During this period he received a stipend from the Carnegie Institute for Peace.
The Carnegie Institute responded with a check for $20,000.
He achieved a research scholarship at the Carnegie Institute.
For many years, until his retirement in 1974, he also taught gifted students at the Carnegie Institute there.
He then showed the painting at the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh, and asked $4,000 for it.
The name was changed to the Carnegie Institute of Technology in 1912, and the school began offering four-year degrees.
He earned a degree in fine arts from Carnegie Institute of Technology.
In 1943 he got a bachelor's degree from Carnegie Institute of Technology.
He had found that his teaching responsibilities at the Carnegie Institute largely precluded him from doing research.
He attended the Carnegie Institute of Technology graduating in 1957.