Out of seventeen undergraduate institutions and
more than 200,000 students in The City University of New York,
Heather Courtney, a junior at the College of Staten Island, was
selected for both the prestigious Belle Zeller and Melani
Scholarships. Citywide, only 10 students were awarded the Belle
Zeller and merely 5 garnered the Melani.
Heather Courtney, with a 3.817 grade point average and a love for
her double major of Bioinformatics and English, finds it difficult
to confine her interests to only these two subjects. Among her many
talents are painting, the study of foreign languages, music and
politics. During the summer of 2002, she put her Spanish skills to
the test in a special study grant she won in Ecuador.
Although serious academic scholarship has been her priority, Ms.
Courtney possesses the high octane energy to take on a leadership
role both at CSI and in the community. She has spearheaded the
organization of trips for our student body to cultural, educational
and entertainment destinations, worked for CSI’s Emerging Leaders
Program. She has lent her administrative skills as President of
Unique Individuals, a club that assists disabled students in every
aspect of college life, and has served as a long-time volunteer in
the Ophthalmology Department of Bayley-Seaton
Hospital, as well as in office and patient support roles.
Even before winning the Belle Zeller and Melani competitions, Ms.
Courtney has been the recipient of scholarships from the Business
and Professional Womens' Association, the American Associations of
University Women, the Art Lab Studio's art program and is a member
of CSI’s Dean's List.
“I have no doubt that this energetic, charming, exceptionally
intelligent CSI student will succeed in all she undertakes,” said
Dr. Adrienne Siegel, the faculty advisor who helps CSI students
prepare their applications, “she has and continues to give fully of
herself to others.”
Ms. Courtney has achieved so much despite the terrible pain that
has been her constant companion ever since a serious car accident in
1994 left her with permanent spinal injuries. But she
looks on her physical disability as a gift instead of a curse.
Rather than taking the comfortable route of staying in a routine job
as a customer service representative for The Putnam
Berkely Publishing Group, she
decided that further education was the logical next step.
Ms. Courtney came to CSI nearly twice as old as many incoming
freshman. She walked with a cane and was scared. She decided that
what others might think of her was less important than the goals she
wanted to achieve. CSI offered her the opportunity to explore many
interests, and she discovered that she was "a student of life at
heart.”
She decided to tackle Bioinformatics, the application of computer
technology to biological questions, and is using this career path to
someday allow her to delve into questions of how to prevent
debilitating diseases.
Ms. Courtney came to CSI after life had dealt her some bad cards,
but it did not stop her from playing her hand with exceptional
bravery, generosity and intelligence. “Now that her efforts have won
such amazing recognition from the City University of New York,” said
Dr. Siegel, “we are sure that she will continue to be a credit to
CSI, her profession and our community.”
The Melani Scholarship, named after a professor in the English
Department of Brooklyn College, commemorates the victory in a class
action suit of women academicians to win equal rights in hiring and
promotion in the City University of New York. This $1,000 award,
seeks an undergraduate woman with at least a 3.3 GPA, excellent
faculty recommendations and financial need.
The Belle Zeller Scholarship Trust Fund was established in 1979
by the Professional Staff Congress (PSC), the instructional staff
union of The City University of New York. The scholarship honors the
founding president of the PSC, Belle Zeller, Professor Emeritus of
Political Science at Brooklyn College, where she taught for over
forty years.