Quantcast The Spectator
College Media Network
Spectator Home Spectwitter! Specbook! Site map

Fund started as tribute to student

Memorial scholarship to benefit music student with passion for teaching

Lindsey Lewandowski

Issue date: 12/5/05 Section: Campus News
  • Print
  • Email
The future recipient of an award given by the music faculty scholarship committee must not only be studying to become a music teacher - but they must also have a passion to teach music.

They must be an active participant and a leader in the music program or in ensembles at UW-Eau Claire. They must be a positive role model for their peers, and they must inspire those around them.

Essentially, to receive the Branden Atherton Memorial Music Scholarship, one must have and do what Branden Atherton did, said Heidi Fisher, director of annual giving and major gifts officer for the UW-Eau Claire Foundation.

"This is really modeled after everything that Branden demonstrated and exemplified while he was here," she said of the scholarship that serves as a tribute to the senior music education major who died as a result of an Oct. 16 bus accident. He and members of the Chippewa Falls High School band were returning from a competition at UW-Whitewater when the accident occurred.

The scholarship is one of two recently established as a tribute to Atherton and to music students like him.

The other, the Northwestern Bank Marching Band Scholarship, will benefit UW-Eau Claire students who work with high schools in the Chippewa Valley, said Randy Dickerson, associate professor of music education and director of the university marching band.

Fisher said the Foundation hasn't worked much with the scholarship to be given in Atherton's honor because it's so soon after his death, and the family will decide the amount to be awarded to music students at Chippewa Falls High School and Waukesha West High School and when it will be given.

"(Branden was) an individual who clearly had a love and passion for music," she said, "and when someone dies like that tragically, to go on and benefit so many others - that's a great way to do it."

Junior Andrew Sazama, who has worked with the Chippewa Falls High School marching band drum line for three years, said establishing a scholarship in Atherton's memory is a good idea.
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools

Be the first to comment on this story

  • NOTE: Email address will not be published

Type your comment below (html not allowed)

  I understand posting spam or other comments that are unrelated to this article will cause my comment to be flagged for deletion and possibly cause my IP address to be permanently banned from this server.

Advertisement

Poll

Do you think Student Senate is accurately representing student opinion on the Blugold Commitment?
Submit Vote

View Results

Advertisement