Coming right after the oil crisis of the 1970s, these small, efficient and inexpensive, cars sold rapidly. In addition, two years later Chrysler released the , based on a proposal of a key engineering executive who joined Chrysler after being dismissed by ; to this day, Chrysler leads the automobile industry in minivan sales[]. Because of these three cars, and the reforms Iacocca implemented, the company turned around quickly and was actually able to repay the government-backed loans seven years earlier than expected.
Iacocca was also responsible for Chrysler's acquisition of in , which brought the profitable division under Chrysler's corporate umbrella. It also created the short-lived , formed from the remnants of AMC. By this time, AMC had already finished most of the work with the , which Iacocca desperately wanted. The Grand Cherokee would not be released until 1992 for the 1993 model year, at which time Iacocca left Chrysler.
"Return" to Chrysler
In July 2005, Iacocca returned to the airwaves as Chrysler's pitchman, along with stars such as and , to promote Chrysler's "Employee Pricing Plus" program; the ads reprise the "If you can find a better car, buy it" line that was Iacocca's in the 1980s. In return for his services, Iacocca and agreed that his fees, plus a $1 donation per vehicle sold from through , , would be donated to the Iacocca Foundation for research.
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