|
FOR RELEASE: Tuesday, July 31, 2001
2001 STURGIS FELLOWS ANNOUNCED AT UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS Eight 2001 freshmen students have been awarded prestigious Sturgis Fellowships at the University of Arkansas, worth $48,000 for four years. The incoming freshman class for fall 2001 includes Lindsey Barnes of Neosho, Mo., David Deitz and Stephanie Wood of Little Rock, Ginny Fish of Harrison, Erin Grantz of Watson, Okla., Eun Park of Van Buren, Elizabeth Terry of Fort Smith and Leslie Yingling of Winslow. "The eight selected this year are amazing students. I look forward each year to serving on the Sturgis Fellow selection committee and with good reason. Sturgis Finalists are very accomplished," said Randall Woods, dean of the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences. "It is a pleasure to interview these articulate, informed and poised young people. The only problem comes when we have to make a selection. Each year that seems to be more and more difficult." Woods said each student selected to the 2001 Sturgis class has an average ACT score of 33.2 and an average GPA of 4.19. "These students could have attended any school in the country," he said. "We are delighted they selected Fulbright College at the University of Arkansas. I am confident that in four years as they prepare for graduation and the opportunities that lie beyond, they will be delighted with the decision that brought them here." The Sturgis Fellowship is made possible by an $8,000,000 endowment from the Roy and Christine Sturgis Charitable Trust to the Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences. Each Sturgis Fellow receives $48,000, $12,000 per year, and provides every student with one of the most prestigious scholarships offered by any university in the country - providing for tuition, room, board and discretionary funds for computers, musical instruments, professional journals, trips to conferences and travel abroad during junior year. Anna Terry, former Sturgis Fellow and UA class of 2001, said the Sturgis Fellowship definitely plays a role in attracting the brightest and top-achieving students throughout the country. "The very existence of an academic scholarship such as the Sturgis Fellowship demonstrates that attracting good students is a top priority at the University of Arkansas," she said. "Here, students create their own opportunities - perhaps through independent study or research, through community service, or by playing a musical instrument. I am sure Roy and Christine Sturgis would be proud of the excellent educational environment that their monies have helped foster and support." The original endowment funded five, four-year fellowships of $40,000. Because of the enormous success of the fellowship in attracting the top students from the region and around the country, the Sturgis Foundation awarded the University of Arkansas an additional $3 million in 1992. An additional gift in 1997 of $2.5 million brought the total endowment to $7.5 million. Sturgis Fellows have received a vast array of national scholarships including three British Marshall Scholarships, 10 Barry Goldwater Scholarships (for outstanding accomplishments in mathematics and science), four Morris Udall Scholarships, five Harry S. Truman Scholarships, and one Rhodes Scholarship. Megan Ceronsky, UA class of 2000 and former Sturgis Fellow who has more recently claimed a Truman Scholarship and British Marshall Scholarship, said the Sturgis Fellowship attracted her to the U of A from out of state. "The Sturgis Scholarship was a terrific inducement for me to leave Minnesota and come to the University of Arkansas," she said. "I had researched and applied for scholarships at colleges and universities all over the country and had not encountered anything like it. I am headed to graduate school at Oxford University in the fall on a British Marshall Scholarship, and I owe a lot of that success to the Sturgis Fellowship and to the attention I received at the U of A."
### Contact:Suzanne McCray, Director, Office of Post-Graduate Fellowships, 479-575-4747, smccray@uark.edu, Jay Nickel, Assistant Manager of Media Relations, 479-575-7943, jnickel@uark.edu |









