From: Carnegie Mellon President's Office
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Friday, July 25, 2008 11:06 AM
To: Carnegie Mellon Alumni
Subject: Message From the President - Remembering Randy Pausch

 


Dear Alumni:

 Randy Pausch
<http://www.cmu.edu/homepage/images/2007/randyPausch_236x236.jpg> It is with
great sadness that I inform you that our dear friend and colleague Randy
Pausch passed away today, July 25, after a brave struggle against pancreatic
cancer.

Randy captured the minds and hearts of millions worldwide with his Carnegie
Mellon lecture, "Really Achieving Your Childhood Dreams," and his book, "The
Last Lecture."

Randy, who earned his doctorate from Carnegie Mellon in 1988, returned to
the university in 1997 as an associate professor of human-computer
interaction and computer science. Along with Carnegie Mellon Professor Don
Marinelli, Randy was the co-founder of the Entertainment Technology Center,
a leading interactive multimedia education and entertainment center.

At Carnegie Mellon, Randy was also the director of the Alice software
project, a revolutionary way to teach computer programming. The interactive
Alice program teaches computer programming by having kids make animated
movies and games. A fitting legacy to Randy's life and work, Alice may in
the future help to reverse the dramatic drop in the number of students
majoring in computer science at colleges and universities. Randy was also
known as a pioneer in the development of virtual reality, and he created the
popular Building Virtual Worlds class.

An award-winning teacher and researcher, Randy was also a National Science
Foundation Presidential Young Investigator and a Lilly Foundation Teaching
Fellow. He used sabbatical leaves to work at Walt Disney Imagineering and
Electronic Arts (EA), and he consulted with Google Inc. on user interface
design. He is the author or co-author of five books and more than 70
articles.

Perhaps the greatest lesson, however, Randy taught us all was how to live,
even in the face of great challenges, and how to follow our passion. While
Randy's greatest passion was clearly his family, he did not shy from sharing
his passion for his work as a professor, for his students, and for Carnegie
Mellon. We will miss Randy, but we will carry the memory of him and all that
he did to make Carnegie Mellon a better university and each of us who knew
him a better person.

A memorial service for Randy will be scheduled at a later date. For more
information, visit www.cmu.edu
<http://www.alumniconnections.com/links/link.cgi?l=357582&h=298523&e=CMU-200
80725123051> .

Sincerely,

Jared L. Cohon
President, Carnegie Mellon University

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Office of Alumni Relations
Carnegie Mellon University 
5017 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
 
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