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Undergraduate research project leads to
scholarly publication
Students conducting scholarly research side by side with faculty members
has a long and distinguished history at Wells. An ongoing undergraduate
research project at the college has received international recognition
with the publication of an article in a major scientific journal, Biochemistry
(Vol. 36, No. 33, 1997). This project exemplifies a spirit of collaboration
and reveals the benefits of this distinctive aspect of the college's liberal
arts curriculum.
Associate Professor of Chemistry Christopher
T. Bailey co-authored the study with a group of his former students: Cheryl
Byrne '96, Kristi Chrispell Forbes '93, Catherine Molkenbur-Newman '93,
Marcy Sackett '92, Katherine Reid-Birch '90, Kärin McCollum 91, Denise
Vibbard 90, and Rose Catelli West '89. Entitled "Effect of a Covalently
Attached Synergistic Anion on Chelator-Mediated Iron-Release from Ovotransferrin:
Additional Evidence for Two Concurrent Pathways," the publication is the
result of students from different class years sharing their knowledge.
Bailey's research group has been studying
transferrin, a protein which is responsible for shuttling iron around the
human body. He explains, "Transferrin is also implicated in the treatment
of iron-overload disorders. The condition is treated by injecting the patient
with a small, iron-binding molecule called a chelator. The chelator removes
the iron from transferrin and allows it to be excreted by the body. Our
research has focused on determining the mechanism by which the chelators
remove the iron from the protein."
The chelator currently used clinically
is toxic and slow acting. "When patients require chelation therapy they
have to go into the hospital where the chelator is administered by continuous,
intravenous infusion over many hours, usually overnight," says Bailey.
"Because this treatment may be required several times a week, the biggest
obstacle to its success is patient non-compliance. By helping to decipher
the mechanism by which the chelator works with the protein to remove iron,
we hope our research will allow others to design and develop more effective
chelators."
This research, which has been a part
of the education of Wells science students for nearly a decade, is an extension
of work Bailey did while he was in graduate school at the University of
Vermont. He brought the project to Wells when he began teaching, and a
grant from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation in 1989 enabled the
first wave of Wells students to join him during the summer.
Rose Catelli West '89 was the first
student to work on the project. She is now a project scientist at Triangle
Laboratories, Inc., in North Carolina, which is a leader in the field of
testing environmental samples for highly toxic dioxins and related compounds.
Her contribution to the research was getting basic procedures to work properly
in the Wells lab. Looking back she recalls, "I was a junior when Dr. Bailey
arrived at Wells fresh from graduate school. At the time, I hoped it would
not become the long-term project that it has; however, I left Wells secure
in the knowledge that the natural gumption of the Wells woman would win
out over the initial difficulties and the sheer amount of work involved."
Marcy Sackett '92 is in her sixth year
of graduate school at Indiana University and plans to finish her Ph.D.
in biochemistry this May. She takes great satisfaction in viewing the research
as the cumulative effort of several different "generations" of Wells students.
"The generations aspect of the project is exemplified by the fact that
we were each trained by the generation before us. Then, before we graduated,
we passed our experience and protocol on to the next generation. This gave
each of us an opportunity to learn and then give our knowledge - like the
college motto 'To have and to share,'" she says.
Kristi Chrispell Forbes '93 is working
on her Ph.D. in the department of genetics at the Harvard Medical School
in Boston. She views the use of generations of students as a way to overcome
natural time constraints facing undergraduate researchers. Forbes says,
"I didn't realize it at the time, but now that I have worked full-time
on projects, I can see Dr. Bailey is doing a great job integrating the
limited amount of work each student has time to do during a couple of semesters
at Wells into a full-scale, scientific investigation. At the time, I also
didn't realize how many of us would be involved in the project as it progressed."
Currently a first-year graduate student
at Cornell University in the field of animal science, department of reproductive
physiology, Cheryl Byrne '96 joined the project in its latter phase and
used her work as a senior thesis project. The right balance of challenge
and support in Chris's approach to teaching made the experience meaningful
for her. Byrne says, "Once I was familiar with equipment and procedures,
Dr. Bailey only came into the lab if I asked him. He let me have all the
autonomy I felt I needed. The confidence and appreciation for accountability
I developed have already been important factors in the current phase of
my life."
Nearly all the co-authors have pursued
careers in science or attend graduate programs in the sciences. While they
have come away with different perspectives, they are in agreement that
involvement in the project gave them a competitive edge. Sackett says,
"My undergraduate research with Dr. Bailey prepared me for graduate school
because I had the opportunity to learn about research and to gain confidence
in the laboratory. Wells is a wonderful setting for a woman to develop
into a scientist."
November, 1997
Alumna named annual giving officer
Margaret J. Thomas, who graduated from Wells in 1984, is the new associate
director of development, annual giving at the college.
Her primary responsibility in this
position is to work with an extensive network of alumna, student, and parent
volunteers that generates financial support for the college. She coordinates
direct mail campaigns, phonathons, and makes personal visits and solicitations
to raise funds for the college.
Before beginning her current position
at Wells, Thomas spent three years working in the Annual Giving Office
at St. Bonaventure University where she held positions of steadily increasing
responsibility, first as assistant and then as associate director of annual
giving. As the manager of St. Bonaventure's telephone outreach program,
she trained and supervised a large staff of student workers.
Thomas also gained valuable fund-raising
skills working for Telecomp Inc., a Rochester, New York-area telemarketing
company that provides support for colleges, hospitals, and other non-profit
organizations. She began her career at the Chase Manhattan Bank in Rochester
and held a number of positions during her six-year tenure.
She studied in the graduate program
in literature at the State University of New York College at Brockport
and received her bachelor of arts degree in English from Wells.
"It is an exciting time to be working
in the development area at Wells," said Thomas. "As the direct result of
fund-raising efforts, the use of technology in the liberal arts curriculum
has been greatly enhanced since I was a student. Generous donors keep Wells
current by providing key academic resources for students today. I am pleased
to be a part of this effort."
November, 1997
New vice president for external relations
will lead college's $50 million comprehensive campaign
Cornell University administrator Jan Kennedy Olsen has been named vice
president for external relations at Wells and will begin the new position
in January of 1998, according to Wells President Lisa Marsh Ryerson.
Olsen will lead the college's comprehensive
campaign to raise $50,000,000 by the year 2000. The campaign entered its
public phase in 1995 and has raised $37,000,000 toward the goal. "Jan brings
to Wells a wealth of fund-raising and management experience," says Ryerson.
"She is well-suited to lead our campaign through its final and most challenging
phase."
For the last 15 years, Olsen has served
as director of the Albert R. Mann Library at Cornell. During that time
Mann has become a premier institution receiving international recognition
for its remarkable collections and technological innovations. Under her
leadership, the library won the first ALA/Meckler Library of the Future
Award and the John Cotton Dana Award; it is the only library to have had
a complete issue of Library Hi-Tech devoted to its achievements.
Olsen has been extremely successful
at generating the considerable resources needed to support Mann Library.
She quadrupled the library's endowment, initiated a five million dollar
endowment campaign and successfully persuaded the State of New York to
provide $17 million for an addition that will double available space. A
government and corporate grants writing program she created generates $750,000
annually.
"Jan is coming to Wells at a time when
the college is establishing new initiatives to increase the use of computers
and information technology in the liberal arts curriculum. I am sure her
knowledge and enthusiasm in this area will help us raise the funds we need
to become an innovator in the application of technology in the women's
college setting," said Ryerson.
While Olsen has played a central role
opening the gateway to the Information Age at Cornell, she remains dedicated
to the human factor. Her exceptional skills as a manager have been recognized
through numerous honors. She has received the State University of New York
Chancellor's Award For Excellence in Professional Service and the National
Honor Society for Agricultural Science
Award for Innovative Administration,
among others.
In addition to her years of service
to Cornell, she has worked as a Planning and Analysis Librarian in the
Office of Information Resources Management at the U.S. Department of the
Interior; Chief of Public Services at the National Agricultural Library,
U.S. Department of Agriculture; and Director and Associate Professor of
Steenbock Memorial Library at the University of Wisconsin.
Olsen has a strong commitment to agricultural
development and works extensively in the Third World. She has represented
abroad the United States government and institutions of higher education
and carried out consultancies in Brazil, Peru, the Philippines, Spain and
Africa. One of her major projects at Mann Library, supported through a
grant from the Rockefeller Foundation, has been the identification of the
world's most significant literature on food and agriculture so it can be
shared with developing nations.
She has conducted a number of research
projects exploring the application of electronic technology to the use
and storage of scholarly information. As a librarian, she is concerned
that scholars and scholarship will be effectively served by the emerging
electronic library. One of her most recent accomplishments is a book published
by the Meckler Press on electronic journal literature and its implications
for scholars.
Another aspect of her professional
experience makes her particularly suited to her new position at Wells:
She served as director of the library and chairperson of the department
of library science at Alverno College in Wisconsin - a four-year liberal
arts college for women. At Alverno, she taught, chaired the Faculty Senate
and participated in extensive reform of the liberal arts curriculum. As
a result, she is acquainted with and has developed an appreciation for
single-sex education for women.
Born in Australia, Jan Kennedy Olsen
completed her undergraduate studies at the University of Adelaide with
a concentration in library science. She completed a master's degree in
library science at the University of Wisconsin. At Cornell, she earned
a master's degree in education and a Ph.D. in administration in higher
education.
November, 1997
Other Articles
in Wells College News:
| September,
2002 |
September,
2000. - May.,2001 |
May,1998 |
May - June,1997 |
| August, 2002 |
September,
1999 - August, 2000 |
April,1998 |
March - April,1997 |
| September,
2001. - May.,2002 |
August,1999 |
March,1998 |
February,1997 |
|
May,1999 |
February,1998 |
November - December,1996 |
|
April,1999 |
January,1998 |
October,1996 |
|
February -March,
1999 |
December,1997 |
September,1996 |
|
January,1999 |
November,1997 |
June - Aug.,1996 |
|
Fall,1998 |
October,1997 |
May,1996 |
|
August,1998 |
September,1997 |
April,1996 |
|
June -July,
1998 |
July - August,
1997 |
February - March,
1996 |
Last updated 01/22/2003
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