<p>2010</a> Marshall Scholars Announced</p>
<p>The Marshall Scholars for 2010 have now been announced. Princeton had just one Marshall this year, Jessica Lanney 10. Jessica is a Woodrow Wilson School major who will pursue two masters degrees at the London School of Economics.</p>
<p>Lanney</a> '10 wins Marshall Scholarship - The Daily Princetonian</p>
<p>Every member of the Ivy League, with the exception of Columbia, was represented among the Marshall Scholars this year. Brown, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Penn and Princeton each had one scholar. Yale led the Ivies with two. Nationally, Stanford led with four scholars while MIT and Yale were tied for second with two each.</p>
<p>Since the founding of the program in 1954, Harvard has had the most winners with 247. Princeton is in second place with 119, while Yale takes third with 107. Stanford has an impressive number of scholars with 82 through this year and MIT comes in next at 50 through this year. A handful of other schools have 25 to 50. </p>
<p><a href="http://www.marshallscholarship.org/about/USInstitutions1954-2008.pdf%5B/url%5D">http://www.marshallscholarship.org/about/USInstitutions1954-2008.pdf</a> (In order to read it, youll need to expand this .pdf file in your browser window.)</p>
<p>Marshall Scholars Since Founding of Award</p>
<p>247--Harvard
119--Princeton
107--Yale
82---Stanford
50---MIT</p>
<p>The Marshall Scholarship is generally considered second only to the Rhodes among the prestigious international fellowships available to American students. More information about it can be found here.</p>
<p>Marshall</a> Scholarship
Association</a> of Marshall Scholars</p>