|
Rhodes Times Two
 |
| Foster: his second
time at Oxford |
| Photo: Jim Wallace |
|
 |
| Chokshi: his fourth
named scholarship |
| Photo: Les Todd |
|
Two Duke seniors were
among the thirty-two recipients recently selected for the prestigious
Rhodes Scholarships. Dave Chokshi of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and
Jacob Foster of Winchester, Virginia, were chosen from among 981
applicants at 341 colleges and universities throughout the country.
Rhodes Scholarships, created in 1902 by the will of British philanthropist
Cecil Rhodes, provide two or three years of study at Oxford University
in England. Overall, Duke has had thirty-five Rhodes winners.
Chokshi and Foster are recipients of A.B. Duke Scholarships, which
provide four years of tuition based strictly on merit. Both were
recently named winners of the Faculty Scholar Award, the highest
honor that the Duke faculty can bestow upon its undergraduates.
Chokshi is a double major in chemistry and public-policy studies
whose interests include bioethics and the complexities of fostering
equitable health care based upon strong science. At Oxford, he
plans to pursue a degree in philosophy, politics, and economics;
he says he will later head to medical school.
Because he is interested in going into health policy and bioethics,
he wants to study at Oxford's highly regarded philosophy department.
The "applied philosophy" degree he plans to pursue will
give him a strong background in ethics and philosophy that he will
later combine with medicine, he says. "I wanted to get some
coursework done before I went to medical school." Studying
at such an internationally-oriented university, he can learn more
about different health-care systems and perspectives on medical
ethics.
Chokshi has done AIDS-prevention work in India. Because he speaks
Gujarati, an Indian language, he was able to work with the administrators
of a day-care center for children born to prostitutes. He developed
a basic health program for the children and wrote a pamphlet to
combat misinformation about AIDS that circulated among adults.
Chokshi has several scientific publications to his credit, and
has been a Howard Hughes Research Fellow in the department of immunology,
exploring issues related to the immune system and aging. He has
been recognized for his work by being named both a Truman and a
Goldwater Scholar. He has also been active in university issues,
as the student representative (voting member) to the Academic Affairs
Committee of Duke's board of trustees and as chair of the Duke
Honor Council while it was implementing a stronger honor code.
He's worked as biosciences editor for The Journal of Young Investigators
and as editor-in-chief for Vertices, a student science journal
at Duke. As a member of Duke's Red Cross Club, Chokshi has organized
volunteers to teach first aid in Durham's public schools. He also
has been a volunteer tutor for a leukemia patient and a patient
advocate in Duke Medical Center's neurology ward.
As a physics major, Foster worked in nonlinear dynamics and high-energy
physics and took graduate, as well as undergraduate courses. At
Oxford, he plans to pursue a doctorate in mathematical research.
On being selected for the Rhodes, he said, "The opportunity
to be with this group of people who are so enormously talented
and passionate about what they do-- I think this will be a wonderful
community to be part of."
Earlier in his Duke career, Foster spent a month at Oxford's Mathematical
Institute, where he studied with Professors Philip Candelas and
Xenia de la Ossa. He has also been in communication with Sir Roger
Penrose at the same institute, and Penrose plans to have Foster
work on a "twistor/massive particle project" there starting
next year. His particular interest is twistor theory, which is
studied almost exclusively at Oxford.
He is also interested in classical studies, and the instructor
of a Duke graduate-level class on Medieval Latin literature called
Foster "one of the most intelligent and academically promising
students I have ever met." Last fall, when he spent a semester
in Italy on the Duke-in-Florence program, he wrote a research paper
on "The Triumph of St. Thomas" in the Santa Maria Novella
that he has been urged to revise for possible publication.
Foster also studied the organ while at Duke, and he participates
in Hoof 'n' Horn, the student-run musical theater group. He has
performed in several recent Sondheim musicals, including A Funny
Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. This year, he is the organization's
president.
Rhodes Scholars are selected on the basis of high academic achievement,
personal integrity, leadership potential, and physical vigor, among
other attributes. In 2001-02, Duke had four Rhodes winners, the
most in school history. Harvard had four Rhodes Scholars this year,
the most of any university. Columbia, Cornell, Yale, and Duke each
had two winners.
|