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Professor Herb Cash This is Me

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Harvard University
Cambridge, MA

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This profile was automatically generated using 2 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...

Employment History

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 Web References

  1. 1. OWCC's 40th Anniversary: Distinguished Alumni Recipients -- Thomas Tedder, Ph.D.
    raider.owcc.net/40anniversary/ - [Cached]

    Published on: 12/12/2004   Last Visited: 6/30/2006

    During my first year at OWCC, I enrolled in a botany class taught by Professor Herb Cash. Without question, that class was the inception for my thirst for science and the beginning of my pursuit of knowledge about how cells work. That pursuit has lead to my present endeavors in cancer research.

    The direction of my scientific efforts took form during my second year, again with Professor Cash as my teacher. Professor Cash taught the most fascinating and informative course in microbiology, an experience that ultimately would lead me to both bachelor and master degrees in microbiology and my present career. Professor Cash took a personal as well as professional interest in the students in his classes, instilling in them an enthusiasm for biology.

    Although he demanded excellence from his students, often to their great dismay, I am sure the lessons learned by each student benefit them for years to come. I feel that I am an example of how his guidance and inspiration can encourage a young mind to pursue things they would not have otherwise dreamed. After leaving OWCC, my further studies in the biological sciences were greatly accelerated because of the solid background that I had obtained in the Biology Department of OWCC. This background provided me with many opportunities to jump ahead to more advanced courses without difficulty or reservation.

    Eleven years later, my early experiences at Okaloosa-Walton continue to play an important role in my life. As an Assistant Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School and a principal investigator in the Division of Tumor Immunology at Dana-Farber, I often think of Professor Cash and how he insisted that I work to the limit of my potential. I know that his encouragement and persistence laid the foundation of my work ethic and interest in the biological sciences so integral to my work today.
  2. 2. OWCC's 40th Anniversary: Distinguished Alumni Recipients -- Thomas Tedder, Ph.D.
    www.owcc.net/40anniversary/Alu - [Cached]

    Published on: 10/22/2002   Last Visited: 4/23/2006

    During my first year at OWCC, I enrolled in a botany class taught by Professor Herb Cash. Without question, that class was the inception for my thirst for science and the beginning of my pursuit of knowledge about how cells work. That pursuit has lead to my present endeavors in cancer research.

    The direction of my scientific efforts took form during my second year, again with Professor Cash as my teacher. Professor Cash taught the most fascinating and informative course in microbiology, an experience that ultimately would lead me to both bachelor and master degrees in microbiology and my present career. Professor Cash took a personal as well as professional interest in the students in his classes, instilling in them an enthusiasm for biology.

    Although he demanded excellence from his students, often to their great dismay, I am sure the lessons learned by each student benefit them for years to come. I feel that I am an example of how his guidance and inspiration can encourage a young mind to pursue things they would not have otherwise dreamed. After leaving OWCC, my further studies in the biological sciences were greatly accelerated because of the solid background that I had obtained in the Biology Department of OWCC. This background provided me with many opportunities to jump ahead to more advanced courses without difficulty or reservation.

    Eleven years later, my early experiences at Okaloosa-Walton continue to play an important role in my life. As an Assistant Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School and a principal investigator in the Division of Tumor Immunology at Dana-Farber, I often think of Professor Cash and how he insisted that I work to the limit of my potential. I know that his encouragement and persistence laid the foundation of my work ethic and interest in the biological sciences so integral to my work today.

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