"I want my former scholars to mentor my current scholars, and my current scholars to mentor my future scholars, to get them in the pipeline," Tucker said.
Carlos J. Ledezma, a first-year at Harvard Medical School and an HSF scholar, echoed Tucker's sentiment.
"It's like a ladder-you always turn around to look at who's behind you so you can help them out," he said. "This is going to be a life-long thing, not a one-time shot."
Students welcomed the move to form campus chapters and encourage networking.
"It would be nice to have a list [of Scholars]," said Miguel A. Segovin, who is a third-year Divinity School Student and HSF Scholar. "Unless people tell you, you really don't know."
Erica L. Maclandon `03 cited Harvard's small Hispanic community as a potential disincentive for prospective students.
"There are so few Hispanic students here-you don't want to come to a school knowing that you'll be one of 200," she said.
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