U-M ranks second in Peace Corps volunteers

March 4, 2002
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University of Michigan News Service – UM News

U-M ranks second in Peace Corps volunteers

ANN ARBOR—The University of Michigan currently has 76 former students serving as Peace Corps volunteers or trainees, ranking second in the nation, according to figures released today (March 4) by Peace Corps headquarters. The University of Wisconsin-Madison tops the list with 96 volunteers and trainees. U-M’s ranking is up from sixth a year ago, when the University had a total of 65 Peace Corps volunteers in the field.

According to Rudie Altamirano, director of the U-M International Center, which maintains a campus Peace Corps office, a total of nearly 1,900 former U-M students have been Peace Corps volunteers among a total 165,000 who have served in 135 countries since the agency’s founding in 1961.

U-M played an historic role in the inception of the Peace Corps. In the early hours of Oct. 14, 1960, then Sen. John F. Kennedy made an unprepared campaign speech to a group of U-M students on the steps of the Union. He asked if they would be willing to devote a few years of their life working in underdeveloped countries around the world to promote better understanding between the United States, developing nations and their peoples. Within weeks, 1,000 Michigan students had signed a petition calling for the establishment of the Peace Corps program. Less than one year later—on
“There are several reasons for U-M’s leadership in this area besides capitalizing on the idea that the Peace Corps was born here,” Altamirano explains. “We hire former Peace Corps volunteers in our office, who have networks established with other volunteers. Our associate director Kay Clifford and administrative assistant Jill Scott were both in the Peace Corps. We integrate the idea of community service in all of our programs. And, of course, the 40th Peace Corps anniversary last year raised awareness.”

Enthusiasm for international service among U-M students carries over to the University’s leading community service programs, such as AmeriCorps, America Reads and Project SERVE. These and other programs are coordinated through the Ginsberg Center for Community Service and Learning. “The University’s high ranking in the number of Peace Corps volunteers is not surprising,” says Barry Checkoway, professor of social work and urban planning, and former director of the Ginsberg Center. “U-M has a tradition stretching back to its founding of students serving communities from local neighborhoods to urban centers throughout the United States to cities and villages around the world.”

The University’s Peace Corps Office is located at 603 E. Madison St. in the International Center, between the Michigan Union and West Quad on Central Campus, as part of the Overseas Opportunities Office (Room 10). The office can be contacted at (734) 647-2182, by e-mail at Peace.Corps@umich.edu Information can also be found on-line at http://www.umich.edu/~icenter/peacecorps/

The Ginsberg Center is located at 1024 Hill St. For information, call (734) 647-7402 or find the Center Web site at http://www.umich.edu/~mserve/



Peace CorpsRudie AltamiranoKay CliffordAmeriCorpsPeace.Corps@umich.eduhttp://www.umich.edu/~mserve/