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AAUW Naperville Area awards three $5,000 scholarships to local college women
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Appel à propositions pour soutenir les innovations environnementales au Cameroun et en RDC | Organisation internationale de la francophonie
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College of Engineering Student Spotlight: Mariah Brothersen
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10 May 2021 at 19:52 |
Contributed
It was a jubilant day on April 20th this year. Dancers from nine villages welcomed their big American Guest visiting Sierra Leone and their village.
Bishop Kyle Searcy is Senior Pastor of Fresh Anointing House of Worship International, Montgomery, Alabama (www.fahow.org) and Fresh Oil Fellowship of Churches International.
Children in Moselolo and surrounding villages have no access to school. The nearest schools are 5-10 miles away. They are subjected to child labor, domestic work, child abuse through childhood marriages and other problems such as illiteracy resulting in extreme adult poverty adding to the statistics of Sierra Leone continually listed as high in illiteracy, very poor poor healthcare and very high rate of poverty in the world.
Correspondent
If you ask most young women in high school what they want to do with their lives and what career they plan on pursuing, chances are they will sometimes lean toward a career in nursing or becoming an English professor or education or child studies – all solid and noble professions women often undertake. But Nicole Kent chose a different path not often considered by young women, civil engineering.
For those who hold their nose while taking math and science to get college credit, Kent embraced her courses and developed a passion for them.
“I was a little hesitant entering into college and not knowing what civil engineering encompassed, but I had always loved studying math and science, so I figured I would enjoy it and I have,” said Kent.