The Somerville Mathematics Fund is pleased to announce the winners of their renewable mathematics scholarships for 2022. The Math Fund was founded to celebrate and encourage math achievement and these students deserve to be celebrated for their work in math and science while in high school. Thanks to the generosity of many individuals and a few organizations, this year we were able to award a record 9 scholarships, totaling $54,000 over four years.
Top Row (left to right): Ezra Brody, Sam Diener, Lucy Gunther; Middle Row: Rio Hunter Black, Katherine Johnson, Ian Morales; Bottom Row: Iskandar Nazhar, Nikhilesh Rattan, and Leensyn Rivera Asmen
We definitely want to celebrate our scholarship winners for their achievements while meeting the challenges of going to high school, much of it was during a pandemic. CONGRATULATIONS.
The winners are attending a variety of schools next fall. Ezra Brody will attend Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Sam Diener, Case Western Reserve University; Lucy Gunther and Ian Morales, Carnegie Mellon University; Rio Hunter Black and Nikhilesh Rattan, Tufts University; Kate Johnson, University of Virginia; Iskander Nazhar, University of Massachusetts Amherst; and Leensyn Rivera Asmen, Simmons University
A bit of explanation about the scholarship names. Some scholarships are supported by many donations, some large, some small — but together there is $6000 for each student. For those student who participated in Game Jam this year, we had sponsors who each sponsored one year of a scholarship. We have some named annual scholarships, two memorial scholarships are for founders of the Somerville Math Fund. One of our named scholarships is given by one of our first scholarship winners back in 2001 in the name of his favorite famous mathematician. One is given in memory of a mother who distinguished herself in WW2 as a nurse and saved for her children’s education.
Their annual scholarships of $1500 are renewable for up to a total of four years as long as they maintain a B average and take mathematics or courses which use mathematics.
There were four memorial scholarships this year: Dr. Alice T Schafer Scholarship, Lt. Catherine M. Landers, S. Ramanujan, and Michael Voolich.
Lucy Gunther, Alice T Schafer Memorial Scholarship
One of the scholarships was given in the memory of an outstanding woman mathematician, Dr. Alice T. Schafer. Lucy Gunther was awarded the Alice T. Schafer Memorial Scholarship, she is planning on majoring Mechanical Engineering at Carnegie Mellon.
Dr. Schafer (1915 - 2009) was orphaned as an infant and raised by two aunts. When she went to college at the University of Richmond of Virginia, women students weren’t allowed in the library and she was discouraged from majoring in mathematics. She won prizes, earned a PhD, taught at colleges (including Wellesley) and among the things she is known for is helping start the Association for Women in Mathematics (1971).
Less known about Dr. Schafer was her role helping to start the Somerville Mathematics Fund in 2000 -- attending all of the planning meetings and contributing to their work as long as she was able. She is remembered for her passion and work to insure mathematical opportunities for women. Lucy sees herself as someone with the mind-set to solve practical problems for the society, be it solving packaging or mobility problems, she realized this was the mindset of an engineer. Since Dr. Schafer was committed to the education and supporting women in mathematics, Lucy’s majoring in Mechanical Engineering is a wonderful way to honor Dr. Alice Schafer's memory of encouraging women in the maths and sciences.
The Lt. Catherine M. Landers Memorial Scholarship was awarded to Rio Hunter Black. Rio has an interest in medical research. When Lt. Landers (1920 - 2012) wanted to go to nursing school (graduating in 1942), her grandmother opened a cedar chest were she had been saving dollar bills to help pay for her granddaughter’s education. Lt Landers won a Bronze Star for her service during WW2, where she ran a field hospital outside Paris; she was about to be shipped to the far East when WW2 ended and so she boarded a transport ship for the USA instead. Jay Landers and Jasper Lawson donated a scholarship in her memory, honoring her commitment to education. Rio Hunter Black's interest in medical research with a Biology major at Tufts is a wonderful way to honor Lt. Landers' commitment to education.
Iskandar Nazhar, S. Ramanujan Memorial Scholarship
Our scholarship in the memory of S. Ramanujan, it is a gift from the Jha Family and is awarded to Iskandar Nazhar who is planning on attending UMass Amherst. Iskandar Nazhar wants a career in pure math. Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887 - 1920) was a mostly self-taught brilliant Indian mathematician who sadly died young. He discovered his love of mathematics while in high school when he found a book that listed 4000 mathematical theorems without information on they were discovered or developed. So he continued his math work, often on a slate, only recording his concluding theorem on paper when finished, without the details of how he came to the conclusion. With his humble beginnings and no formal mathematical training, the story of his life and how he finally connected with the well-known mathematicians of his day is detailed the book and movie, The Man Who Knew Infinity. That book inspired the Jha family who gave this scholarship in his honor. Ramanujan’s notebooks and papers have included both previously discovered and new mathematical theorems many in number theory. These notebooks have continued to provide mathematicians with material to study and try to figure out how Ramanujan discovered these theorems and to see if they were provable.
Iskandar’s love of and talent for math led him to taking many college math classes while still in high school. He already had S. Ramanujan as one of his heroes. A perfect match with the sponsor of this scholarship who also was inspired by S. Ramanujan as a high school student more than twenty years ago.
The Michael Voolich Memorial Scholarship was awarded to Samuel Diener who is interested majoring in Physics at Case Western Reserve. Michael Voolich (1943 - 2019) was a person who was interested in how everything worked, if Renaissance man was a job offering, Michael would have applied. He learned by asking questions and then he loved telling everyone what he had learned and how seemingly disparate things were related. He had a career than included teaching many different subjects in local schools, none of which was math. But, he married a math teacher. So, when the Somerville Math Fund was being discussed and organized in his living room, of course he joined the founding board.
He liked to do things for people and of course for the math fund. His telephone calls and trips to Table Talk Pie Company each year for city-wide Pi Night celebration were a highlight each year. He especially loved helping find things for others to donate for the Scrapheap Showdown each year and his marvelous multiple clamps will still be a necessary part of future Scrapheap challenges to come.
Michael loved to be able to give and help others in the local community along with his extended family here and abroad. This scholarship was funded by the many people who donated in his memory to the Somerville Math Fund. Sam participated in Scrapheap before it was canceled due to COVID the last couple of years. Sam’s interest in helping the community and solving problems would definitely be much that Michael would have loved to have talked about with Sam.
The Somerville Math Fund Scholarship generously donated by Neva Durand went to Ian Morales. “Congratulations on your well-deserved success. You should be very proud of what you’ve accomplished.” Ian will be attending Carnegie Mellon to major in Mechanical Engineering. He has an interest in using engineering to solve real world problems with clean energy and water and then finding a way to give back to other first generation students in Somerville.
Kate Johnson, the Julie Schneider, the Bickoff Family, Winter Hill Bank and Tufts University Scholarship
The Somerville Math Fund Scholarship, generously sponsored by four sponsors of Game Jam #2 was won by Katherine Johnson. Our annual high school engineering competition, Scrapheap Showdown, was canceled again by COVID in October 2021. In lieu of the live event, usually in a gym at Tufts University, we held an online Game Jam where students created games for others to play and evaluate. The four donors who each paid for one year of Katherine’s scholarship were Julie Schneider, the Bickoff Family, Winter Hill Bank, and Tufts University. Kate has been involved in projects and activities around wellness while in school. She sees mathematics (data interpretation, quantitative reasoning, and statistical analysis) as a way to improve societal health. So, Kate is planning on attending the University of Virginia to major in Public Health.
Ezra Brody, East Cambridge Savings Bank and Somerville Math Fund Scholarship (one award)
The Somerville Math Fund Scholarship partially sponsored by East Cambridge Savings Bank, and the other half by generous donors to the Somerville Math Fund was won by Ezra Brody. Ezra has an interest in the life of microorganisms and the process of novel drug development. With my desire for a career focused on the ethical medical applications of biochemistry, I want to also investigate pharmacology and the body’s response to diseases and treatments. Ezra plans to attend Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and major in Biochemistry and Biophysics.
The Somerville Math Fund is able to award scholarships and teacher grants thanks to the generosity of our donors. We have some who are able to make large donations, but some who can only make small ones. All of those donations together made it possible to award two more scholarships, one to Nikhilesh Rattan and the other to Leensyn Rivera Asmen.
Nikhilesh Rattan, the Somerville Math Fund Scholarship
Nikhilesh Rattan is interested in space technology and plans on majoring in Mechanical Engineering at Tufts University.
Leensyn Rivera Asmen, the Somerville Math Fund Scholarship
Leensyn Rivera Asmen is interested in climate justice and sustainability and plans on majoring in Environmental Science and Computer Science at Simmons University.
The Somerville Mathematics Fund was chartered in 2000 to celebrate and encourage achievement in mathematics in the city of Somerville, Massachusetts. It May 2011, it was recognized as the outstanding Dollars for Scholars Chapter in New England. Since it's founding in 2000, it has awarded $554,000 in four-year mathematics scholarships to one hundred eighteen outstanding Somerville students.
Erica Dakin Voolich, 2022
The link to this page is https://somervillemathematics.blogspot.com/2022/06/outstanding-math-students-win.html