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NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release – March
30, 2009
Contact: Ernie Ballard, writer
at the LSU Office of Communications & University
Relations, 225-578-8654, or Delia A. Taylor, APR,
225-931-0286 or
taylormedia@bellsouth.net.
Denham Springs High
Alumnus Named Prestigious Truman Scholar
LSU Junior
Micaela
de Gruy Becomes Fifth LSU Student
to Receive the Award
The Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation has
announced that LSU junior and
Denham Springs
High School graduate Micaela de Gruy of
Baton Rouge
is among 60 students nationwide to receive the
prestigious Truman Scholarship. She is the only
student from
Louisiana
selected to receive the Truman Scholarship this
year.
“We are proud of Micaela and all of LSU’s Truman
Scholars over the past few years,” said LSU
Chancellor Michael Martin. “This is proof that LSU
students are performing at a very high level
nationally, and LSU is doing its part as a
university committed to excellence in everything it
does.”
De Gruy, a mass communication and
LSU
Honors
College
student, will graduate from LSU in December.

Micaela de Gruy
“I never expected to receive any honor of this
caliber. I have proof now that dedication and
passion really can get you where you want to be,” de
Gruy said. “It has been a truly humbling experience
to be around other finalists and hear about their
accomplishments. I promise to use this opportunity
for the benefit of others; my future is not about
me, but about the kind of change I can make in the
world.”
After graduation, de Gruy hopes to attend the
Boston College Graduate School of Social Work. She
plans to pursue both a master’s degree and Ph.D. in
social work and would like to work for the
International Rescue Committee, recruiting and
training volunteers to serve refugee camps in
Africa.
“We have the best media and politics program in
the country – this is an example of why,” said John
Maxwell Hamilton, dean of the LSU Manship School of
Mass Communication.
De Gruy joins four other LSU students who have
received Truman Scholarships to date: Claire Kendig
in 2008, Cynthia “CC” Dubois in 2006, Jacob Landry
in 2005 and Allen Richey in 2003. In six of the past
seven years, an LSU student has reached the finalist
stage of the Truman Scholarship process.
“LSU can be very proud of Micaela, who
exemplifies the dedication to both academic
excellence and service to the community that we all
share here on this campus,” said Nancy Clark,
LSU
Honors
College
dean. “She follows in a growing LSU tradition of
students who have been recognized as tomorrow’s
leaders by the Truman Foundation.”
The scholarship provides up to $30,000 for
graduate study, along with priority admission and
supplemental financial aid at some premier graduate
institutions, leadership training, career and
graduate school counseling and special internship
opportunities within the federal government. The
2008 Truman Scholars will assemble May 26 for a
leadership development program at William Jewell
College in Liberty,
Mo., and will receive their awards in a special
ceremony at the Truman Library in
Independence,
Mo., on May 31.
The 60 Truman Scholars this year represent 55
colleges and universities across the
United States. The
recipients were selected from 601 candidates
nominated by 289 colleges and universities.
“Inspired by her studies in international
development, Micaela is now educating herself to
become a leader in a field of global development
that is virtually unexplored: global social work,”
said Drew Lamonica Arms, LSU
Honors
College director of
fellowship advising. “Micaela is a remarkable
combination of passion and poise, and she has great
potential to be a ‘change agent’ on a global scale.
I could not be more proud of her and thrilled that
she has been recognized by the Truman Foundation for
her achievements.”
The Truman Scholarship Foundation was established
by Congress in 1975 as the federal memorial to the
33rd president. The mission of the Truman
Scholarship Foundation is to find and recognize
college students with exceptional leadership
potential who are committed to careers in
government, the nonprofit or advocacy sectors,
education or elsewhere in public service; and to
provide them with financial support for graduate
study, leadership training and fellowship with other
students who are committed to making a difference
through public service.
Truman Scholars are required to work in public
service for three of the seven years following
completion of a foundation-funded graduate degree
program as a condition of their receiving Truman
funds. Part of the application process is for the
students to create policy to address a current
issue.
LSU’s Office of Fellowship Advising was created
to assist students in applying for prestigious
scholarships and fellowships, such as the Rhodes,
Marshall, Gates, Mitchell, Udall, Truman and
Goldwater awards. Students interested in applying
for these and other scholarship opportunities or for
more information, contact
fellowships@lsu.edu.
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