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| From the top down: Kana Ellis, Northport,
Ala., Third Team; Gabriel Walvatne, Mobile, Ala., Third Team;
Laura Medders, Thomasville, Ga., Honorable Mention; Allison
Kellogg, Madison, Miss., Third Team; Sarah Adair, Hartselle,
Ala., First Team. |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Five students from The University of Alabama
have been named to this year’s USA Today All-USA College Academic
Team, the largest number of students from UA ever named to the USA
Today team in one year.
UA students garnered the most awards of any college or university
this year, claiming five of 83 spots on the list. The ranking places
the UA students among some of the nation’s top college and
university students.
Named to the First Team was Sarah Adair, a senior microbiology
major from Hartselle, who hopes to pursue biomedical research. Three
students were named to the Third Team: Kana Ellis, a senior psychology
major from Northport, who plans to attend law school; Allison Kellogg,
a senior dance major from Madison, Miss., who hopes to pursue a
career in the performing arts; and Gabriel Walvatne, a senior interdisciplinary
studies major from Mobile, who plans to attend law school. Laura
Medders, a senior journalism major from Thomasville, Ga., who wants
to be involved with urban community development, received Honorable
Mention.
Each year, USA Today selects the “best of the best,”
what it considers the top 20 students in the nation for its First
Team. USA Today also includes Second and Third teams and Honorable
Mentions in its “All American Academic Team.” Students
are chosen for their grades, awards and activities, leadership roles
and their ability to use their academic skills outside the classroom.
Since 1991, The University of Alabama has placed 22 students on
the list.
The state of Alabama was well represented on this year’s
list. In addition to the UA students, an Auburn University student
was named to the First Team and a student at the University of Alabama
at Birmingham was named to the Third Team.
Sarah Adair, USA Today All-USA College Academic First Team member
Hometown: Hartselle, Ala.
Major: Microbiology
Career Goal: Biomedical Research
Adair is set to graduate in May 2003. “Sarah is that unusual
and inspirational mix of an absolutely brilliant student who is
putting her knowledge to great use in the service of others,”
said Dr. Hank Lazer, assistant vice president for undergraduate
programs and services in a letter nominating Adair. “In my
25 years at The University of Alabama, Sarah Adair represents the
best I have seen in any student.”
Adair is set to graduate in May 2003. During her time at UA she
has received many of the top honors students across the United States
can receive. In the spring of 2001 she was named a Barry Goldwater
Scholar, and received one of 302 scholarships for potential as a
future scientist.
In the fall of 2001, she received a Phi Kappa Phi Research Award,
a research grant to help fund her research in the Caldwell lab at
UA. This award is for undergraduate research.
In the spring of 2002, Adair received the McWane Foundation Research
Fellowship to begin funding her Parkinson’s research. Just
one of these UA fellowships is given each year for undergraduate
research.
She’s a member and president of Beta Beta Beta, the biological
honor society and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, the oldest national
honor society for recognition of academic achievement in the arts
and sciences.
She’s also active in the community. Two nights a week for
the past three years she has volunteered for the Good Samaritan
clinic in Tuscaloosa - a free clinic that serves patients who have
no insurance and limited income. She has become licensed in the
state of Alabama as a pharmacy technician.
Adair has been actively involved in research throughout her college
career. In her sophomore year she was named a Howard Hughes Medical
Institute Summer Research Intern, a full year earlier than most
students at UA. She has produced some remarkable data in the field
of neuroscience and currently is involved in a project on Parkinson’s
research, working with UA biology professor Guy Caldwell.
This past December she presented a poster at the American Society
of Cell Biology in San Francisco for her work on Parkinson’s
disease. Adair has generated an animal model that will allow screening
for environmental and genetic factors that cause Parkinson’s.
Her research shows much promise and she hopes to continue her work
to help find a cure for Parkinson’s, which affects approximately
1.5 million Americans.
This bright, talented and deserving young woman has achieved more,
still. She founded a student journal to help students publish their
own scientific research; she testified before an Environmental Protection
Agency subcommittee on the pollution of Alabama’s groundwater
supply; and was the president of the Blount Student Association
in the fall of 2000. The association is part of the Blount Undergraduate
Initiative, a four-year liberal arts program at UA.
Kana Ellis, USA Today All-USA College Academic Third Team member
Hometown: Northport, Ala.
Major: Psychology
Career Goal: Law
During her time at the Capstone, Ellis has been very involved in
the honors programs and has received many awards and honors, among
them: National Honors Student of the Year, 2002; William P. Bloom
Scholarship Award , 2002, one of four UA Premier Awards, the University’s
most prestigious awards; Henry Pettus Randall III Scholarship, 2002,
an award for most outstanding research project for the year; XXXI
Amanda Taylor Watson Scholarship, 2002, given to the top XXXI student;
Phi Beta Kappa, 2002 (initiated junior year); Omicron Delta Kappa
National Honor Society, 2002; Mortar Board Honor Society, 2002;
Blue Key Honor Society, 2002; Cardinal Key Honor Society, 2001;
Golden Kay National Honor Society, 2001; and Alpha Lambda Delta
National Freshman Honor Society, 2000.
Ellis has served as Honors Program Student Association president
since 2001, where she helps facilitate collaboration and team building
among officers and represents the Honors Program to other organizations
on campus and to the faculty.
She is an officer of the Anderson Society, UA’s most selective
honor society that initiates just 24 members annually, as well as
many other clubs. She has taught Sunday school, is a member of the
Presbyterian College Group, helped build a house in Los Angeles
with Habitat For Humanity’s Alternative Spring Break and is
a fellow with the Blackburn Institute, a student/faculty/alumni
think-tank that each year studies a specific issue that affects
Alabama.
Ellis saw a need to help introduce honors freshmen to the university
setting before the beginning of their freshman year so she created
a program called Alabama Action. Because of her hard work and dedication
to this project, she has delivered several national presentations
on how to have successful honors program student associations and
summer opportunities for honors students.
The goals of Alabama Action are two-fold: first, to engage incoming
honors freshmen in a period of sustained, substantive volunteer
work in an underprivileged area; and second, to provide these incoming
students with a first-rate academic introduction to poverty issues.
During 2001, the Boys and Girls Club in Eutaw was refurbished,
two donated computers were installed and students were tutored in
an after-school program. In 2002, at Holt Elementary School in Tuscaloosa,
the library was reorganized, an outdoor classroom setting was created,
computers were procured, installed and networked and students worked
with fifth-graders on conflict resolution.
“It is no small feat that a student at a large state university
could have organized disparate community leaders, earned the backing
of the University president and administration and garnered financial
backing on the strength of her idea alone,” said Dr. Fran
Oneal, manager of the University Honors Program, in a letter nominating
Ellis.
Honored with the University’s Premier Innovative Service
Award, Alabama Action is now a permanent part of the honors experience
at UA.
Allison Kellogg, USA Today All-USA College Academic Third Team
member
Hometown: Madison, Miss.
Major: Dance
Career Goal: Performing Arts
UA senior Allison Kellogg is most certainly worthy of the national
honor she received in November 2002 - Point of Light Foundation
National Volunteer of the Day. Her energy and enthusiasm has been
felt in her hometown of Madison, Miss., and in her college town
of Tuscaloosa through the important volunteer work she does.
Her unending desire to give back to the community is a rare gift
indeed. She has been able to turn her talent for dance into community-building
activities and a way to connect with children from different backgrounds.
In March of 2002 Kellogg received the Doublemint Aces For Campus
Excellence Award, one of 50 national grants given from more than
14,000 applicants. The award was given for her work in providing
underprivileged children with dance classes.
She has received the James B. Rogers Jr. Mortar Board Scholarship,
the Miss America Community Service Award, was invited to join Omicron
Delta Kappa Society, Lambda Sigma, Cardinal Key and Blue Key, performed
in the Alabama Repertory Dance Theatre where she spent 30 hours
a week training, has served in several different offices in the
Phi Mu social sorority and is a member of Dance Alabama, which raises
funds for UA arts programs.
Kellogg loves to work with children. She teaches free dance classes
at the Tuscaloosa Boys and Girls Clubs through a program called
“A Time To Dance.” She has several on-going school programs
in Tuscaloosa and Madison, Miss., where she mentors students and
classes. One of her programs is called Make A Difference Day. The
student project “Reading for Refugees,” encouraged reading
by raising funds to purchase blankets for Afghan refugee children.
She also created a program called “Star Kids.” It
teaches children how to use their gifts and talents to serve others
in the community. She designed coloring books and program pamphlets
and produced a video for the now copyrighted project.
“Because dance gave me a focus and positive direction in
my own formative years, I want to provide the same opportunity for
any child who is interested in dance,” Kellogg said.
Kellogg auditioned for the Radio City Rockettes Christmas Show
in the early fall of 2002 and was chosen as an alternate cast member,
quite an accomplishment for any dancer.
Gabriel Walvatne, USA Today All-USA College Academic Third Team
member
Hometown: Mobile, Ala.
Major: Interdisciplinary Studies
Career Goal: Attorney
Gabriel Walvatne is on his way to changing the way the Alabama’s
justice system works. During his undergraduate years, and as part
of his McNair Scholarship, he has conducted original survey research
in criminal justice. His work will be published in UA’s “McNair
Scholars Journal” this spring. He already has presented the
results of his research at three professional conferences.
He was allowed to enroll in a second and third year law class
at UA’s School of Law for credit as part of the project.
Walvatne has received numerous awards and honors: Academic Walk-On
Scholarship, 2001-2003; Outstanding Sophomore; Samuel Thomas Barnes
IV Memorial Scholarship, awarded by New College; McKinley Student
Excellence Award; and the Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society, 2002-present.
He’s a member of the Pre-Law Student Association; has been
a member of the Alabama Model United Nations since 2000; participates
in intramural sports; is on the New College Student Council; is
a UA Ambassador, representing UA to prospective students, parents
and special guests; volunteered for the Tuscaloosa Police Athletic
League; and was asked to serve as a participant on the search committee
for the director of UA’s New College in 2002.
Walvatne also is a talented writer. This year he is the senior
editor of the New College Review, a nonfiction undergraduate magazine
written and produced by New College students. In this year’s
issue he will have an article entitled “Societal Implants:
The Makeover of the American Male,” which explores the increasing
pressure on men to be cosmetically flawless.
His major research, however, is into the issue of restorative
justice, which is a movement in criminal justice to define crime
as a personal harm and focus on the interaction of the victim and
offender to repair that harm. Walvatne was not a believer in the
practice until he met Montgomery circuit judge Tracy McCooey. McCooey
started a Victim Offender Conferencing program where, quite literally,
victims and offenders talk to each other about the crimes that have
been committed.
Walvatne wants to see that same approach adopted in Tuscaloosa.
He began by studying the attitudes of Tuscaloosa County criminal
justice professionals toward victims, offenders, the community and
the criminal justice system. By comparing these answers to the restorative
justice principles of the system, victims and offenders, he was
able to determine if the participants would be open to this innovative
approach to justice. He currently is preparing the results for publication.
Laura Medders, USA Today All-USA College Academic Honorable
Mention
Hometown: Thomasville, Ga.
Major: Journalism
Career Goal: Urban Community Development
Laura Medders is a talented journalist and honors student who
will use her gifts to help people change the direction of their
lives and their circumstances. Her study of social inequality and
educational gaps in the United States as part of her journalism
major has prompted her to write for several publications both on
and off campus.
Through her Computer-Based Honors minor, she is developing a database
and template for grant writing at the Tuscaloosa Family Resource
Center. This will enable the agency to apply for larger and more
complex grants with greater ease.
She has received numerous honors and awards: First Place, Georgia
Associated Press Association for Deadline Reporting, 2000; Randall
Undergraduate Research Award, 2001; Journalism Academic Achievement
Award, 2002; XXXI’s Women’s Honor Society, 2002, UA’s
most prestigious women’s honorary recognizing leadership,
service and outstanding achievements; and Outstanding Sophomore
in the Computer-Based Honors Program, 2001.
Medders has been involved in many programs at the University:
service chair of the Alabama Student Society for Communication Arts;
assistant copy editor for Dateline Alabama, UA’s student-run
online daily news site; UA Athletic Hostess, 2001-02; Circle K International
Service Club; Crescent East Housing Projects tutor; Holt Middle
School’s GEAR UP Program tutor; A Time to Dance volunteer,
a program that teaches jazz, ballet and modern dance classes to
boys and girls in local housing projects; and Kid’s Club volunteer,
an after-school program that provides games and recreational activities
once a week to students in a housing project.
In the summer of 2002, Medders chose to live and work as a part
of the Desire Street Ministry, serving the Desire Street Project
of New Orleans. She has been involved in many worthy research projects
during her tenure at UA. Medders said the Desire Street internship
removed the blinders she had to the social problems of this nation
and it has affected every aspect of her academic endeavors.
As part of an honors independent study she has explored issues
of disparities in educational funding, poverty, social inequality
and racism. She has conducted research on effective community development.
Her career goal is to work in urban community development and inspire
others to fight against social injustice.
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