A string of national scholarships will take students abroad for research, study, and teaching

TACOMA, Wash. – University of Puget Sound students and recent alumni won recognition nationally and internationally this academic year by securing highly competitive awards for study, research, and teaching experiences abroad.

Fourteen students and alumni were honored with the scholarships and fellowships, taking the number of prestigious national awards achieved by Puget Sound students since 2000 to a total of 172. Puget Sound, a national liberal arts college with a student undergraduate body of 2,600, congratulates this year’s new awardees and looks forward to following their careers ahead.

The 2014-15 awards include Rhodes and Fulbright Research scholarships, a Watson Fellowship, a Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to Germany, a Critical Language Scholarship to China, seven French Government Teaching Assistantships, and a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Postgraduate Scholarship. In addition, alumnus Jay Goldberg ’12, attending Indiana University Bloomington, secured a National Science Foundation Research Fellowship. Several other students were finalists or waitlisted for national awards.

“We had a momentous start to the school year when Lillis Scholar Billy Rathje ’15 flew through a grueling interview and assessment process and came away with a Rhodes Scholarship,” said Sharon Chambers-Gordon, director of the Office of Graduate and Undergraduate Fellowships. “That was followed by some remarkable applications by other students—some of whom won fellowships and some of whom came so close they still left us brimming with pride. Every year it is a privilege to see these young people honored for their talents and initiative. We thank them and wish them a fruitful and exciting year ahead.”

As a Rhodes Scholar, Rathje will study at the University of Oxford, England, to pursue a doctoral degree in computer science. While at Puget Sound, he majored in computer science and English literature and pursued interests in theater performance, poetry, musical composition, the sciences, and applied science.

Watson Scholar Lisa Tucker ’15 will travel the world for a year and research how gardening is used by different cultures to relay political action messages. The American politics and government major will travel to England, Italy, Hong Kong, Vietnam, and Brazil.

NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship winner Max Miranda ’15 was one of only 29 men’s fall sports participants, from across all three NCAA divisions, to receive the award. The Logger linebacker and molecular and cellular biology major intend to use the scholarship to pursue medical school.

Nathan Bradley ’16 secured a Critical Language Scholarship to China, just a year after landing a Boren Scholarship to China. At Puget Sound, the Colorado native is double majoring in Chinese language and culture and economics.

Biology major and honors program student Grete Slaugh ’15 will be pursuing her interest in plant research—this time abroad—as the recipient of a Fulbright Research Scholarship to Germany.

Eight other scholars, as named below, were chosen for teaching assistantships overseas. They will teach English to students of all ages in local public schools in Germany or France, giving them an experience of the local culture and a chance to enhance their language and teaching skills.

Overall, the national awardees include:

Rhodes Scholarship
William J. Rathje ’15

Fulbright Research Scholarship to Germany
Grete  A. Slaugh ’15

Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship to Germany
Aiyana D. Wain Hirschberg ’15

Watson Fellowship
Lisa M. Tucker ’15

Critical Language Scholarship to China
Nathan C. Bradley ’16

French Government Teaching Assistantship

Bailey Brady ’15 – Corsica
Zeinah Kara ’15 – Toulouse
Kara Klepinger ’15 – Bordeaux
Emilie Kurth ’15 – Lyon
Laura Leach ’15 – Orléans-Tours
Laura Shearer ’15 – Dijon
Helen Shears ’12 – Poitiers

NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship
Max Mirande ’15

National Science Foundation Research Fellowship
Jay Goldberg ’12

The students were assisted in their achievements by Puget Sound faculty and staff; by members of the Tacoma community who provided enriching work, study, and volunteer opportunities; and by their family and friends.

The Fellowships Office, directed by Sharon Chambers-Gordon, coordinates the student applications and handles student recruiting, interviews, evaluation, mentoring, and mock interviews.

The Graduate Fellowships Advisory Committee, chaired by Professor of Religion Greta Austin, reads all applications, conducts campus interviews, and selects scholarship nominees. Committee members also include Associate Dean Martin Jackson, mathematics; Julie Nelson-Christoph, English; David Tinsley, German studies; Kate Stirling, economics; Jeff Grinstead, chemistry; Seth Weinberger. Politics and government; Peter Hodum, biology; and Chambers-Gordon. In addition, many faculty on and off-campus provided indispensable assistance by acting as research advisors and mentors or by writing letters of recommendation on the students’ behalf.

For more information about student fellowship and scholarship opportunities, contact Sharon Chambers-Gordon at 253.879.3329 or scgordon@pugetsound.edu.

Photo on page: The student scholars gather at the President's House. Photo by Ross Mulhausen.

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