Rotary Club of Aiken Awards $105,000 in College Scholarships

This has been a year unlike any other, but the Rotary Club of Aiken has made it a very special one for twenty-one high school seniors in Aiken, SC. Foregoing our traditional luncheon celebration due to COVID 19 restrictions, the squeals of shock and delight heard during the notification phone calls to these deserving students were evidence that the $5000 college scholarship each were awarded is a game changer for most of them.

The Rotary Club of Aiken Scholarship Committee carefully considered approximately 120 applicants. While grades were considered, it was not the major driver for a scholarship determination. Students were evaluated on their extracurricular activities, their volunteer efforts, the importance attached to furthering their education, the challenges they have overcome, and their own efforts to address their financial needs.  

Linda Strojan, Scholarship Committee Co-Chair, explained, “While we looked at the grades of each applicant to ensure they had the ability to be successful in college, we were very interested in helping those students whose actions spoke to their dedication to Rotary’s “Service above Self” motto. These students were engaged in a host of community service activities.” She went on to say, “I believe in the power of education to improve lives.  If we can help students achieve their goals by making education more affordable, we have made a difference.”

Many of the stories and the students’ efforts were heartwarming but the Scholarship Committee could easily see how the effects of the COVID 19 pandemic would affect each applicant.  Many of the applicants had depended on their own jobs to help bridge the financial gap for college, but these were quickly eliminated due to COVID 19. Given the unprecedented change from a booming economy to a high rate of unemployment, we could see many parents would be unable to provide educational support for their high school senior.  

Betty Ryberg, Scholarship Committee Co-Chair, rallied Rotarians and community leaders to donate additional funds to expand the scholarship awards from 16 to a record-setting 21 scholarships for the Rotary Club of Aiken.  She said, “I am so thankful to our fellow Rotarians and friends who stepped up to fund our scholarships.  Our winners are future pharmacists, business owners, scientists, teachers, musicians, and athletes. These students make me look forward to a future in which they will serve on boards, they will start businesses, they will be donors.  They may become future Rotarians.  This is the future I envision for each of them.”  

Funding for the scholarships was provided not only by Rotarians but also by outside donations.  The Albrecht Family Charitable Trust, the Gifting Tree Foundation and the Kisner Foundation are three of the organizations who provided funding for the 2020 scholarships.

Picture of Lyddie Hansen

Lyddie Hansen

Lyddie is an active community volunteer. She retired from SRNS in 2013 and enjoys Aiken year around with her husband, Charlie.
Picture of Lyddie Hansen

Lyddie Hansen

Lyddie is an active community volunteer. She retired from SRNS in 2013 and enjoys Aiken year around with her husband, Charlie.

In the know

Related Stories

The Beginnings of a New County | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

The Beginnings of a New County | Cabinet of Curiosities

2021 is a special year for the residents of Aiken County — not only is it a new year of hope after a year of chaos, but it’s also the 150th anniversary of Aiken County’s founding. In January of 1871, state legislator Charles D. Hayne (Barnwell District) proposed an act to create a new county with Aiken as its seat. On March 10, 1871, the act was formally enacted by the South Carolina state legislature. While Hayne was not the first person to promote the idea of a new county, he was the one to get the bill through the state legislature successfully. Names for the new county included the

Read More »
To Keep Christmas Well | Palmetto Bella

To Keep Christmas Well

“…and it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Christmas well …” It is among the closing lines from Charles Dickens’ classic story, “A Christmas Carol.” It may be one of the best remembered and most cherished sentences in the book. “To keep Christmas well,” I suspect, implies different things to each of us. But in the language of the day when this book was written, it meant to observe, or to honor, or to celebrate something. To actively remember. Perhaps in this year of rather lopsided “celebrations” — with their often double-edged experiences and wobbly sense of imbalance — I have found myself searching for

Read More »
Story of Hanukkah | Palmetto Bella

Story of Hanukkah

Hanukkah is the Jewish Festival of Lights, celebrated to commemorate the rededication of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem after Judah Maccabee’s victory over the occupying Greek army in 165 BC. In the land of Judah, ruling Syrian King Antiochus ordered the Jewish population to reject all their religious beliefs and practices and worship Greek gods. For fear of the occupying Greek military that enforced King Antiochus’ decree, some Jews obeyed that command, but the majority chose to rebel against it. Thus were sown the seeds of what would ultimately become the celebration of Hanukkah. Fights broke out in a village near Jerusalem when Greek soldiers demanded that the Jewish villagers

Read More »
Rocking Around the (Metal? Holly?) Christmas Tree | Cabinet of Curiosities | Palmetto Bella

Rocking Around the (Metal? Holly?) Christmas Tree | Cabinet of Curiosities

Have you ever watched A Charlie Brown Christmas television special and wondered about the metal Christmas tree lot that Charlie Brown visits? Did you know that cutting down a holly tree almost became illegal in our area? Let’s explore this curious affinity for metal Christmas trees and an early effort to save the holly tree in the latest episode of the Cabinet of Curiosities! The History of Christmas Trees When imagining our ancestors and how they may have spent Christmases a few hundred years in the past, many of us picture a happy family around a large, decorated tree, with a blazing fire in the hearth and children playing at

Read More »