Dinkelspiel Award

Excerpt from the Stanford Report, June 8, 2004

Dinkelspiel Award

The Lloyd W. Dinkelspiel Award, named after the president of the Board of Trustees who served from 1953 to 1958, recognizes distinctive contributions to undergraduate education or the quality of student life at Stanford. This year's recipients are Sarala V. Nagala, a senior in the Public Policy Program; H. Jazmin Quill, lecturer in the Psychology Department; Vivian Fu-Ning Wang, a senior in the Management Science and Engineering Department; and Adrienne Jamieson, the Mary Lou and George Boone Centennial Director of the Stanford in Washington Program.

Nagala was cited for enthusiastic leadership of the Stanford Pre-Law Society, promoting interaction among undergraduates, faculty and elected representatives; for her role in the creation of the student-initiated public policy course, The Supreme Court in Our Lifetime, and for accommodating the overflow of interested students; for her thoughtful mentoring and friendship, and for the joy she brought to her role as head peer academic coordinator in Junipero House; and for her outstanding scholarship, intellectual curiosity and generosity in service to others.

Quill was cited for her leadership in program development and curriculum design as co-director of the Psychology One Program; for her commitment, infectious enthusiasm and unequivocal joy in teaching; for creating an environment for graduate students that supports and encourages excellence in teaching as well as scholarship; and for her extraordinary effect on Stanford undergraduates, inspiring within them intellectual excitement and a passion for the study of psychology.

Wang was cited for her enthusiasm first as a Cantor Arts Center student guide and later as coordinator of the Student Guide Training Series, and her commitment to sharing with others her deep appreciation for the university's collections; for increasing awareness of the Cantor Center among undergraduates through her coordination of the innovative "First Thursdays"; for her singularity and excellence as an artistic "techie," bridging her seemingly disparate interests in management science and engineering and art history; and for the grace, good humor and quiet radiance she brings to all her endeavors.

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Jamieson was cited for extraordinary leadership of the Stanford in Washington Program (SIW), where she has developed an engaging learning environment for all students and directed a dedicated and hardworking staff; for her relentless pursuit of excellence, strengthening the SIW Council, expanding the physical facility, establishing a new distance learning center and developing the most well-respected residential academic program in the nation's capital; for her balance of compassion and professionalism in teaching and the enthusiasm and excitement she conveys in her seminars on policy making in Washington or press and politics; and for her many roles—as professor, academic adviser, resident fellow, internship coordinator, tour leader and resident diplomat.

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Dinkelspiel Award H&S archive