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For Immediate Release
June 14, 2002
Public Information Office
310 Owen Hall, Campus PO 1820
Asheville, NC  28804-8507
828/251-6526 - FAX: 828/251-6777
web: http://www.unca.edu/news
e-mail: pubinfo@unca.edu

UNCA Student Awarded Prestigious Goldwater Scholarship

Academic excellence in the sciences recently earned UNC Asheville senior Melinda Beaver a prestigious scholarship from the Barry M. Goldwater and Excellence in Education Foundation. She was one of 309 winners chosen from among 1,155 applicants nationwide. The award, which will partly fund Beaver’s last year at UNCA, provides up to $7,500 for educational expenses, including housing, books and tuition.

A native of Stony Point, N.C., Beaver, 21, is pursuing a double major in chemistry and environmental science. "I have always been attracted to the sciences," she said. "I’d rather go work in a lab than write a paper or a poem."

Working under the guidance of UNCA chemistry professor and department chair Bert Holmes, Beaver is the third of Holmes’ students in as many years to win the coveted award.

In Holmes’ lab, Beaver investigates the properties of compounds that are potential replacements for ozone-destroying chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). The gas-phase reactions of these new compounds are measured to determine how they react as well as how fast they react. This information is related to their environmental impact because the measurements help determine how long the compounds will persist in the atmosphere. Beaver acknowledges that the most exciting part of the research so far has been helping discover a new reaction pathway for these molecules that no one else had found.

"Melinda has an exceptional chemistry gift," Holmes said. "In the lab, she always makes the right decisions and moves through the research very quickly. I’ve assigned her to work on a very hard project that I thought would take her two summers, but she only took one." Beaver presented the project results at a National Meeting of the American Chemical Society in Orlando, Fla. this spring. "Melinda is now working on a second project that is even more complicated than the first and she is making remarkable progress," said Holmes.

Beaver’s activities extend beyond the lab. She is involved with UNCA’s American Chemical Society Student Affiliates group and tutors underclassmen in chemistry. Beaver also works part-time at Asheville’s First Baptist Church providing child care for church members.

"A variety of things are special about Melinda," said Holmes. "She’s very bright, organized and persistent. She has a sense of quiet confidence about her -- she’s a competent calm person."

Beaver will continue her work in the lab this summer as a paid research assistant through a grant from the National Science Foundation. She’s also currently working on research papers to submit to the Journal of Physical Chemistry and the Undergraduate Research Journal this fall.

Media Contacts:

  • Jill Yarnall, UNCA Public Information Assistant Director, 828/251-6526
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