NSF fellowships awarded to students for graduate study

NSF
fellowships awarded to students for graduate study

…………………………………………………………………

Twenty Rice
students have won National Science Foundation Graduate Research
Fellowships.

The fellowships
are awarded for graduate study leading to research-based
master’s or doctoral degrees in the mathematical, physical,
biological, engineering and behavioral and social sciences,
including the history of science and the philosophy of science,
and to research-based Ph.D. degrees in science education.

The 2001 Rice
winners, their fields of study and intended graduate schools
are:

•Elizabeth
Noemie Bartmess-LeVasseur, psychology/sociology, U. of California–Santa
Barbara
• Danielle Monique Bilyeu, ecology, Colorado State
U.
•Jonathan Christian Borck, environmental engineering,
U. of California–Berkeley
• Jae Chung, cultural anthropology, Rice U.
• Frederica Conrey, psychology/sociology, Northwestern
U.
• Seth Andrew Eatinger, electrical engineering, Stanford
U.
• James Jordan Emerson, evolution, U. of Chicago
• Kimberly Ann Foster, computational biology, Scripps
Research Institute
• Christopher Allen Harrison, chemical engineering,
U. of Delaware
• Scott Anthony Harrison, chemical engineering, U.
of Michigan
• Nathan Hillson, biophysics, Harvard U.
• Theresa Ann Holland, engineering/bioengineering,
Duke U.
• Dana Elise Hunt, environmental engineering, Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
• Michelle Margaret Meyer, molecular biology, Stanford
U.
• Thuy Linh Nguyen Pham, cellular biology, Stanford
U.
• Aimee Placas, cultural anthropology, Rice U.
• Nathan Alan Vandesteeg, polymer engineering, U. of
Massachusetts–Amherst
• Raymond Summers Wagner, computer engineering, Rice
U.
• Michael Bruce Wakin, computer engineering, Rice U.
• Bethany Jo Weber, cognitive psychology, Rutgers U.

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