ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON ENGINEERING I95 



ill each case may or should be done by the Institution or others to 

 make the inventory complete for purposes of important research. 



These methods have all along been obviously proper introductories 

 to the work, but this committee has not felt authorized to enter 

 upon their promotion until specifically authorized so to do by the 

 Trustees of the Institution as part of a general and well considered 

 scheme approved by them. The committee has confined itself thus 

 far to the consideration of matters referred to them by the Executive 

 Committee. 



Recommendatio7is. — The specific recovimendations of the comniiitee 

 are, following the scheme of the Founder : 



1. That promotion of original research, rather than education as 

 commonly understood, be made the primary object of the Institution. 



2. That this object be promoted by — 



(a) The discover)^ of the exceptional man and assistance to him 

 to enable him to make the work for which he seems specially designed 

 his life work. 



{U) By increasing the facilities for higher education by ascertain- 

 ing just where those facilities are most likely to prove fruitful of 

 good to the country and to the world, by discovering what facilities 

 already exist, and, finally, the best wa}' of supplementing well 

 established and safely organized equipments for advanced and pro- 

 fessional education and scientific work. 



(<:) By utilizing and adding to existing facilities of the universi- 

 ties and other institutions of learning throughout the country and 

 aiding their teachers in research. 



3. That special aid be extended to fellows and other individuals 

 for stated work ; these fellows to be temporary, permanent, travel- 

 ing, etc., in order that all existing sources o knowledge may be 

 utilized to promote research. 



4. That a permanent Carnegie Institution organization be estab- 

 lished, consisting of — 



{a) Committees, general and advisory. 



((^) A faculty of a rather limited number of individuals, who are 

 specialists in the various departments, with a staff capable of con- 

 ducting the routine business of the Institution. 



5. That few, if any, Carnegie laboratories, workshops, or schools 

 be established as parts of same ; nor should those in existence be 

 taken over, thus saddling the Institution with management duties in 

 widely separated places and placing it in competition with existing 

 institutions. 



