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Moynihan Chair

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Thursday, June 14, 2007
Maxwell School
Receives $5-Million Gift in Honor of the Late U.S. Senator Daniel Patrick
Moynihan
Endowment will fund the
Moynihan Chair in Public Policy
The Maxwell School of Syracuse University today
announced that it has received a $5-million gift from the New York City-based
Leon Levy Foundation to establish the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Chair in Public
Policy, in honor of the late distinguished scholar and U.S. Senator from New
York. The announcement was made during an event in the U.S. Capitol featuring
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and other members of Congress; former Moynihan
staff members, including NBC commentator Tim Russert; and the Senator’s widow,
Elizabeth Moynihan.
“We are deeply grateful to the Leon Levy Foundation, and to Founding Trustee
Shelby White, for this generous endowment gift,” said Maxwell School Dean
Mitchel Wallerstein. “We intend to appoint a leading national figure in the
domestic policy area to the Moynihan Chair, an individual whose scholarship will
continue the tradition of Senator Moynihan on issues such as urban
revitalization, Social Security, the future of the U.S. family, transportation,
and government secrecy. Through the research, teaching and public engagement
activities of the Moynihan Chair, future generations of faculty and students at
the Maxwell School—and elsewhere—will be reminded of the important role that the
Senator played in elevating debate and understanding of these critical domestic
public policy problems.”
Shelby White said, "Pat Moynihan was a towering figure, as a scholar and a
statesman -- for New York, the nation and the world. He was also a friend to my
late husband, Leon, and me. The Leon Levy Foundation is proud to honor his
legacy with a chair at the University where he began his teaching career.”
Syracuse University Chancellor and President Nancy Cantor underlined the
significance of establishing the Moynihan Chair. “Pat Moynihan was an exemplary
public servant, one who was at the core a first-rate public intellectual. This
remarkably generous gift will help Syracuse University and the Maxwell School
perpetuate among future generations of policy makers Senator Moynihan’s ethic
that sound public policy must be built upon sound scholarship.”
Senator Moynihan was a longtime friend of the
Maxwell School, where he began his academic career as a junior faculty member in
1959-61. He then embarked on a long and storied career in public service,
leading ultimately to his four terms as a U.S. Senator representing New York.
During that career, the Senator served as a member of the Maxwell School’s
Advisory Board and returned often to guest lecture and otherwise support the
School and its students. In 1985, he established the annual Daniel Patrick
Moynihan Award recognizing and rewarding outstanding junior Maxwell School
faculty members; of the 25 recipients, an astonishing 22 remain on the Maxwell
faculty today. Upon his retirement from the Senate in 2001, Senator Moynihan
rejoined the School as a University Professor, the highest faculty rank at
Syracuse University. He held that post until his death in March 2003.
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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.
The
Leon Levy Foundation,
founded in 2004, is a private, not-for-profit foundation created from the estate
of Leon Levy, a legendary investor with a longstanding commitment to
philanthropy. The Foundation’s overarching goal is to continue the tradition of
humanism characteristic of Mr. Levy, by supporting scholarship at the highest
level, ultimately advancing knowledge and improving the lives of individuals and
society at large.
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