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Atlanta ARCS Foundation awards $55,000 to support seven UGA graduate students in biomedical sciences

Athens, Ga. -The Atlanta chapter of the Achievement Rewards for College Students Foundation recently awarded $55,000 to seven outstanding University of Georgia doctoral students in the biomedical and health sciences, one of whom will receive a special $10,000 grant for global health research abroad.

Presented at an awards ceremony at the Ritz Carlton in Atlanta, the ARCS Foundation gala event featured keynote speaker Nicholas Patrick, a British-born engineer and NASA astronaut. Patrick earned an engineering degree from the University of Cambridge, England and a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His flight on the 2006 Discovery STS-116 mission made him the fourth Briton to travel in space.

The ARCS Foundation was founded in Los Angeles in 1958 and is dedicated to helping meet the country’s needs for scientists and engineers by providing scholarships to academically outstanding university students. UGA recipients of the award are selected through the UGA Biomedical and Health Sciences Institute. This year’s ARCS Scholars represent four UGA schools and colleges-the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, the College of Pharmacy, the College of Veterinary Medicine and the Odum School of Ecology.

The following students are UGA ARCS Foundation Scholars for 2010-11.

The Atlanta chapter of the ARCS Foundation has awarded more than $2.1 million in scholarships to students at the University of Georgia, Emory University, Georgia Institute of Technology and Morehouse College. Additional information about the foundation can be found at www.arcsfoundation.org. For more information about UGA’s Biomedical and Health Sciences Institute, see www.biomed.uga.edu/.

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