Caitlin Meyer – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Tue, 19 Nov 2024 19:01:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Caitlin Meyer – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 Fordham Scholars Reap Prestigious Awards https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/fordham-scholars-reap-prestigious-awards/ Tue, 15 May 2012 16:43:58 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=30989 Fordham marks 2012 as another successful year for reaping prestigious awards: Among this year’s crop of student awards are 8 Fulbright awards, 4 Boren awards, a Cambridge scholarship and the University’s first Lilly Graduate Fellowship in Humanities and the Arts.

Caitlin Meyer, FCRH ’12, is the recipient of a Cambridge Overseas Trust Scholarship to attend the University of Cambridge. Meyer, who was a Truman Scholarship finalist in 2011, will have the opportunity to obtain an M.Phil. in politics through the rigorous 10-month program.

A political science major, Meyer is passionate about civic engagement. She has participated in student government associations every year since the second grade, culminating in her service this year as president of Fordham’s United Student Government.

For Meyer, the Cambridge Scholarship is a chance to pursue this passion and lead others to become engaged as well.

“Young people are becoming more and more disillusioned with government and government processes,” she said. “Some statistics say that you’ve got less than 5 percent of U.S. citizens who say they trust the government.

“I’m interested in finding ways to reengage citizens—not just here, but also abroad.”

She has already worked several internships in her hometown of Oakland, Cali., including an internship with U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein. Ultimately, she said, she hopes to attend law school.

Gabrielle Hovendon, FCRH ’11, is one of 16 graduate students chosen nationally to join this year’s cohort of Lilly Fellows. The three-year program brings together humanities students who are interested in teaching at church-related colleges and universities.

Hovendon, who was an English major, will use the scholarship to begin a master’s in fine arts program in creative writing at Bowling Green State University in the fall.

“I was interested in being part of a community of like-minded graduate students and faculty,” said Hovendon, a native of Watertown, N.Y. “I also have a strong sense of social justice, and I believe that teaching at a church-related college would provide an excellent environment for me to incorporate my social concerns into my writing and my teaching philosophy.”

As a Lilly Fellow, Hovendon will receive a yearly financial award and will interact regularly with other Lilly Fellows at conferences and a distance colloquium, which will foster discussions among the group. She will also work with two Lilly faculty mentors on both her research and teaching goals.

As of May 15, Fordham’s Fulbright winners include:  Sarah Borsody, LAW ’11, to Mexico; Gina Ciliberto, FCRH ’12, to Malaysia; Alexandra DeBlock, FCRH ’11, to Thailand; Juan Duran, FCLC ’11, to Spain; Maria Christina Leano, FCLC ’08, to Turkey; Sean O’Connor, GSB ’12, to Sri Lanka; Mateusz Plaza, FCRH ’12, to Poland; and Elizabeth Scheib, FCRH ’12, to Germany. Three students—Allison Chandler, LAW ’11, Emily Groene, GSAS ’12, and Colleen Taylor, FCRH ’12—are Fulbright alternates for Sierra Leone, Niger, and Ireland, respectively.

Mateusz Plaza, a senior philosophy and history double-major, will travel to Krakow, Poland for the year on a Fulbright Fellowship. There, he will research Polish philosopher Jozef Tischner at the Jozef Tischner Institute and Ignatianum University.

Mateusz Plaza, FCRH ’12, will travel to Poland on a
Fulbright Fellowship.

“My research focus will be on Tischner and his philosophical work known as the ethics of solidarity,” said the Long Valley, N.J. native. “I am particularly interested in how this philosophy can form the ideological basis of a political community that is separate from the common socialist and capitalist tendencies in politics today.”

Plaza will interview residents and scholars of Krakow, many of whom knew Tischner personally. The fellowship, he said, will bolster his plan to study continental philosophy on the graduate level.

As of May 15, winners of the Boren Fellowships for International Study went to GSAS students Jonathan Clay, to Brazil, and Batya Rotter, to Israel. The Boren Scholarships for International Study went to Amanda Angri, FCLC ’12, to the United Arab Emirates, and to Rose Hill sophomore Mary Hamilton, to China. In addition, FCHR junior Lucas Bifera is an alternate for a Boren Scholarship to China, and GSAS student Emily MacGruder, GSAS, is an alternate for a Boren Fellowship to Tanzania.

In all Fordham students have to date earned 154 national and international awards through the University’s Campion Institute, said Director John Kezel, Ph.D. “As an independent, University-wide office, we continue to mentor all students who meet eligibility requirements for major scholarships.”

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Fordham Junior is Named 2011 Truman Scholar https://now.fordham.edu/university-news/fordham-junior-is-named-2011-truman-scholar/ Wed, 30 Mar 2011 18:27:20 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=31968 A junior in Fordham College at Rose Hill has received a 2011 Truman Scholarship, the most prestigious American award given to undergraduates for graduate study.

Abraham Mercado, an international political economy major, is a graduate of Colegio San Ignacio de Loyola in San Juan, Puerto Rico. He is fluent in English, Spanish and French and intends to pursue a juris doctorate with a concentration in international law.

Mercado is Fordham’s eighth Truman Scholar and its second from Puerto Rico. He began working with the St. Edmund Campion Institute for Prestigious Fellowships in his sophomore year to prepare his application. The $30,000 federal scholarship is awarded each year to between 60 and 65 college juniors who have demonstrated leadership and a commitment to public service.

“Abe is passionate about economics, politics, international affairs and foreign trade, and displays a sophisticated appreciation of how these issues can impact countless lives in developing countries,” said Maria Noonan, assistant director of the Campion Institute.

His career plans include securing a position of economic leadership within the United States government—first within the treasury department and later as a political and economic policy leader in Puerto Rico.

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“My vocation for public service is the main driving force behind everything I do. It is at the top of my priorities in my plans for the rest of my life,” Mercado said.

He is currently working with a group from Cornell University to establish Progressive Youth International, a non-governmental organization that supports sustainable, community-based development projects and small-business incentives aimed at poverty relief in Latin America.

“Fordham is blessed with students like Abraham Mercado,” said Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of the University. “Yes, he is the beneficiary of a Fordham education. Yes, he had terrific support from the Office of Prestigious Fellowships. Nonetheless, he would be exceptional in any group of students.

“In more than just conspicuous achievement, Abe embodies the Fordham ethic: his natural gifts, his considerable energy and his great heart are all offered in the service of others,” Father McShane said.

Even his leisure pursuits are intensive. Mercado has been a racquetball aficionado since he was 14 and was the captain of Puerto Rico’s junior national team during the 2009 junior world championships. He practices three to four hours a day, six days a week, and aspires to join the national team in the coming years.

To prepare for the interview portion of the application, he prepped with Gualberto Rodriguez (FCRH ’95), who also won a Truman for Fordham and graduated from Colegio San Ignacio de Loyola, said John Kezel, Ph.D., director of the Campion Institute.

“He invited me to his office and we spoke a lot about interview strategies, what kind of questions they would ask me, how I drafted my policy proposal and how I would defend it,” Mercado said. “After that, we started talking about life, basically, and went out to lunch. We’re very good friends now.”

He learned that he had won the award from Father McShane. The even-keeled Mercado tempered his reaction by reminding himself that he “still had to focus on class.”

Since then, he has let his parents and close friends in on the good news. “My parents congratulated me and told me they were really proud of me,” he said. “They also told me to keep pushing on, to further my commitment to my career and my graduate studies.

“The encouragement that I’ve received from everyone—my parents and friends and everyone at the Campion Institute—has played a huge role. I can’t thank them enough,” he said.

The University also drew a finalist in the 2011 Truman competition. Caitlin Meyer, a junior in Fordham College at Rose Hill, is a political science major from Oakland, Calif., and serves on the executive board of the United Student Government. She is Fordham’s seventh Truman finalist.

This is the second consecutive year that a student from Fordham has won a Truman Scholarship. Joseph Carnevale (FCLC ’11) is using the prize to attend medical school and simultaneously earn a master’s degree in public health.

Truman Scholars are elected by 16 independent selection panels on the basis of leadership potential, intellectual ability, and likelihood of “making a difference,” according to the Truman Foundation.

– Joseph McLaughlin

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