Age
18
Gender
Male
Ethnicity
Hispanic/Latino
Religion
Christian
Church
Pentecostal
Hobbies and interests
Gardening
Biking And Cycling
Running
Swimming
Piano
Reading
Action
Adventure
Fantasy
Humor
How-To
Magical Realism
Gardening
Thriller
Suspense
I read books multiple times per week
US CITIZENSHIP
US Citizen
FIRST GENERATION STUDENT
Yes
Misael Lebron
2,035
Bold Points2x
FinalistMisael Lebron
2,035
Bold Points2x
FinalistBio
I am Misael Julian Lebron. I was diagnosis with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when the cancer cells have less than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as high risk. Despite this, I overcame the odds and rebounded back, with passion, into my educational life I had lost. Now that I have been given a second chance at life, I am doubling my efforts to get into a college with a spectacular Entomology and Botany program. In going into this field, I am determined to travel on expeditions, and find the cure insects hide in the unique compounds within their venom, exoskeleton, and/or bodily fluids that contain possible cancer fighting abilities. These scholarships would give me a opportunity to be the groundbreaker in this relatively unnavigated field. With remedies derived from natural resources, with minimized egregious health impacts, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship. For our future. For our loved ones. For our cure.
Education
Vivian Gaither High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Doctoral degree program (PhD, MD, JD, etc.)
Majors of interest:
- Botany/Plant Biology
- Biological and Physical Sciences
- Agricultural/Animal/Plant/Veterinary Science and Related Fields, Other
- Biology, General
- Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Other
Career
Dream career field:
Entomology and Botony
Dream career goals:
Sports
Swimming
Club2022 – 2022
Research
Natural Disasters
Presenter and Author2022 – 2023
Arts
Showcase
Music2023 – 2024
Public services
Volunteering
Childrens Cancer Center — Leader and playmate2023 – PresentVolunteering
Camp Boggy Creek — Led children and various outdoor activities.2023 – 2023
Future Interests
Volunteering
Simon Strong Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge was halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, answering me, saying that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, mouth sores, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. My support system, especially the Children’s Cancer Center (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, and insomnia are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three funerals for friends of mine due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, will never take another breath, will never be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using natural remedies, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Grandmaster Nam K Hyong Scholarship
2020, a year most remember as the year covid struck. However, this was the year that at 13 years old I was diagnosed with cancer. I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploid which made the cancer more difficult to kill. This devastated me, and my family's physical, and mental health. This diagnosis halted my quest for knowledge as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remember my first question to the doctor was “What about school,” meaning what would happen with my education. When my doctor responded that “school [did] not matter right now,” it was as though he told me that my dreams, my childhood aspirations, did not matter. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my life, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams and deteriorated my mental health. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to keep up with my academics. I remember signing out of school one day. I remember my hands shaking badly, in the middle of the whole class, breaking one the zippers on my backpack while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. This is when I started to cry; I cried from the situation, how weak I was, how unfair it was. The constant battle with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, mouth sores, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog which makes it hard to learn new subjects and hard to focus. This was one of the lowest points for me because I realized that I would be unable to do what I had previously done academically. This realization came over me like an ice plunge, plunging my mind into the dark hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. My support system played a vital part in my will to continue my fight. This support also came from organizations such as the CCC, the Children’s Cancer Center.
The CCC did not start as the place I volunteered but was first the place I was a beneficiary to others gracious actions. I started at the CCC as a recipient of their comforting embrace. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that although the treatment I underwent was extremely tough, I felt as though my strength was reinvigorated and my mind was made clear. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which were completely different from my own experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, these families have fought battle after battle. However, we all have one struggle in common. Mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Some panic with each new symptom, some have insomnia from worrying about the next day, and the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. Not every child makes it through treatment. I have attended three funerals for friends of mine due to the atrocity that is cancer. These kids will never play in the sun, will never take another breath, will never be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Elevate Mental Health Awareness Scholarship
2020, a year most remember as the year covid struck. However, this was the year that at 13 years old I was diagnosed with cancer. I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploid which made the cancer more difficult to kill. This devastated me, and my family's physical, and mental health. This diagnosis halted my quest for knowledge as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remember my first question to the doctor was “What about school,” meaning what would happen with my education. When my doctor responded that “school [did] not matter right now,” it was as though he told me that my dreams, my childhood aspirations, did not matter. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my life, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams and deteriorated my mental health. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to keep up with my academics. I remember signing out of school one day. I remember my hands shaking badly, in the middle of the whole class, breaking one the zippers on my backpack while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. This is when I started to cry; I cried from the situation, how weak I was, how unfair it was. The constant battle with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, mouth sores, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog which makes it hard to learn new subjects and hard to focus. This was one of the lowest points for me because I realized that I would be unable to do what I had previously done academically. This realization came over me like an ice plunge, plunging my mind into the dark hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. My support system played a vital part in my will to continue my fight. This support also came from organizations such as the CCC, the Children’s Cancer Center.
The CCC did not start as the place I volunteered but was first the place I was a beneficiary to others gracious actions. I started at the CCC as a recipient of their comforting embrace. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that although the treatment I underwent was extremely tough, I felt as though my strength was reinvigorated and my mind was made clear. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are completely different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, these families have fought battle after battle. However, we all have one struggle in common. Mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Some panic with each new symptom, some have insomnia from worrying about the next day, and the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. Not every child makes it through treatment. I have attended three funerals for friends of mine due to the atrocity that is cancer. These kids will never play in the sun, will never take another breath, will never be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Powering The Future - Whiddon Memorial Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Carlos F. Garcia Muentes Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Bright Lights Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Mental Health Importance Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Nyadollie Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Sloane Stephens Doc & Glo Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Linda McCoy-Aitkens Memorial Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Elizabeth Schalk Memorial Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Career Test Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Joy Of Life Inspire’s AAA Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Frank and Patty Skerl Educational Scholarship for the Physically Disabled
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Ken Larson Memorial Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. The Children’s Cancer Center, (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
North Star Dreamers Memorial Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. This is an opportunity to, potentially, find a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Big Picture Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round; Especially Children’s Cancer Center (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Mikey Taylor Memorial Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round; Especially Children’s Cancer Center (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Brian J Boley Memorial Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round; Especially Children’s Cancer Center (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Abbey's Bakery Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round; Especially Children’s Cancer Center (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Jonathan Tang Memorial Scholarship
2020. A year most remember as the year COVID struck. However, this was the year that, at 13, I was diagnosed with cancer. My prognosis was lower due to my older age and a mutation called hypodiploid, which made the cancer harder to defeat. My quest for knowledge halted as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my family's life and my own, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to find some remnant of normalcy. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out. Once out I cried from my weakness, the unfairness. Constant battles with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog, which makes it difficult to learn new subjects and focus. The realization that I couldn’t keep up academically came over me like an icy plunge, plunging my mind into the dark, hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round; Especially Children’s Cancer Center (CCC), played a vital role in my will to continue my fight.
I started at the CCC as a beneficiary of others’ kindness. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that their support reinvigorated my strength and cleared my mind. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, however, we all have one struggle in common: mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Panic, insomnia, and stress are constant companions, with the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. I have attended three friends' funerals due to the atrocity that is cancer. They will never feel the sun, take another breath, nor ever be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This grounding fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require-a Ph.D. in Entomology and a M.S. in Botany. Although a significant challenge, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their cells for possible cancer-fighting properties. Using remedies derived from nature, children, and adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For a cure. Through entomology and botany, I see an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Michael Rudometkin Memorial Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. This is an opportunity to, potentially, find a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Hines Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. This is an opportunity to, potentially, find a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Redefining Victory Scholarship
2020, a year most remember as the year covid struck. However, this was the year that at 13 years old I was diagnosed with cancer. I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploid which made the cancer more difficult to kill. This devastated me, and my family's physical, and mental health. This diagnosis halted my quest for knowledge as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remember my first question to the doctor was “What about school,” meaning what would happen with my education. When my doctor responded that “school [did] not matter right now,” it was as though he told me that my dreams, my childhood aspirations, did not matter. Being diagnosed with cancer massively impacted my life, both physically and mentally. The diagnosis and following treatment shattered my once greatly aspired dreams and deteriorated my mental health. With a broken spirit and hope on the verge of collapse, I returned to school to keep up with my academics. I remember signing out of school one day. I remember my hands shaking badly, in the middle of the whole class, breaking one the zippers on my backpack while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. This is when I started to cry; I cried from the situation, how weak I was, how unfair it was. The constant battle with fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, mouth sores, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy imperiled to quench the flames of hope within me. Especially an effect of chemotherapy called chemo-fog which makes it hard to learn new subjects and hard to focus. This was one of the lowest points for me because I realized that I would be unable to do what I had previously done academically. This realization came over me like an ice plunge, plunging my mind into the dark hopeless abyss. However, through faith, hope, and a supporting family I kept getting back up to fight for another round. My support system played a vital part in my will to continue my fight. This support also came from organizations such as the CCC, the Children’s Cancer Center.
The CCC did not start as the place I volunteered but was first the place I was a beneficiary to others gracious actions. I started at the CCC as a recipient of their comforting embrace. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that although the treatment I underwent was extremely tough, I felt as though my strength was reinvigorated and my mind was made clear. This is true for many families who go there. These families undergo extreme difficulties in the hospital, many of which are completely different from my experiences. From bone marrow transplants, to recurring cancer, these families have fought battle after battle. However, we all have one struggle in common. Mental health. Each family struggles with unique mental health struggles. Some panic with each new symptom, some have insomnia from worrying about the next day, and the biggest anxiety inducer... will I live to see tomorrow? These challenges take their toll. Not every child makes it through treatment. I have attended three funerals for friends of mine due to the atrocity that is cancer. These kids will never play in the sun, will never take another breath, will never be with their now brokenhearted loved ones. This fact is what made me change the focus of my career. This has awoken a calling within me to learn, to study, to research. To bring peace and hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer with a less toxic chemotherapy treatment for cancer.
This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
El Jefe Entrepreneurial Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. This is an opportunity to, potentially, find a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Rev. and Mrs. E B Dunbar Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found, and studied, to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. This is an opportunity to , potentially, find a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Rick Levin Memorial Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although it is a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. From the moment I witnessed the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms in my garden, I knew that it was became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, but then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia in 8th grade. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploid which made the cancer more difficult to kill. This devastated not only me, but my whole family. My quest for knowledge ground to a halt as defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remember my first question to the doctor was “What about school,” meaning what would happen with my education. When my doctor responded that “school [did] not matter right now,” it was as though he told me that my dreams, my childhood aspirations, did not matter. The diagnosis, the treatment, my broken dreams; beat down my spirit and threatened to take away my hope. However, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day. I remember my hands shaking badly, in the middle of the whole class, breaking one the zippers on my backpack while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried from the situation, how weak I was, how unfair it was. I was beat down by constant fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, mouth sores, and many other side effects from the chemotherapy, but through faith, hope, and a supporting family I was able to get back up and fight for another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After finishing treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, when I began my studies again it felt odd. I felt as though I had to give back to the community that supported me through my trial and shift the focus of my career. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and then studied to create a less harmful chemotherapy to treat cancer, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life.
The CCC, the Children’s Cancer Center, did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I was a beneficiary to others gracious actions. I started at the CCC as a recipient of their comforting embrace. As I started going to the CCC more often I found that although the treatment I underwent was extremely tough, I felt as though my strength was reinvigorated, as though the very fire of my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after my treatment, which I then went from being just a recipient of support from caring individuals, to being an active participant in supporting those undergoing treatment. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring those whose lives have been seized by cancer back to normalcy. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would vastly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Thomas Mashig Foundation Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Strong Leaders of Tomorrow Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
William R. Godfrey Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
West Family Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
CEW IV Foundation Scholarship Program
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Adam Montes Pride Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Journey 180 Planner Changemaker Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Castillo Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Mendoza Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Urena Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Walking In Authority International Ministry Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Schmid Memorial Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, until a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated my family and me. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. I was constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. However, faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that my newfound outlook could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. This drive stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Kalia D. Davis Memorial Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Mike Peters Memorial Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Billy Downey Memorial Agriculture Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Andrea Claire Matason Memorial Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Jaimeson Williams Legacy Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Janie Mae "Loving You to Wholeness" Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Simon Strong Scholarship
I have always dreamed of becoming an entomologist. Although a peculiar profession to pursue, the diverse ecosystem that lies in the undergrowth captured my heart. Witnessing the humble bumblebee buzz by bountiful blossoms, it became my dream to work with these fascinating pollinating powerhouses. My fascination with insects continued into middle school, then a tragedy struck. I was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. Not only was I diagnosed with cancer, but I had a lower prognosis because of my older age, and due to the cancer having a mutation called hypodiploidy which made remission exceedingly difficult. This devastated me and my family. My quest for knowledge halted, defeating cancer took priority. After being diagnosed I remembered my doctor, after I asked him, telling me that school did not matter right now. This devastated me; however, I kept my faith and my hope. I remember signing out of school one day, hands shaking badly, breaking one of my backpack zippers while a friend offered help. Being shy and on the verge of a breakdown, I refused their help and unsteadily walked out of the class. While stumbling down the stairs I started to cry. I cried seeing how weak I was, how unfair it was. Constantly beat down by fevers, zero platelets, an immunocompromised body, and many other side effects from chemotherapy. Faith, hope, and a supporting family helped me get back up and fight another round. Finally, 2 ½ years later, I finished my fight with cancer and emerged victorious. After treatment, I realized that my dream to study insects could finally be fulfilled, but, that dream evolved into wanting to help others. I needed to shift the focus of my career to give back to the community that supported me. I realized that, with my newfound outlook, my strange passion could lead to an incredible change in the pharmaceutical industry! If an organism is found that possesses cancer-fighting properties, and studied to create less harmful chemotherapy, it could change the way medicine is made! I felt moved to use this gift to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction called childhood cancer. My drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others had on my life. The Children’s Cancer Center (CCC) did not start as the place I volunteered, but was first the place I felt comforted and cared for. Although the treatment I underwent was arduous, my soul was reignited with a renewed hope on each visit. This feeling persisted even after treatment, and I went from being a receiving support from caring individuals, to supporting others undergoing treatment.
This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To bring hope to those whose lives have been seized by cancer. This scholarship would be conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. This scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and allow me to give back to our amazing community that has given, and lost, so much. With remedies derived from nature, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. As Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. There is an opportunity to better the that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Rev. Ethel K. Grinkley Memorial Scholarship
I am an Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia survivor. I had a mutation called haplodiploid, and that, along with being a teen, increased my risk of not being in remission. However, in preserving through this challenge I gained a new perspective on life that has truly allowed me to connect with others who are struggling with their own battles.
Cancer. That was the word that struck my heart with fear when the doctor first told diagnosed me in the hospital. This soon led to countless chemotherapies and treatments that all had one goal, to kill the cancer. However, throughout this time I had two key things that held me together; my family, and my faith. My family supported me throughout my treatment, and as is commonly said, “when the going gets tough the tough get going.” I was no exception to this fact, and the support my family showed in simple ways like bringing me food, and encouraging me throughout chemotherapy were major reasons I did not lose hope. Another reason, and perhaps the most important one, was keeping steadfast in my faith in God. Even in the darkest moments, surrounded by the seas of uncertainty, God kept me on solid ground and stayed by my side. I remember an especially hard time in treatment, when my initial diagnosis was then made graver with the discovery of a resilient mutation in the cancer, I surrendered myself, saying that “whether I live or I die, I would be at peace either way. If I die I would be with our father in heaven, and if I survive it would have a testimony that can be spread with the world.” This revelation led to a strengthening of my faith and eventually my victory over cancer, and a victory over the enemy.
However, this victory did not lead to a peaceful ending. I still felt the need to repay the blessings and kindness that had been bestowed upon me. I started to pay this immeasurable kindness forward the summer vacation of 2023, the year after I completed treatment. I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center, to help young children who have been diagnosed with cancer. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can know how agonizing it is to be under chemotherapy. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized. However, this ambition cannot take hold without a proper education. This scholarship would be extremely conducive to the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. With this, I would be able to go on expeditions to travel the world in search of insects and plants for unique compounds in their venom, exoskeleton, bodily fluids, and cells with possible cancer fighting abilities. With remedies derived from natural resources with minimized egregious health impacts, children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship. For our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Fall Favs: A Starbucks Stan Scholarship
The Pumpkin Spice Frappuccino. A heavenly treat with the ability to satisfy any drinkers sweet tooth and much more. With the purchased beverage in hand you, unsuspectingly, take a little swig. As the wave of chilled, sweet, coffee hits the tastebuds, you drift away in a REM-like state on a barge across the sea to the tropic rainforest of Latin America, and this is where you see the fields, fields of coffee trees all growing the precious beans that gifted you the treasured drink in your cooled hands. But in a snap, you are back, with the brisk fall breeze gently feeling its way to the innermost workings of your soul. With an almost unperceivable shiver, a wave of gratitude and warmth radiates from the resting place of the consumed drink. Gratitude not only for the farmers, ohh no, but gratitude for family, gratitude for friends, gratitude for life. Life that was fought for, life free from cancer.
In this reminiscent mood the memories started to flow back. Memories of the times this ambrosian drink comforted and reinforced the hope within my soul. In times when chemotherapy caused my insides to combust in a turbulent tornado of heat, during the fall, I knew that there was one drink that would put a spell on the turmoil that lie within. This was especially true during the beginning of my treatment in the year 2020. This was the year that the chemotherapy started. The consistent, decimating, sickening chemotherapy. In the hospital I watched as the clear, odorless chemo dripped down the IV line, down into my port, down into my very soul. And as I watched I knew that this clear, seemingly harmless, liquid would ravage my body and take me to hell and back. With this in my mind I remembered all the fun and joy I had before my diagnosis, the joy of being a child; But instead, my life would be fast-forwarded, and it would be forced to adopt the maturity trauma and hardship insist upon. But this joy refused to be lost for good. It demanded to return in great abundance as it had before, and it happened in a minuscule event that happened after a chemo treatment.
During chemo treatments I could be held for up to a week in the hospital until I had the adequate blood levels. On such an occasion, I had been waiting and waiting to receive the clear to go back to my cozy den, I started to relinquish the sadness and fear that had gripped me from the beginning of the treatment. I had started to rediscover the joy in life. With my mom beside me, I started to smile and laugh again, I began to hope again. By the time I was discharged I had discovered that I had begun to change. I was strengthening my faith in God and relinquishing my life to be his will, come what may. But at the end of this I remember, my mom and I had gone to a Starbucks, and I had asked for my favorite drink. The Pumpkin Spice Frappuccino, and with this drink I associate this memory, the awakening of my faith and hope in God, and, the powerful joy that came with my newfound hope.
Joieful Connections Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Hicks Scholarship Award
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Bright Lights Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
William A. Stuart Dream Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Janean D. Watkins Overcoming Adversity Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Aserina Hill Memorial Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future. These experiences I had during my cancer journey made me realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to help others, to relate to others; to help those that feel lost and alone know that they are found and are never alone. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed firsthand the struggles that other kids faced during their treatments, however, their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the unrelenting agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized. This is why if I were to start my own charity, our mission would be bring light and hope to those lost in the darkness of disease. We would bring care packages for those undergoing chemotherapy and words of inspiration and life to those we reach out to. In order to fund this organization we would create different events throughout the year that would inspire others to contribute to the fight against childhood cancer. This organization would be called, Hear Them Ring. It would be called so because when children complete cancer treatment they ring a bell to signify the end of their journey.
However, in order to start this beacon of hope, I will have to complete my education. This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to achieve my goal, and in doing so, travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying for this scholarship, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Goobie-Ramlal Education Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Reginald Kelley Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Morgan Stem Diversity in STEM Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Innovators of Color in STEM Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Jiang Amel STEM Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Shays Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Jeanie A. Memorial Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Our Destiny Our Future Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Gabriel Martin Memorial Annual Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
STAR Scholarship - Students Taking Alternative Routes
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying, to enable me to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...
Rev. Frank W. Steward Memorial Scholarship
When I was 14, I was diagnosed with Pre-Bcell Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. My cancer had a rare mutation called hypodiploid. Hypodiploid is when cancer cells have fewer than 40 chromosomes, and this, combined with my older age, led me to be classified as “high risk”. Yet I am still here, more passionate, determined, and mature than before. As the strongest steel is forged in the hottest fires, I went through fire and brimstone and can now testify how tenacity and purpose all set the fundamental foundation for my future.
I had always been interested in entomology and botany from an early age. In my childhood home, we had a garden where I would spend the majority of the day probing through soil and plants rooting for curious critters. And although my peculiar interest was not shared by my peers, I was not discouraged. Throughout my cancer journey this became my coping mechanism, and although the chemotherapy used to treat cancer caused me to be physically and mentally incapable of performing difficult tasks, in the few weeks after my treatment commenced, I began to perceive the drastic effect this had on my curriculars. I was not only waging a war for my very existence, but for my raison d'être. Now having won my battle and with a newfound purpose, I will be able to pursue my field and fulfill my burning desire to end the hellish torment those treated for cancer suffer. Because of the experiences I had during my cancer's downfall, I realized that I must use this gift, this opportunity, I was given to pursue an unorthodox solution to the grievous affliction that is childhood cancer. In studying the relatively unresearched cancer-fighting properties of insects and plants hidden in various parts of the world, a cure could be found to benefit future generations. The incredible change that could be made to the pharmaceutical industry from finding an organism that possesses cancer-fighting properties that can be applied to humanity could change the way medicine is made! I realized that my drive to improve the lives of others stemmed from the impact others have had on my life. This epiphany came as I volunteered with the CCC, the Children's Cancer Center. While volunteering with the CCC I witnessed just how strong the kids were, regardless of their disabilities or energy levels. Their unrelenting playfulness and joy deeply moved me, as I can relate to the agony they were enduring. This is why I aspire to learn, to study, to research. To improve the lives of those that cancer has seized.
This scholarship would be extremely conducive to achieving the level of education I require, a Doctor of Philosophy in Entomology and a Master of Science in Botany. Although the challenge of rising to the top will be extremely difficult, this scholarship would greatly improve my erudition and my ability to travel in search of insects and plants with unique compounds in their venom, fluids, and cells for possible cancer-fighting abilities. With remedies derived from nature children, and even adults, could experience higher survival rates and lower long-term health impacts. Just as Ralph Waldo Emerson eloquently put it, “The creation of a thousand forests is in one acorn.” Entomology could be the pioneer in finding a remedy for the horror that is cancer. This is why I am applying to UF, to study for our future. For our loved ones. For our cure. I see through entomology and botany an opportunity to better the pharmaceutical industry with a field of study that, potentially, has a cure awaiting discovery in the undergrowth...