Hunter to Receive Greene Family Scholarship

Walton alumni Wyndell and LaKeysha Greene and their young children, Kyle and Wesleigh.
Photo Submitted

Walton alumni Wyndell and LaKeysha Greene and their young children, Kyle and Wesleigh.

"My dream is to graduate with my bachelor's degree and become a data analyst at Walmart," said Katelyn Hunter.

Hunter, a freshman at the Sam M. Walton College of Business, hopes to major in information systems. To assist her in reaching her goal, she applied for and received the Wyndell Kyle & LaKeysha Michelle Greene Family Memorial Endowed Scholarship. The academic award provides Hunter with $5,000 per year for four years.

"This scholarship means so much to me because it's taking some of the financial burden off of me and my parents," Hunter said.

The endowed fund was established in the memory of Walton alumni Wyndell and LaKeysha Greene and their young children, Wesleigh and Kyle, who died as a result of a car accident outside of Dallas in May 2010. The extended Greene family created the fund to honor Wyndell and LaKeysha's family, their philanthropic views and to support underserved students. 

"The Greene family took a tragic situation and turned it into a hope-filled opportunity for students," said Barbara Lofton, director of Walton's Diversity and Inclusion Program. "I hope assisting students reach their dreams and aspirations helps the family and friends of Wyndell and LaKeysha Greene to heal and find comfort."

Scholarship recipients must have financial need, a minimum 3.0 GPA and 24 ACT score, and be a resident of St. Landry Parish, Louisiana, or Lafayette County, Arkansas — the home counties of Wyndell and LaKesha — or have attended Walton's Technology Awareness Program while in high school.

Hunter, who attended the Technology Awareness Program in the summer of 2017, was born in Fayetteville but grew up in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Along with her grades and ACT score, the TAP program allowed her to qualify for the award.

"It inspires me to see others supporting students and helping them achieve, grow and blossom," Lofton said. "This creates such a wonderful legacy for the Greene family.  For that I am thankful."

 

Contacts

Barbara Lofton, director
Diversity and Inclusion Program
479-575-4557, BLofton@walton.uark.edu

Lori McLemore, marketing and communications officer
Sam M. Walton College of Business
479-575-5021, mclemore@uark.edu

Headlines

Affairs of the Heart

Find out how biomedical engineering professor Morten Jensen is developing innovative devices to produce better outcomes in cardiovascular medicine.

Students, Faculty and Alumni Kick Off Centennial Year of School of Law

Founded April 14, 1924, the School of Law faculty, students and alumni started the celebration of its centennial year with a Founders Day event and will continue with more commemorative events this coming fall.

Yearly Academic Award Winners, Ambassadors Recognized by Bumpers College

Schyler Angell, Lexi Dilbeck, Cason Frisby, Tanner Austin King, Anna Brooke Mathis, Carrie Ortel, Lucy Scholma, Kadence Trosper and student ambassadors were honored at the college's annual reception.

World Premiere of 'Cries from the Cotton Field' Slated for May 8

Cries from the Cotton Field chronicles the journey of 19th century Italian immigrants from northern Italy to the Arkansas Delta and ultimately to Tontitown. It will premier at 6 p.m. May 8 in Springdale Har-Ber High School.

Fay Jones School's Earth Day Event Spotlights Sustainable Materials and Projects

"One day doesn't seem like a lot, but one day can empower individuals and groups, energize them to work for change and innovate for transformative solutions," professor Jennifer Webb said of the students' design work.

News Daily