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Ellen Deibert ’85

Ellen Deibert ’85

Neurologist Ellen Deibert ’85 is leading the way in treating traumatic brain injuries As a teenager heading off to college more than two decades ago, Ellen Deibert ’85 could not have predicted that she would one day be on the leading edge of any medical field, much less be counted a specialist in the complexities… Continue Reading

Bill Cahill ’05, MEd ’09

Bill Cahill ’05, MEd ’09

When the opportunity to volunteer with the Alumni Association presented itself, Bill Cahill ’05, MEd ’09 says he jumped at the chance. “I’ve had so many affiliations with the College through the years,” said Cahill, explaining that he took swimming lessons and attended summer camps on campus as a child before following in the footsteps… Continue Reading

Katherine Uyhazi ’05

Katherine Uyhazi ’05

The announcement last week that President Barack Obama was ending the ban on federal funding for embryonic stem (ES) cell research came as welcome news to at least one Lion alumna. As part of her MD/PhD coursework at Yale University, Katherine Uyhazi ’05 is doing research work at the Yale Stem Cell Center under the… Continue Reading

Danielle Flood ’16

Danielle Flood ’16

Questions such as “How does lightning work?” and “How do shells get on the beach?” racked the mind of Danielle Flood as a child. Now a senior biology major, Flood admits to always being curious about nature when she was younger as she would ask her parents countless science-related questions. Flood’s passion to learn has… Continue Reading

Krishna Parekh ’13

Krishna Parekh ’13

The threespine stickleback, a shiny little fish with spines on its back and belly, is a darling of evolutionary biologists. That’s because it thrives in the ocean, where its ancestor lived, as well as freshwater. But the story of the fish’s adaptation to different environments also hooked a TCNJ student, who has now won a… Continue Reading

Alan Tsai ’12

Alan Tsai ’12

Even if Alan Tsai doesn’t pick up that coveted accent when he goes to Australia this fall (2012), studying abroad in the land down under is guaranteed to be an eye-opening experience for the future optometrist. Yet traveling to the University of Sydney is not the first time this biology and seven-year optometry student jetted… Continue Reading

Andrew Goldfarb ’16

Andrew Goldfarb ’16

How being a twin helped launch Andrew Goldfarb into grad school at Harvard When Andrew Goldfarb was 14, he and his brother Zach wondered whether they were, in fact, identical twins. As newborns, the boys looked alike, and there seemed to be no need to perform genetic testing to determine whether they were among the… Continue Reading

Jessica Kafer ’10

Jessica Kafer ’10

Jessica Kafer ’10, a biology major with minors in chemistry and anthropology, combined her loves of biology research and community service when she studied abroad in Kenya through the School for Field Studies (SFS). “I wanted to study abroad in Africa because I wanted a unique study abroad experience,” Kafer said. “I figured I could… Continue Reading

Natella Maglakelidze ‘15

Natella Maglakelidze ‘15

When results go wrong Natella Maglakelidze cheers. For this senior biology student, any results mean that she is one step closer to finding answers. Maglakelidze grew up with medicine and science her whole life. Both her parents are in the medical field, and Maglakelidze was fascinated whenever they talked about work. “As a child, I… Continue Reading

The Mansoor Tetrad: One College, Four Sisters

The Mansoor Tetrad: One College, Four Sisters

The Mansoor Tetrad: One College, Four Sisters Mendelian genetics have leapt out of the textbooks and into the halls of the Biology Building at The College of New Jersey, where four sisters are pursuing the same dream: a career in the sciences. In the Mansoor family, a passion for science and a diploma from TCNJ… Continue Reading

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