Anti-Malarial Activity Exhibited by
Astronomical thanks go to Dr. Bill Baker, who gave me the enchanting opportunity to join his lab as well as travel with him and William Dent to Antarctica during my last semester as an undergraduate. I look forward to working towards my Ph.D. in his lab for the years to come. I would like to sincere...
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Format: | Text |
Language: | English |
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Online Access: | http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.406.5175 http://honors.usf.edu/documents/Thesis/U56372176.pdf |
Summary: | Astronomical thanks go to Dr. Bill Baker, who gave me the enchanting opportunity to join his lab as well as travel with him and William Dent to Antarctica during my last semester as an undergraduate. I look forward to working towards my Ph.D. in his lab for the years to come. I would like to sincerely thank everyone that is directly and indirectly involved in Dr. Baker’s lab. Many hands and minds went into helping me with this thesis, and to take credit for all of it would be ludicrous. There is no one person above anyone else that aided this research, however Wai Ma, Charles Harter, Jason Cuce, Jeremy Beau, Mathew Lebar, and Garrett Craft deserve their own individual acknowledgements for helping my scientific confidence and knowledge throughout my two years as an undergraduate in Dr. Baker’s lab. Without these six individuals, I would be among the many undergraduates passing by without a thought as to what heights their full potential could reach. My full potential is not yet determined, however my accomplishments thus far and my increased research capabilities are all due to your encouragement and help. I would also like to acknowledge Dr. Dennis Kyle, Tina Mutka, and the other individuals in his lab that were responsible for the Malaria bioassays and the information provided for this paper. Finally, I would like to thank A. J. Williams for all of his hard work in helping isolate the |
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