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News
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For Immediate Release - Tuesday,
July 30, 2002 |
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CSI Student awarded 2002 Jeannette K. Watson
Fellowship
Elie
Jarrouge, a College of Staten Island (CSI) student, recently earned
a 2002 Jeannette K. Watson Fellowship, a sought-after, paid summer
internship offering mentoring and lifetime contacts to talented
college students who demonstrate exceptional academic promise and
outstanding leadership skills.
Elie's decision to leave his family in Lebanon at
age 17 was a difficult one, but his ten years in the Boy Scouts
honed his survival and leadership skills, and effectively prepared
him for higher education in America.
A pre-med student majoring in biology at CSI, Elie
not only has a 3.81 Grade Point Average, but is also very active on
campus. He conducts research in the biology department, studying
enzymes activities in fruit flies and gel electrophoresis to
determine genetic components.
Elie tutors students in high-level physics,
chemistry, organic chemistry and biology. He also works as a
Teaching Scholar with the Discovery Institute and as a math tutor
with CSI's Summer Immersion program. This summer Elie is interning
at the Wildlife Conservation Society at the Bronx Zoo.
Established by The Thomas J. Watson Foundation in 1999, the
fellowship operates on the principle that "talent is broadly
distributed but only selectively developed." Watson Fellows have
their pick of coveted job placements ("work they can learn from")
over three consecutive summers in non-profit agencies, business
organizations, and government service that give them a chance to
grow and develop interpersonal skills, and gain self-confidence in a
variety of professional settings.
Five Watson fellows currently call CSI home, including 2000
Fellowship recipients Kenyatta Carter, Yekaterina Lushpenko, and
Tara Lynch, as well as the 2001 recipient Kristine Gansico.
During the third summer of being a Watson Fellow, international
assignments can be granted through partnerships with Save the
Children in Haiti, Malawi, or Ethiopia, as well as The Peggy
Guggenheim Collection in Venice.
Tara Lynch was the college's commencement speaker on June 6, 2002,
and is working this summer in Ethiopia with Save the Children, while
Kate Lushpenko, a CSI senior, will be guarding the museum walls of
the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice, Italy.
For more than 40 years The Thomas J. Watson Foundation has provided
opportunities for graduating seniors at 50 selective liberal arts
colleges to travel abroad for a year of work and study through The
Thomas J. Watson Fellowship.
A series of weekly seminars further enhances the learning experience
by encouraging debate and interaction, and also provides an
opportunity for Watson Fellows to swap stories about their work
experiences. Visits to cultural institutions like Shakespeare in the
Park and the Metropolitan Museum of Art enable students to discover
New York's free summer offerings. Every Watson Fellow receives a
generous stipend as well as a laptop computer to complete their
assignments.
In 1999 The Jeannette K. Watson Fellowship was launched to provide a
set of unparalleled workplace and seminar experiences to ignite the
professional and personal growth of students. Students compete
annually for 15 Jeannette K. Watson Fellowship openings with only
the most fiercely determined candidates surviving the rigorous
soul-searching required of them.
For more information about The Jeannette K. Watson Fellowship visit
www.jkwatson.org
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