Search:  
Communications and Marketing
For the Media
Media Contacts
Tip Sheet
Experts Directory
Fact Sheet
Press Releases
Research News
Athletic News
Campaign News

 
Online Magazines
Ohio Today
Outlook Online
Perspectives
RE:search

 
Campus News
WOUB Online
The Post
ATHENSi.com
Regional Campuses

 
Communications & Marketing
Services:
Comm. Planning
News Team
Univ. Publications
Video Team
Web Design Team

 
Feedback
Send comments or university news items to:
news@ohio.edu

Tel: (740) 593-2200
Fax: (740) 593-1887
 

> Return to News

Aug. 7, 2002
Contact
: Media Specialist George E. Mauzy Jr., (740) 593-1794 or mauzy@ohio.edu
Editors: A headshot of Tomazic can be downloaded at: www.ohiou.edu/news/pix/TOMAZIC_CHRISTOPHER.JPG

Ohio University welcomes Christopher Tomazic into the Templeton Scholars program

ATHENS, Ohio -- This fall, Christopher Tomazic of Lorain Southview High School in Lorain, Ohio, is one of 10 new Templeton Scholars at Ohio University.

Recipients of the Templeton scholarship must have been ranked in the top 20 percent of their high school graduation class and scored a minimum of 28 on the ACT or 1,240 on the SAT. Other requirements included a written essay, interviews with Ohio University faculty and staff members and current Templeton Scholars and endorsements from their high school teachers and administrators. The scholarships are renewable provided the students complete 16 credit hours and maintain a 3.3 GPA.

Tomazic will major in music composition at Ohio University. In high school, he had the third-highest g.p.a. in a senior class of 245 students. He also participated in Junior ROTC, where he served as a batallion executive officer and won the Distinguished Cadet Award. He was named the Outstanding Senior Male of the Year and was a recipient of the Sons of America Revolution award, a member of the Ski Club and marching band and president of the National Honor Society. He is the son of James Tomazic and Kathleen Discenzo.

The scholarship is named after John Newton Templeton, who was born a slave in South Carolina around 1805. He was emancipated in 1813 and went on to educate other African-Americans while serving as a principal and teacher at the African School in Pittsburgh, the city's first school for African-Americans. He died in 1851.

"We are well pleased with these exceptional students and their choice to attend Ohio University," said Assistant to the President Erek Perry, who directs the scholarship program. "These Templeton Scholars have many outstanding qualities, possess a deep commitment to excellence and will continue to honor the legacy of John Newton Templeton."


[ 30 ]

 

E-mail This Article

(Enter E-mail Addresses and Select File Type)
To:
From:

Plain Text
HTML


Christopher Tomazic
Christopher Tomazic

Visit the Cutler Scholars Web site


Prospective Students | Current Students | Faculty & Staff | Alumni & Friends | Infoseekers

Ohio University Woodcut
Copyright ©2002 Ohio University