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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Three University of Alabama students
recently landed two of the nation’s most highly sought academic
scholarships.
The Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation chose John Phillips,
a junior biochemistry major from Decatur, as one of its 75 Truman
Scholars, selected from among the 602 students nominated by 299
colleges and universities. Truman Scholars are awarded $30,000
for graduate study and are chosen on the basis of leadership potential,
intellectual ability, and likelihood of “making a difference.”
The Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education
Foundation selected two UA students, Cody Locke, a junior biology
major from Boaz, and Jennifer Phillips, a sophomore chemical and
biological engineering major from Birmingham (35216), as Goldwater
Scholars. More than 1,000 mathematics, science and engineering
students were nominated by faculties nationwide for Goldwaters,
and only 320 were selected. UA students comprised half of the state’s
four representatives.
“These awards demonstrate the success of The University
of Alabama at empowering its students to achieve to the top of
their ability and then be recognized for that achievement,” said
Dr. Robert Halli, dean of UA’s Honors College.
Truman Scholar – John Phillips
John Phillips, who is minoring in business and Computer Based
Honors, was cited by the Truman Foundation for his role in building
a patient information database for the Good Samaritan Clinic, a
free Tuscaloosa health clinic that provides services to the medically
uninsured. In addition to developing the programming for the system
and training the volunteers who would use it, Phillips built a
computer for the clinic, using recycled parts from non-working
computers.
President of Capstone Men and Women, the University’s student
ambassador group, and founder and president of Capstone Leaders
United, a group that promotes campus diversity, John Phillips is
researching, under faculty guidance, cancer genes as well as new
methods for industrial pollution clean-up. He was named Outstanding
Junior in the Computer Based Honors Program and was elected to
Phi Beta Kappa.
“In all our combined time as teachers and researchers at
the University of Tennessee, the Rockefeller University, Columbia
University and now at The University of Alabama, John is among
the most brilliant young men we have ever met,” wrote Drs.
Kim and Guy Caldwell, assistant professors of biological sciences
in UA’s College of Arts and Sciences, in a joint nomination
letter. “He is simply impressive in every capacity – as
a researcher, as a scholar, as a leader among his peers, and role
model for others.”
Following graduation in May 2006, John Phillips said he plans
to enter a five-year program and obtain a Doctor of Medicine degree
and a master’s in public health. His career goals include
helping design free health clinics and later to help shape policies
related to health care or support for biomedical research.
Goldwater Scholar – Cody Locke
As a full-time undergraduate student, Locke researches the molecular
basis for epilepsy in the Caldwells’ lab, using the animal
model system, C. elegans. More than 50 percent of all
human hereditary diseases have been linked to genetic components
also found in the worm.
“Never before have I seen such an enormous talent mature
to international stature at an undergraduate level as has Cody
Locke’s,” wrote Dr. John W. Holaday, a biotechnology
entrepreneur and an adjunct professor of anesthesiology and critical
care medicine at The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine,
in a letter of support for Locke. Holaday met Locke through his
professional association with the Caldwells.
Locke has presented research, for which he was the lead author,
at the American Society for Cell Biology's annual meeting, the
world's largest conference in the cellular biology field. As a
sophomore, a work he co-authored was selected from this meeting
of more than 10,000 cell biologists as one of 13 works highlighted
in the society's international Press Book for media release and
for use in high school education nationwide. His research has been
published in Human Molecular Genetics and received more
international recognition via a news release by the Howard Hughes
Medical Institute.
For a Computer-Based Honors project, Locke used information from
the human genome project to design and build an online database
on the genetics of epilepsy. It integrates Internet-based computational
resources directly with laboratory experiments involving a method
for genetic analysis called RNA interference. The database, at http://carpedb.ua.edu,
is included in the National Center for Biotechnology Information
Molecular Biology Database Collection, published by the journal Nucleic
Acids Research. It was recently highlighted in Science magazine.
Active in campus organizations, Locke is editor in chief of the Journal
of Science & Health at The University of Alabama and
president of Beta Beta Beta Biological Honor Society. He is a
first-generation college student who plans to become a molecular
and cellular biology professor.
Goldwater Scholar – Jennifer Phillips
Jennifer Phillips says she has been fascinated with science and
mathematics for as long as she remembers. Although she initially
intended to explore these fields as a physician, she changed her
mind after attending the University of Alabama at Birmingham’s
Biomedical Engineering Summer Research Program. Jennifer Phillips
now thrives on the possibilities that can be accomplished in the
field of biomedical research through engineering.
As part of her Computer-Based Honors project, Jennifer Phillips
developed a computer program that models the heat transfer during
magnetic fluid hyperthermia, which is a cancer therapy that directly
injects a fluid containing magnetic particles into a tumor. The
application of an alternating magnetic field causes the particles
to become hot. The elevated temperature of the particles destroys
the surrounding cancerous cells while minimizing damage to healthy
tissue.
“The quality of her work on this research project is nothing
short of excellent. I consider her work to be of the same caliber
as that of a graduate student, yet she is still only a sophomore,” wrote
Dr. Duane Johnson, associate professor of chemical and biological
engineering at UA’s College of Engineering, in her nomination
letter.
The results of Jennifer Phillips’ project currently are
being submitted as two different manuscripts to internationally
peer-reviewed journals. She also presented her research at the
biotechnology symposium at the national American Institute of Chemical
Engineers conference during a session with graduate students and
other well-established professors.
To expand her research capabilities, Jennifer Phillips participates
in the Cooperative Education Program and has worked three semesters
with the Southern Research Institute. The Co-op Program is a special
academic program in which students alternate periods of full-time
study with periods of full-time employment.
Jennifer Phillips is also involved in numerous organizations at
the Capstone including Ambassadors of the College of Engineering,
Honors College Ambassadors, and UA’s chapter of the American
Institute of Chemical Engineers, and she volunteers with the American
Cancer Society and with two local elementary schools as a tutor.
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