|
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: December 09, 2004
SCHUMER VISITS SYRACUSE AND DELIVERS $5 MILLION CHECK FOR
THE MOYNIHAN GLOBAL AFFAIRS INSTITUTE
Syracuse University Global Affairs Institute will create an
endowment in the name of former Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan
Schumer: Funds will be used to bring more international students,
visiting scholars, and post-doctoral students to Syracuse as well
as support research
Last year, Schumer secured $5 million for the endowment; today's
funds represent another $5 million intended for the Moynihan Institute
US Senator Charles E. Schumer today traveled to Syracuse to present
Syracuse University Chancellor Nancy Cantor with a check for $5
million to endow a state-of-the-art global affairs institute at
SU in the memory of the late New York Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
Schumer said that the institute will attract the world's best professors
to the school and could be a stimulus to help attract people to
the region. The center already hosts events and notable speakers
to SU and will hit the ground running after they formally introduce
the Moynihan Center to the Syracuse community in March.
Schumer, who secured the $5 million for the Maxwell School's Global
Affairs Institute, said today that it would carry on the public
and intellectual tradition of Senator Moynihan by funding visiting
scholars and international leaders, and supporting scholarship in
impoverished nations. The Moynihan center will focus on the legacy
of Senator Moynihan of anticipating problems, and then working towards
innovative responses to them. Specifically, it will bring to Syracuse
international students, visiting scholars, post-doctoral students
and top-notch research. Last year, Schumer secured half of the $10
million intended for the endowment in the name of the late Senator
Moynihan; today's allocation represents the remaining amount headed
to the Institute.
"With this endowment, SU is going to be the destination for
world class thinkers and professors who work in the field of global
affairs,” Schumer said. “That’s great for the
university, great for the discipline, and great for the entire region.
Exciting new projects are what bring creative, new people to the
region.”
The measure also designates the existing Global Affairs Institute
(GAI) at the Maxwell School as the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Global
Affairs Institute committed to studying diverse cultures, economies,
and political systems. The Maxwell School was named as the nation's
top school of public affairs by the 2004 U.S. News & World Report's
graduate-program rankings. The Maxwell School's Moynihan Center
will contain four regional centers within the institute and nine
topical working groups.
“The Moynihan Global Affairs Institute will bring experts
on the cutting edge in a broad range of areas right here to Syracuse
to talk about the international issues of the day,” Schumer
said. “That opportunity doesn’t come around every day
and it will make Central New York unique. This is just the kind
of thing we need to attract young creative professionals.”
Schumer has invited New York Delegation members as well as national
officials to the Moynihan Center's official opening in March. The
Moynihan family will be in attendance and Tim Russert, former Chief
of Staff and currently the host of Meet the Press on NBC will moderate
the ceremonies.
The Maxwell School's Global Affairs Institute was established in
1993 to extend, integrate, and focus the Maxwell School's commitment
to exploring current international and global concerns. The Institute
organizes conferences, credit bearing seminars, and workshops, and
provides research fellowships and internship opportunities to graduate
students. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a one-time junior faculty member
at the Maxwell School from 1959 to 1961, was elected to the United
States Senate in 1976 where he served four terms. He retired from
the Senate in 2000 renowned as a foreign affairs expert. The Almanac
of American Politics once described him as "the nation's best
thinker among politicians since Lincoln and its best politician
among thinkers since Jefferson."
Schumer was joined at the event by Nancy Cantor, Chancellor of
Syracuse University; Mitchel Wallerstein, Dean of the Maxwell School;
and Peg Hermann, Director of the Moynihan Institute.
####
|