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The
Larry Monroe Scholarship Award 2009
Daniel Bevan
The Larry Monroe Scholarship
Award is presented annually here in Sun Valley in memory of former
FBI Agent Lawrence J. Monroe, one of the founders of the National
Executive Institute. Larry played a crucial role in the initial
program design, curriculum development, and administration of
many NEI programs during his long, distinguished career at the
FBI Academy. His untimely death in 1999 led to the creation of
this coveted scholarship.
Candidates for this
award include all eligible NEI members' children and grandchildren
who are enrolled in an accredited two - or four - year undergraduate
program or who are pursuing a masters or higher level degree.
Selection for the award is based on monetary need, demonstrated
work ethic, scholarship record and service orientation.
This year, we received
four outstanding applications. The Scholarship Committee unanimously
decided that the 2009 Larry Monroe Scholarship Award, in the amount
of $10,000, should be granted to Daniel Bevan. Daniel is the son
of Vince Bevan, former Chief, Ottawa Police Service, Ottawa, Canada
and the graduate of the 24th NEI session.
Daniel, during his
high school years, was recognized as team MVP eight times in four
different sports and graduated as class Valedictorian. He has
just completed a Bachelor of Science Degree, with Honors in Biology
at Queen's University where he also started three years for the
Queen's baseball team and was named Pitcher of the year in 2009.
Daniel has demonstrated
his work ethic, and service orientation by coaching youth at risk
in basketball, assisting with girls' basketball and volleyball,
helping raise money and participating on a humanitarian project
in the Dominican Republic, as well as being involved in campus
security at Queen's University.
Daniel is the only
student to be admitted to the master's program for a degree in
Fisheries Oceanography at the University of Victoria this September,
where he will seek to make connections between the health of wild
salmon stocks and the abundance and species composition of plankton
communities in Southeast Alaska and Northwest British Columbia.
An excerpt of Daniel's
letter of application for this scholarship follows:
"Fish is the largest
source of protein in the world, and since the late nineteenth
century, wild stocks have been disappearing at an alarming rate.
The biological, economic, and social effects of these collapses,
originating on both the Pacific and Atlantic Coasts, have resonated
across North America. The collapse of the Atlantic cod fishery
in the latter half of the 20th century robbed countless coastal
communities, both Canadian and American, of their way of life.
Declines in salmon stocks on the Pacific Coast threaten to do
the same to the West Coast fisheries. For example, a 2001 outbreak
of sea lice concentrated around salmon farms in the Broughton
Archipelago (British Columbia) caused a catastrophic decline in
pink salmon abundance, to the point where the affected generation
of salmon was 99% smaller than their parental generation. This
collapse sparked backlash from fisheries of all sizes, whose economic
sustenance was simply no longer there.
Fisheries scientists
are only now beginning to understand the linkages between the
health of salmon stocks and their environment. This relationship
is a complex one, but it is imperative that future fisheries management
be closely linked to fluctuations in the characteristics that
define the environment encountered by heavily-fished species.
I have decided to pursue an education in Fisheries Oceanography
with the goal of uncovering further relationships between salmon
and their environment. Looking forward, the health of fish-dependent
people and perhaps even peace between nations will be at stake
unless the gap left by collapsed fisheries can be bridged, if
only temporarily, by a better understanding of the physical and
biological controls over fish productivity in aquatic ecosystems."
We believe that Larry
Monroe would be proud to have Daniel Bevan as recipient of the
2009 scholarship award, presented at the NEIA Annual Conference,
Sun Valley, Idaho, June 10, 2009. Congratulations Daniel!
Richard M. Ayres
Chair, Scholarship Committee
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