Is a Fulbright in Your Future?
SPU Can Help You Clear the Hurdles
IF YOU’VE EVER CONSIDERED applying for a Fulbright
grant, you may be interested to know that your alma mater can lend a hand.
The
Fulbright Program, sponsored by the U.S. Department of State, offers opportunities
for recent graduates, postgraduate candidates, and developing professionals and
artists to conduct career-launching study and research abroad. Established in
1946, the program awards approximately 4,500 new grants each year, and alumni
include Nobel and Pulitzer prize winners, ambassadors and artists, prime ministers
and heads of state, professors and scientists, Supreme Court justices and CEOs.
With a limited number of opportunities available, the application process can
be highly
competitive. That’s where Seattle Pacific University comes in. Prospective
applicants who are not enrolled at an academic institution are considered at-large
applicants
and may apply on their own, or through their alma mater.
If they choose the latter,
the process is as follows: The applicant applies online at www.cies.org, indicating
his or her affiliation with Seattle Pacific; the University contacts the applicant
and schedules an interview (interviews are given to all candidates); and upon
successful completion of the interview, the University writes a letter of support
on
behalf of the applicant.
"This letter of support gives applicants an added advantage
in the application process,” says Susan VanZanten Gallagher, director of
SPU’s Center for Scholarship and Faculty
Development. “This is just one of many programs the Center sponsors that encourage
scholarship in our community.”
For more information, call the Center for Scholarship
and Faculty Development at
206/281-2003.
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From the President
Americans today are searching for a new tone for their lives. “We
are talking here about another set of values — not the giddy sense
of entitlement that emerges out of exuberant times,” says President
Philip Eaton.
A Gift at Any Age
Young alumni are supporting The Campaign for SPU with the Young Alumni
Endowment. They will provide scholarship support to students
engaging the culture. [Campaign]
Like Grandfather, Like
Grandson
On June 7, 80-year-old Sheldon Arnett finally received
his bachelor’s degree from Seattle Pacific. His grandson,
Jeremiah Johnson, earned his SPU bachelor’s degree the
same day. [Campus]
The Retiring Class of 2003
Five professors, with a combined 162 years in the classroom, retired
this year. They tell of their careers and the impact students
had on them. [Faculty]
Second Wind
A marathoner, wife, mother and business alumna, Claudia Shannon came back after tough
times. As a 45-year-old senior, she was on the SPU cross country
team that ranked 14th in the nation. [Athletics]
My Response
After 25 years, Joyce Quiring Erickson, retiring professor of English and
dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, reflects on glossy brown
chestnuts, home and the Promised Land.
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