
Harold Ekeh is a senior at Elmont Memorial High School in Elemont, New York.
I actually applied to MIT last year but I didn't get in *sobbing* but if given the chance I would go!
So here comes this Nigerian transferred to America guy who applied to 13 insanely prestigious schools in America and got accepted by all! (happens only once in a century) including MIT. Now he is faced with the chance to go to MIT or dump its sorry ass lol. So jealous with the green eyes and blood oozing thing. See what CNN Money said below:
Now comes the really hard part: Deciding where to go. He actually got into all 13 schools he applied to, including MIT and Johns Hopkins.
"I am leaning toward Yale," he told CNNMoney. "I competed at Yale for Model UN, and I like the passion people at Yale had."
Some of the Yale students he met became his friends and mentors, offering advice on the college application process. Now Ekeh is trying to do the same thing.
Ekeh, 17, founded a college mentoring program at his school, Elmont Memorial High School on Long Island in the New York city suburbs. His goal is to get more students into top universities.
American dream: Ekeh was born in Nigeria and came to the United States when he was eight. He wrote his main college essay about the struggle to adjust, including being clueless in U.S. history classes at school. He said he would ask his parents repeatedly why they moved.
"We had a fairly comfortable life in Nigeria, but they told me we moved to America for the opportunities like the educational opportunities," he recalled.
The salutatorian is quick to credit his parents, school and community for his success.
"I am very humbled by this," Ekeh said. "It's not just for me, but for my school and community. We can accomplish great things here."
A passion for science: He wants to major in neurobiology or chemistry in college and later become doctor and, ultimately, a neurosurgeon. He was named a 2015 Intel Science Talent Search semifinalist earlier this year for his research on how the acid DHA can slow Alzheimer's.
For Ekeh, the cause is personal. His grandmother was diagnosed with Alzheimer's when he was 11. One of his proudest moments was running home to tell his mother and aunts about the breakthroughs he was finding with DHA.
"When other kids would say, 'I want to be a superhero or police officer,' I would say, 'I want to know what is on the inside of us,'" he said.
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