Tuesday, May 8, 2012

UGA student wins prestigious scholarship

By on November 29, 2008

Christina Faust, a University honors student from Athens, is one of 12 national recipients of the 2009-2010 George J. Mitchell Postgraduate Scholarship. She will use her fellowship to study immunology and global health at the National University of Ireland, Maynooth.

Faust, who is pursuing a dual bachelor’s/master’s degree in ecology, was previously named a 2008 Truman Scholar and a 2008 Udall Scholar. The UGA senior, a graduate of Cedar Shoals High School, is the daughter of Lynn and the late Tim Faust, a former professor in UGA’s Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources, and the granddaughter of Bob and Marian Olyha, also of Athens.

Faust was chosen from a pool of 300 candidates and is among the 10th anniversary class of Mitchell Scholars. She is the first Mitchell Scholarship recipient at UGA.

“Christina Faust is clearly one of the brightest stars in the UGA academic sky, and I am very proud of her,” said University President Michael F. Adams. “She has demonstrated remarkable talent and the ability to master a variety of areas of study, characteristics which bode well for her future. I expect great things from Christina.”

The Mitchell Postgraduate Scholarship, named in honor of the former U.S. senator who served as chairman of the historic peace negotiations in Northern Ireland in 1998, is a nationally competitive fellowship sponsored by the U.S.-Ireland Alliance for one-year of graduate study in any discipline offered by institutions in Ireland and Northern Ireland. The award promotes a spirit of community and global understanding through linking future American leaders with the island of Ireland.

“Many of our students impress me, but Christina Faust truly inspires me,” said David S. Williams, director of UGA’s Honors Program. “We need leaders who understand the delicate interwoven nature of our complicated ecosystems, and who can envision and articulate answers and approaches. Christina is a leader for our times, and I am extremely proud of her.”

Faust’s commitment and passion for a career in wildlife conservation has been reinforced through her undergraduate research experiences at UGA. She has combined her interests in infectious diseases research and the way ecosystems are affected by completing thesis research on the avian influenza virus through UGA’s Odum School of Ecology with a related study through the Southeastern Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study in UGA’s College of Veterinary Medicine.

Faust was one of 12 students selected internationally to present at the International Wildlife Disease Association Conference in 2007. She also presented twice at UGA’s spring undergraduate research symposium sponsored by the Honors Program’s Center for Undergraduate Research Opportunities. She has won several conference awards, including “Outstanding Master’s Presentation” at the 2008 Graduate Student Symposium at UGA’s Odum School of Ecology.

- UGA News Service

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