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Intellect

BYU grads receive National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowships

Four Brigham Young University graduates were recently awarded the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship for 2004.

David Comstock, Christopher Monson, Scott Raymond and John Russ were four of about 170 students who received the fellowship, which covers all tuition and fees for three years, as well as a yearly stipend of more than $27,000.

The U.S. Department of Defense awards NDSEG fellowships to about 8,000 students annually.

The students are usually in the early stages of their graduate studies pursuing doctoral degrees in fields of science and engineering that are of military importance.

Comstock graduated from BYU in mechanical engineering in 1999. He is pursuing a graduate degree in materials science and engineering.

Monson graduated from BYU in chemistry and is currently a graduate student in chemistry at the University of California-Berkeley. He also received the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship for 2004-2005.

Raymond graduated in neuroscience and applied physics with a minor in mathematics at BYU. He also received the Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship for 2003-2004, the Ashford Fellowship at Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and was named a Hertz Foundation Fellowship finalist this year.

Russ is majoring in electrical e ngineering with a minor in mathematics. He plans to earn his doctorate degree in electrical engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

For more information, call Carolyn Tuitupou at (801) 422-6136.

Writer: Thomas Grover

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