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July

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Jul 29, 2010

Scholars Take High Score in Mini-Golf Tournament

by Editor — last modified Jul 29, 2010 10:03 PM
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On the evening of July 21, after years of strenuous training, five Seattle-area Truman Scholars took on 22 other teams in a grueling 24-hole mini-golf tournament.  The tournament was a fundraiser for Treehouse, a Seattle organization focused on supporting foster children.  Though no official results have been seen, rumors abound that the Trumans were the highest-scoring team in history.  (Team members hope that no one remembers that high scores are not desirable in golf...)  Captain Bradley Bowen (MT '04) fearlessly led David Rubenstein (OR '06), Kristin Kan (TX '04), Allison Rank (OH '03), and Michele Buckley (CO '06) through the twists and turns of the course.  The MVP award, however, goes to Kristin, who knocked in the team's only hole-in-one.  

Everyone in Seattle is already looking forward to future fun, community-focused activities!

 

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David Rubenstein (OR '06), Bradley Bowen (MT '04), Michele Buckley (CO '06), Kristin Kan (TX '04), and Allison Rank (OH '03).

 

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The team getting ready for one of the challenges.

Jul 20, 2010

Viewpoint: "Can For-Profit Social Enterprises Count as Public Service?"

by Editor — last modified Jul 20, 2010 11:05 AM
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baird

The Truman Scholar commitment to public service originally focused on government service, and more recently, has focused on the nonprofit sector.  The Truman Scholarship exists, in part, to encourage promising young Americans to follow public-sector careers in lieu of more lucrative private sector options.  But my last year working for Gray Ghost Ventures, an "impact investing" firm that has roughly $200 million deployed in for-profit companies worldwide that seek to have a direct impact on poverty alleviation, has led me to ask, "Can you build financially sustainable companies with meaningful social returns, and if so, is that public service?"

Compared to government programs, the world's problems are simply too large for the nonprofit sector to solve. The federal government spends more on education each year than the entire endowment of the Gates Foundation (and federal spending is only a small portion of all government spending on education in the sector).  And given the financial situation in the United States, budgets for major programs are becoming increasingly tight, and government will likely have fewer and fewer resources as the years progress.  In many emerging markets, corruption and instability have shifted responsibility for development projects away from governments.  If we want to change the world, we have to think of complements to these two incomplete solutions.

In recent years, the field of "social enterprise" has been on the rise.  Today, there are more than 50 firms worldwide that invest in early-stage companies that directly address poverty.  The most famous sector within social enterprise is microfinance - banking practices that lend small amounts (roughly $100) in emerging markets, with mostly women clients, and have repayment rates at upwards of 98 percent.  Microfinance was made globally famous by founder Muhammad Yunus winning the Nobel Prize in 2004, and today, more than $3 billion is invested in small-scale microfinance banks alone.  Major multinationals from Deutsche Bank to JP Morgan are now participating, and any individual can make a small-scale loan to an individual in the developing world through the website Kiva.org

In the past five years, organizations like Omidyar Network, Acumen Fund, and Gray Ghost Ventures, my employer, have been investing in companies beyond microfinance that address poverty.  These enterprises are varied and high-impact.  D.Light Design, for whom fellow Truman Scholar Greg Nolan (FL '06) interned, is a solar-powered light that is sold in India, Kenya, and Tanzania for $10 - or two months' worth of kerosene for a family living below the poverty line - and has sold over 100,000 units.  Promethean Power Systems, for whom fellow Truman Ming-Jay Shiao (OH '06) consulted, makes solar-powered bulk refrigeration units that increase farmers' income by upwards of 50 percent, cuts down on carbon emissions from heavily-polluting diesel machines significantly, and are an attractive alternative based on energy cost-savings to multinational dairies and food companies.  I worked for the Indian School Finance Company in Hyderabad, which makes market-rate loans to low-cost independent schools in slum areas of India, an increasingly large part of the Indian education system.  

Do these enterprises count as public service?  The sector is too young to tell.  But if these enterprises can be financially successful, they are more self-sustaining than nonprofits and do not face the same budgetary pressure as governments.  In addition, being able to leverage the sheer volume of capital in the private sector - several orders of magnitude greater than the grant dollars available in the philanthropic sector - has world-changing potential.  The for-profit social-enterprise sector has its risks: companies need to maintain a strong focus on their social mission to keep the "public good" objective (for example, microfinance banks, if the interest rates are too high, could border on exploitation), and to date, financial successes for investors have been limited.  But as our world struggles to figure out how to bring about major social change with increasingly limited resources, I encourage Trumans to think about how we can include business solutions as a piece of how our public service mandate can change the world.

Ross Baird (GA '06) is an investment analyst at Gray Ghost Ventures, an impact investment firm dedicated to providing market-based capital solutions to entrepreneurs who are addressing the needs of low-income communities in emerging markets.

Jul 19, 2010

Scholars Showcase Creativity in Summer Institute Presentations

by Editor — last modified Jul 19, 2010 10:42 PM
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The Truman Summer Institute (SI), held annually in Washington, DC, and initiated in 1991, provides Truman scholars with an intentional community environment in the summer following their senior year of undergrad. The 10-week program includes seminars, presentations, workshops and an eight-week internship with a public service organization. Scholars participate in public policy seminars for the first week and various days throughout the summer. Events include a day on Capitol Hill sponsored by the John C. Stennis Center for Public Service Leadership and a workshop on arts and Public service with the Liz Lerman Dance Exchange. Scholars also live communally on the George Washington University campus. But the highlight of the summer has to be the Tuesday night presentations – scholar-led speeches on any topic of their choosing.

Presentations have included a range of topics, from an analysis of Foucault's viewpoints on the prison system by Meg Beyer (GA '09) to an exploration the social implications of Lady Gaga in pop culture by Adam Amir (FL '09). Hometown pride is a popular topic choice. Jennie Hatch (ME '09) delivered a virtual guide to the Maine Lobster Bake, which left many mouths watering; Amy Nichols (OR '09) introduced us to the nuances of Pittsburghese. Some scholars have taken this opportunity to showcase little-known feats and talents: at 16, Ellie Emery (CT '09) completed a 58-day, 700-mile trek across the Canadian tundra; Patrick Reimherr (UT '09), accompanied by Alex Merkovic-Orenstein (FL '09) and Adam Amir (FL '09), wrote and performed a song about the “Truman Blues.”

We wouldn't be Truman Scholars if we didn't broach important social issues. Several scholars presented on very serious topics. Olimar Maisonet-Guzman (PR '09), presented on international water conflicts because she wanted to share one of the two things in her life that she takes seriously, the other being fencing. Jenny Lamb (CO '09) revealed the complexity of agricultural development in East Africa. 

Reynaldo Fuentes (WY '09) sums up his feelings about the summer. “Whether we are inspired by the speech of a lifelong public servant or debating controversial political issues over homemade dinner, the summer's experiences will last us a lifetime.”

Aerica Shimizu-Banks (WA '09) graduated from Seattle University this Spring with a degree in Environmental Studies and Public Affairs. Her interests include policy-making, environmental justice, and handmade greeting cards. 

 

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Alex Merkovic-Orenstein (FL '09), Patrick Reimherr (UT '09), and Adam Amir (FL '09) (left to right)

 

 

Barbecue Brings Seattle Scholars Together

by Editor — last modified Jul 19, 2010 10:09 PM
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On Saturday, July 10, a group of summer-ready Truman Scholars gathered at Golden Gardens Park in Seattle to celebrate the first sunny weekend of the Emerald City's summer.  Nine scholars, plus their families and friends, attended the BBQ hosted by Michele Buckley (CO '06) and David Rubenstein (OR '06).  Delicious burgers, great conversation, and a beautiful setting made this an event to remember!

 

A number of group service projects and social events were planned for the coming months, including a Truman Scholars team for this week's mini-golf tournament to raise money for a wonderful foster child support program here in Seattle (Click here to support us!).

 

We hope other Pacific Northwest scholars will be able to join us at our next event!

 

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Group photo.

 

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David Rubenstein (CO '06) ran the grill while other scholars chatted.

Jul 17, 2010

A New Leaf Dedicates Pat Gilbert Center

by Editor — last modified Jul 17, 2010 12:35 PM
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In May, A New Leaf, a Mesa, Arizona-based social service organization, dedicated The Pat Gilbert Center. Pat Gilbert (AZ '91), currently Chief Administrative Officer of the Marc Center of Mesa, previously served as a Senior Scholar at Truman Scholars Leadership Week and as a Board member of the TSA Board of Directors.

From the organization's newsletter:

A New Leaf is proud to announce the building name for services provided at 635 E. Broadway in Mesa, the Pat Gilbert Center. Honoring our good friend and long-standing community leader comes naturally as Pat not only envisioned this one-stop-shop for low-income residents, he laid the foundation for its success. Today, the Pat Gilbert Center houses services including, Maricopa County WIC and Immunizations, the MesaCAP, Marisol Federal Credit Union and A New Leaf Community Behavioral Health Services.

Click here to watch a video of the dedication.

 

Jul 15, 2010

Profile: Ernest Calderón (AZ '77)

by Editor — last modified Jul 15, 2010 10:40 AM
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“If you want to stick your nose under the tent, don’t be surprised
if somebody grabs both of your ears and drags you in.”

 

For the third piece in this series, Ernest Calderón (AZ ’77), a prominent Arizona lawyer and current president of the Arizona Board of Regents, was interviewed by Christopher Sopher (VA ’10), undergraduate student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

calderon

Calderón has worked as a lawyer for more than 25 years in both private and public practice. He served as President of the State Bar of Arizona and in 2002 was named “National Latino Lawyer of the Year” by the National Hispanic Bar Association. He has been appointed to public service roles by seven Arizona governors from both political parties and worked on issues from juvenile justice to early childhood education. He was appointed by former Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano (NM ’77) to the Arizona Board of Regents, which oversees the state’s public university system. Since July 2009 he has served as the board’s president, leading its work on college access and affordability. Calderón graduated from Northern Arizona University and the University of Arizona law school.

Sopher is an undergraduate and Morehead-Cain Scholar at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he studies public policy. He helped start the national college mentoring organization Strive for College, and founded and ran its chapter at UNC. He spent the 2008 year working for the Obama for America campaign. He blogs about youth issues at www.youngerthinking.com.

How do you navigate political party? You’re a Democrat, so if a Republican asks you to serve in a public role, how do you decide whether you want to do that?

For me, the thought process is: the greater good is neither Republican nor Democrat. The greater good is whatever the right thing to do is. If I have a Republican governor that comes to me and says that they have a particular task force they want me to lead, or a particular job they’d like me to help them with, I ask myself: “Who’s this going to benefit?” If it’s going to benefit the public, then I’m willing to do it, even over the objection of people in my own party. I really believe my duty as a citizen and certainly as a Truman Scholar is to try to make life better for the citizenry, so if I can contribute to a solution, then it’s my duty.

Applying that idea to your current role as president of the Arizona Board of Regents, what were your starting goals?

We focused on accessibility and affordability issues. And we’ve made a pretty good cut at it.

So access and cost are the key issues right now?

Greater access was my theme. Cost is a component of that. Geographic location is another; cyberspace accessibility was another. We strove every possible way to ensure that, for example, people in the military who had taken courses in the military would now receive credit in our university systems for those courses. We put together “3 + 1” programs where we jointly admit students their freshman year along with a community college.  They complete the first two years at the community college. The third year they complete at the community college but we control the curriculum. The fourth year they go to the four-year university at the full rate but they are guaranteed matriculation at the end of that year. So essentially they spend three years of community college tuition and one year of university tuition and they get a bachelor’s degree. That reduces the cost of higher education by about 60 percent.

That’s been successful?

So far, yes. We started on my watch this year and so far it’s been very successful.

We were also talking about more online outreach. Our universities now are probably at the forefront of the country, probably in the top 25 universities in online courses. So if you live on the reservation someplace and you can’t afford to travel to Flagstaff or Tucson or Phoenix, many courses are online now. All you need is Internet access. We’ve even helped with that, trying to provide more Internet access to those places on the reservations that don’t have Internet access.

And we’re doing a comprehensive effort to ensure that we have more branch campuses located geographically around the state. As it is now, we have Arizona State University, which has 68,000 students in Tempe. We have the University of Arizona, which has about 35,000 students in Tucson, and we have Northern Arizona University which has about 22,000 students in Flagstaff. But there’s a whole lot of Arizona in between those places. So we’re going to try to ensure that we set up branch campuses, either in conjunction with an existing community college or just freestanding. In the case of NAU, we went ahead and created a campus in a city library in Prescott Valley, Arizona. We got the community college to join as well, so if you live in that rural area, all you have to do is go to the city library and you can take community college courses, a university course. You can even apply for some limited Bachelor’s degree programs and complete your entire education there, which would make it very affordable.

On affordability, I feel safe saying a sizable number of Truman Scholars are concerned about this issue in one way or another: as current or former students, as parents, as people with loans, as parents of kids who will be taking loans. In your experience, what are the obstacles and some of the possible solutions to bringing down the cost of higher education?

The things I just mentioned are tremendously important. The geographic location changes allow you to go to school without moving away and having to pay room and board and that sort of thing. Online courses do the same thing. And the “3 + 1” program knocks about 60 percent off [a student’s] education costs. So those are significant by themselves.

And they were not easy to do. There’s a variety of people who like to hang on to past traditions. And anything other than “desk time” in one of our established physical locations is seen by them as being “less,” when in this new world it really means “more.” We’ve got to see more state and federal aid to higher education. Arizona is 48th in the country for state student financial aid. State student financial aid is very, very important. If you look at Georgia and you look at Arkansas, they both have stellar programs of student financial aid. Those are the sort of models we need to move toward.

Another thing we need to do to make school more affordable is to eliminate the remedial work that our universities are doing. We have a lot of students that come to the universities unprepared for university studies. They might have sailed through high school, but somebody did them a disservice by not adequately preparing them for college. So one thing we can do is bolster our K-12 system so that students are taught more rigorously, they have higher standards.

So what would you ask people reading this interview—the average or the interested person—to do to address some of these needs?

The average person should get involved politically Whether they run for office, help a neighbor run for office, or just get involved in candidate debates, they need to support legislative candidates that are willing to place education, particularly higher education, on the front burner. I think we’ve seen a trend in the country where you’ve seen a greater amount of support over the last two decades go to corrections than to higher education. It was probably needed in the corrections area, but now I think it’s time for the pendulum to swing the other way and invest in education.

The only way legislators will invest in education is if they find you and your neighbor calling and saying, “Hey, I’d like you to support our universities and our education. Why are you cutting taxes when my seventh grader’s middle school doesn’t have adequate supplies?”

Let’s shift gears. You’ve had a very long career in law in many capacities: private, public, government. What advice would you offer other Truman Scholars interested in law, about where the leverage points are in the legal profession, about how they can make the greatest public service contribution?

If the person is already a law student, the advice I’d give them is something I wish had been given to me. That is: when you come out of law school, get a job, even if it’s for a brief period—one year—where you actually have to try a case. Where you actually have to present a set of facts to a jury, you have to persuade a jury, you have to get a judge to rule on things. The reason I say that is you learn a lot about human nature when you try a case. You learn about what motivates people, you learn a lot about what turns people off. You learn to distill down a complex set of facts into something that the jury can absorb and determine what to do. Along with that, once you’ve tried a case, if you become an advocate of any sort, you have no fear anymore of something going to trial.

You’d be amazed at the liberation you have when somebody says to you, “Well, we’re going to try to block your homeless shelter and take you to court over it.” When they told me that when I was working on trying to get a homeless shelter built in Phoenix, I said, “That’s great. Let’s go to a jury.” And they said, “What are you talking about?” And I said, “Well, if you want to file a lawsuit to try and stop us, go ahead. But my first words to a jury are going to be, ‘What you do to the least of my brethren you do to me.’ And we’re trying to take care of the least of our brethren.” As soon as they heard that, they relented. Now I wouldn’t have been able to do that had I not faced a jury before.

So spend a year in the public defender’s office or the county attorney’s office. Or find a law firm that’ll teach you how to try a case, and do that. Then after that you’ve got the fundamentals down. You have seen Armageddon.

Now let’s say you’re not a law student. I would ask myself, what is my passion? Some people go to law school because they want a job that pays well. There’s nothing wrong with that, but you can be very miserable in life and be well-paid. Try to find something in law that really gets you passionate about life. If you find that, the law will be very interesting for you, very vibrant, and less tedious.

And what was that thing for you?

I grew up in segregated housing. I’m Hispanic—they called us the “Mexicans”—and where I grew up we had to live in a certain place. The company owned all the housing—it was a copper mining company—and so the Mexicans had to live in a certain place, and the two black families had to live next door to each other, and the Native Americans—Apaches, Navajo— had to live in a certain place. And I grew up thinking, “this isn’t fair. We’re being judged by the color of our skin.”

So I gravitated to those parts of the law where I can help, particularly in education. I see myself as an equal opportunity person to—either through the law or civic activities—inject myself when I see somebody’s not being treated fairly.

So I’ll ask the obligatory Arizona question about fairness: SB 1070 [the Arizona immigration enforcement law of recent attention]. What is going on, where do you think that is headed?

SB 1070 is incredibly popular here in Arizona. I think that shows there’s a great deal of frustration with the Obama administration for not doing something about it. The Obama administration promised that in year one, they would pursue immigration reform. It never happened. It still hasn’t happened. So what you’ve seen is an overreaction in Arizona to the fact that we have an immigration problem. We have immigrants who are here, hardworking, good people, but they are putting a strain on our infrastructure—health care, city services, whatever. There’s also a very small percentage of immigrants who are here in the criminal element. They victimize everybody, particularly fellow Hispanics. And then you have a segment of our community in Arizona—a small, vocal community—who just don’t like these people because they look different. And when you add all those things together, you have the perfect storm.

That’s what prompted Senate Bill 1070. Twenty-five percent of Hispanics in Arizona support SB 1070. Twenty-five percent. So that tells you that even the Hispanic community thinks that the system is broken. The federal government’s going to try to enjoin the application of the statute, and we’ll see if they’re successful. But ultimately the President of the United States and the Congress have to come up with some immigration reform. We’ve got to allow those hardworking immigrations who are here to become legal. They’re paying taxes already, so let’s get them to pay more taxes, just like everyone else. And then we need to have real stern punishment for the criminal element that comes over. None of that is happening. That’s why 1070 was passed.

You’ve spent your entire career in Arizona. I know many younger Truman Scholars feel conflicted about that. They want to stay in their home states and do public service work, but they also feel this draw to Washington or other major cities. What advice would you give Scholars making those decisions?

Go with your heart. As you get older, it’s more difficult to get to Washington. You’ll have a mortgage, you’ll have family commitments. So if there is somebody that really loves Washington, then consider trying to get a job there early in your career. You have to remember that Washington draws the best and the brightest, and you might be the head of a government agency or a county attorney in Iowa, but when you get to Washington you’re probably three or four steps below that, because there are other people who got there before you. So if you’re willing to work your way up slowly, Washington is a great incubator. Sooner or later, though, you don’t become effective in Washington unless you have left Washington at some point, and gone to your home community and served.

What advice would you give Truman Scholars who are interested in education: policy, administration, higher education?

Now’s the time. If you’re interested in education policy, our country is at a crossroads. We have declining financial resources for it. I would have people get involved, if they like K-12 education, by attending school board meetings. Find the parent groups who are organizing about school sites and management and that sort of thing. If there is a local department of education, contact them and find out what task forces are going on. Attend the meetings. If you know a politician who can appoint you, get appointed to a task force or committee to attack a problem.

If you’re interested in higher education, contact the Board of Trustees or Board of Regents and say you’d like to be involved. I’ve received many people and plugged them in wherever I could. It’s an open door. Higher education policy is an open door for two reasons. Right now we’re at a crossroads, and things are ripe for change. Second, education is a very open system in this country. If you want to stick your nose under the tent, don’t be surprised if somebody grabs both of your ears and drags you in.

If you would like to conduct an interview or write a feature for the Truman Scholars Blog, please contact news@trumanscholars.org

Class Notes (July 2010)

by Editor — last modified Jul 15, 2010 11:05 PM
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Will Masters (NH ‘81) will be moving from Purdue University to be Professor of Food Policy in the Friedman School of Nutrition at Tufts University. His contact information and details are at http://sites.tufts.edu/willmasters.

Brian Ellner (NY '90) was recently tapped by the Human Rights Campaign to lead its Campaign for New York Marriage. The campaign is focused on electing fair minded legislators this fall in order to enact marriage equality early next year. Learn more about the effort at www.hrc.org/nymarriage.

Mary (Ammann) Vargas (NJ ‘94) opened Stein & Vargas, LLP, a national litigation firm focusing on the representation of individuals with disabilities in disability discrimination cases in September 2009. She received the American Academy of Pain Management's Advocacy for People with Pain Award for 2010.

Jake Zimmerman (’95), Missouri State Representative for District 83, is engaged to his girlfriend of two years, Megan Robertson.

Shawn Vogt Sween (MN ’99) and family recently moved back to Minnesota. Shawn is opening a rural law practice in Grand Meadow, MN, which will focus on agricultural and transportation law, rural schools and communities, and general rural legal needs, including real estate, wills and estates, and probate law. (see www.svslawoffice.com.) Shawn also recently finished renovating a historic 110+ year old building in downtown Grand Meadow for use as his office and would love to visit with any Trumans who happen to travel through Minnesota close by on I-90.

Jina Moore (WV '01) is finishing up a three-month reporting project on peace building and the United Nations, in partnership with the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.  You can find her dispatches from four countries on her blog or her website.

Michael Gale (WV ’02) has transitioned into a new role at U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.  Michael is now overseeing a national, public engagement campaign as the Communications Coordinator of an effort to craft a renewed, 10-year vision for the National Wildlife Refuge System. 

Marie-Adele “Dellie” Sorel (MD ’04) just completed her first year of residency at Cambridge Health Alliance/Harvard and moved to Washington, DC, where she is now in training for radiation oncology at Georgetown University. She also got engaged this year and is planning to get married in April.

Kelsey Vaughan (ME ’04) will be starting a master's program in Public Health at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine this fall, and she looks forward to connecting with London-based Scholars!

Ross Baird (GA '06) and Jen Kyle (CT '06) were engaged in late May. Ross proposed at sunrise at the Tidal Basin in Washington, DC, an outing he and Jen had planned to take together during 2007 Truman Scholars Summer Institute, but never did. "Three years later, it was certainly an unforgettable morning," Baird said.

Katie Jares (IA '06) will be moving to Washington, DC and pursuing her Ph.D. in Justice, Law, and Society at American University. She plans to examine the composition of parole boards and their role in the criminal justice process.

Devin Mauney (AZ ’08) will be starting law school at Harvard as a member of the HLS Class of 2013.

Please submit updates about yourself and other scholars to news@trumanscholars.org.

Jul 13, 2010

A Look Back at the 2009 National Conference

by Editor — last modified Jul 13, 2010 12:05 AM
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More than one year has passed since the inaugural Truman Scholars National Conference was held June 19-21, 2009 at the National Press Club in Washington, DC. This was the largest gathering of Truman Scholars to date, with more than 300 Scholars present. For an agenda and more information about the National Conference, please visit http://www.trumanscholars.org/national-conference

Following the National Conference, a PDF newsletter [click here to download the PDF] was distributed via the Truman Scholars listserve. We have re-posted the articles online and hope you enjoy reading them and re-experiencing this landmark event. 

 
 

Jul 04, 2010

MSNBC Reports on Jeff McLean's (WI '03) Reunion at 28,000 Feet

by Editor — last modified Jul 04, 2010 12:20 PM
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MSNBC Reports on Jeff McLean's (WI '03) Reunion at 28,000 Feet! A mid-air reunion: Jeffrey McLean and his wife, both in the armed services, reunite in flight.

 

Watch here: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/21134540/vp/38068309#38068309

 

 

Jul 01, 2010

Scholars Swap Stories at Old Ebbitt Grill

by Editor — last modified Jul 01, 2010 11:25 AM
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On a balmy June evening in Washington, DC, more than 40 Truman Scholars from all classes (1977-2010) descended on the Old Ebbitt Grill in Washington, DC for a Meet-and-Greet event to swap stories, make new pals, and spill the beans about Madeleine Albright's latest brooch acquisition. We were delighted that Trumans from 1977-2009 were able to join us for a terrific Happy Hour hosted by Christine Curella (NJ '07) and Caitie Whelan (ME '07), featuring Truman Foundation Executive Secretary Fred Slabach (MS '77) and Truman Scholars Association President Pooja Agarwal (MO '05). Even an amateur eavesdropper could tell from the bear hugs and guffawing that Trumans are professionals when it comes to having a good time. We certainly hope you can join us for our next DC bash!

 

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Te-Ping Chen (CA '06) and Michael Gale (WV '02)

 

group ebbitt

Christine Curella (hostest with the mostest; NJ '07), Pooja Agarwal (TSA President; MO '05), Julie Curti (WI '06), David Zipper (NC '99), and Frederick Slabach (Truman Foundation Executive Secretary; MS '77).