| ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Public Employee Press By JANE LaTOUR Despite their youth, the scholarship
recipients have worked hard on behalf of their communities and in the
pursuit of their career dreams. Jessica Evans traces her desire to become
a social worker directly to her high school day care work with children
whose mothers were in jail. Now, her scholarship from DC 37 is helping
to pay her tuition costs at Hofstra University. In their scholarship essays, the
students wrote about various forms of inequality that concern them. Jessica
Evans described the impact of 9/11 on the lives of Muslims in America.
She wrote: If it didnt affect me, then why bother getting
involved? Then I realized, what if I was in that position? Caitlin
Travers, now at Carnegie Mellon University, plans to make a career in
engineering. She wrote: Engineering has traditionally been dominated
by males; however, I refuse to allow these limitations to hinder me. Throughout
my career, I hope that I can make the field more welcoming for females.
Parental pride bubbled over throughout
the event. Janice Kikuchi, a member of Local 436, the United Federation
of Nurses and Epidemiologists, spoke about her sons many accomplishments.
Glenn Kiyoshi Lashley has already excelled in Spanish and Latin.
Now hes studying Japanese. His strength and passion is composition,
she said. In his scholarship essay, he wrote that the union has
touched every facet of our lives, said the beaming mother of the
Harvard student. Joan Reed, president of College Assistants
Local 2054 and chair of the DC 37 Education Committee, concluded the event
by encouraging all present to help the scholarship program grow: Please
get the word out We want to see it grow every year. Encourage those
who are eligible to apply for the scholarships. How to apply for union scholarships | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
©
District Council 37, AFSCME, AFL-CIO | 125 Barclay Street, New York, NY 10007 | Privacy
Policy | Sitemap |