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"Dreams Taking Flight"
Erich Jarvis, Ph.D.
Assistant
Professor, Department of Neurobiology at Duke University Medical
Center
Looking
back, there were plenty of reasons for Erich Jarvis not to
succeed. He was raised among the working poor in Harlem, where
the seductions and temptations of the street run rampant.
He had family members on drugs, in prison, shot--his father
even slid into schizophrenia and moved to a cave in a New
York City park. Despite this prescription for a troubled life,
Erich Jarvis did not give in to the temptations in his path.
Nor did he wind up on the street, or in prison, or in an early
grave. Far from it, in fact. For Jarvis also had people in
his family who broke the cycle of poverty--people who instilled
in him the need and the desire to succeed. Jarvis became one
of just 52 African-Americans out of more than 4,300 biologists
to earn a Ph.D. in 1995. Today, he runs a $1-million-a-year
laboratory at Duke University Medical Center, leading a team
of researchers on a cutting-edge quest to understand how songbirds
learn to sing. At the age of 38, when most scientists are
beginning to make their mark, Jarvis is already a star--he
is a world-renowned neurobiologist who recently received the
National Science Foundation's highest honor, the Alan T. Waterman
Award, which also carries a $500,000 grant. Clearly Jarvis
beat the odds.
You won't
want to miss his story of perseverance and inspiration.
(Biography
adapted from Bill Morris' article, "His Dreams Took
Flight" that appeared in the February 16, 2003 issue
of Parade Magazine.)
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