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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- Michael Townley and Allie Esslinger of Tuscaloosa,
and Joy Garnett of Eutaw conducted research at The University of
Alabama as members of the 2005 McNair
Scholars class.
Townley, a 2004 graduate of UA, conducted his research with UA
faculty mentor Dr. Jerome Rosenberg in the New College Program
during the summer of 2004. Along with co-authoring a research report
for the UA McNair Journal on “Governmental Treatment of Jehovah’s
Witnesses as Conscientious Objectors to Military Services in the
20th and 21st Centuries,” Townley has been honored with the
James Fitts Alston Scholarship, and the AIEJ Scholarship for study
at Hiroshima University in Japan. He was also honored by the Black
Faculty and Staff Association for outstanding academic performance.
Garnett, an engineering student at UA, conducted her research
with UA faculty mentor Dr. Robert Metzger in the department of
chemistry in the summer of 2004 and with Dr. David Nikles in the
department of chemistry in the fall of 2004. Garnett co-authored
a research report for the UA McNair Journal on “Effects of
Fumed Silica Particles in the Elastic Modulus of UV-Cured Base
Film for Magnetic Tape.” Along with being a member of Sigma
Alpha Lambda Honor Society, Garnett has also been named a GEM Fellow
for Eastman Kodak and a Robert C. Byrd Scholar.
Esslinger, a senior at UA, conducted her research with UA faculty
emeritus mentor Dr. Bob McKenzie of the Kettering Foundation during
the summer of 2004. Along with conducting her research project
on “Community Leaders’ Communication Networks and Views
of Public Participation in Civic Decision-Making,” Esslinger
is active in Honors College, Blount Undergraduate Initiative, and
Alabama Action. She is also a member of the National Collegiate
Honor Society and Phi Eta Sigma.
The McNair Scholars Program is named after Dr. Ronald E. McNair,
a first-generation college student who earned a doctorate in physics
at MIT. Later, as an astronaut, he became the second African-American
in space. He was among those who died in the 1986 Challenger accident.
Honoring his legacy, McNair Scholars is a prestigious scholarship
and research program that helps prepare accomplished undergraduates
for graduate study. A U.S. Department of Education TRIO program,
McNair Scholars targets first-generation college students and those
from other groups underrepresented in doctoral programs.
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