|
 |
 |

NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
December
Five undergraduates named first
Civic Leadership Fellows at Urbana campus
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
12/6/04
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Three juniors and two seniors have been named the first Civic Leadership
Fellows at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The Civic
Leadership Program is a new initiative of the department of political
science and is being run in conjunction with its new Center
for the Study of Democratic Governance.
The fellows are Andrea M. Alvarez, junior in history and political science
from Geneva, Ill.; Mark C. Brown, junior in history and philosophy from
Champaign; Merrin Permut, junior in political science and psychology
from Roanoke, Va.; Emily Renwick, senior in political science from Champaign;
and Kasey Umland, senior in economics and political science from Monee,
Ill.
The fellows will enroll in new courses in public policy, political economy
and ethics that are designed to “enhance their capacities to become
leaders on the world stage,” said James D. Nowlan, the director
of the Civic
Leadership Program.
In addition, the fellows will be paired with prominent Senior Fellows,
a group chaired by Jim Edgar, a former governor of Illinois; James D.
Bindenagel, a U.S. ambassador appointed by President Bill Clinton and
currently the vice president of the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations;
and former Fortune 500 CEO Richard Cline.
Fellows will complete bachelor’s degrees in their current fields,
then leave campus in the second semester of their senior years for an
internship, which could be anywhere in the world. They will return for
a one-year master’s degree in political science with a focus on
civic leadership. In the master’s program, the fellows will take
part in a yearlong public policy practicum that will produce an analysis
with options and recommendations.
In the first semester of their graduate work, fellows will go to Washington,
D.C., for a weeklong series of meetings and workshops with members of
Congress, high-ranking officials in the administration, media executives
and U. of I. alumni.
At the beginning of each fall semester, the Civic Leadership Program
will recruit applications from juniors across all disciplines on the
Urbana campus for up to 15 fellowships. Prerequisites in economics,
political science and related fields are encouraged, but not required
of applicants in the first years of the program.
All of the new fellows have distinguished themselves academically, and
all are active in leadership roles on campus, Nowlan said.
•
Alvarez is president of Delta Zeta Sorority, and in the summer of 2004,
presented research findings in history at the McNair Research Symposium
at the University of Chicago;
•
Brown is a Chancellor’s Scholar and the president of Sigma Pi
Fraternity;
•
Permut is the president of Chi Omega Sorority and served in the summer
of 2004 as an assistant to a member of Parliament in the United Kingdom
through the campus Parliamentary Internship Program;
•
Renwick has studied in France as well as in Washington, D.C., and plans
to study in Bombay during the coming semester break;
•
Umland is campus co-chair of Amnesty International and works in the
Illinois Leadership Center in the Illini Union.
More information about the Civic Leadership Program can be found online.
Nowlan can be reached at 217-333-0364.
|
 |
 |
|