Karl E. Peace Endowed Chair in Biostatistics Scholarships/Graduate Assistantships

In 1959, with a loan of $532 from a businessman in a neighboring county, Karl E. Peace enrolled at Georgia Southern University, prepaying his tuition for the first two quarters. In the third quarter, he obtained a Georgia State Teachers scholarship that, in addition to his seven part-time jobs, helped him complete his bachelor?s degree in chemistry while supporting his siblings and cancer-stricken mother. He went on to earn a masters degree in mathematics from Clemson University, teach at several colleges and universities, and earn a PhD in biostatistics from the Medical College of Virginia (MCV).Peace approached Georgia Southern University officials in 1998 with a plan to establish a biostatistics center at the university, a corresponding program of study in biostatistics at the graduate level, and a school of public health. He returned to the Statesboro, Georgia, campus in the fall of 2000, when Georgia Southern began to offer the masters of public health degree in biostatistics that he and Charles Hardy developed. In 2004, his endowment to honor his late wife
led to the creation of the Jiann-Ping Hsu School of Public Health (JPHSOPH), the first school of public health in the University System of Georgia (USG). In creating the JPHSOPH, the board of regents also named the center for biostatistics the Karl E. Peace Center for Biostatistics.
The Karl E. Peace Endowed Chair in Biostatistics Scholarships/Graduate Assistantships are available for undergraduate or graduate scholarships and enable outstanding students to study with the eminent scholar. Applicants must be enrolled full time and have a minimum grade point average of 3.0. Applicants must be of high moral character and must be committed to pursuing a career in public health.

Donor
Dr. Karl E. Peace
Award
Varies
Deadline
04/30/2015