Paid Internships at Civil War Sites Available

Check out this wonderful opportunity for a paid internship at Gettysburg or Harpers Ferry. Contact Dr. McClurken if you’re interested in applying. [Note the deadline is coming up very fast.]

Gettysburg National Military Park, Harpers Ferry National Historical Park

Deadline:  January 14, 2011

The Richards Civil War Era Center at Penn State invites applications from qualified undergraduate students for four paid positions at historic sites during the summer of 2011: two at Gettysburg National Military Park and two at Harpers Ferry National Historical Park. The internships provide aspiring historians and teachers with hands-on experience in public history. All of these non-credit, paid internships come with a $3,500 stipend and housing.
•    Gettysburg National Military Park interns will work with either interpretive operations or with the museum service branch.  The interpretive operations intern engages with tourists by designing and presenting two public presentations and assisting at the visitor center’s information desk.  The intern in the museum service branch will perform varied aspects of archival and museum management—working with letters written from soldiers and civilians at the time, as well as material objects from the war.
•    Harpers Ferry National Historical Park features one position especially suited to future teachers.  Often wearing period costume, the intern prepares, develops, and delivers education programs about the park for students from kindergarten through high school.  A second position involves working with the visitor services branch, which includes presenting programs to tourists and working the desk at the visitor center.
Application Process: Applicants must have a 3.0 grade point average and have not graduated at the time of the internship. Applicants should submit a one-page statement of interest detailing why they would like to work at the particular site and how they think the experience will further their education. They must also provide a letter of recommendation from a faculty member (e-mail is acceptable) and an informal transcript.  Materials must be received by January 14, 2011.
Direct all application materials to Karen Fisher Younger, Richards Center Managing Director, 108 Weaver Building, University Park, PA 16802.  For more information, see the Richards Center Web site: http://richardscenter.psu.edu, or contact Dr. Younger at kvy100@psu.edu.

Funding is made possible through the generous support of Larry and Lynne Brown and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Source: http://richardscenter.psu.edu/news-events/summer-opportunities

Charles Girard (’12) Wins Human Rights Campaign Scholarship

The Human Rights Campaign Foundation awarded a Generation Equality Scholarship to University of Mary Washington junior Charles Girard ’12.

The $500 scholarship recently was awarded as part of the HRC Foundation’s Youth and Campus Outreach Program, which aims to provide tools, facilitate connections, and empower young people to fight for LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) equality on campuses.

Girard is majoring in American studies with a concentration in gender and sexuality. Since 2008, Girard has held various roles on the executive committee of UMW’s PRISM (People Representing Individuals of Sexual Minorities), including secretary and webmaster.

He is a co-founder and current president of the Gender-Neutral Housing Project, formed in 2008 to establish a gender-neutral housing policy on campus. Also, Girard was chosen by Equality Virginia to serve on the Generation Equality board, their LGBT youth outreach program, and to speak at Equality Virginia’s statewide conference about UMW’s gender-neutral housing initiative.

Girard said he plans to continue working with PRISM to have gender identity and expression added to the school’s non-discrimination policy. After graduation, he said, “I want to work with transgender youth and use the tools that I am learning in college to continue to make a difference in the lives of my transgender brothers and sisters.”

David L. Boren Scholarships

The applications for the 2011-2012 National Security Education Program’s David L. Boren Scholarships for American undergraduate students and Fellowships for graduate students are now available at www.borenawards.org <http://www.borenawards.org>  <http://www.borenawards.org/>. Boren Awards provide unique funding opportunities for U.S. students to study in Africa, Asia, Central & Eastern Europe, Eurasia, Latin America, and the Middle East, where they can add important international and language components to their educations.

Boren Scholarships provide up to $20,000 for an academic year’s study abroad. Boren Fellowships provide up to $30,000 for language study and international research. The application deadline for the Boren Fellowship is February 1, and the deadline for the Boren Scholarship is February 10.

Please contact the Boren Awards staff at boren@iie.org <mailto:boren@iie.org> or 1-800-618-NSEP with any questions.

Boren Scholarship — February 1

The applications for the 2011-2012 National Security Education Program’s
David L. Boren Scholarships for undergraduate students and Fellowships
for graduate students are now available at www.borenawards.org
<http://www.borenawards.org/>. Boren Awards provide unique funding
opportunities for U.S. students to study in Africa, Asia, Central &
Eastern Europe, Eurasia, Latin America, and the Middle East, where they
can add important international and language components to their educations.

Boren Scholarships provide up to $20,000 for an academic year’s study
abroad. Boren Fellowships provide up to $30,000 for language study and
international research. The application deadline for the Boren
Fellowship is February 1, and the deadline for the Boren Scholarship is
February 10.

Please contact the Boren Awards staff at boren@iie.org
<mailto:boren@iie.org> or 1-800-618-NSEP with any questions.

Marissa Allison (’10) Wins State Department Fellowship

Marissa S. Allison, a History and Middle Eastern Studies graduate (2010) of the University of Mary Washington, has won a Critical Language Scholarship from the United States Department of State. With this prestigious award, she will travel to Muscat, Oman for a 9 weeks of intensive study of the Arabic language.

As noted in UMW’s own announcement of the award, Marissa completed study abroad programs in Costa Rica, Jordan, and Egypt while a Mary Washington student. She also has gained experience as an Arabic media research intern with the global intelligence network Stirling-Assynt, as a research intern at the Palestine-Israel Journal in Jerusalem, and through a Baghdad Embassy virtual internship. In addition to being named to the Dean’s List and receiving honors with the Virginia Social Sciences Association for an undergraduate paper and student presentation (based on her senior thesis, written with Dr. Al-Tikriti, on the 1979 Siege of Mecca), Marissa is a magna cum laude graduate of UMW.

Student Awarded Fulbright Scholarship

Farrah Tek,  who presented her senior thesis, “Victims Participation in the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC): A Look at the Revolutionary Process,” at the History and American Studies Symposium this spring, has been awarded a Fulbright scholarship.

With this award, Farrah Tek will work alongside the Victim Units of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia [ECCC] and use the vast resources of the Documentation Center of Cambodia [DC-CAM] to produce scholarly research.  Legal scholars have examined the logistics and practicality of victim participation on an international and domestic scale.  Tek will look at how victims, as civil parties, influence the process, procedure, and outcome of the tribunal.  Her research will take a grass-root and anthropological perspective, interviewing victims themselves.  With this approach, she hopes to study the topic from a new angle and look at the cultural implications of a United Nations-sponsored court on Cambodian society.  This project will continue the work of her thesis paper that she composed this past semester with Dr. Carter Hudgins (UMW History) serving as advisor.

Historic Deerfield — Summer Fellowship Program, June 13-August 14, 2011

Historic Deerfield is offering fellowships for 6-10 undergraduates (junior or senior status) to work and study in their museums in Deerfield, Massachusetts. Application deadline: February 25, 2011. For more details, go to www.historic-deerfield.org/summer-fellowship-program.