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UA students (left to right) William Norvell Jr. of Florence,
Stephanie LeeAnn Wilson of Vestavia Hills, Cody Locke of
Boaz, Mary Katherine "Katie" Marchiony of Hoover
and Jason Spruell of Dothan were named to this year's USA
Today All-USA College Academic Team.
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Five students from The University of
Alabama have been named to this year’s USA Today All-USA
College Academic Team – the most of any school in the nation.
This year’s team brings UA’s total for the last three
years to 14, a figure that also tops all other colleges and universities.
Four UA students were chosen for the 2004 team and five for the
2003 team.
A total of 84 students nationwide were selected for this year’s
team. Yale has three students on the team, the second highest total
for a single university.
For the past two years, Harvard or Alabama has had the most students
selected. This year Harvard had two students on the team.
“Placing five students on the USA Today All-USA College
Academic team underscores the important point that our best and
brightest students can compete with anyone, anywhere, anytime,” said
UA President Robert E. Witt.
UA students named to the Second Team were Cody
Locke, a junior biology major from Boaz, who hopes
to become a molecular and cellular biology professor and who
is a two-time USA Today Academic All-American; Mary
Katherine “Katie” Marchiony, a senior
management information systems major from Hoover, who hopes
to become a business systems analyst at a Fortune 100 company;
and Stephanie LeeAnn Wilson,
a junior chemical engineering major from Vestavia Hills, who
hopes to be a physician.
Jason Spruell, a senior
chemistry major from Dothan who hopes to be a university research
professor, was named to the Third Team, and William
Norvell Jr., a senior banking and financial services
major from Florence, received Honorable Mention. Norvell plans
a career in investment banking.
Students selected for this annual “best of the best” list
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 had 31 students
recognized.
Cody Locke, USA Today All USA College
Academic Second Team member
Hometown: Boaz
Major: Biology
Career Goal: Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology
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Cody Locke
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This marks the second time in as many years for Cody Locke to
be named to a USA Today All-USA College Academic Team. Locke researches
the molecular basis for epilepsy in the lab of Drs. Guy and Kim
Caldwell, UA biology professors in the College of Arts and Sciences.
During the fall of 2004, Locke 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. It was the second year in a row that research in
which Locke was intricately involved was presented at the conference.
The previous year, the work he co-authored was selected from
this meeting of over 10,000 cell biologists as one of 15 works
highlighted in the society's international Press Book for media
release and for use in high school education nationwide.
Locke's research, which involves the development of an animal
model system – a microscopic worm called C. elegans – for
epilepsy, has been published in a top human disease journal, Human
Molecular Genetics. It received more international recognition
via a news release by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. More
than 50 percent of all human hereditary diseases have been linked
to genetic components also found in the worm.
For the scientific paper, Locke performed convulsion analysis
on the worm, recorded time-lapse videos of seizure-like activity
in the worm, and manipulated those videos with the aid of computer
scripts he wrote.
In 2003, Locke was one of only four students nationwide selected
to receive the Benjamin Cummings Biology Prize, a scholarship awarded
annually by the Benjamin Cummings Co., a division of a biology
textbook publisher. He was also awarded a National Society of Collegiate
Scholars Merit Award, a national scholarship awarded to 50 new
members of this honor society that has chapters at more than 170
campuses.
For his Computer-Based Honors project, Locke used information
from the human genome project to design and build a novel bioinformatics
database. It integrates Internet-based computational resources
directly with laboratory experiments involving a method for genetic
analysis called RNA interference. The database, at www.carpedb.ua.edu,
is
included in the National Center for Biotechnology Information Molecular
Biology Database Collection, published by the journal Nucleic
Acids Research.
In a letter of recommendation, one of Locke's nominators, UA
biology professor Guy Caldwell, called inviting Locke to join his
lab "one of the finest decisions of my career. I can best
describe his personality as having a calm fervor," Caldwell
wrote, “Not a day goes by wherein I don't see him working
diligently in the lab, actively assessing web-based information
on epilepsy (or science in general) or hovering thirstily over
a scientific paper. Students like Cody embody the reason I entered
this profession."
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. As an incoming
freshman, Locke mentored environmentally at-risk students at
a local elementary school, while painting the cafeteria and leading
an effort to install new computers in every classroom through
Alabama Action, a service learning experience for freshmen in
UA's University Honors College.
A first generation college student, Locke is the son of Mickey
and Patsy Locke.
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Mary Katherine “Katie” Marchiony,
USA Today All-USA College Academic Second Team member
Hometown: Hoover
Major: Management Information Systems
Career Goal: Business Systems Analyst at Fortune 100 Company
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Mary Katherine "Katie" Marchiony
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While tackling full academic course loads, working at University
Medical Center and assisting with student recruitment efforts,
Katie Marchiony designed and implemented an academic peer mentoring
program that is being applied in courses across The University
of Alabama campus and has drawn the attention of a panel of chief
information officers representing Fortune 500 companies.
As a sophomore, Marchiony excelled in her computer science courses
but noted that many of her peers struggled with the complexities
of the material. So, she coordinated a planning session with faculty
in UA’s Computer Science and Management Information Systems
departments.
“In that meeting,” writes Dr. Edd Mansfield, department
head of information systems, statistics and management, “Katie
suggested student-led help sessions to provide problem solving
guidance in a low-key, non-threatening environment.”
Marchiony “developed the training materials, lesson plans,
sample problems, example programs and step-by step solutions,” Mansfield
continued in his letter of recommendation.
She also marketed the program campuswide and coordinated all the
logistical planning and recruiting of her classmates. Marchiony
acted as the conduit between the class instructors and the mentors,
Mansfield indicated.
Since implementing Marchiony’s program, enrollment in UA’s
Management Information Systems program increased. Many students
who participated in the peer mentoring program reported increasing
their grade point averages by at least one letter grade. Marchiony
later participated in a forum where the mentoring program was discussed
by a panel of Fortune 500 chief information officers for their
consideration as an alternative to their company’s instructional
meeting styles.
An ambassador for UA’s Culverhouse College of Commerce,
Marchiony is a recipient of the Lucy Blankenship Piper Memorial
Scholarship and is a Management Information Systems Faculty Scholar.
She helped facilitate UA’s Computing Olympiad, a state-wide
academic competition for high school students and was a member
and webmaster for Alabama Students for Constitutional Reform.
She has had internships with The Home Depot, where she managed
a $170,000 budget project from beginning to end, and Ernst & Young.
She was on a team that recently completed a project for Procter & Gamble.
Marchiony is the daughter of Bob and Mazie Marchiony.
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Stephanie LeeAnn Wilson, USA Today
All-USA College Academic Team Second Team member
Hometown: Vestavia Hills
Major: Chemical engineering
Career Goal: Physician
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Stephanie LeeAnn Wilson
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During an internship with the Southern Company, Stephanie “LeeAnn” Wilson
researched and expanded a methodology for calculating ammonia releases
from power plants. This College of Engineering junior’s method,
which she outlined in a soon-to-be published paper, is expected
to become the industry standard for ammonia emissions calculations,
according to a nomination letter written by a principal research
engineer at Southern Company.
“Upon publication, this estimating method will form the
backbone of not only Southern Company’s environmental reporting
of ammonia, but of the majority of the electric utility industry
nationwide,” wrote Keith E. Harrison, in the letter.
Wilson’s project consisted of in-depth research on nine
pieces of power production and pollution control equipment as well
as the ammonia chemistry associated with the equipment and different
power plant configurations.
In 1998 ammonia was added to the list of pollutants the EPA requires
all power plants to report under its Toxic Release Inventory. Utility
companies had not developed an extensive method to calculate ammonia
releases, and Southern Company gave Wilson a skeleton theory and
method and allowed her to develop it.
In addition, for four consecutive semesters Wilson, through her
memberships in the University Honors Program and the Computer Based
Honors Program, has conducted prostate cancer epidemiology research
under the direction of Dr. John Higginbotham, associate dean for
research and health policy in The University of Alabama School
of Medicine, Tuscaloosa campus.
By first taking old data and looking for trends in prostate cancer
using the Alabama Tumor Registry, Wilson revived and expanded research
initiated by Higginbotham. She also broadened the research to include
breast cancer data.
“She reshaped the existing research project into a more
statistically and locally prevalent project by geo-coding and pinpointing
exact street locations of cancer incidents,” Higginbotham
wrote in his nomination letter. “This improvement to the
project is being used to create maps that visually display cancer
clusters throughout the state of Alabama and allow for spatial
analyses to be performed on this information.”
Wilson is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and is an Honors
College ambassador involved in the recruitment of the best and
brightest students to UA. She has been a member of the Alabama
Women’s Chorale and is the chair of the Student Government
Association’s Capstone Event Committee, a position in which
she is organizing and orchestrating a day of community service
this spring for some 1,000 student participants.
The daughter of Rick and Donna Wilson, LeeAnn Wilson led a medical
mission trip to Mexico during last year’s Spring Break and
participated in a medical mission trip to Brazil.
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Jason Spruell, USA Today All-USA
College Academic Team Third Team member
Hometown: Dothan
Major: Chemistry
Career Goal: University Research Professor
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Jason Spruell
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Jason Spruell’s undergraduate research has given the chemical
industry insight into more practical ways of achieving desired
chemical reactions in an environmentally friendly manner.
Working alongside Drs. David Dixon and Kevin Shaughnessy, two
UA chemistry professors, Spruell used supercomputers to perform
mathematical calculations leading to a better understanding of
water soluble catalysts and which will help in the design of new
catalysts.
Companies that produce chemical goods, such as plastics and pharmaceuticals,
use catalysts to increase the rate and efficiency of chemical reactions,
thereby using less energy. These catalysts have traditionally been
dissolved in organic solvents. Replacing these organic solvents
with ones having less environmental impact, or even with water,
is a major goal of researchers. Water has often not worked well
as a solvent for certain types of reactions, but a particular class
of catalysts, known as water soluble palladium catalysts, are effective
in water. In analyzing these catalysts, Spruell has discovered
more about their properties and how they work.
“Jason’s work will have an impact in the area of ‘green’ chemistry
as we develop chemical processes with less environmental impact
in terms of waste production and energy consumption,” wrote
Dixon in his nomination letter.
During the summer of 2004, Spruell performed chemistry research
abroad at Universitaet Muenster in Muenster, Germany. He competed
for and won an international award, given to only two undergraduate
students worldwide, which funded his research, travel and living
expenses. In the spring of 2004, Spruell was awarded the Barry
M. Goldwater Excellence in Education Program Scholarship, worth
$7,500 annually and given to roughly 300 university juniors and
seniors nationwide.
Spruell, who has been accepted into graduate schools at Harvard,
Northwestern, Columbia and UCLA, is a member of the Blount Undergraduate
Initiative in UA’s College of Arts and Sciences and participates
in UA’s Computer Based Honors Program. He serves as president
of the Student Affiliates to the American Chemical Society. He
has also volunteered at University Place Montessori School and
with the Boys and Girls Club of America.
“Jason is one of the most impressive students I have encountered, including
those I’ve worked with at Stanford and Yale,” wrote Shaughnessy in
his nomination letter.
Spruell is the son of Ken Spruell and Barbara Pearson.
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William Norvell Jr., USA Today All-USA
College Academic Team, Honorable Mention
Hometown: Florence
Major: Banking and Financial Services
Career Goal: Investment Banking
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William Norvell Jr.
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Working to overcome stereotypes of the Greek System, William Norvell
Jr., president of UA’s Interfraternity Council, negotiated
an agreement between University administrators and UA’s 23
fraternities on how disciplinary action is handled. He developed
a “Hazing Protocol” empowering Greek presidents to
strictly enforce a “no tolerance” policy related to
hazing violations.
“It is unbelievable how much change his leadership has made
to the Greek community here at The University of Alabama,” wrote
Tim Hebson, associate dean of students at UA, in his nomination
letter. “….All Greeks understand that if an individual
in a chapter does haze, he is held immediately responsible for
this by the chapter and the University.”
In the past, charters could be revoked when one or two individuals
violated policy, but Norvell’s work to empower the individual
fraternity presidents has reduced problems, Hebson wrote. Norvell’s
initiatives also reduced the amount of hours pledges can be at
a fraternity house and set deadlines for initiations to occur.
Norvell, who serves as president of the Blue Key National Honor
Society and was a member of UA’s Multicultural Center Task
Force, has been actively involved in Greek Links for the past three
years, including, as a junior, coordinating the collective charitable
efforts among all Greek organizations.
Over the last three years, Greek Links has raised more than $400,000,
with proceeds going to benefit Habitat for Humanity, Children’s
Miracle Network, Kid One Transport and the Literary Council of
Central Alabama. After Hurricane Ivan devastated Gulf Shores and
other areas, Norvell organized about 30 of his fraternity members
to help in the relief effort. Coordinating with Gulf Shores’ representatives,
including the mayor, Norvell and the fraternity members made the
five-hour drive to the destructed areas and worked approximately
330 hours in the relief effort.
During his UA career, this Culverhouse College of Commerce student
has worked as an intern at Merrill Lynch and completed research
on warrant pricing models at the request of Dr. Robert Brooks,
a UA professor of financial management. Norvell developed a program
that Brooks has now incorporated into the curriculum for his financial
engineering class.
Norvell is the son of Bill and Anne Norvell.
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