[http://2009.igem.org/Team:Alberta ]
[http://2009.igem.org/Team:Alberta/Team ]
[http://2009.igem.org/Team:Alberta/Project ]
[http://2009.igem.org/Team:Alberta/Parts ]
[http://2009.igem.org/Team:Alberta/Notebook ]
Kelly Robinson
Kelly Robinson is currently involved in the 2008 University of Alberta iGEM team. She is entering into the 4th year of an Honors Biochemistry program, and wishes the actively pursue molecular virology in graduate studies. In her spare time, she enjoys playing video games, Magic the Gathering, watching anime and reading (anything from the Future of Spacetime to Metamorphoses). Her favorite bands include, but are not limited to, Opeth, Tristania, Blind Guardian and Lake of Tears.
Jason Gardiner
Jason is a veteran of IGEM 2007 where his team the Butanerds won first place in the Energy track. Jason is currently in his fourth year of his Bachelor degree specializing in Botany. His hobbies include Softball, Beach volley ball, soccer, as well as playing the guitar and fiddling with the IGEM 2009 Wiki. Jason has applied to continue his education in grad studies at the University of Alberta in 2010. His degree in botany focuses mostly on the molecular side of plants and he hopes to use this knowledge applying synthetic biology to plants.
Amber
Winnie is entering 4th year cell biology. She does not have a lot of hobbies (and had a hard time spelling "hobbies"). Her favorate thing to do is sleep....However, the 6 month in iGEM have got her really excited about research; and She is looking forward to gain more experiences in labs in the future.
Stephen
Steve's in 2nd year genetics. He likes sandwiches. Maddy you smell.
Andy
Benny is entering his fifth year of study in UofA's Electrical Engineering (Biomedical Specialization) program, having transferred from the Engineering Physics program. This is his first year participating in the iGEM competition. He joined the team in hopes of gaining field experience, and meeting potential colleagues from around the world. In his spare time, he enjoys writing/playing music on his electric guitar, studying new languages (Mandarin, Japanese, and eventually Spanish), video games, reading, and just chilling in general.
Brewster
Saima Zamir is in her third year of Biological Sciences Program at U of A and a proud member of 2008 iGEM Team. She plans to be a hot shot neurosurgeon one day. In her spare time, she works diligently on building her Zamir Memorial Hospital, one fantasy brick at a time - in addition to glass etching and pencil sketching. With her dancing shoes and Mighty wings, she is going places!!
Chongya Niu
Chris Kelly is a recent graduate of the University of Alberta's molecular genetics program and a first time participant in iGEM. His interests include (but are not limited to) science, science and more science (genetics, biochemistry, microbiology, astronomy, quantum mechanics in particular); but he also enjoys math and philosophy. In his spare time, Chris enjoys the most nerdiest of pursuits - Dungeons and Dragons, Lord of the Rings, video games, arguing on the internet about trivial things (Yes, the Millennium Falcon could kick the Enterprise's butt), reading (mostly non-fiction science books, but occasionaly hard sci-fi) and making countless references to internet memes. His musical tastes are, shall we say, refined? He listens mainly to heavy metal but also likes post-rock, IDM/EDM/EBM and a little bit of shoegaze and neofolk. To top it off, he's a huge fan of Leonard Cohen. Go figure.
Dan
Tom is in 4th year biomedical electrical engineering. He likes to stay active and eat healthy. Staying active includes playing sports, working out and running. Tennis is his particular favorite sport of the summer and snowboarding is his winter sport. He enjoy speaking in the third person and does so often. Tom is also offended by all of the chuck norris jokes going around out there as he can also do all those things only better. One time Tom did a round house kick and started the universe.
David
Anthony Lott is in his 3rd year of undergraduate studies of Physiology at the University of Alberta. Although this is his first year with iGEM, Anthony brings a diverse (and not necessarily practical) array of laboratory experiences to the table. His past research projects include: mate-choice preference of Cichlasoma nigrofasciatus (Hurd Lab, 2005), site-directed mutagenesis of GFP (Campbell Lab, 2006), micro-CT analysis of Gdf6 skeletal deformities (Lehmann/Doschak Lab, 2007), and pH-microenvironments associated with AE1 (Casey Lab, 2008). Anthony's interests include badminton, raving about speedminton, collecting dust and microbes on his unused Yamaha C2 grand piano, art and design, and one-upping his fellow teammates. He is also involved with organizing Frontier College and the Heart of the City Piano Program. Anthony is interested in pursuing a career in health-care.
Denis Joly
David was born in Calgary, Alberta, Canada to some really awesome parents. Seriously. The best. He grew up around Calgary and graduated high school in a very small community outside of town called Crossfield. A four year break later, David returned to Calgary to earn his undergraduate degree in cellular, molecular, microbial biology. During his time at the University of Calgary, David worked under Dr. Douglas Storey investigating quorum sensing in Psuedomonas aeruginosa in relation to virulence.
David moved north after his first degree to begin working under the direction of Dr. Richard Rachubinski. His project is focused upon prion behavior in budding yeast. Specifically the identification and characterization of novel prions in yeast, along with an investigation of possible cofactors in prion formation, progagation and regulation. With only a few years left in his PhD, David is having more fun than ever.
David's interest in iGEM began with hearing about last years projects and a little bit of free time that he really wanted to occupy better than just playing a lot of video games.
E.NG
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
Emera
Justin is a graduate student from the UofA. He has a BSc in Immunology and Infection
and is a Masters Candidate in Cell Biology... or was... He has gone to pursuing his dream of saving the world...
[[Image:]] Eric
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] James
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] <font color=white James R
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] Jen
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] Jonathan
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] Justin
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
Kalon Amstrong
Kalon Armstrong is a 4th year UofA student finishing off a BSc specializing in Molecular Genetics. Most of his growing-up and schooling took place in the small town of Cochrane, AB. This will be his first year on UofA's IGEM team and he is excited help take the competition to a new level. His ultimate goals consist of working in the Biotech or healthcare industry. When lab work,textbooks & energy drinks are aside, Kalon volunteers at the Student Distress Center on campus. While his interest in music, movies, snowboarding & hanging with friends etc. may seem stereotypical on the surface, they feel unique in their own right and keep him more than busy most of the time.
[[Image:]] Kiwi Fruit
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] Kevin Tok
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] Lisa
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] Julia
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] Steve
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
[[Image:]] Uche
Saul Godkewitsch, hailing from beautiful Canmore, Alberta, is in his fourth year of
Electrical Engineering studies, biomedical option. While pipettes and Eppendorf tubes
aren't his specialty, the iGEM project proved to be one of the most exciting pursuits of
his summer. When he wasn't making gels or preparing overnights, Saul was spending time
working on his diffusion tensor tractography project of neurodevelopment in the corpus
callosum (read: "brain stuff"), or playing squash. Aside from schoolwork, Saul
volunteers at the Campus Food Bank, plays guitar and enjoys sports of all variety.
Advisors
Dr. Michael Deyholos
Dr. Douglas Ridgway
Dr. Michael Ellison
James Mclagan
Dr. Wayne Materi
What we did
(Provide proper attribution for all work)
== Where we're from ==
|