Life IS changing when the Rhodes selection committee can look at a person 
with paraplegia & still see "physical vigor".  P.S. I'm back. It's been awhile. 
I 
got kicked off the list when my husband was in the hospital for a couple 
weeks & my mailbox exploded... 8-) CloudSing

32 U.S. Students Chosen As Rhodes Scholars

By TARA BURGHART
.c The Associated Press 

CHICAGO (AP) - Ian Desai was so curious about maps he found in a book that he 
retraced the ancient voyage of Jason and the Argonauts, one of the most 
enduring Greek fables. Now, not surprisingly, he'll immerse himself in modern 
Greek 
and Oriental studies at Oxford University after being named among America's 
32 Rhodes Scholars.

The scholars, chosen from 904 applicants from 341 colleges and universities, 
will enter Oxford next fall. The scholarships fund two or three years of study 
in England.

The American students will join scholars selected from 18 other nations. 
About 95 scholars are selected each year.

``I'd really like to look back on the past through a modern lens,'' said 
Desai, a University of Chicago graduate. ``What I'm trying to understand is how 
the past comes to influence current political and social realities.''

For six weeks during a study abroad program in Greece, Desai walked, took 
buses, rode a motorcycle and sailed with a group of Turkish fishermen to better 
understand Jason and the Argonauts.

``I was looking to retrace this journey and get a kind of current perspective 
on this ancient myth,'' he said.

The Rhodes Scholarships were created in 1902 by the will of British 
philanthropist and diamond magnate Cecil Rhodes. Winners are selected on the 
basis of 
high academic achievement, personal integrity, leadership potential and 
physical vigor, among other attributes.

Past scholars include former President Bill Clinton, U.S. Supreme Court 
justices Byron White and David Souter, singer/songwriter Kris Kristofferson, 
former 
presidential candidates Bill Bradley and Wesley Clark, and James William 
Fulbright, creator of the Fulbright Scholarships.

This year, Harvard University had the most selectees with five, followed by 
the U.S. Naval Academy with three - the most for that school in one year since 
1929, said spokesman Cmdr. Rod Gibbons.

Another winner, Jennifer Howitt, who lost the use of her legs in a hiking 
accident when she was 9, plans to study development and to continue work to 
improve conditions for the disabled in developing countries.

``I'm still having trouble putting into words how it feels,'' said Howitt of 
Georgetown University, a member of the U.S. wheelchair basketball team that 
won a gold medal at the Athens Paralympic Games. ``In a lot of ways, it felt 
kind of like winning the gold in Athens. It kind of put this smile on my face 
that I couldn't take off.''

Others selected include Jeremy Farris, a senior at Georgia Tech who 
discovered a pathogen to help control kudzu and plans to study political theory 
at 
Oxford, and Andrew Kim, a University of Chicago graduate who plans to study 
international relations, particularly conflict resolution and refugee issues 
related 
to Africa.

Justin Mutter, one of two Rhodes honorees from the University of Virginia, 
has been working in public health in Haiti and plans to study how global 
religious communities confront problems like poverty and disease.

``Everyone experiences shock, not really having known what to expect, and all 
of a sudden hearing your name called out,'' Mutter said. ``After that, it's 
this sense of gratitude, not only for being offered a scholarship but for the 
community, the experience of the whole process.''

On the Net:

http://www.rhodesscholar.org

11/22/04 13:08 EST
    
Copyright 2004 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news 
report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed 
without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.  All active 
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