Syracuse University's Remembrance Scholar Committee has chosen the 35 students
who will be the 2009-10 Remembrance Scholars.
The scholarships were founded as a tribute to-and means of remembering-the 35
students who were killed in the Dec. 21, 1988, bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over
Lockerbie, Scotland. The students, who were returning from a semester of study
abroad in London and Florence, were among 270 people who perished in the
bombing.
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.
"It is an honor to be part of the process of selecting our new Remembrance Scholars
from among a truly remarkable pool of students," says Suzanne Thorin, dean of
libraries and University librarian and chair of the Remembrance Scholar Selection
Committee. "They all represent the hopes and dreams of classmates lost, and remind
us of humankind's capacity to turn unspeakable tragedy into a celebration of life."
The 2009-10 Remembrance Scholars will be recognized during a November
convocation.
Additionally, the 2009-10 Lockerbie Scholars, Stefan Hanley and Alistair Inglis, were
recently selected. Each year, two students from Lockerbie, Scotland, come to
Syracuse for a year of study through the Syracuse-Lockerbie Scholarships, jointly
funded by Syracuse and the Lockerbie Trust.
The 2009-10 Remembrance Scholars (and their hometowns and colleges/schools) are: