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| FOR STUDENTS FOR FACULTY AVAILABLE SCHOLARSHIPS NOMINEES AND RECIPIENTS FAQ INFORMATION CALENDAR |
RECENT RECIPIENTSPhysics student awarded Marshall ScholarshipBy
Nancy Ross-Flanigan Some high school students like to drive around with music cranked up loud. Jacob Bourjaily’s favorite drive-time entertainment during his senior year was the taped lectures of Nobel Prize-winning physicist Richard Feynman. Apparently something sank in. When Bourjaily came to U-M two years ago, he sailed through introductory physics and had aced senior quantum mechanics by the end of his freshman year. By the next year, he’d become an associate member of the Michigan Center for Theoretical Physics—the first undergraduate student ever chosen for the honor. Now, another honor will offer him an opportunity to further his knowledge of science. The 20-year-old physics and mathematics major from Grand Rapids is one of eight students from the Midwest selected for the highly competitive Marshall Scholarship for 2005. The program, financed by the government of the United Kingdom, selects about 40 American students annually to spend two to three years studying at the British university of their choice. Bourjaily is an ideal choice for the Marshall Scholarship, says associate professor of physics Timothy McKay. “Jake is incredibly excited about learning about every subject—physics in particular,” McKay says. “His enthusiasm for new ideas and the pure pleasure with which he makes connections between what he knows already and what he’s learning is really irresistible.” Part of his enthusiasm comes from sharing his knowledge, McKay says. In high school, Bourjaily created and presented weekly programs at the Roger B. Chaffee Planetarium. At U-M, he has shared his love of science with middle school students through the Student Physics Society’s outreach programs. “There’s probably no reward as great as the look on somebody’s face when they first see or understand something that they didn’t know about,” Bourjaily says. “It’s fun to explain all the things we know and then inspire them to be curious about the things we don’t understand.” It’s those “things we don’t understand” that fascinate Bourjaily. His dream is nothing less than learning the secrets of the universe. “I’d like to understand gravity in terms of how we understand particles and the rest of physics,” he says. “Right now, our views of gravity and our views of particle physics are inconsistent with each other. I’d like to see that resolved.” His current research—under the direction of Gordon Kane, the Victor Weisskopf Collegiate Professor of Physics—deals with the composition of the universe. “An enormous amount of energy in the universe is made up of things we don’t understand—what we call dark energy and dark matter,” Bourjaily says. “It’s almost comical that we understand so little. I’d like to have an impact in increasing that understanding.” “Jacob has been an exceptional student and citizen since the moment he set foot on our campus,” Provost Paul N. Courant says. “He richly deserves this opportunity to study abroad, and we’re confident he will continue to excel.” His impact already is being felt in the physics world. Last summer, he was the only undergraduate student at the 42nd International School of Subnuclear Physics in Erice, Sicily, typically a school for advanced graduate students and post-doctoral fellows. There, he was named Best Student, earned the Paul A.M. Dirac Diploma and was chosen Best Presenter of a Theoretical Subject. He also has been invited to several universities to speak about his research on dark matter cosmology. As a Marshall Scholar in 2005, Bourjaily will study mathematics at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. “Cambridge offers the strongest coursework in mathematics and physics anywhere in the world,” he says. “I’ll be able to go very deeply into the subjects, to deepen and broaden my knowledge.” The Marshall Scholarships were established in 1953 as a British gesture of thanks to the people of the United States for the assistance received after World War II under the Marshall Plan. For more information about the Marshall Scholarships, visit http://www.marshallscholarship.org/. For more about Bourjaily, visit http://www-personal.umich.edu/~jbourj/. Engineering student wins prestigious Rhodes ScholarshipBy Karl Leif Bates Joseph Jewell wants to be an astronaut or a professor, or both. But first he’s going to spend two years at Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar.
Jewell, a graduate student in aerospace engineering, is one of 32 U.S. students awarded a Rhodes Scholarship this year. In addition to being an honors student who scored a perfect 1600 on the SAT, the 23-year-old is an accomplished musician and student government leader. "I've had to pick carefully what I did, but yes, I do sleep," he says with a laugh. Jewella native of Stevensville, Mich., on Lake Michiganwill start at Oxford next fall. That gives him just enough time to finish a master's degree at Michigan, where he is working on hypersonic aerodynamics and turbulence in the lab of Werner J.A. Dahm. "We are tremendously pleased that Joseph chose Michigan for graduate studies," Provost Paul N. Courant says. "He's obviously one of the finest young scholars you could hope to meet, and a well-rounded person besides. Michigan is thrilled to share him with Oxford." At Oxford, he will pursue a research master's in engineering, but also play timpani in the symphony. "And I intend to see as much of Europe as possible." Jewell received his undergraduate degree at the California Institute of Technology, which nominated him for the Rhodes. He finished with a 3.8 average with degrees in both aeronautics and history. He also was secretary of the student council at Caltech and played percussion in the Occidental-Caltech symphony and concert band. He flew three times aboard the NASA zero-gravity experiment plane, a refitted KC-135 tanker affectionately known as the "Vomit Comet." Jewell co-authored a study guide, "Up Your Score: The Underground Guide to the SAT, 2001-2002 Edition." He received the United States Presidential Scholar medallion from President (and former Rhodes Scholar) Bill Clinton at a White House ceremony. Jewell's father, Stephen, is the news editor of the St. Joseph Herald-Palladium. His mother, Suzanne, teaches elementary school. Though the Herald-Palladium broke the news of the scholarship right away, "over the years, I may not have gotten as much coverage as I would have if I weren't the editor's son," Jewell says. The Rhodes Scholarships were created in 1902 by the will of Cecil Rhodes, British philanthropist and colonial pioneer, who specified that the scholarship be awarded for high academic achievement, integrity of character, a spirit of unselfishness, respect for others, potential for leadership and physical vigor. The Rhodes Trust provides two or three years of study at Oxford, including college and university fees, a stipend to cover necessary expenses while in residence in Oxford as well as during vacations, and transportation to and from England. The total value averages approximately $35,000 a year. In addition to the 32 Americans, scholars are selected from Australia, Bangladesh, Bermuda, Canada, the nations of the Commonwealth Caribbean, Germany, Hong Kong, India, Jamaica, Kenya, Malaysia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Singapore, Southern Africa (South Africa, plus Botswana, Lesoto, Malawi, Namibia and Swaziland), Uganda, Zimbabwe and Zambia. Approximately 95 scholars are selected worldwide each year. For more information on Rhodes Scholars, visit http://www.rhodesscholar.org/. |
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University of Michigan | Office of the Provost | ©2004 U-M Regents | Site design by Marketing Communications |
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