CHICAGOAN,
MDA LEADER ROBERT G. SAMPSON DIES
TUCSON, Ariz., December 4, 2006 -
Prominent in past years as a Chicago
businessman, civic leader and Muscular
Dystrophy Association (MDA) board
member, Robert G. Sampson died on
Dec. 3 at age 81 at his home in Arlington
Heights, IL.
Affected with muscular dystrophy
at age five and requiring a wheelchair
by the time he was seven, Sampson
persevered in pursuing his education
and excelling as a scholar. He put
himself through Loyola University
and DePaul Law School working nights
as a hotel clerk and switchboard operator.
Sampson worked eight years for the
city of Chicago's law department and
then was offered a position as an
attorney with United Airlines. He
moved up to become a vice president
and eventually special assistant to
the company's chairman.
Renowned for his efforts in behalf
of Chicago's inner-city children,
Sampson also was recognized as a national
leader in efforts to increase opportunities
and accessibility for people with
disabilities. He served as a board
member and director emeritus for MDA
from 1974 to 1993 and participated
in many Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day
Telethons. He also served as vice
chairman of the President's Committee
on Employment of People with Disabilities.
Sampson received the Distinguished
Alumnus Award from DePaul University,
the Federal Aviation Administration's
Distinguished Service Award, the William
A. Patterson Award (United Airlines'
highest honor) and the Horatio Alger
Award for outstanding Americans who
pull themselves up by their bootstraps.
In 1984, MDA established the Robert
G. Sampson Neuromuscular Disease Research
Fellowship, and in 1992 the Bob Sampson
Disability Awareness Award.
MDA is a national voluntary health
agency working to defeat more than
40 neuromuscular
diseases through programs of worldwide
research,
comprehensive services,
and far-reaching professional and
public health education.
The Association’s programs
are funded almost entirely by individual
private contributors.
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