Published
December 30, 2008 08:48 am - When Casey Bryant’s baton twirling coach was
diagnosed with breast and colon cancers more than eight years ago,
she wanted to do more than send cards and
flowers.
Pageant
contestant has a purpose
Susan Misur
The Daily Item
LEWISBURG — When Casey Bryant’s baton
twirling coach was diagnosed with breast and colon cancers more than
eight years ago, she wanted to do more than send cards and
flowers.
Bryant, 20, began speaking and fundraising
for the American Cancer Society at Relay for Life events at home in
Linthicum, Md., and then as a student at Bucknell University.
Now, she’s taking to the stage to spread
awareness — the pageant stage.
The Bucknell senior entered the 2009 Miss
Central Pennsylvania Scholarship Pageant with a platform of
promoting the American Cancer Society and Relay events to compete
against 10 other participants.
Though a pageant newcomer, Bryant won and
was crowned with the title of Miss Greater Juniata Valley.
She will move on to the Miss Pennsylvania
Pageant in June to compete against about 25 other contestants; that
winner proceeds to the Miss America Pageant.
“I never saw myself doing this,” said
Bryant, who performed a twirling routine to the song “Diamonds are a
Girl’s Best Friend.”
“Then I thought, ‘what a great way to get
out in the community and show that students are doing good things
and the ways to get involved.’ ”
As a member of the American Cancer
Society’s national board, Bryant coordinates monthly conference
calls for college chapters of Relay for Life across the country and
publishes an online newsletter.
For the past three years, she has
organized the Relay event at Bucknell where she is a political
science, Latin American studies and Spanish triple major.
Bryant, who performs twirling routines at
Bucknell sporting events and is a national champion twirler, first
considered the pageant when her twirling partner joked she should
participate. Though she is not from Pennsylvania, attending college
here qualified her to enter.
She said she was hesitant at first, “but
once you start, you want to do a good job.”
Bryant headed to Lewistown for a weekend
in early November for the pageant, which consisted of a panel
interview and evening gown, swim suit, talent and Q & A portions
of the actual pageant.
To Bryant’s surprise, the process was
heavily interview-focused, rather than solely emphasizing
contestants’ looks as pageants often seem to do, she said.
“They asked a lot about the election and
whether states voted the way I thought they’d go,” she said of her
initial 10-minute-long interview in front of a panel of judges.