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  Newsmakers   02 Mar 2017  7 Indian-American students nominated for Truman scholarship

7 Indian-American students nominated for Truman scholarship

PTI
Published : Mar 2, 2017, 1:03 pm IST
Updated : Mar 2, 2017, 2:35 pm IST

The awards are given to college students on their records of leadership, public service and academic achievement.

The students will compete for the prestigious national awards, which provides up to USD 30,000 for graduate study. (Representational Image)
 The students will compete for the prestigious national awards, which provides up to USD 30,000 for graduate study. (Representational Image)

Houston: Seven Indian-American students have been nominated for the prestigious Harry S Truman Scholarship, which is given to college juniors for demonstrating leadership potential and a commitment to public service.

The students will compete for the prestigious national awards, which provides up to USD 30,000 for graduate study.

The awards are given to college students on their records of leadership, public service and academic achievement.

Only about 60 Truman Scholars are named nationwide each year.

The foundation reviewed 768 potential scholars from 315 institutions before settling on the 199 students from 136 institutions, according to a release.

Among the scholarship finalists were Shreya Ganeshan of the University of Georgia, Anjali Misra of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Samarth Gupta of Harvard University, Megan Patel of Georgetown University, Maya Durvasula of Duke University, Manju Bangalore of the University of Oregon, and Anjana Murali of the University of Pittsburgh.

A foundation regional review panel will interview the finalists from March 3-April 7, with the scholars being announced April 21.

The Truman Scholarship Foundation was established by Congress in 1975 as the federal memorial to President Harry S Truman.

Each year, a selection committee reviews applications from more than 600 nominees for the Truman Foundation in Washington.

Tags: harry s truman scholarship, indian-americans, public service, award