Senator George J. Mitchell to Receive 2008 Eisenhower Medal for Leadership and Service
By: Send2Press
May 12, 2008
PHILADELPHIA, Pa., May 12 (SEND2PRESS NEWSWIRE)
-- Eisenhower Fellowships has announced that it
will present the 2008 Dwight D. Eisenhower
Medal for Leadership and Service to former U.S.
Senate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell.
Eisenhower Chairman General Colin L. Powell USA
(Retired) will present the award to Senator
Mitchell at its annual board of trustees'
dinner in Philadelphia on May 15, 2008.
The Eisenhower medal is awarded
annually to a business leader, statesmen, or
other public figure who has achieved
widely-recognized advances toward President
Eisenhower's vision of peace and productivity
through person-to-person international
dialogue.
"Senator Mitchell's commitment
to brokering innovative solutions to
international conflicts, as demonstrated by his
stewardship of the peace effort in Ireland and
his efforts to end violence in the Middle East,
reflects the time-honored mission of Eisenhower
Fellowships," said John S. Wolf, president of
organization. "For 55 years, Eisenhower
Fellowships has promoted international
understanding and cooperation through the
exchange of information, ideas, and
perspectives among emerging leaders throughout
the world."
Senator George J. Mitchell
currently serves as chairman of the global
board of international law firm DLA Piper and
as Chancellor of Queen's University in Northern
Ireland. In 1980, Senator Mitchell resigned the
position of U.S. District Judge for Maine to
accept appointment to the U.S. Senate. He
served in the U.S. Senate for 14 years,
including six years as Senate Majority Leader.
While in the Senate, Senator Mitchell's efforts
led to the successful passage of major
legislation to protect the environment, expand
public education, and promote free trade. After
he left the Senate in 1995, Senator Mitchell
continued to serve the public through his pro
bono work for a number of domestic and
international causes.
In 1996, the
governments of the United Kingdom and Ireland
asked Senator Mitchell to chair the peace
negotiations in Northern Ireland. The Senator
led the negotiations for two years, work that
ultimately resulted in the historic Good Friday
Accord that ended decades of conflict. In
addition, Senator Mitchell has served as
chairman of the Special Commission
investigating allegations of impropriety in the
bidding process for the Olympic Games, the
National Health Care Commission, and an
international fact finding commission on
violence in the Middle East. More recently,
Senator Mitchell led an independent
investigation on past steroid use by Major
League Baseball. He was also named one of Time
magazine's 100 most influential people in the
world.
Eisenhower Fellowships is a
private, non-profit, non-partisan organization
that identifies men and women well on their way
to positions of regional or national
leadership, and provides them with
individualized fellowships for visits and
consultations with leaders in their fields.
Established in 1953 as a tribute to President
Eisenhower, the organization has sponsored over
1,700 Fellows from more than 100 countries.
For more information please visit http://www.eisenhowerfellowships.org/.
