| Many
students discover their passion for a subject in college. Allyssa
Lamb, a UW senior and 2004 Rhodes Scholar, started a bit earlier.
“At age 8, my
grandfather gave me a book, Land of the Pharaohs, and it
just clicked for some reason,” Lamb recalls. “I went
to the library and picked up every book they had on ancient civilizations,
walking home with armloads of books.”
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Allyssa
Lamb. Photo by Karen Orders. |
Lamb’s fascination
with the ancient world continues. She has a double major in classics
and Near Eastern
languages and civilization, and spent last summer on an excavation
at Tel Dor, an ancient site in Israel.
And she reads ancient Greek, Latin, biblical Hebrew, and hieroglyphics.
Reading—in whatever
language— has always been important to Lamb. She learned to
read at age 2, and became a fixture in the local library when she
began searching for books on ancient civilizations. “The librarians
got to know me well,” she admits. “If they got a new
book they thought I’d like, they would be excited to tell
me about it. I learned a lot about navigating libraries at an early
age.”
When she arrived at
the UW, Lamb wasn’t sure how to translate her fascination
with the ancient world into a degree or a career. She started with
courses in ancient history and classics, and caught the attention
of classics professor Lawrence Bliquez, who was impressed with her
work.
“He contacted
me after the midterm to find out my interests,” says Lamb.
That conversation led Lamb to consider a classics degree. Bliquez
also directed Lamb to Scott Noegel in the Department of Near Eastern
Languages and Civilization, a specialist in ancient Egypt. Before
long she was pursuing degrees in both departments.
“I realized I was
going to need both sides—the Greek and Roman and
the Egyptian—for what I wanted to do,” says Lamb. “Even
if I don’t use both later, what I’ve learned from studying
both halves, getting that broader perspective, has been a very good
lesson.”
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"I
learned a lot about navigating libraries at an early age,"
says Rhodes Scholar Allyssa Lamb.
Photo by Kirsten Atik. |
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She also values the attention
to students in both departments. Bliquez’s early interest
in her studies proved to be the rule, not the exception. “One
of the great things about faculty in both departments is their willingness
to get involved in what students are doing—to know what classes
they’re taking, what research opportunities they’re
involved in. They’ll suggest courses or opportunities for
financial aid. Their willingness to help students has really been
important to me.”
Lamb, once convinced
she would be an archaeologist, is now more interested in ancient
texts than in unearthing ancient artifacts, but she hopes to continue
participating in archaeological digs during the summer.
“I’d like
to remain involved with the material culture in some way,”
she explains. “It’s easy to read the literature and
forget that the concrete side of the culture really exists somewhere.
It’s one thing to see artifacts in a museum. It’s very
different to be digging and see where the wall and floor of an ancient
building are.”
The same can be said
for ancient languages. It’s one thing to study them in a book,
but quite another to see them in context. While in Italy through
a program offered by the Classics Department, Lamb came across an
Egyptian stela—an inscribed stone—in a museum in Naples.
“I realized I was able to read the inscription, which was
in hieroglyphics,” she recalls. “It was the first time
I read a real hieroglyphic inscription, not something in a workbook.
It was an amazing moment for me.”
Lamb described that
moment in an essay for the Rhodes scholarship application. She clearly
impressed the judges. Lamb was one of 32 American students selected
as 2004 Rhodes scholars.
“It was a bit
of a surprise,” says Lamb. “When my name was announced,
I was in shock. It wasn’t until someone grabbed my hand and
congratulated me that I realized I did hear right.”
She is looking forward
to entering Oxford this fall, where she plans to study Egyptology.
But she knows she will miss the University of Washington.
“Being at the University of Washington worked out phenomenally
for me,” she says. “I had the opportunity to work with
brilliant people I wouldn’t have met at other schools. I can’t
imagine a college that would have been better for me.”
[Winter/Spring 2004 - Table of Contents]
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