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Chapple Professor

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Friday, May 5, 2006
Maxwell School of
Syracuse University Names Long-Time Faculty Member to Newly Endowed
Professorship
The Maxwell School of Syracuse University
has received a $1.5-million gift from John H. Chapple, an alumnus of the School,
to establish and endow the Chapple Family Professor of Citizenship and Democracy
in the Department of Political Science. The dean of the Maxwell School, Mitchel
Wallerstein, has announced that long-time Maxwell political science professor
Robert D. McClure has been named as the inaugural Chapple Family Professor.
The duties of the Chapple Family Professor are to carry on the long tradition of
the Maxwell School, dating back to its founding in 1924, of encouraging
undergraduates to learn and think about their roles as citizens in a democracy.
To that end, the Chapple Family Professor will teach in, and provide leadership
for, the School’s two interdisciplinary, team-taught, undergraduate citizenship
courses: Critical Issues in the United States and Global Communities. Versions
of these courses have been offered at Maxwell for more than 80 years as a means
of fulfilling the School’s founding mission: to teach responsible citizenship to
Syracuse University’s undergraduates. The Chapple Family Professor also will
teach other political science courses in the broad area of citizenship and
democracy, to both undergraduate and graduate students.
“The courses with which this professorship is associated were envisioned first
by George Maxwell, the School’s founder; initially designed and taught by
Maxwell’s first dean; and further developed and strengthened by some of the
School’s most extraordinary teachers -T.V. Smith, Stuart Gerry Brown, Ralph
Ketcham, Mike Sawyer, and Don Meikeljohn, to name a few. This professorship,
while carrying that tradition into the 21st century, is the legacy of their
vision, dedication, and skill, and I am honored to be the beneficiary,” says
McClure.
John Chapple--currently Chairman, CEO, and President of Nextel Partners Inc., in
Kirkland, Washington--is a long-time supporter of the Maxwell School and
Syracuse University and serves on the Maxwell Advisory Board and the Syracuse
University Board of Trustees. Chapple, who received his political science degree
in 1975, says “I feel blessed to have had the opportunity to go to Syracuse
University, where I received an excellent education from and was inspired by
great faculty members like Bob McClure.”
After graduation, Chapple worked for the City of Syracuse and later for local
Syracuse Cablesystems. Chapple then joined American Cablesystems in Florida,
before heading west to tackle new challenges in cellular/wireless, and
ultimately in sports entertainment. “I have always been interested in politics
and government, and, after graduating from SU, I discovered the vital connection
that exists between the public and private sectors. George Maxwell was right
that we all need to be involved in the process, if only just by staying active
on the sidelines. I hope that this gift to Maxwell will help future generations
to gain the awareness and understanding of that truth,” says Chapple.
According to Dean Wallerstein, “This generous gift from John Chapple will help
to ensure that the Maxwell School can continue to offer these extraordinarily
popular courses for another 80 years and beyond. Based on his own undergraduate
experience, John had the vision to appreciate the unique nature of the
interdisciplinary courses on citizenship and democracy that have been for
decades the hallmark of a Maxwell undergraduate education. And there is no one
more deserving to be the inaugural Chapple Family Professor than Professor
Robert McClure, who has worked tirelessly to promote undergraduate education in
citizenship and democracy and who is himself one of a long line of outstanding
‘teacher-scholars’ who have captivated generations of Maxwell undergraduates
and, in many cases, changed their career objectives.”
McClure
joined the Maxwell faculty in 1969, and during his long and distinguished
academic career he served 13 years as Associate or Senior Associate Dean. He
observes that “to be honored for what you do joyously every day out of a deep
conviction that it is important to society and out of the selfish motive that
you find it so gratifying personally is beyond any reasonable expectation. But
it does confirm what Mike Sawyer said to me nearly 40 years ago: that Maxwell is
a place where you can have a satisfying career, while paying attention to
undergraduates and taking teaching seriously. I trusted Mike, and, as always, he
was right.”
# # #
The Maxwell School
of Syracuse University is the premier academic institution in the United
States committed to scholarship, civic leadership, and education in public and
international affairs. Maxwell is home to Syracuse University’s social science
departments and to numerous nationally recognized multidisciplinary graduate
programs in public policy, international studies, social policy, and conflict
resolution. Maxwell's graduate program in public administration -- the first of
its kind in the nation -- is ranked consistently the leading graduate public
affairs program in the country.
Contact:
Jill
Leonhardt,
director of communications, (315) 443-5492;
jlleonha@maxwell.syr.edu.
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