Contact:
Dave Gerr
860-572-7900,
ext. 50
info@westlawn.edu

Westlawn Announces
Recipients of 2009 Owens Scholarship
Famous
Maryland Boatbuilder, Norman G. Owens, Supports Excellence in Marine Education
July 21 2009, Mystic, CT: The
Westlawn Institute of Marine Technology is proud to announce that Westlawn
students Jonathan Ames and Alfredo Rovere have each been awarded the $500 Owens
Scholarship for excellence in the study of boat design. The award is based on
both academic achievement, creative ability and on design presentation. Each
scholarship winner receives a tuition grant of $500 towards their current
module of study and, in addition, each is now recognized as an “Owens Scholar.”
The scholarship is funded by the generous donations of Norman G. Owens, former
president of the once internationally recognized Owens Yacht Company of
America.
Jonathan
Ames
Jonathan
Ames lives in Storm Lake, Indiana. At thirty-nine years old, Jon has been a
Westlawn student since January 2006. He got his start in boats at a young age,
paddling canoes and kayaks, sailing small boats like the Butterfly, Hobie
Cat’s, Sunfish, and generally enjoying life around the water as small boy. Love
of the water continued through college and after he graduated he found himself
working in Green Bay, WI, a beautiful area to stay involved with power boating
and sailing with friends.

Jonathan Ames
Feeling a
need for a change of scenery, Jon bought an old Atkins sailboat and motorsailed
her from Green Bay down to Florida via the Mississippi. Once in Florida he
worked full time on commercial boats and earned his Coast Guard 50-ton master’s
license, with sail endorsement. He then spent a number of years working as a captain
in Florida waters. Around this time, Jon discovered he enjoyed maintaining,
servicing, and modifying boats just as much as driving them.
Jon sold
out of his commercial-boat business to focus on boatbuilding and design at
Westlawn. He says that, “Westlawn have proven to be challenging and rewarding
and have taught me how little I really knew about what I was captaining for
years.” He also says, “I want to personally thank Norman Owens and the American
Boat & Yacht Council, for making this grant available. It means a great deal
to me.”
Jon’s
future goals include graduating from Westlawn, working in the industry with
manufacturers and designers to learn as much as he can, and eventually starting
his own office creating beautiful and practical boats. In addition, he says, “I
look forward to the challenges associated with the current economic and
environmental climate. I think it will bring out the best in all of us and
force us to think in new and creative ways to design the best boats.”
Alfredo
Rovere
Based in Rio
De Janeiro, Brazil, Alfredo Rovere is the son of the yacht designer and
boatbuilder, Roberto Rovere. Twenty-nine years old, he enrolled in Westlawn in
January 2007. He grew up between drawing boards and shipyards, accompanying his
father. Alfredo started sailing when he was 3 years old, and at the age of six,
he begun his own experiences in the Optimist class in which he won the Team
Racing World title in 1994. At 15 years old, he became a member of the design
staff at his father’s company, where he worked since he moved to Rio de Janeiro
in 2000.

Alfredo Rovere
In Brazil,
Alfredo was working in Quantum Sails loft for a year and a half until he
started the business school. He graduated in 2004 and few months later he
started sailing professionally, coaching and sailing on the Bruschetta
Sailing Team, from Brazil. After a two year campaign, this team achieved two
J-24 World Titles (2006 and 2007) and also qualified for the 2007 Pan-American
Games. After the 2007 J-24 worlds, he was sailing in Europe with a Czech Team
in an IMS boat, getting the 3rd place in the Europeans and 2nd in the Worlds.
After the IMS worlds, Alfredo accepted an invitation from Bravissimo
Sailing Team, from Brazil, and with them, won the 2007 J-24 European
Championship and got the 4th place in the 2008 J24 Worlds.
In the
beginning of 2009 he was back to Bruschetta Team and won again the J24
worlds in Annapolis, being the first non-American team to win a J-24 Worlds
held in USA. Since 2007, he had to organize his time between the races and the Westlawn
Institute course, and also working in yacht design with his father. As a yacht
designer, Alfredo is working on cruising motor and sailing projects for the
Argentinean market. His goal is to keep learning and growing professionally as
a yacht designer and as a sailor as well.
Norman G.
Owens was president of the Owens Yacht Company, of Baltimore, MD. The company
focused primarily on producing affordable inboard motor cruisers, with a
popular 30-foot sedan cruiser, exhibited at the 1937 New York Boat Show. Owens was
also known for the Owens Cutter, a 40-foot 6-inch sailboat, a model
which won numerous races and was eventually sold to Hinckley, where it became
the Hinckley 41. When the Owens Yacht Company was sold to Brunswick in
1960, it was the second largest boat manufacturer in the world. Mr. Owens’
support of the Westlawn scholarship program has helped to ensure the legacy of
quality boats, which Owens was known for, will continue.
Founded in
1930, the Westlawn Institute of Marine
Technology is the only nationally accredited and state-certified
distance-learning school of small-craft design in the United States. As the
not-for-profit educational affiliate of the American
Boat and Yacht Council, the mission of the Westlawn Institute of Marine Technology
is threefold:
■ To provide our students with
the skills and knowledge required to build a rewarding career in the profession
of yacht and small-craft naval architecture.
■ To support continued growth of
the recreational and small-craft marine community through the development of
well-trained, safety-oriented, boat designers developing better products for
the benefit of the boating public.
■ To provide continuing education
to marine-industry professionals.
To learn
more about Westlawn, please call (860) 572-7900 or visit the Westlawn website
at: www.westlawn.edu.