Honolulu Native Spends Summer As SMU Maguire Intern
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DALLAS, TX (08/13/2013)(readMedia)-- DALLAS (SMU) - SMU junior Kyle Nakatsuka traveled back to his hometown of Honolulu, Hawaii, to serve as a Maguire Public Service Intern and learn firsthand the value of helping people and communities in need.
Nakatsuka, a student of anthropology, biology, Spanish and human rights, spent six weeks observing, conducting and contributing to research at Ke Ola Mamo Native Hawaiian Health Care Systems clinic that serves native Hawaiians in Honolulu. He also conducted research in Taos, N.M., at the Taos County Economic Development Corporation.
The Maguire Ethics and Irby Family Foundation Public Service Internships are sponsored by SMU's Cary M. Maguire Center for Ethics & Public Responsibility. Each intern is responsible for finding agencies to sponsor their projects, which ultimately are selected for their proposals' ethical and social justice merits.
"These students are setting the course for the rest of their lives and are an inspiration to those who teach and support them. As their efforts show, they are indeed world changers," says Maguire Ethics Center Director Rita Kirk.
Such public service internship grants "help students like me pursue internships in the nonprofit and public sectors," says Rahfin Faruk. "With increasing financial pressures, I'm extremely thankful the Maguire Center has helped me gain development and international relations experience, first at Grameen Bank and now at the U.S. Department of State."
"By providing students cash awards for public service and ethics research projects, these SMU students can commit to the public service projects they always wanted to do, but didn't have the financial resources to make possible," says Candy Crespo, assistant director of the Maguire Ethics Center.
For the past 16 years, Public Service Internships have been awarded to nearly 140 SMU students who have served in more than 100 agencies in more than a dozen countries.
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