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Dallas woman and boyfriend named Rhodes Scholars

Elizabeth Longino

Elizabeth Longino

by Staff and Wire Reports

wfaa.com

Posted on November 23, 2009 at 9:11 AM

Congratulations to Elizabeth Longino of Dallas. She and 31 other top students — including her boyfriend — were named Sunday as Rhodes Scholars.

Longino has an impressive resume, co-founding an anti-child prostitution group in Cambodia. The University of North Carolina senior also teaches English and computer skills in Vietnam.

Longino graduated from the Hockaday School in 2006 and is headed to the University of Oxford along with Henry Spelman, who is also a UNC senior.

The couple had done their final scholarship interviews apart — he in Philadelphia, she in Houston. Spelman heard the results first.

When he called with his good news, "the stakes just went way up," said Longino, who had to wait 45 minutes before finding out that she, too, had nabbed one of the world's most prestigious scholarships.

They join the 30 other American students announced Sunday as Rhodes Scholars, including two students who teach philosophy and poetry to inmates, three All-Americans in swimming and a U.S. Army second lieutenant mentored by Gen. David Petraeus.

One winner, Andrew McCall of St. Louis, is the first Rhodes Scholar from Truman State University in Missouri.

The winners were selected from 805 applicants at 326 schools, and join an international group of scholars.

Their expenses will be fully covered for up to three years of study at the University of Oxford in England. The scholarships, worth about $50,000 per year, are awarded for attributes that include high academic achievement, personal integrity, leadership potential and physical vigor.

Several honorees, such as recent Bowdoin College graduate and New Canaan, Conn., native William Oppenheim III, say they hope the Rhodes Scholar honors help bring attention to the causes about which they are passionate.

Oppenheim founded and runs the Omprakash Foundation, which helps link volunteer teachers with grassroots educational projects worldwide that need their help.

Another new Rhodes Scholar, 23-year-old Tyler Spencer of Staunton, Va., started Athletes United for Social Justice to help tackle the AIDS epidemic in Washington, D.C., after learning of a similar program while studying in South Africa.

"AIDS in D.C. is just a severe epidemic," he said. "Our athletes have just about as much to learn from the South Africans as they would from us."

Eleanor "Ellie" Ott, 23, a recent University of Pittsburgh graduate from Lawrence, Kan., said her passion for working with refugees will motivate her to earn two master's degrees as a Rhodes Scholar: one in forced migration, and another that will teach her to use rigorous evidence to base social policy on.

"I hope to help shape refugee policy in the future, and ideally that would be through using research and evidence," she said.

Columbia University senior Raphael Graybill, a native of Great Falls, Mont., plans to study political theory at Oxford. Right now, though, he's juggling life as an auxiliary police officer with the New York Police Department, his political science studies at Columbia and his responsibilities as captain of Columbia's ski and snowboarding team.

Graybill had already been approached to run for political office in Montana, but that will have to wait now that he's a Rhodes Scholar. Eventually, a political career is possible.

"The best way to live out your values is in public life," he said.

For Spelman, of Swarthmore, Pa., and Longino, of Dallas, the scholarships might even help them communicate better.

The couple avoided discussing their applications for the nine months they've been dating, a situation Spelman called "really awkward."

That changed when Longino called him with her news.

"It was probably one of the top five phone calls of my life," she said.

2010 Rhodes Scholars

The 32 American students chosen as Rhodes Scholars for 2010, listed by geographic region:

District 1:

  • William J. Oppenheim III, New Canaan, Conn., Bowdoin College
  • Zohar Atkins, Montclair, N.J., Brown University

District 2:

  • Russell A. Perkins, Evanston, Ill., Wesleyan University
  • Matthew L. Baum, Watertown, Mass., Yale University

District 3:

  • Mark Dlugash, Larchmont, N.Y., Swarthmore College
  • Alexandra P. Rosenberg, New York, N.Y., United States Military Academy

District 4:

  • Caroline J. Huang, Newark, Del., Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Henry L. Spelman, Swarthmore, Pa., University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill

District 5:

  • Tyler S. Spencer, Staunton, Va., University of Virginia
  • Ugwechi W. Amadi, Camden, N.C., MIT

District 6:

  • Grace Tiao, Marietta, Ga., Harvard University
  • Kira C. Allman, Williamsburg, Va., College of William and Mary

District 7:

  • Jordan D. Anderson, Roanoke, Va., Auburn University
  • Roxanne E. Bras, Celebration, Fla., Harvard

District 8:

  • Elizabeth B. Longino, Dallas, Texas, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
  • Steven Mo, Pearland, Texas, MIT

District 9:

  • Darryl W. Finkton, Indianapolis, Ind., Harvard
  • Monica L. Marks, Rush, Ky., University of Louisville

District 10:

  • Daniel D. Shih, Aurora, Ill., Stanford University
  • Jean A. Junior, Troy, Mich., Harvard University

District 11:

  • Stephanie A. Bell, West Des Moines, Iowa, University of Chicago
  • Eva Z. Lam, Milwaukee, Wis., Harvard

District 12:

  • Eleanor M. Ott, Lawrence, Kan., University of Pittsburgh
  • Andrew J. McCall, St. Louis, Mo., Truman State University

District 13:

  • William D. Gohl, Colorado Springs, Colo., Regis University
  • Justine O. Schluntz, Albuquerque, N.M., University of Arizona

District 14:

  • Raphael J.C. Graybill, Great Falls, Mont., Columbia University
  • Elizabeth A. Betterbed, Fox Island, Wash., United States Military Academy

District 15:

  • Henry R. Barmeier, Saratoga, Calif., Princeton University
  • Geoffrey C. Shaw, Belvedere, Calif., Yale

District 16:

  • Elizaveta Fouksman, Emerald Hills, Calif., University of California-Los Angeles
  • Brittany L. Morreale, Palos Verdes Estates, Calif., United States Air Force Academy

 WFAA-TV and the Associated Press contributed to this report

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