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SHAWNEE
and OKLAHOMA CITY, June 28, 2006 – For a newly graduated Shawnee High School
student, the chance to spend a summer in the labs of the Oklahoma Medical
Research Foundation has been a real eye-opener.
“I expected it to be stiff, stern scientists
mixing chemicals in white lab coats and calmly examining charts of data,”
said Taryn Tate, who will attend Oklahoma State University this fall. “Now I
know that it’s real adults – and teenagers – who show enormous dedication
and fervor, racing to cure diseases for other people.”
Tate is one of 17 Oklahoma students selected
to participate in OMRF’s Sir Alexander Fleming Scholar program. The program, which
celebrates its 50th anniversary this year, gives students the chance to
complete individual research projects, write scientific papers for
publication and present their work in formal seminars.
The students arrived at OMRF at the beginning
of June and are spending eight weeks at OMRF conducting medical research.
“The Fleming program is worlds beyond your
typical summer job,” said Tate. “I am actually working on research that is
relevant to the health of ordinary people and the war on cancer.”
Tate’s summer project specifically focuses on
brain cancer. Working with a pair of OMRF researchers, she is studying
whether administering a certain compound may prevent the growth and spread
of brain cancer by shrinking tumors.
The Fleming Scholars program has served as a
model for similar programs nationwide since its creation in 1956. More than
400 students have been trained through the program at OMRF. Two of OMRF’s
faculty members, Judith James, M.D., Ph.D., and Rodger McEver, M.D., got
their start as Fleming Scholars.
“Many students leave knowing that research is
an area they had not truly considered, but they have been enticed by the
exploration bug,” said Ginger Coleman, who has helped coordinate the program
for a decade. “I want them to have made contacts and bonds with people that
they will be sharing their professional careers and possibly know for a
lifetime. Although I teach during the school year, this is a completely
different experience and intertwines education, business and people skills –
all activities dear to my heart.”
About OMRF:
Celebrating its 60th birthday in 2006, OMRF (www.omrf.org)
is a nonprofit biomedical research institute dedicated to understanding and
curing human disease. Its scientists focus on such critical research areas
as Alzheimer’s disease, cancer, lupus and cardiovascular disease. It is home
to Oklahoma’s only member of the National Academy of Sciences. |