Howser Nominated for Hockey Humanitarian
NEW HAVEN, Conn. – Yale senior forward Crysti Howser
(Wilmette, Ill.) is one of 21 nominees for the Hockey Humanitarian
Award, with finalists to be announced later this month. In addition
to excelling on the ice Howser has also been active in a number of
community service initiatives, making her a candidate for the award
given annually “to college hockey’s finest
citizen.”
In its 14th season, the Bank of New York Mellon Hockey
Humanitarian Award is open to all male and female collegiate hockey
players at the Division I, II or III levels. The winner will be
named in a ceremony on Friday, Apr. 10 at the Verizon Center in
Washington, D.C., in conjunction with the 2009 NCAA Frozen Four.
The Yale women’s hockey program has had three finalists for
the award, including 2007 award winner Kristin Savard ’07.
Julianna Schantz-Dunn ’00 and Deanna McDevitt ’03 were
also finalists.
As a freshman Howser began volunteering weekly at New
Haven’s Downtown Evening Soup Kitchen, organizing and
distributing dinners for those in need. She continues to do that to
this day, and in recent years she has also been one of the key
participants in the Yale Sports Empowerment Program. Through that
initiative she and other Yale students organize weekly health and
fitness education sessions for residents at local homeless
shelters.
In her sophomore year Howser volunteered for the AIDS Walk New
Haven event in April. She returned the following year, this time as
organizer of a team. Howser and other Yale student-athletes
obtained financial donations from sponsors to enable homeless men
from the Emmanuel Baptist Shelter who were part of the Yale Sports
Empowerment Program to participate in the walk as a team, combining
two of her community service efforts into one.
In 2007 Howser also began her involvement in Yale’s Relay
for Life 12-hour walking fundraiser for the American Cancer
Society. She was a coordinator for one of the most successful Relay
for Life events in the Northeast that spring, helping raise nearly
$250,000 for the American Cancer Society. She and one of her hockey
teammates were in charge of soliciting sponsorships and food
donations for the event, which hosted more than 2,000 people.
Howser then served as head coordinator last year, making her solely
responsible for organizing food donations from more than two dozen
New Haven restaurants. She got her entire team involved as
committee members and also got the Yale men’s ice hockey team
involved through a friend of hers on that team. The event raised
more than $100,000. Howser is continuing her involvement with the
Relay for Life this year.
Howser expanded the geographical bounds of her work in May of
2007. Through i-to-i, an organization she learned of through
Yale’s Career Services Center, she spent two weeks in a rural
South African nature reserve, 200 miles north of Cape Town. With
other students from various European and North American colleges
she worked on an environmental conservation project that sought to
protect an agriculturally rich region containing some of the rarest
natural plant life in the world from further damage. This May,
after she graduates from Yale, Howser intends to do another trip
through i-to-i.
Howser has also taken part in various holiday gift-giving
initiatives for underprivileged families both in New Haven and back
home in Illinois, including coordinating the effort for her
residential college at Yale (Silliman). During her first two years
at Yale she was also involved in Athletes in Action, a faith-based
group that met weekly and helped engage her in numerous community
service projects. In the spring of her freshman year she
participated in Bulldog Buddies, a program run by the Yale Athletic
Department through which student-athletes read to and play sports
with children at a local elementary school once a week.
On the ice, Howser is just the fourth player in Yale history to
lead the team in scoring for three straight seasons. The Bulldogs
have won 46 games during her class’ tenure, more than all but
three classes in Yale history. Howser is second on Yale’s
career points list (114), third on Yale’s career goals list
(56) and third on Yale’s career assists list (58). She also
has the third-best single-season goal total in school history (22,
2006-07) and the fourth-best single-season point total in school
history (37, 2006-07). She was an honorable mention All-Ivy League
selection last year.
Howser has also been a part of the USA Hockey program. She was a
member of USA Hockey’s Under-22 Select team each of the past
two summers, playing in the annual three-game series against Team
Canada. She scored a goal for the U.S. this past summer. Howser was
tied for fifth in scoring at the 2007 USA Hockey Women’s
National Festival and also was invited to USA Hockey’s
Holiday Camp in December of that year, training as part of a group
of 56 of the top players in the country. Before coming to Yale she
was a part of multiple USA Hockey player development camps.
A political science major, Howser plans to go to law school.












