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Last spring, several Lewis & Clark undergraduates made a dramatic display of their academic fitness, winning a Truman Scholarship, three Goldwater Scholarships, and six Fulbright grants to further their education and research.
Truman Scholar
Truman Scholarships are awarded annually to undergraduate juniors who are committed to making a difference through public service. The scholarship provides up to $30,000 in financial support for graduate study and leadership training in preparation for a career in government, nonprofit and advocacy sectors, education, or other public service fields.
Ben Brysacz CAS ‘09 is a senior political science major who wants to pursue a career in public policy and eventually politics. “I want to make a difference, and I feel the political arena is the most effective place to do that,” says Brysacz.
A native of Tucson, Arizona, Brysacz first became engaged in politics in high school. “I had a favorite teacher who had a passionate way of looking at politics and fighting for the rights of disadvantaged people,” he says. “Before taking his class, I had never looked at politics from a scientific perspective to really think about the way things work. I also volunteered for the local Democratic Party, and my interest just blossomed from there.”
To build a foundation for a political career, Brysacz plans to attend graduate school on the East Coast. But most of all, he wants to effect positive change for the future: “Real leadership involves getting people to believe in change, to value it, and pass on that understanding to their children. That’s what I’d like to be a part of.”
Goldwater Scholars
Barry M. Goldwater Scholarships are awarded annually to undergraduate students who have done excellent academic research in mathematics, science, or engineering, and intend to pursue a career in these fields. Lewis & Clark was one of only four liberal arts institutions in the country that had three students earn the $7,500 scholarship last spring.
After graduating, Akagi hopes to join Teach for America and teach high school chemistry to students in low-income communities. “Our country needs more scientists, and a strong science community can only be achieved by first having a strong science education in high school,” she says.
After teaching, Akagi plans to work toward a PhD in chemistry.
Fassio is interested in the process of gene expression and would like to better understand why certain genes are expressed at specific times in an organism’s development. After graduation, she plans to pursue a PhD in molecular biology. She hopes to teach and do research at the university level.
“We use cultured rat hippocampal neurons, or brain cells, isolated from the hippocampus of a rat and grown in vitro to study a class of proteins called neuromodulators,” says Jacobs. “These proteins are involved in a cellular process that underlies long-term memory formation.”
While he has not decided on a graduate school yet, Jacobs is interested in pursuing a PhD in neuroscience.
Fulbright Winners
Funded by the U.S. Department of State, the Fulbright Program awards grants to students and professionals for the opportunity to do graduate study, research, or teach at the elementary to the university level in countries all around the world. With its six winners, Lewis & Clark ranks among the top 20 undergraduate colleges in the country in the production of Fulbrights for 2008-09.
While studying abroad last year, Hooper worked in the German parliament with a renewable energies politician. “A new passion of mine is international environmental policy and sustainable development,” he says. “I would like to make an impact on environmental policy in the United States.”
Nelson later hopes to teach in a public school, where he plans to explore how language intersects with society and culture.
Upon completion of his research, Nichter plans to pursue graduate work in clinical psychology. He aspires to become a clinical therapist at a children’s hospital.
Phillips hopes to continue building culture-spanning bridges after she returns home by teaching in elementary or middle school.
Spingarn plans to attend graduate school and later develop curricula based on German-language historical materials in archives, museums, or libraries.
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