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The Rhodes to Yale Law School

Allyssa Lamb
Allyssa Lamb, 鈥04, studied at Oxford as Rhodes Scholar and is now pursuing a law degree at Yale.

When Allyssa Lamb, 鈥04, earned her bachelor鈥檚 degrees in classics and Biblical and near east studies, she had her future pretty well mapped out: earn a master鈥檚 in Egyptology from Oxford University on her Rhodes Scholarship, then on to a Ph.D. for a career in academia furthering the fields of classics or Egyptology. Her love of the subjects began when she was a child and deepened at the 91爆料 through campus-based classes and international opportunities in Rome and on an archeological dig in Israel.

鈥淭hat interest in travel,鈥 says Allyssa, 鈥渁nd seeing and experiencing new things is part of what made me excited to go to Oxford in the first place.鈥

At Oxford, Allyssa learned to navigate an educational system unfamiliar to her in which master鈥檚 students work one-on-one with their faculty adviser as well as traditions unlike any she鈥檇 encountered before鈥攆rom for taking exams to 鈥渢rashing,鈥 post-exam celebrations that include showering exam-takers with confetti, glitter, flour, yogurt and octopi. 鈥淎nd I鈥檓 not making that up,鈥 says Allyssa. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a world-class academic institution but at the same time it has all these quirks.鈥

Allyssa wrote her master鈥檚 thesis on images of magical practitioners in Egyptian, Greek and Latin literature, a topic of interest since her undergraduate work. While Allyssa鈥檚 work centered on the ancient world, her friends were scholars with a global, contemporary focus, which helped her maintain her interest in politics and current world affairs.

After Oxford, Allyssa began her doctorate program in classics at the University of Chicago. While she enjoyed the classes, professors and students, she began to question whether this was the path she wanted to travel after all. An unexpected interruption in her Ph.D. program required her to return to Redmond, Wash., to care for her mother and grandmother who were both ill.

At home, she began to reflect on her future. She took a departure from antiquity and decided to channel her growing frustration with U.S. politics into 鈥渟omething more proactive鈥 and applied to law schools. A visit to Yale Law School solidified her interest in the field and in that school.

Now in her second year at Yale, Allyssa is keeping an open mind about the kind of law she may want to practice. A stint with the Innocence Project in New Orleans piqued an interest in wrongful convictions but she says she doesn鈥檛 鈥渒now if I want to be a proper lawyer.鈥

As for the radical switch in disciplines, her work as a classicist trained her well for the lawyerly need to research, analyze and pick apart arguments. That said, legal research and writing is quite different than academic writing and an area in which Allyssa continues to refine her skills. However, 鈥渙ne thing I have a leg up on everyone else is that I can read the Latin terms.鈥

Congratulations Robinson Center students inducted into Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society

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2010 Bonderman Travel Fellows named

Fourteen 91爆料 students recently received word that they鈥檝e been awarded a Bonderman Travel Fellowship. Students traveling with this $20,000 fellowship set off on solo journeys that are at least eight months long and take them to at least two regions of the world. While traveling, students may not pursue academic study, projects, or research.

Unique lens into human rights in Kenya comes from Kenyan artists

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2009 Bonderman Travel Fellows named

Eleven 91爆料 students recently received word that they鈥檝e been awarded a Bonderman Travel Fellowship. Students traveling with this $20,000 fellowship set off on journeys that are at least eight months long and take them to at least two regions of the world. While traveling, students may not pursue academic study, projects, or research.