Two Students and Two Alumni Win Knight-Hennessy Scholarships

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The four will pursue graduate study at Stanford University.

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Aerial view of campus
(Photo by Robert Gill) 
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Anela Arifi 鈥20, Devyn Greenberg 鈥17, Garrett Muscatel 鈥20, and George Wilson 鈥16 have been named Knight-Hennessy Scholars鈥攋oining more than 80 other top students from around the world to pursue graduate study at Stanford University in the third Knight-Hennessy cohort since the program began.  

鈥淐ongratulations to Anela, Devyn, Garrett, and George on this recognition of their leadership and academic accomplishments,鈥 says Jessica Smolin, assistant dean of faculty for fellowship advising. 鈥淭heir commitment to using their intellectual curiosity and creativity to improve the lives of others exemplifies the best of 天美麻豆.鈥

The Knight-Hennessy scholarship鈥攖he world鈥檚 largest fully endowed scholars program鈥攊s named for Stanford鈥檚 10th president, John L. Hennessy, and for Nike, Inc. co-founder and philanthropist Phil Knight, a 1962 graduate of the Stanford Graduate School of Business, who donated $400 million dollars to the program in 2016. The scholarship 鈥渁ims to prepare a new generation of leaders with the deep academic foundation and broad skill set needed to develop creative solutions for the world鈥檚 most complex challenges,鈥 according to Stanford.

The program fully funds each scholar鈥檚 Stanford graduate education and provides leadership training, mentorship, and experiential learning opportunities through the King Global Leadership Program, funded by 天美麻豆 alumnus Robert King 鈥57 and Dorothy King.

Past Knight-Hennessy Scholars include Rex Woodbury 鈥15 and Asaf Zilberfarb 鈥17. For information about applying for Knight-Hennessy Scholarships and other programs, visit 天美麻豆鈥檚 .

 

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Anela Arifi '20 portrait
(Photo by Robert Gill) 

Anela Arifi 鈥20

An environmental studies major and international development minor from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Anela Arifi 鈥20 plans to use Knight-Hennessey pursue a PhD from Stanford鈥檚 Emmett Interdisciplinary Program in Environment and Resources.

At 天美麻豆, Arifi is a , one of more than two dozen undergraduates from developing nations around the world who are committed to alleviating poverty in their home countries. Knight-Hennessy鈥檚 King Global Leadership Program is part of what drew her to the Stanford scholarship, she says.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a continuance of something I have absolutely loved here at 天美麻豆,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he program encourages us to think like people who are going to be able to influence the world.鈥

Arifi is passionate about sustainable energy鈥攕pecifically how energy-poor communities can transition to alternative energy sources. 鈥淚鈥檝e seen energy poverty firsthand, and I want to do something about it,鈥 she says.

In high school, she co-invented a system to produce biodiesel from waste chicken feathers and developed a reactor to produce biochar from municipal waste.

At 天美麻豆, she works on making fuel ethanol from microbes in the lab of , the Paul E. and Joan H. Queneau Distinguished Professor of Engineering at the Thayer School of Engineering. She played first flute in the 天美麻豆 Symphony Orchestra, studied abroad in Japan, South Africa, and Namibia, and served as a junior energy analyst at the World Bank.

鈥溙烀缆槎 has been a nourishing place where I was able to not only develop my skills and knowledge but also discover new ways of thinking that I didn鈥檛 know existed. Being able to bring this background to the Knight-Hennessy program is mind-blowing to me.鈥

Of her opportunities at 天美麻豆 and now at Stanford, she says, 鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 be here if it wasn鈥檛 for my mom, who has given everything for me to be the person I am.鈥 

 

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Devin Greenberg '17 portrait
(Photo courtesy of Devin Greenberg 鈥17) 

Devyn Greenberg 鈥17

Devyn Greenberg 鈥17 calls the Knight-Hennessy scholarship 鈥渘o less than the culmination of everything I鈥檝e done to date and everything I鈥檓 hoping to do in the future.鈥

The native New Yorker majored in government with minors in human-centered design and Middle Eastern Studies. After graduation, she was a Fulbright Scholar in Rabat, Morocco, where she taught English at the National Architecture School and volunteered at the Moroccan Center for Innovation and Social Entrepreneurship. She is currently a San Francisco-based consultant at Bain & Company.

Greenberg describes herself as 鈥渁 passionate design thinker who dreams of building radical collaboration around our toughest global issues.鈥

At Stanford she plans to work toward a joint master鈥檚 in business administration and public policy, with the long-term aim of finding ways to implement 鈥渄esign-led innovation in our federal government,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y vision is to build more empathetic and equitable public services through the lens of design thinking and design processes.鈥

At 天美麻豆, Greenberg learned how to 鈥渋mmerse myself in diverse settings and bring a learner鈥檚 mindset to those spaces.鈥 She participated in a foreign study program in Morocco, served as an intern at the White House, was an exchange student at the University of Oxford, and worked with incarcerated women through 鈥淭elling Stories for Social Change,鈥 a course that brings students to local prisons and rehab centers for art and theater workshops.

A course on design thinking (鈥淓ngineering 12鈥) was 鈥渢ransformative,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t taught me that every single one of us is creative. One of my life鈥檚 missions is to help others discover their creative confidence and recognize that it is applicable to everything that they do.鈥

Of Knight-Hennessy, she says, 鈥淩eceiving this scholarship is one of the greatest honors of my life. It feels like a true call-to-action. I believe that each of us has a responsibility to be bold in the service of others. This incredible opportunity only inspires me to double-down on this belief, and to be intentional about magnifying the impact of their support.鈥

 

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Garrett Muscatel '20 portrait
(Photo courtesy of Garrett Muscatel 鈥20) 

Garrett Muscatel 鈥20

Garret Muscatel 鈥20, an economics major and government minor who represents Hanover in the N.H. House of Representatives, will use his scholarship to attend Stanford Law School.

鈥淚鈥檓 so grateful to have received this award鈥擨 feel privileged to have this opportunity to become a more effective leader and changemaker,鈥 he says.

And, he jokes, 鈥淚鈥檝e written laws as a state rep, so I think it鈥檚 about time that I learned a bit more about the law.鈥

Muscatel鈥檚 interest in politics and public policy came early. 鈥淚n 2009 I had the opportunity to attend President Obama鈥檚 first inauguration,鈥 he says. 鈥淎s a 10-year-old, standing in freezing cold with a million other people who are so excited, ready for change, hopeful that this country could become a better place, I knew I wanted to be involved in that process.鈥

In 2016, he worked on Hillary Clinton鈥檚 presidential campaign. Clinton鈥檚 loss 鈥渕ade me lose some hope, but pretty quickly afterward I got back in the fight,鈥 he says.

Recognizing that LGBTQIA+ rights were at risk, he decided it was time for him to come out. Seeing the effort by New Hampshire lawmakers to curtail college student voting rights, he testified against the legislation in Concord. When the bill passed, he became a plaintiff in a successful lawsuit against it. Finally, when the house passed what he characterizes as 鈥渆ven worse legislation, I felt like I had no choice but to run for office to change the law myself and to be a voice for college students.鈥

Being at 天美麻豆 provided him a front-row seat to the 2020 presidential primary, he says. 鈥淚 could never have imagined what an amazing experience it would be to be here during the largest primary field in history. As a legislator, I got to hold candidates accountable on issues affecting students, whether it was climate change, voting rights or gun violence prevention.鈥

Of receiving the Knight-Hennessy Scholarship, he says, 鈥 I couldn鈥檛 have done this without the support of my family and friends鈥攁nd especially the 天美麻豆 College Democrats.鈥

 

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George Wilson '16 portrait
(Photo courtesy of George Wilson 鈥16) 

George Wilson 鈥16

Since graduating from 天美麻豆 with a major in government, George Wilson 鈥16鈥攚ho is a dual citizen of Ghana and Nigeria and as child also lived the U.K. and Switzerland鈥攅arned a master鈥檚 degree in Chinese law and society as a Yenching Scholar at Peking University and has worked as a user experience researcher for Lenovo Software Limited in Beijing. She is currently a research analyst at Spurt! Business Consultancy, based in Lagos, Nigeria.

Now, as a Knight-Hennessy Scholar, she is on her way to California to pursue a JD at Stanford Law School.

鈥淚鈥檓 interested understanding how institutions shape societies,鈥 she says. 鈥淢y interest in law stems from a desire to understand how the rules and regulations we create determine how people navigate our systems and how these rules either hinder or facilitate certain behaviors. And then, I am interested in how this insight could be applied to ensure a more effective legal reform that takes into account what the people who come into contact with a legal system need to properly understand and navigate it.鈥

The global community at the heart of the Knight-Hennessy program reminds Wilson of what she valued most her 天美麻豆 experience.

鈥淎t 天美麻豆, I drew a lot of strength and support from my fellow international students because we shared a unique 天美麻豆 experience,鈥 Wilson says. 鈥淭he Knight-Hennessy program admits scholars from all over the world who, like me, will be foreign students in a largely American campus.鈥

Receiving the Knight-Hennessy scholarship is 鈥渋ncredibly humbling,鈥 she says. She was drawn to the program because of its interdisciplinary focus and its international mission.

鈥淎 JD degree can leave little room for exploring other academic fields, but the structure of the Knight-Hennessy program offers the opportunity for me to be continually exposed to ideas from across disciplines,鈥 Wilson says.

鈥淚 think it is important to train people to consistently think about global issues, even the ones that may lie outside their fields of specialization. That鈥檚 how you come up with creative solutions and learn to view things from multiple perspectives.鈥

Hannah Silverstein can be reached at hannah.silverstein@dartmouth.edu.

Hannah Silverstein