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Mayer Award Recipients Named -- Dr. Jack Norman Baldwin
(L), UA professor of political science, and Ashley Fallon
Ragsdale (R), UA student from Huntsville, each received the
Morris Lehman Mayer Award for 2003, one of the University's
premier individual awards. The recipients are shown with Dr.
Morris Mayer (C), UA business professor emeritus for whom
the award is named.
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Sullivan Award Recipients Named -- (L-R) Kana Anne
Ellis, UA student from Northport, Margaret Lee Watson, former
president of the UA National Alumni Association, and Nabeel
Ahmed Memon, UA student from Tuscaloosa, were named the 2003
recipients of the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award, one of the
University's premier individual awards.
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Ramsey Award Recipient Named -- Kristin Gail Robinson,
a UA student from Vestavia Hills, was named the 2003 recipient
of the John Fraser Ramsey Award, one of the University's premier
individual awards. The award is named in honor of the late
UA history professor emeritus.
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| Bloom Award Recipient Named -- Rashmee Nawar Sharif
(C) of Tuscaloosa was named the recipient of the 2003 William
P. Bloom Scholarship Award, one of the University's premier
individual awards. Shown with Sharif are Star and Stan Bloom
of Tuscaloosa who established the endowment for the award.
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - The University of Alabama has announced the
top individual award recipients for scholarship, leadership and
service to the University for 2003.
UA interim President Barry Mason announced the honors at the Presidential
Awards Dinner held Saturday, Feb. 22, at 6 p.m. at the NorthRiver
Yacht Club in Tuscaloosa. The recipients will also be recognized
during UA Honors Week in an awards ceremony this spring.
The Morris Lehman Mayer Award is named in honor of Morris
Lehman Mayer, business professor emeritus. For three decades, Mayer
was a beloved UA teacher and a guiding force in student life. The
award recognizes one faculty member and one member of the graduating
class who exemplify integrity, selfless service and leadership at
UA and in the community while making significant contributions to
student life.
Ashley Fallon Ragsdale of Huntsville received the Mayer
Award as the graduating recipient. Ragsdale has earned a 3.6
Grade Point Average in her major of biology and minor of psychology
while participating in the Blount Undergraduate Initiative. She
has served as vice president of Mortar Board, Capstone Men and Women
and XXXI Women’s Honorary, president and founder of S.E.P.A.
(Students for the Education and Prevention of AIDS), philanthropy
chairman of Pi Beta Phi sorority, a member of Omicron Delta Kappa
honorary, an inaugural member of the Blount Undergraduate Initiative,
a teaching assistant for the department of biological sciences and
was a Howard Hughes Undergraduate Medical Institute intern. In her
college career, Ragsdale has also been named Most Outstanding Freshman
by Omicron Delta Kappa, Most Outstanding Sophomore by Order of Omega
and a Blackburn Fellow by the Blackburn Institute. Ragsdale also
represented the state of Alabama at the International Mission on
Medicine in South Africa, where she spent three weeks with 50 other
students from throughout the nation learning the devastating effects
of HIV/AIDS. She also volunteers with AIDS education and prevention
in Alabama as well as serving as a child mentor for several Alabama
organizations.
Dr. Jack Norman Baldwin has been selected as the faculty
recipient of the Mayer Award, as an individual who embodies
“servant leadership in the art of teaching,” according
to a nominator.
Baldwin has been a professor at UA since 1988. He has served as
UA Faculty Senate President, a position in which he had to tackle
many politically sensitive issues. Baldwin has also advised doctoral
students, directed independent study groups and has been involved
with an off-campus doctoral program at Maxwell Air Force Base. He
also serves as faculty adviser to student organizations such as
Mortar Board and the Other Club, and as a facilitator for the Blackburn
Institute. He is described by a nominator as “a consummate
teaching professional whose career exemplifies creating opportunity
and growth for all members of The University of Alabama community.”
This year's Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award is presented
to one man and one woman of the graduating class and one non-student
who has been helpful to, and associated with, the University. The
Sullivan Award recognizes excellence of character and service to
humanity.
Student winners of this year's Sullivan Award are Nabeel Ahmed
Memon of Tuscaloosa and Kana Anne Ellis of Northport.
Nabeel Ahmed Memon has maintained a 4.0 Grade Point Average
as a biology major with a minor in the Computer-Based Honors Program
at UA. His accomplishments include co-founding the Beta Beta Beta
research journal JOSHUA, Journal of Science and Health at The
University of Alabama, which provides a forum for UA students
to publish their science and health research and “The Medical
School Goes Paperless: Improving Access to Information for Improved
Patient Care,” a research project for the Computer-Based Honors
Program that will involve computer technology in the research and
organization of medical care. Memon serves as an Arts and Sciences
ambassador, a member of the top UA honor societies, and volunteers
as a tutor and research student. He was honored as the 2002 Most
Outstanding Junior and the 2001 Arts and Sciences Sophomore of the
Year in his academic career at Alabama. In addition to his medical
research, Memon has also observed and assisted physicians to learn
more about the medical profession.
Kana Anne Ellis, last year’s recipient of the William
P. Bloom Scholarship Award, has earned a 4.0 Grade Point Average
in psychology with a minor in Spanish and the Computer-Based Honors
Program. She is a member of all three of the University’s
honors programs and has served as president of the Honor’s
Program Student Association for three years. Under her term, the
organization has reached its highest membership in history and undertaken
numerous service projects. Ellis founded Alabama Action,
a service program to immerse honors freshmen in community service
in the state’s poorest schools.
Ellis was also recognized as the first “Honors Student of
the Year” by the National Collegiate Honors Council. She is
the Anderson Society vice president, The Other Club recording secretary
and a member of the XXXI Women’s Honorary, the Blackburn Institute
and Phi Beta Kappa honorary. With plans to enter law school, Ellis
has done research for the Computer-Based Honors Program on the proportionality
of the death penalty in Alabama with the UA School of Law.
Margaret Lee Watson received the Sullivan Award as a non-student
honoree. Watson is a 1972 graduate of the Capstone, and she
has worked as a teacher and guidance counselor in schools across
the Southeast. She has served as president of the National Alumni
Association in 1996-97, served in numerous positions in different
alumni chapters and served on the executive committee as a national
vice president. She has been active with Kappa Delta sorority, Boy
Scouts, Girl Scouts, American Cancer Society, the Alabama Counseling
Association, School Counselors Association and United Methodist
Church. Watson has also been active in recruiting students. A nominator
wrote, “I met numerous students who commented on the influence
that she had on their decision to attend the University. Her enthusiasm
and commitment to the University could not be any stronger.”
The John Fraser Ramsey Award, named in honor of the late
University history professor emeritus, recognizes in a junior the
versatility of gifts and attainments, as well as the breadth of
excellence in mind and character, that have traditionally been the
goals of a liberal education.
The recipient of the Ramsey Award is Kristin Gail Robinson of
Birmingham. She has excelled in her major of social work and
minor in psychology, achieving a 4.0 Grade Point Average and involving
herself fully in the University and community service. After transferring
to UA from the University of Georgia, Robinson quickly became involved
in campus organizations such as the Undergraduate Social Work Organization,
becoming president and founder of Bama Pro-Life and serving on the
Avanti Orientation Team. Her honors include Avanti of the Year in
2002, Russell and Barbara Beaulieu Award for Social Work and the
UA President’s List. Robinson also works as a research assistant,
a task usually reserved for graduate students, on a project studying
Attention Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder in children.
The William P. Bloom Scholarship Award honors a junior who
has improved intergroup relations within the University community;
this year’s recipient is Rashmee Nawar Sharif of Tuscaloosa.
Sharif embodies the characteristics of this award in many ways.
As president of the International Student Association, she has made
great steps to involve students of many different backgrounds and
cultures in socialization and service.
She coordinated the first “Flava Fest” this year with
SCAR (Student Coalition Against Racism) and AAA (African-American
Association). This event was a success in mixing cultures and groups
at UA. She has obtained a 3.62 Grade Point Average in international
management with a minor in Spanish. Sharif has also studied abroad
in Ireland and Italy and has made several visits to her homeland
of Bangladesh. She has also been a part of the Alabama Model United
Nations, the Women’s Leadership Institute and has been recognized
by the University Honors Program for academic achievement.
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