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Megan May, a senior in UA's
Capstone College of Nursing, is shown during a day of broadcast
filming for a profile on the Wendy's High School Heisman
Hall of Famer airing nationally Dec. 11. (Photo by Patrick
McIntyre)
Download a high resolution version
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – And you thought The University of Alabama
had never been home to a Heisman winner.
Megan May, a senior UA nursing student from Roanoke, will soon
be flown to New York City where she will attend the 2005 Wendy’s
High School Heisman presentation, as she has for each of the previous
four years. In 2001 as a senior at Handley High School, May was
chosen the female national winner of the annual award recognizing
students who excel in academics, athletics and community involvement.
Just as the collegiate Heisman is known for being the most prestigious
award in college football, the Wendy’s High School Heisman
award also is known for being the most prestigious award at the
high school level. May, along with that year’s male winner,
was selected from more than 13,000 nominees. Each year, for the
remainder of their lives, the winners are invited back to attend
the annual presentation.
The UA Capstone College of Nursing student will be profiled in
a television segment scheduled to air on ESPN2 Sunday, Dec. 11
at 6:30 p.m. EST. Each year, the male and female winners from five
and 10 years prior are highlighted.
Dr. Sara Barger, dean of UA’s Capstone College of Nursing,
said seeing students like Megan makes her feel good about the future
of her profession. “She has the intellectual capacity along
with the human caring to make a really outstanding nurse,” Barger
said. “Megan is going to be exactly the kind of nurse who
each of us will want to care for us one day. I will be proud to
call her an ‘Alabama nurse.’”
Monika Gragg, instructor in UA’s College of Nursing, described
May as a serious student who was a quick learner, not only in mastering
text material but in grasping new “psychomotor skills” such
as obtaining an accurate blood pressure or giving injections.
The combination helped make her a natural for other students to
turn to when they needed peer assistance. “All the students
knew who to ask when they had a question,” Gragg said. “There’s
only certain people other students go to when they have a question,
and she was one of those people.”
May, scheduled to graduate in December 2006, has excelled academically
at UA and has been awarded membership in some of the University’s
most prestigious honor societies, including Omicron Delta Kappa,
Mortar Board, and Anderson Society. During her clinical rotations,
May juggles working in a hospital with attending class.
“In the hospital, Megan would take care of patients anywhere
from eight to ten hours a day (two days per week), doing everything
that a nurse would do – under supervision,” Gragg said. “Her
patients loved her.”
May, who plans to later attend nurse anesthetist school, said
the annual opportunity to meet and learn about the other Heisman
honorees has inspired her to continue working hard. “The
biggest thing it has done for me is the motivation it provided,” May
said. “When I go back and see the past winners, they are
just outstanding. It motivates you to keep trying.”
The initial honor came with a flood of attention. Her town’s
mayor proclaimed a “Megan May Day” in her honor. “All
my friends made fun of me for that,” she said. She was grand
marshal of the town’s Christmas parade, met then-Gov. Don
Siegelman and granted media interview requests for several state,
regional and national news outlets, including being recognized
in Sports Illustrated. Handley High School was awarded $3,500 in
honor of May, and the school requested May’s input on how
the money should best be spent.
In addition to posting an impressive ACT score, in high school
May was president of the Key Club and the National Honor Society
and was captain of both her basketball and softball teams, winning
area honors for her athletic prowess. May, who was also selected
from 91,000 applicants as one of the nation’s 250 Coca-Cola
Scholars in 2002, enjoys playing intramural sports at UA and coaching
a basketball team of 10-year-olds in her free time. The UA senior
cited the ample opportunities to interact with patients as guiding
her nursing career choice and said she was happy with her decision
to attend The University of Alabama.
“I know I made the right choice,” May said. “I
love everything about it. I feel at home here. The teachers here
are great, and I have great friends here. I couldn’t imagine
myself anywhere else.”
And now The University of Alabama, which has fielded some of the
greatest teams and players in college football history – a
rich tradition frequently juxtaposed with its never having landed
a Heisman Trophy – no longer has to imagine what it might
be like to have a Heisman in its midst.
For more information, see http://www.wendysheisman.com/..
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