CASNR student named 2008 Truman Scholar
STILLWATER, Okla. – Oklahoma State University student Cortney Timmons of Ada has been selected for one of the nation’s most prestigious scholastic honors, the Truman Scholarship. She is the 15th OSU student to receive the coveted honor.
Timmons was given the news in a surprise announcement by OSU President Burns Hargis.
“Cortney’s achievements and national recognition have
brought honor to OSU,” said Hargis. “Our entire OSU community is proud of what
she has accomplished. She is an extraordinary representative of the quality and
creativeness that is evident in students at OSU.”
Timmons joins a growing list of OSU students to receive this recognition, said Robert Graalman, director of the OSU Office of Scholar Development and Recognition.
In fact, OSU students have been selected for this
scholarship so many times that, in 2000, OSU was designated as Oklahoma’s first Truman
Honor Institution.
The Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation was created in 1975 to support
students with exceptional leadership potential who are committed to careers in
government, the nonprofit or advocacy sectors, education or other public
service. The foundation selects only 80 U.S. college juniors each year to
receive the $30,000 scholarship.
In addition to the scholarship, Timmons will receive leadership training,
career and graduate school counseling and special internship opportunities
within the federal government. Following her graduation, she plans to pursue both
a master’s and doctoral degree, studying in the United
States and in Great Britain.
“In speaking to those who attended her surprise Truman announcement, Cortney
displayed that wonderful air of self-confidence with her characteristic sense
of humility,” said Ed Miller, associate dean of academic programs in the OSU
Division of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources.
“Cortney is in every
way a genuine and warm individual," he said. "Working with her is so rewarding, one of the
highlights of my academic career.”
Timmons, a biosystems and agricultural engineering major, is the daughter of
Steve and Lisa Timmons of Ada.
She is a 2004 graduate of Byng
High School.
“There are few students in the history of OSU who have so completely given
themselves to an undergraduate life that combines service and academics at such
a high level,” said Graalman. “The best thing about Cortney is her character.
She’s as respected and admired as anyone I’ve ever met at OSU.”
As a biosystems engineering major, her coursework encompasses the College of Engineering, Architecture and Technology and DASNR's College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources.
Karl N. Reid, dean of CEAT, said Timmons has engaged in an unusual blend and
level of leadership pursuits while maintaining an outstanding academic record.
“In more than 40 years in higher education, I have not met a student who has
been a better model of excellence in scholarship, leadership and service,” Reid
said.
Timmons is serving as president of the Student Council of the College of Engineering,
Architecture and Technology. As a freshman, she was named a CEAT Scholar, and
last summer traveled with 12 other scholars to Japan, accompanied by Dean Reid.
She also has been involved in the OSU Scholar Development and Recognition
Program at OSU, and has been both a student and a summer traveler to Cambridge and Dublin
for specialized courses.
In 2007, Timmons was among 80 students from 60 colleges and universities
selected to receive a Morris K. Udall Scholarship, OSU’s fifth student to
receive the award since the scholarship program began in 1996. Scholars were
selected on the basis of leadership potential, academic achievement and
commitment to careers in the environment, health care or tribal public policy.
Each received a stipend of $5,000.
As a Udall Scholar, she heard about a tailgate recycling program at the University of Missouri
at Columbia,
and with the support of the OSU Student Government Association started “Real
Cowboys Recycle” at OSU home football games. The program grew throughout the
year and she was named Oklahoma Collegiate Recycler of the Year, and the
organization was recognized locally and regionally for its impact and
popularity.
She also has served as an Agriscience Ambassador, held the Frank Lucas
Agricultural Policy Internship and was selected twice for the highly
competitive Lew Wentz Research Project Awards. She also received a first place
award in research competition from the American Society of Agricultural and
Biological Engineers. She is a finalist this spring in the Glamour Magazine’s
“Top 10 American Women Students” competition.
After completing her education, she hopes to design agricultural systems and programs that protect and sustain the quantity and quality of water, soil and other natural resources while developing techniques to make agricultural operations more environmentally friendly.
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MEDIA CONTACT:
Carrie Hulsey-Greene
OSU Communications
Phone: 405-744-6260
E-Mail: carrie.hulsey_greene@okstate.edu
Oklahoma State University, U. S. Department of Agriculture, State and Local governments cooperating. Oklahoma State University in compliance with Title VI and VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Executive Order 11246 as amended, Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, and other federal and state laws and regulations, does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, age, religion, disability, or status as a veteran in any of its policies, practices, or procedures, and is an equal opportunity employer.
