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Alumni
Profiles
Twenty
years ago, Lawrence Biondi, S.J., recently appointed president
of Saint Louis University, announced three new scholarship programs
designed to attract the nation’s most outstanding high school
students. Biondi said the scholarships would be awarded to those
who have a passion for life and the energy and talent to help
make the world a more just and peaceful place. Of the new aid
packages, was the Presidential Merit Scholarship —
the University’s first full scholarship covering tuition
and housing.
Check
out what some in the inaugural class of Presidential Scholars
are up to now:
Patricia
Fitzsimmons (A&S '92, Law '01)
Patricia
Fitzsimmons (A&S ’92, Law ’01)
Corporate counsel, Pfizer, New York
Patricia
Fitzsimmons advises the world’s largest research-based
biomedical and pharmaceutical company on patent issues.
She is corporate patent counsel at Pfizer headquarters
in New York, and she specializes in neuroscience.
Previously, she supported Pfizer’s patent portfolio
for the pain reliever Celebrex.
Fitzsimmons says her job is a perfect blend of her
degrees. After graduating from SLU, Fitzsimmons did
graduate work in chemistry at Colorado State University.
She then returned to SLU for law school.
“It’s interesting, challenging work,”
she said. “I have to interpret not only what
scientists are saying but what the law is saying.
I use what I learned at SLU every single day.”
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Dr.
Peter McCarthy (A&S '92, Med '96)
Dr.
Peter McCarthy (A&S ’92, Med ’96)
Emergency room physician, vice chief of staff and EMS
Director
St. John’s Mercy Hospital, Washington, MO
Peter
McCarthy is the third of nine children. He knew his
parents couldn’t help with college. In fact,
he worked at Target to pay for his last two years
of private high school. He thought he would need to
work to get through SLU until he was named a Presidential
Scholar.
“The scholarship had a tremendous impact on
me and my family,” he said.
McCarthy said the scholarship allowed him to live
on campus, focus on his studies and enjoy extracurricular
activities such as rugby. It also allowed him, at
the age of 18, to begin training as an emergency medical
technician (EMT). McCarthy worked as an EMT during
his last three years of undergraduate studies and
his first few years at SLU medical school.
After completing his residency in pediatrics and internal
medicine at SLU, McCarthy joined a health care group
that provided physicians on a temporary basis to emergency
departments throughout the nation. McCarthy worked
in Missouri and Illinois for two years before joining
St. John’s Mercy full time in 2003. In addition
to being an ER physician, McCarthy is vice chief of
staff and director of emergency medical services (EMS),
providing medical direction for seven different ambulance
services and all fire services in the area.
>“When you’re 18 years old, you don’t
see how something shapes you. And now, here I am at
38, directing EMS services,” he said. “That
never would have happened had I not received the Presidential
Scholarship and the freedom that came with it." |
Gina
(Buchheit) Christopher (A&S ’92)
Gina
(Buchheit) Christopher (A&S ’92)
Piano teacher and tuner, St. Louis
After
graduating from SLU, Gina Christopher worked as a
nanny in Germany for a year. She returned to the United
States to earn her master’s degree in music education
from the University of Kansas and became a certified
music therapist.
Christopher spent nine years in the Special School
District of St. Louis County working with students
who did not respond to regular classroom stimuli.
She used music to help these students learn, identify
emotions and develop appropriate social skills.
After starting a family, Christopher decided to concentrate
on tuning pianos and giving private piano lessons.
“I enjoy exposing students to composers and their
music,” she said. “I also like helping students figure
out how they learn and then watching as they grow." |
Dr.
Paul Perl (A&S ’92)
Dr.
Paul Perl (A&S ’92)
Researcher, Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate
(CARA), Pittsburgh
Rather than having to work his way through school,
the Presidential Scholarship allowed Paul Perl to
volunteer his way through. He was heavily involved
in campus ministry programs — tutoring at the county
jail, working at homeless shelters, painting people’s
homes on weekends and volunteering with a peace organization.
He went on a service mission trip every spring break.
“Between
being surrounded by the Jesuits and listening to the
Indigo Girls, my sense of social justice flourished,”
he said.
Halfway through his graduate studies in sociology,
Perl took off a year to serve in the Jesuit Volunteer
Corps as a case manager at a homeless shelter for
men in Hartford, Conn.
He
resumed his studies at Notre Dame and became a sociology
researcher for CARA, a national, Catholic research
center affiliated with Georgetown University. Through
his surveys with Church leaders and lay Catholics,
Perl explores such topics as the effects of Catholic
schooling on children, public reaction to the sex
abuse scandals and Catholic attitudes about poverty,
politics and global issues.
“I’m
happy to be serving the Church in a way that uses
my skills as a social scientist,” said Perl, who works
from his home in Pittsburgh. “I hope what I do is
helping Church leaders make informed decisions.”
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Dr.
Tricia Scerba (A&S ’92)
Dr.
Tricia Scerba (A&S ’92)
Pediatrician, Rural Health Center at the Dr. John Warner
Hospital, Clinton, Ill. Tricia
Scerba was the only French major in her medical school
class, and she has the Presidential Scholarship to
thank for that distinction.
Since childhood Scerba knew she wanted to be a pediatrician,
but she said the scholarship allowed her to explore
other subjects.
“Had I gone to another school I probably would have
stayed entirely on the science track, but my professors
at SLU encouraged me to broaden my scope,” she said.
“The scholarship took the pressure off me financially
and let me take advantage of different opportunities.”
Scerba spent her junior year in France, and during
her medical education at the University of Illinois,
she completed a maternal/child public health internship
in Paris. After completing her pediatrics residency
at the University of Tennessee, Scerba joined the
Rural Health Center in Clinton, where she is the only
pediatrician in a county of 16,000 people.
“I love working in a smaller setting,” she said. “I
know a lot about my patients and my community, so
if a patient needs anything beyond my care, I know
where to go.” |
Laura
(Gerdes) Shambro (Nurs ’92)
Laura
(Gerdes) Shambro (Nurs ’92)
Branch manager, Visiting Nurse Association-TIP, St.
Louis After
graduating from SLU’s nursing school, Laura Shambro
spent four years working at Jewish Hospital in the
hematology/oncology ward. Then, she was offered a
job in home health care.
“Home care is truly why I went into nursing,” she
said. “You develop relationships with your patients,
and you allow them to stay in their home, which is
what most patients want.”
Shambro specializes in gerontology and agrees with
those who say today’s elderly comprise the greatest
generation.
“They have so much wisdom to give us, and they deserve
to be well cared for,” she said.
Had she not received the Presidential Scholarship,
Shambro said she probably would have gone to a state
school and missed out on the strengths of a Jesuit
education.
“I had amazing professors who taught me how to think,”
she said. “I’ve met many nurses who are caring but
don’t have the critical thinking skills I developed
at SLU. I know those skills have furthered my career.” |
Amie
Merz Thompson (A&S ’92)
Amie
Merz Thompson (A&S ’92)
Owner, The Caring Corner, Hillsboro, Mo.
Amie
Merz Thompson receives a paycheck every other week,
but she values the two bottles of homemade barbecue
sauce sitting on her desk just as much. They were
given to Thompson by a mother who was going through
a nasty divorce and needed counseling for herself
and her two teenage daughters.
Thompson has been helping individuals and families
through the rough spots for more than 15 years.
A few years after graduating from SLU, Thompson earned
her master’s degree in counseling from Webster University.
She began working at the Caring Corner, a social service
agency in Festus, Mo., serving 11 counties. Eventually
she became owner and expanded the agency’s resources.
Much of her counseling services are geared toward
helping children in foster care.
Thompson also is certified as a state, federal and
international substance abuse counselor. The Department
of Transportation employs her to provide counseling
to truck drivers, train conductors and highway workers
who test positive for illegal substances.
“I love what I do,” she said. “I figure if I can make
a difference in someone’s life, if I can make it better,
then I’m doing what I was put here to do.” |
Scholarships
provide financial assistance to some of the brightest and most
deserving students, who otherwise might not have been able to
attend Saint Louis University and realize their academic dreams.
With each gift, our donors open up a world of possibilities not
only for our students’ future, but also for our future.
These students one day will be community leaders and decision
makers, trained to be informed and critical thinkers, ethical
and compassionate leaders, and active members of communities throughout
the world.
Students
come to Saint Louis University seeking several things —
academic training, spiritual formation and an opportunity to grow
as individuals. For many students, these goals are realized only
because of the scholarship support they receive. The entire University
community gratefully acknowledges the generosity of the donors
who have helped to establish our scholarship program.
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