Rockefeller makes last official trip to W.Va. as a U.S. Senator
West Virginia University’s new school for policy and
politics will carry the name of longtime U.S. Senator Jay Rockefeller
(D-W.Va.).
The announcement about the
new school came Saturday in Morgantown
as Rockefeller formally donated his archives, from his 30 years in the U.S.
Senate, to WVU’s Charles C. Wise Library.
“My career in service to West Virginia and its
people was undertaken with a singular recognition that none of us exist solely
for ourselves, but for the sake of others,” Rockefeller said during Saturday’s
announcement.
“The goal of the John D.
Rockefeller IV School of Policy and Politics is to instill that passion in
others and empower them to make the world a better place.”
The John. D. Rockefeller
IV School of Policy and Politics in the Eberly College of Arts and Sciences
will bring together WVU’s existing academic programs in political science,
public administration, international studies and leadership studies.
The West
Virginia and Regional
History Center
within WVU’s Libraries will handle the processing, preserving and collection of
Rockefeller’s senatorial archives — including papers, photographs, videos,
speeches, recordings, reports, correspondence, electronic records, artifacts
and other memorabilia.
At 2,000 linear feet, the
collection is said to be one of the largest collections WVU has ever received.
Rockefeller said his trip
to Morgantown Saturday would be his last
official trip to West Virginia
as a U.S. Senator. He opted not to seek another term in the U.S. Senate this
year. U.S. Senator-Elect Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) will take his seat in the
New Year.