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PEP Archives | November
2002 Table of Contents | Public
Employee Press Archives | Home
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Brenza Bradford is determined
to succeed in her education and in her life. The
District Council 37 Disabled Scholarship Award winner is
now completing her junior year at the Fashion Institute
of Technology.
Ramya Angara is following
in his fathers footsteps. The son of Local 375 member
Rao Angara, a structural engineer for the Dept. of Environmental
Protection in Corona, Queens, Ramya is a second year student
in the School of Engineering at Columbia University. |
By JANE LaTOUR
DC 37s commitment to education was forged in the 1960s.
Executive Director Lillian Roberts, then the unions associate
director, identified the need for programs that would provide a
pathway to progress for the members. The District Council 37 Education
Fund, which offers members the most extensive array of classes in
the labor movement, was the outgrowth of that inspired concept.
The DC 37 Scholarship Program is another vehicle for making that
commitment a reality. Students the children and grandchildren
of union members apply for a large number of these scholarships.
On Sept. 22, the 2002 Annual Scholarship Dinner Dance provided a
celebration of academic achievement to honor this years
winners.
Joan Reed, president of College Assistants Local 2054 and the chair
of DC 37s Education Committee, presented the awards.
The Scholarship Program was extremely successful this year,
she observed. We want it to grow even bigger. We received
a tremendous amount of support from the locals.
New York University Professor Miriam Frank, who served as a judge
for the Memorial Scholarships, attended the event and commended
the high quality of the recipients.
This is a group of young people who have ambition and who
did everything right to get into college they got good grades
in high school, they did extra curricular activities, performed
volunteer activities theyre beautiful kids! she
said.
Students such as Catherine Marzan and Kavita Sharma are examples
of the pride of DC 37. Catherine is now a freshman at
Marymount College in Tarrytown. Her father, Local 1549 member Liberato
Marzan, works for the Dept. of Sanitation in the Bronx. Catherine
attended Columbia Universitys Summer Program on Leadership
and the Law and is interested in the field of international studies.
Kavita Sharma, the daughter of Ram Sharma, a Local 371 member in
the Dept. of Homeless Services, is another exceptional student.
The young scholar is now in her junior year at St. Johns University.
She is carrying a double major in biology and anthropology, and
a double minor in chemistry and philosophy. Ms. Shama is studying
to become a cardiologist and is currently interning at Long Island
Jewish Hospital.
Scholarship Winners
DC 37 Education Committee Scholarship: Ramya Angara, Deepa
Magge, Iva Pokorny and Kavita Sharma.
Evelyn Gaskin Scholarship: Lori Gratz and Serena Ramirez.
DC 37 Disabled Scholarship: Brenza Bradford and Jeremy Vasques.
DC 37 Memorial Scholarship: Berenice Arcuri, Yifan Ding,
Karen Ganesh, Charles Lei, Catherine Marzan, Tene Nia Redmon, Laquan
Robinson, Angela Marie Rovengo, Christopher Skeehan and Katherine
White.
Local 375 Joseph E. Collins Memorial Scholarship: Shubha
Bhar, Kimberly Cuozzo, Christopher Fell, Arvin Kheterpal, Marina
Kliger and Chandani Patel.
Local 957 Scholarship: Denise Rogers, Ada Rodriguez and Derek
Miller.
Local 1251 Scholarship: Omar Ahmed, Tremaine Charles, Francis
Diaz, Miriam Dukes and Kenrick Tanner.
Local 1505 Bobbie Jean Johnson Memorial Scholarship: Taisha
Colon, Christine Pisares and Anne Marie Turzilli.
Local 2054 Scholarship: Kelvin Aponte, Anthony Mosco, Joseph
Perrotto and Brian Sibener.
The 2002 Union Plus Credit Card Scholarship awards for this
year include three children of DC 37 members. They are Shubha Bhar,
attending Cornell University, daughter of Local 375 member Bijay
Bhar; Jimmy Mark, attending Columbia University, son of Local 372
member Ya Jun Mark; and Iva Pokorny, attending New York University,
daughter of Local 1501s Yvette Pokorny.
Ms. Bhar dreams of becoming a bioengineer to apply my knowledge
of math and science to solve environmental problems. Ms. Pokorny
is majoring in biochemistry with the goal of becoming a doctor.
The young Mr. Mark, who also excels at math and science, hopes to
work with unions. Since my mother joined, I have learned that
unions can have a positive impact on the lives of their members,
he said. Local 372, DC 37 and AFSCME mean security for my
family.