UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The late Susan Welch, who served as dean of the College of the Liberal Arts for nearly three decades, was a distinguished political science scholar and academic leader. She was also a noteworthy philanthropist; during her lifetime, Welch and her husband — the late Alan Booth, former distinguished professor of sociology, human development and demography — contributed or pledged nearly $3 million to Penn State and the college.
Before Welch passed away in March 2022, she made bequests to create the Director's Fund for the Choral Program in the School of Music in the College of Arts and Architecture and the Russ and Lori Rose Women's Volleyball Scholarship in Intercollegiate Athletics. She also made a bequest that elevated the Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial Scholarship in the McCourtney Institute for Democracy — a summer research fund created by Welch in 2017 and named in honor of one of her personal heroes — to a yearlong fellowship for a promising graduate student.
Political science and social data analytics doctoral student Morrgan Herlihy, a research assistant with the McCourtney Institute for Democracy, is the inaugural recipient of the new Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial Fellowship.
Herlihy’s path to pursuing her doctorate, however, was somewhat unconventional. A Connecticut resident, she attended college immediately after high school but left for personal reasons and instead launched what she described as a successful career in business management. “Always in the back of my mind, though, was that this wasn’t where I wanted to see myself,” she said.
Ultimately, the decision to change careers was forced upon her when the retail chain she worked for declared bankruptcy. “I was always interested in state or federal government work, so I started applying for jobs,” she said. “I quickly realized that even though my skill set was very applicable, working in government without a degree in political science was basically frowned upon.”