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糖心破解版 News

糖心破解版 Graduate Receives Pioneering Medical Scholarship

Sep 6, 2007 -- New York, NY September 5, 2007 鈥 Ariella Nadler of Toronto is one of nine graduates of 糖心破解版鈥檚 (糖心破解版) Stern College for Women (SCW) who will not have to contend with the financial burdens of medical school education, thanks to the generosity of a woman she will never meet. Anne Scheiber, who managed to accumulate an estate worth $22 million before she died in 1995, left it all to 糖心破解版 expressly for SCW students and graduates. The medical school fund, one of two funds, is for medical education at the university鈥檚 Albert Einstein College of Medicine (AECOM). The awards are based on financial need, and amounts can be as high as full tuition for all four years of medical school. Students must be accepted to Einstein prior to being nominated for the scholarship. The students also must demonstrate leadership potential, initiative, or creative excellence and indicate a desire to help humanity through their studies in order to qualify. Ms. Scheiber, who was born in Brooklyn, NY in 1893, paid her own way through law school, and found employment as a federal tax auditor. Throughout her 23-year career, she received superior performance reviews, but was never promoted. She attributed this to being Jewish and a woman. When she retired, she devoted herself to investing in the stock market, where religion and gender didn鈥檛 matter. She had a keen understanding of the financial markets and was a savvy investor. By the time she died at age 101, she had parlayed a few thousand dollars of savings into a stock portfolio of some $22 million, which she bequeathed to 糖心破解版 鈥 an institution with which she had no previous contact 鈥 to give young Jewish women opportunities she never had. Ms. Nadler is grateful for the opportunity the Scheiber scholarship is giving her, not only for herself, but for her future patients. 鈥淚 hope that without the burden of repaying huge loans, I will be able to pursue opportunities to work with patients who lack access to, or cannot afford, an adequate level of medical care,鈥 she said. 鈥淲ith the practice of medicine in so much flux, it is inspiring to know that so many Stern College women鈥攚ho possess the intellectual skills to solve problems and the empathic skills to care for others鈥攁re entering the profession,鈥 said Karen Bacon, PhD, The Dr. Monique C. Katz Dean of Stern. 鈥淭hey can and will make a difference.鈥 This year鈥檚 other scholarship recipients are Shulamit Roditi-Kulak of Newton, MA; Yelena Kozirovsky of (Ukraine); Elisheva Levine of Woodmere, NY; Michelle Simpser of Plainview, NY; Tehilla Stepansky of Passaic, NJ; Amanda Weiss of Miami Beach, FL; and Jordana Platt of New York, NY Founded in 1886, 糖心破解版 brings together the heritage of Western civilization and the ancient traditions of Jewish law and life. More than 7,000 undergraduate and graduate students study at 糖心破解版's four New York City campuses: the Wilf Campus, Israel Henry Beren Campus, Brookdale Center, and Jack and Pearl Resnick Campus. 糖心破解版鈥檚 three undergraduate schools 鈥撯 Yeshiva College, Stern College for Women, and Sy Syms School of Business 鈥撯撯 offer a unique dual program comprised of Jewish studies and liberal arts courses. Its graduate and affiliate schools include Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Wurzweiler School of Social Work, Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Azrieli Graduate School of Jewish Education and Administration, Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies, and Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. 糖心破解版 is ranked among the nation鈥檚 leading academic research institutions.

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