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December 2005
Dear Contributors,
The Chris Borton Memorial Scholarship
Fund is now in its ninth year and the current trio of recipients
studying in Senegal, Egypt and Italy brings the total number
of UC San Diego students benefiting from your generous contributions
to 22. Their destinations for international study have included
universities in China, Egypt, France, Germany, Ghana, Hungary,
Italy, Japan, Mexico, Scotland, Senegal, Spain and the United
Kingdom. Our three students are among what the New York Times
reports are some 191,000 American students studying abroad
this year. We are pleased to be able to help create opportunities
for young people to experience cultural differences first
hand and to view U.S. society from an international perspective
– these scholarships provide just such opportunities
while also honoring the memory of Chris’ lifelong engagement
with the international scene.
Jenna
Carlsson, a third year student in Sociology with
a minor in African Studies who was fluent in French and eager
to immerse herself in a completely different culture, chose
to study at the Université Gaston Berger in Saint-Louis,
Senegal in a program administered by the University of Wisconsin.
Jenna anticipated that a year in Senegal would help her to
gain communication skills (in both French and Wolof), patience
and a more worldly perspective. Before departing for orientation
in Dakar in October, Jenna visited Davis on two occasions.
We had a wonderful time getting acquainted and exchanging
thoughts. This is one of the first observations she shared
after arrival in Africa: “White Americans who believe
race doesn’t matter should put themselves in a situation
where 99% of the people around them are black. I would predict
they would feel much more uncomfortable and different than
they think they would. Yes, race does matter.”
Tamami
Komatsu is spending her third year as a pre-med International
Studies major studying Literature and Italian Studies at the
University of Bologna. In accepting the scholarship, she wrote:
“Thank you so very much for assisting me in my efforts
to become a world citizen – I only wish I could express
how much I really appreciate this act of benevolence.”
Tamami is very excited about developing an international perspective,
independence and a foundation for her later humanitarian work.
She has a deep concern for the health crisis in Africa and
eventually hopes to work for Doctors Without Borders. After
a few weeks of intensive language training in Rome, Tamami
wrote: “I miss home a lot more than I thought I would
and Italy is lot different than I expected. I love how much
I’m already learning and I already feel different than
when I came.”
Marilyn
Shapley is a fourth year International Studies and
Literature major with a secondary focus on political science.
At the American University in Cairo she is able to study policies
and literature of the Middle East in preparation for a regional
specialization in her planned career as a Foreign Service
officer in the U.S. State Department. When visiting with Marilyn
last summer, we learned of her great interest in Egyptology,
her concern about the current situation of Sudanese refugees,
and her eagerness to learn how to communicate thoughtfully
in an international setting. A few weeks later she was ecstatic
about her first visit to see pyramids, starting to teach English
to refugees, discussing the Egyptian election with local students
and practicing colloquial Arabic in the marketplace. Some
of Marilyn’s courses deal with developing durable peace
and stability in war-torn countries, Third World Literature
and forced migration and refugee studies. When trying out
for the Cairo Model UN club, she had to role play as Saudi
Arabia and with two minutes to prepare had to defend her country’s
record of religious freedom. Marilyn’s comment: “It
was valuable to walk away and realize that there are two sides
to every story, and the truth is never as cut and dry as we
think.”
Besides
visiting with Jenna and Marilyn who live in Northern California,
we also had a chance to meet with several other scholarship
recipients. Early in the year we attended a reception in honor
of the marriage of Yukio King (Germany 2000-01)
and Anja King who came from Berlin for the occasion. Yukio
met Anja when he was studying in Germany. In May we were guests
of Shige Itoh (Japan, 2000-01) as he graduated
from Boalt Law School in Berkeley. The elated graduate is
pictured below. In June we celebrated Brian Israel’s
(U.K., 2003-04) graduation from UCSD. In August we met Brian
and Achim Lyon (China, 2004-05) at Chris’
favorite Ethiopian restaurant in Berkeley, just days after
Achim had returned from Beijing. A picture of Brian and Achim
that night is on the following page. Ellen Holloway
(Spain, 2001-02) was in Davis over the summer, but we only
managed to run into each other in the grocery store.
Updates
on other scholarship recipients: Jenny Chang
(U.K., 1997-98) is continuing the research for her doctoral
dissertation at the University of Washington; Mark
Morris (Ghana, 1998-99) is launching a line of designer
t-shirts from his home base in San Francisco; Julia
Carter (Egypt, 2002-03) took a world trip after her
graduation and has shared marvelous descriptions of all she
saw and did; Marisol Gutiérrez (Mexico,
2003-04) graduated from UCSD; Alice Wagner
(Scotland, 2004-05) and Henrick Shyu (Japan,
2004-05) returned last summer (unfortunately we couldn’t
find a convenient time to get together) and are back at UCSD,
Henrick in graduate school; Jonathan Wang
(Japan, 2003-04) added Japanese Studies as a second major
and will graduate next March, and Ben Winkler-McCue
(Spain, 2001-02) built a house in Hawaii and now is a teaching
assistant at UCSD.
A
news story about the scholarship fund appeared in the Davis
Enterprise this year. It can be viewed, along with other updates
and previous letters, on the CBMSF
web site. One of the responses to the article we received
was a donation with the remark: “Wow! This is something
I’d like to be a part of.”
We will close with what we thought were
particularly touching words from former scholarship recipient
Ben Winkler-McCue: “What you are doing through your
scholarship program is quite admirable. The more one is able
to travel and gain new perspectives, the more one is humbled.
I only hope that some of us can affect the direction our country
is going. Thanks for your continued support.”
We share those thanks with all of you
who have made this project possible.

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