| Tufts
Tops Peace Corps Rankings
With
23 graduates working around the world for the Peace Corps, Tufts
is the largest supplier of volunteers among universities and colleges
with less than 5,000 undergraduates.
Medford/Somerville,
Mass. [03.04.02] -- For the third
year in a row, Tufts University is among the top suppliers of
Peace Corps
volunteers in the country, the international organization announced
this week. Ranked first among colleges and universities with less
than 5,000 undergraduates, Tufts' 23 volunteers join 7,000 others
worldwide, making a difference in 70 different countries.
"I
am pleased to inform you that Tufts University ranks number one
nationally on the list of colleges and universities with alumni
currently serving as Peace Corps volunteers," Peace Corps Chief
of Staff Lloyd Pierson wrote in a letter to Tufts President Lawrence
Bacow. "Throughout the years, your institution has made a tremendous
contribution to this agency's global legacy of public service.
This ranking certainly reflects the high caliber of the students
who attend your institution."
Three
years ago, a Peace Corps director told the Boston Globe that
Tufts was among the top 25 "feeder schools" in the nation, helping
Massachusetts rank as one of the top suppliers of volunteers for
the program.
"The
Peace Corps and Tufts University have developed a significant
relationship over the years," Pierson wrote in his letter to Bacow.
"Thank you for the cooperation and support that you, faculty and
administration members, and students have contributed to our efforts
to recruit new volunteers on campus."
For
Peace Corps volunteers, the experience is demanding.
"Through
their volunteer work overseas, Americans throughout this country
are able to learn more about the world in this era of globalization,"
said Charles Baquet III, the former director of the Peace Corps.
According
to the international organization, volunteers in 70 countries
are working on many important initiatives, such as fighting against
hunger, improving children's education and stopping the spread
of HIV.
Since
1961, more than 165,000 Americans have served as Peace Corps volunteers
in 135 countries around the world.
Photos
courtesy of the Peace Corps.
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