'Lemonade' Cancer Crusader Dies
Alex Scott Started Lemonade Stand To Raise Money For Research
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Play CBS Video Video Taking A (Lemonade) Stand
Alexandra Scott sold lemonade to help children like herself with cancer. Her year-old business grew into a nationwide effort to raise $1 million. The Early Show's Tracy Smith reported in June.
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Alexandra Scott (AP)
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Alexandra Scott at her lemonade stand at Penn Wynne elementary school in June (AP)
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Alexandra Scott, of Wynnewood, Pa., whose battle with pediatric cancer captured hearts nationwide, "passed on peacefully with us holding her hands," her parents, Jay and Liz Scott, said in an e-mail, The Philadelphia Inquirer reported Monday.
"She just slipped away," Liz Scott told the paper Sunday. "You could see when she was ready. She let off a big sigh, and went off to sleep. She was very calm. For that, we're grateful. You're always fearful it's going to be scary."
Alexandra, diagnosed just before her first birthday with neuroblastoma, an aggressive form of childhood cancer, decided to set up a lemonade stand to raise money for treatment. She took in $2,000 that first year, and a series of stands had raised a total of $200,000 after four years.
In June, lemonade stand fund-raisers were set up in all 50 states, as well as in Canada and France, and Alexandra and her family appeared on Oprah Winfrey's TV program and the "Today" show.
Alex hoped that her Alex's Lemonade Stand charity would raise $1 million this year for cancer research. The effort has passed the $700,000 mark, and Volvo of North America had pledged to hold a fall fund-raising event to assure that the $1 million goal would be reached, Liz Scott said.
"When life gives you lemons, make lemonade. When you have bad things, make good things," Alex once said
Since June, Alex's quality of life had dropped off, and her health had severely deteriorated in the last few days, her mother said. Still, her daughter was determined to push forward even as her condition worsened, she said.
"She had a lot of faith and faith in research and trying the newest things," Liz Scott said.
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