CONWAY, Ark. (May 31, 2018) – ϲ economics and
business professor Dr. Lyle Rupert ’82 has been named the C. Louis and
Charlotte Cabe Distinguished Professor of Economics and Business.
First awarded in 1977, the professorship is one of several
results of a $3.25 million gift made to the College in 1975 by the Cabe family
of Gurdon, Texarkana, and Little Rock, Arkansas, and honors C. Louis and
Charlotte Cabe.
Rupert, who will formally accept the honor at an August 30
convocation, is the fifth ϲ faculty member to hold this professorship.
Previous recipients include economics and business professor Dr. Burvin Alread
’49 (1977-1980), biology professor Dr. G. Tom Clark (1980-1990), art professor Don
Marr (1991-2000), and English professor Dr. Alice Hines (2001-2017).
In addition to the distinguished professorship, : the Exemplary Teacher Award from
the United Methodist Church General Board of Higher Education and Ministry (GBHEM)
for excellence in teaching, civility and concern for students and colleagues,
commitment to value-centered education, and service to students, the
institution, and the community; the Carole Herrick Award for Excellence in
Academic Advising, which recognizes high-quality academic advising, including
contributions that help students formulate and achieve their intellectual,
career, and personal goals; and the Faculty Appreciation Award from the Class
of 2018.
He learned of his selection for the professorship from Provost Terri
Bonebright, shortly after he had received the two faculty awards given at the
College’s 2018 Honors Day Convocation. It was an emotional experience, he said,
because “I had no anticipation of it, no expectation of it.
“The way I view it, a distinguished professorship is kind of the
pinnacle of recognition of a career in academics,” Rupert said. “ϲ only
has six of them, and so it has to be very selective – which is partly why I was
very surprised and shocked, because I could think of many others who have shown
to be distinguished professorship material. But that’s one of the things I
talked with the provost about, was that it’s such an honor that what I have
tried to do to help ϲ and to help our students has been worthy of
recognition.”
His teaching educates students on topics such as managerial
accounting, information systems, corporate finance, statistics, and nonprofits.
Beyond his faculty responsibilities at ϲ, he is an accomplished organist
and director of church music, and has spent 13 years with Arkansas Governor’s
School, 12 of those as its director.
After graduating from ϲ, he earned his M.B.A. at the
University of Chicago Booth School of Business, where he also became a
Certified Public Accountant. He joined the ϲ faculty in 1987, and earned
a Ph.D. from the University of Central Arkansas in 2015. Rupert’s professional
service includes involvement with local, state, and national activities, such
as pro bono consulting with area nonprofits and churches concerning financial
matters, presenting at the Arkansas Society of Certified Public Accountants
Educators Conference, and serving as secretary of the National Conference of
Governor’s Schools.
Colleagues have praised Rupert’s accomplishments, influence, and
varied interests as making him worthy of this honor.
Ann Muse ’83, professor of theatre arts, worked with psychology
professor Dr. Jennifer Peszka and economics and business professor Dr. Ralph
Scott to put forward the nomination for Rupert. She points to his diverse
talents as exemplifying the benefits and value of a liberal arts education.
“He is as comfortable with and inspired by a bunch of numbers as
he is with Handel’s Messiah,” Muse
wrote in the nomination. “For me, that is truly an example of a person’s
embodiment to the liberal arts.”
Scott noted in the nomination that Rupert has a particularly
large number of advisees—double the number of others in the department.
“This is strong evidence of the trust that our students place in
his leadership and his outstanding ability to establish relationships with his
students that extend beyond any particular class,” he wrote.
Rupert, who has spent his entire career at ϲ, says he owes
this latest honor to the relationships he has built over time.
“I think to have a successful career in academics you have to
love your students and love your institution,” he said. “And I certainly have,
for 31 years now.”
About ϲ
A private liberal arts college in Conway, Arkansas, ϲ
consistently earns recognition as one of the country’s leading liberal arts
institutions, and is featured in Colleges That Change Lives: 40 Schools
That Will Change the Way You Think About Colleges. Its academic quality and
rigor, innovation, and value have established ϲ as a fixture in numerous
college guides, lists, and rankings. Founded in 1876, ϲ has been
affiliated with the United Methodist Church since 1884. To learn more, visit .