| June 2, 2000
Contact: Jan
Jennings (858) 822-1684
BIOLOGY STUDENT TO
RECEIVE DR. SELMA SILAGI AWARD FOR UNDERGRADUATE EXCELLENCE IN SCIENCE
AT UCSD
Leena L. Shankar, a molecular
biology major in Revelle College at the University of California, San
Diego, has been named the first recipient of UCSD's Dr. Selma Silagi
Award for undergraduate excellence in science.
Shankar will be honored at an
award luncheon June 6 at the UCSD Faculty Club where she will receive
a $5,000 award from the Silagi family to use at her discretion. Her
name will be inscribed on a perpetual plaque to be housed in the
natural sciences building on the UCSD campus.
"Leena is one of the most
impressive students I have seen in my 18 years of being provost of
Revelle College," said Tom Bond. "She has done three times
as much research as the normal undergraduate. She richly deserves this
award."
The Dr. Selma Silagi Award
honors the late research scientist who moved to San Diego after
retiring as professor emeritus from Cornell University in 1987. It is
presented to a top UCSD graduating senior in one of the four natural
sciences on the basis of academic performance, research,
accomplishment, creativity, charisma, and potential for achievement.
Shankar, whose home is in
Thousand Oaks, Calif., was named last October by Glamour magazine as
one of 10 collegiate "Millennium Movers and Shakers" in the
nation.
The young scientist reported
the findings of an honors thesis for the Center for AIDS Research in
San Diego at the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology's conference in San Francisco last year and participated in an
American Heart Association Research Fellowship project at UC San
Francisco, which included presentation of her work to the American
Heart Association. She also volunteered with the Coalition on
Homelessness.
Among her other activities are
working on an independent project studying public health issues
surrounding macular degeneration, serving as a teaching assistant for
an urban studies and planning class, serving as managing editor for
the UCSD student newspaper, The Guardian, helping to create a new
Revelle College leadership program, Leaders of the 21st Century, and
serving on COAST (Chancellor's Organization for Allied Students).
Shankar was nominated for the
Dr. Selma Silagi Award by UCSD professor Flossie Wong-Staal,
Department of Biology. The award will be presented each year to a top
graduating senior in one of the four natural sciences (biology,
physics, chemistry and mathematics) on a rotating basis.
Dr. Selma Silagi received her
Ph.D. in genetics from Columbia University, served as a research
associate at Rockefeller University, and continued her basic research
in cancer until her retirement from Cornell University in 1987 when
she moved with her husband, Robert, to San Diego. She is best known
for her work in 1966 when she used a mouse model to change malignant
melanoma cells into non-malignant cells and back again. She died in
1998. The Dr. Selma Silagi Award at UCSD was established last year by
her family. |