5 Cauac
Blue Overtone
Storm
When Bombs fall
Babies cannot bear
The Shock and Trauma
When Bombs fall
Homes are blown away
Where Children sleep
and play
Small fragile Bodies
Easily bleed
Delicate Skin tears
apart
When Bombs fall
Babies’ Eardrums break
They cannot take
The deafening Storm
-
Trauma/ Pain/ Blood/
Shock/ Death
Who will save the Babies
When Bombs fall?
©Kleomichele Leeds
Jessica Ware, PhD
Jessica Lee Ware is an African-American evolutionary biologist and entomologist. She is an assistant professor at Rutgers University, Newark. She studies the evolution of insect physiology and behavior, particularly dragonflies and dictyoptera, as well as their bio-geography (their geographic distribution). Ware was a contributor to a major study of the phylogenomics of insect evolution, and developed molecular phylogeny of hexapoda.
Early life and education
Jessica Lee Ware was born in Montreal, Quebec, one of twins. Ware has said that she became interested in biology because her grandparents, Gwen and Harold Irons, in northern Canada encouraged her to collect snakes, insects, and frogs. Ware earned a bachelor of science in invertebrate zoology from the University of British Columbia in Vancouver in 2001. She pursued entomology after working in the University's Entomological Museum to support herself during her studies.
After graduating, Ware traveled to Costa Rica to work with Diane Srivastava for a semester. She reports that her time there led to her to choose research as a career, and it was also her first experience of working with other scientists of color.
Ware went directly from her bachelor's degree to the doctoral program at Rutgers University. She was awarded a PhD in 2008, with a dissertation titled, Molecular and morphological systematics of Libelluloidea (Odonata: Anisoptera) and Dictyoptera.
Ware was married to another entomologist. She is now a single parent.
Career
In 2010, she was appointed as an associate professor at Rutgers University. She is also a research associate at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, and the National Museum of Natural History. Ware contributed to a major study of the phylogenomics of insect evolution, and developed molecular phylogeny of hexapoda. She has undertaken fieldwork in several continents.
Ware is active in encouraging women and people from under-represented groups to become entomologists. She was a featured speaker at the March for Science in Washington DC in 2017. She is a contributor to Entomology Today, and serves on the board of several entomological journals.
Honors
Ware is the recipient of a National Science Foundation career grant, as well as an Entomological Society of America Snodgrass Memorial Research Award, which recognizes "outstanding research by a graduate student". In 2008, she was one of the winners of the Entomological Society of America's John Henry Comstock Graduate Student Award. Ware currently serves on the Governing Board of the Entomological Society of America, representing the SysEB section.*
CAUAC
Kin 239: Blue Overtone Storm
I empower in order to catalyze
Commanding energy
I seal the matrix of self-generation
With the overtone tone of radiance
I am guided by the power of accomplishment
I am a galactic activation portal
Enter me.
Once the physical body is sufficiently purified, then it can open to receive the cellular/molecular systems of the fourth and fifth-dimensional bodies: this creates radiance, the cellular transformation or transmutation.*
*Star Traveler's 13 Moon Almanac of Synchronicity, Galactic Research Institute, Law of Time Press, Ashland, Oregon, 2018-2019.
The Sacred Tzolk'in
Sahasrara Chakra (Dali Plasma)
No comments:
Post a Comment