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Uncommon Gifts

THE NUMBERS ARE SIGNIFICANT.

Marietta awards $24+ million in scholarships and grants annually.  96+% of students benefit each year.

THE RESULTS ARE EVEN BIGGER.

Students are relieved of worry brought on by financial burdens, onerous interest on debt, and the looming threat of having to take leave or even withdraw from college for lack of funds.

THE IMPACT IS IMMEASURABLE. 

Scholarship recipients hold fast to their dreams and ambitions, take advantage of life-changing opportunities, study with some of the best, and pave their individual path to success. 

THE BENEFITS ENDURE.

Students gain peace of mind and develop confidence when someone believes in them and is willing to invest in their future.

THIS COMMUNITY MAKES IT POSSIBLE.

Individuals making current unrestricted donations, designating gifts to scholarships, and endowing funds for student support make an extraordinary difference.

Learn as four grateful students share what their Marietta experience means to them. And be Pioneer proud.

Grace West ’23
Grace West ’23

Grace West ’23 has a plan; she always has.

“I was not a traditional child,” Grace West ’23 recalls with a smile. “I wanted to know how things work, so I was always building something and taking other things apart. That doesn’t mean I could always get them back together!”

First in her family to attend college, West says, “I knew from a young age that I wanted to become an engineer, but really doing it has been a learning experience for my whole family. My parents have always supported my goals.” 

Coming from Parkersburg, West Virginia, West attended Marietta’s inaugural Earth, Energy, and Environment Conference (E3) as a high school student. Just a few years later she was chairing the event and double majoring in Petroleum Engineering and Environmental Engineering. In December she’ll graduate with an edge: a Certificate in Engineering Leadership from Marietta’s McDonough Leadership Program where, she says, “I learned to be a team-building leader and an effective follower.” West’s credentials also include membership in two professional organizations and four honor societies. 

Two internships with Chevron intensified West’s ambitions. “I got a feeling for what it will be like to use both my degrees,” she explains. Working one summer in California on the upstream of oil and gas production and the next in Mississippi in downstream operations, “helped me get a good understanding of how the industry all fits together.” 

Now negotiating her first job after college, West knows where she’s headed. “I want to be a well-rounded engineer, to use my knowledge and experience and become a Health and Safety Environment Engineer at Chevron.” 

Gabe Torres ’25 learns from losses. 

Transfer student Gabe Torres ’25 is 1,700 miles from home, and he feels it.

“I’m tight with my family,” says Torres, a native of El Paso, Texas, who has an older sister and two younger brothers. “My dad attended every baseball game of my life until now and my mom is my inspiration with how hard she works. Being this far from them has changed how I view every day.”

Well suited to the Entrepreneurship major that drew him to Marietta, Torres sees benefits in his situation. “Overall, the distance has helped me understand who I am as an individual,” he reflects. “Part of growing up is learning how to handle things on my own.”

Torres, a right-handed pitcher, learned about Marietta from summer league teammate and catcher Ty Davis ’25. “Baseball has taught me to be a competitor and to be a friend,” Torres explains. “I’m able to handle pressure and put failure into perspective. What fires me up most about baseball is that you can lose and still learn. My mom says, ‘In baseball you fail more than you succeed.’ She’s right.”

That’s valuable insight for a future entrepreneur who’s already practicing for his career. In Marietta’s recent PioBiz start-up competition, Torres took third place in the second round. “I loved it!” he says. “That was the first sales pitch of my life, and I realized this is what I want to do.” Next, he’ll present “an awesome idea” at two entrepreneurship contests in Athens, Ohio.

Driven by process over outcome, Torres is unfazed by competition. As he says, “I’m more excited for the failures than the successes.”

Gabe Torres ’25
Gabe Torres ’25
Logan Ayers ’24 and Braedon Ayers ’24
Logan Ayers ’24 and Braedon Ayers ’24

The Ayers brothers care.

At first it might appear that twins Braedon Ayers ’24 and Logan Ayers ’24 are taking the same path toward a shared objective — staying close to home in Fleming, Ohio; choosing the college of their parents, Denise Dougherty Ayers ’95 and Tracey Ayers ’96; majoring in Health Sciences; minoring in Leadership Studies; gaining experience as they prepare for careers as physician assistants (PAs). 

But spend some time with each, alone, and their individuality rises. Logan chose Marietta “because I wanted the experience my parents had in this close-knit community, I value the liberal arts, and the Physician Assistant Program is well known.” Braedon felt the draw “because I knew I could get what I wanted in Marietta’s small classes with attentive faculty.”

He was right. “The professors all want you to succeed,” Braedon observes. “They’re hands-on mentors in the labs and they’re supportive of the research you want to do. That’s something that separates Marietta.” Hooked on the strength of the College’s program, Braedon will begin his Master of Science in Physician Assistant Studies here immediately after graduation. 

Logan sees advantages in studying leadership alongside the sciences. “The skills we’re developing in the McDonough Program apply everywhere and to every type of decision,” he explains. “Having a leadership background has already helped me manage some healthcare situations.”

While shadowing a PA at Marietta Memorial Hospital, Logan asked himself, “In what ways can I use my talents to help other people?” An internship in community health put him in direct contact with patients, an experience that he says, “solidified my plans to become a PA in a community that is underserved.”

Braedon will find his specialty through hospital rotations, building on the “broad background and skills” he’s learned in Marietta’s classrooms and labs as well as volunteering in the Strecker Cancer Center of Marietta Memorial Hospital and interning as a community health coach. Speaking from experience, he says, “Helping patients be well is rewarding. It’s amazing to be a part of their progress.” 

Elizabeth Steele