Cancer fight turns student into activist
2/1/2006 Kerrville, TX Amy Armstrong Kerrville Daily Times (dailytimes.com) Twenty-two-year-old Kristen Morton of San Angelo knows a thing or two about not only surviving, but also thriving when faced with adversity. The senior at Schreiner University in Kerrville, and 2002 graduate of San Angelo Central High School, is leaving a giant legacy at this small private school, its Kerrville community and on hundreds of people who are battling cancer. While creating decorations for a Mini Relay for Life to be held on the Schreiner campus Thursday, she calmly discusses her own battle with cancer. Morton, a San Angelo native, was only weeks from her 17th birthday when she was diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma — a cancer so rare that her doctor informed her there were only 18 cases of adolescents getting this form of cancer since 1980. “He told me it is normally seen only in adults who smoke,” said Morton, a senior at Schreiner. Cancer was the last thing on Morton’s mind as she began her junior year at Central. A gifted student, who excelled academically as well as athletically on Central’s tennis team, Morton had noticed a bump on her tongue that wouldn’t go away. “I went for the biopsy and not too long after that my dad showed up at school one day and pulled me out of class,” Morton said. “He said ‘You have cancer and you have to start treatment right away,’” she said. “After that everything happened really fast.” Morton underwent three different [...]