Alumni Association Recognizes Engineering Student
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Jeff Mounzer |
San Diego, CA, April 2, 2008 -- Jeffrey Mounzer, an undergraduate student with a double major in electrical engineering and economics, joins an internationally acclaimed novelist and physician, an entrepreneurial biotech leader driving to advance diagnosis, a champion of undergraduate diversity, a charismatic professor and administrator, and another undergraduate student, al of whom have been named by the UCSD Alumni Association as top recipients of the 30th Annual Awards for Excellence distinctions. The prestigious awards will be presented on Saturday, June 7, in the Grand Ballroom of the newly expanded Price Center of the University of California, San Diego campus. Funds generated from the event will benefit the UCSD Alumni Association endowed scholarship programs.
The cocktail-attire event, which will benefit student scholarships, is open to the public. Tickets are $150 per person or $1,500 for a table of 10 and can be purchased at , or call (858) 534-3900 for more information.
Winners include Afghan-American Khaled Hosseini, M.D. ’93, author of The Kite Runner; Gunars Valkirs ’74, Ph.D.’82, a biophysicist who was instrumental in San Diego’s biotechnology boom; Anthony Jackson ’74, a dedicated emergency room physician; David Jordan, professor emeritus, Anthropology, and provost emeritus, Warren College; and students Sapna Iyer and Jeffrey Mounzer.
About the 2008 Alumni Association Awards for Excellence recipients:
Outstanding Senior Award
T
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Sapna Iyer |
he selection of
Sapna Iyer and
Jeffrey Mounzer for this award is based on scholarly achievement, leadership and campus service. Iyer is a Marshall College student leader majoring in Biochemistry and Cell Biology. She has been admitted to Â鶹´«Ã½’s School of Medicine in the fall. Mounzer, president of the Triton Engineering Student Council, is a Warren College student graduating with a double major in Electrical Engineering and Economics. He accepted a fellowship to attend Stanford University in the fall for graduate study in Electrical Engineering. These accomplished alumni and students will join the distinguished company of former award recipients including J. Craig Venter ’72, David E. Shaw ’72, Roger Revelle ’36 and Nobel Prize in Medicine recipient Susumu Tonegawa ’69—all international figures who have brought distinction and prestige to Â鶹´«Ã½.
Outstanding Alumnus of the Year Award
Afghan-American author and physician Khaled Hosseini, M.D. ’93 began writing The Kite
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Khaled Hosseini |
Runner while in medical practice. Born in Kabul, Afghanistan to a Dari-speaking family, Hosseini’s memories of peaceful pre-Soviet era Afghanistan, as well as his personal experience with Afghan Hazaras, led to the writing of this first novel. In 2003, the
Kite Runner was published and became an international bestseller in 38 countries; in 2007, the novel was made into an Academy Award-nominated movie. In 2006 he was named a goodwill envoy to the United Nations Refugee Agency. His second critically-acclaimed novel,
A Thousand Splendid Suns was published in May of 2007.
Professional Achievement Award
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Gunars Valkirs |
Biophysicist
Gunars Valkirs ’74, Ph.D.’82 co-founded Biosite with the goal of using monoclonal antibodies to develop and manufacture cheaper, faster and more accurate diagnostic devices to determine conditions ranging from drug abuse to the presence of myocardial infarction. One of Valkirs’ early successes was in the field of pregnancy testing. The ICON test, which Valkirs invented, was the predecessor that led the way to the modern color/yes-no home pregnancy test. While at Biosite, Valkirs helped develop the BNP test for the diagnosis of congestive heart failure, the first blood-based test for this application.
Distinguished Service to the University
Emergency room physician Anthony Jackson ’74 has worked for several years with
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Anthony Jackson |
organizations like the South Central Gifted Scholars Fund and others to mentor and offer high achieving but under-represented middle and high school students from Los Angeles an inside look into higher education, specifically Â鶹´«Ã½. In December of 2007, Jackson, in partnership with the 100 Black Men of Los Angeles, Inc. and Young Black Scholars Program, rented vehicles to transport students from the LA area to attend “A Day at UCSD,” a program that he developed and personally funded. He is credited for recruiting over 25 underrepresented scholars to Â鶹´«Ã½.
Distinguished Teaching
David Jordan is known to thousands of students for his service as professor in Anthropology, and as former provost of Warren College. His charisma, humor and
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David Jordan |
teaching dynamism transcends a typical college classroom through his use of imaginative extracurricular and virtual learning activities. Jordan’s dedication to the educational enrichment, advancement and learning of students, both at the undergraduate and graduate level, has made a significant impact on generations of students. In addition to his classroom success, the distinguished scholar has been instrumental in course development, co-curricular programming and the mentoring of countless teaching assistants and new faculty instructors.
Media Contacts
Judy Piercey
University Communications
858-534-6128
jpiercey@ucsd.edu
Mary Johnson
Alumni Relations
858-534-3901
mkjohnson@ucsd.edu