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Thirty-five students chosen as Syracuse University’s 2008-09 Remembrance ScholarsApril 28, 2008SU News ServicesSUnews@syr.edu
Syracuse University’s Remembrance Scholar Committee has chosen the 35 students who will be the 2008-09 Remembrance Scholars.
The scholarships, among the most prestigious awarded by the University, were founded as a tribute to — and means of remembrance for — the 270 people who were killed in the Dec. 21, 1988, bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, 20 years ago this year. Thirty-five students studying through SU’s Division of International Programs Abroad died as they were returning from a semester of study in London and Florence, Italy.
The scholarships are funded through an endowment supported by gifts from alumni, friends, parents and corporations. Significant support for the Remembrance Scholarships has been provided by C. Jean Thompson ’66 and Richard L. Thompson G’67 in memory of Jean Taylor Phelan Terry ’43 and John F. Phelan, Jean Thompson’s parents; and by the Fred L. Emerson Foundation.
Remembrance Scholars are chosen in their junior year through a rigorous and competitive process. Applicants for the $5,000 scholarship were asked to highlight their University activities, including community service. Each applicant also wrote an essay and was interviewed by members of the selection committee, composed of University faculty, staff and students.
“We had a large and exceptionally qualified group of applicants from which to choose the 2008-09 Remembrance Scholars. Many excellent candidates were left out of the group of scholars selected as the final 35,” says David M. Rubin, dean of the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and chair of the Remembrance Scholars Selection Committee. “We believe this group has the potential to mount exciting activities surrounding Remembrance Week next fall, and then to graduate and become engaged citizens who will change public policy so that it creates a more just and peaceful world.”
The 2008-09 Remembrance Scholars will be recognized during a convocation in October and will play significant roles in the activities the University is planning for the fall to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the tragedy.
Additionally, the 2008-09 Lockerbie Scholars, Lauren Flynn and Kirsty Liddon, were recently selected. Each year, two students from Lockerbie, Scotland, come to Syracuse for a year of study though the Syracuse-Lockerbie Scholarships, jointly funded by SU and the Lockerbie Trust.
The 2008-09 Remembrance Scholars are:
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We want to know how you experience Syracuse University. Take a photo and share it with us. We select photos from a variety of sources. Submit photos of your University experience by filling out a submission form or sending it…
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