Dennis Miller
What about my Member
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- Mar 13, 2003
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Delta Announces First Recipient of the Coretta Scott King/Delta Air Lines Scholarship
Friday April 28, 1:12 pm ET
Student interested in passing racial discrimination policy
ATLANTA, April 28, 2006 (PRIMEZONE) -- Delta Air Lines is acknowledging the birthday of the late Coretta Scott King by announcing the first recipient of the Coretta Scott King/Delta Air Lines Scholarship. India Davis, a 20-year-old theatre major from Seattle, Wash., is the first winner and will be introduced Saturday during commencement exercises at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio.
Davis will receive $10,000 as part of Delta's effort to acknowledge the widow of civil rights leader Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The scholarship is the first of five $10,000 gifts to students from the Delta Air Lines Foundation, a company-managed giving system that is a separate entity from Delta.
``Delta is delighted to provide students like India an opportunity to further their academic goals and fulfill their dreams much the way Mrs. King did,'' said Scarlet Pressley-Brown, general manager - Global Diversity and Community Affairs at Delta. ``In addition, our partnership with Antioch will allow many students to travel to locations around the world to fulfill their undergraduate requirements in community service.''
Davis, a sophomore, is a member of the Coretta Scott King Center committee and is interested in working with the group to pass the Antioch Racial Discrimination Prevention Policy, which would be the first policy of its kind in the country. The theatre major will study in Mali this summer on an Antioch Education Abroad Program.
``I have always been a performer, acting and singing wherever I went,'' said Davis. ``When I came to Antioch, I didn't think I wanted to be a theater major. But for me, performance is a vessel through which I can explore and claim my own identity while creating social change.''
The Coretta Scott King/Delta Air Lines Scholarship, which was created shortly after Mrs. King died in January, supports the work of the Coretta Scott King Center for Cultural & Intellectual Freedom, which focuses its efforts on applied ethics, including the philosophy of human rights and equality at Antioch. Mrs. King, who lent her support to democracy movements worldwide and served as a consultant on nonviolence to many world leaders, graduated from Antioch with a degree in music. Mrs. King would have celebrated her 79th birthday on April 27.
The Delta Air Lines Foundation will provide additional in-kind support of $50,000 a year for five years to provide travel on Delta Air Lines for undergraduate students to fulfill public service requirements and expand advocacy for civil rights and human rights efforts around the world. The Foundation's gift also will provide travel for college symposium participants conducting lectures related to King's work.
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Friday April 28, 1:12 pm ET
Student interested in passing racial discrimination policy
ATLANTA, April 28, 2006 (PRIMEZONE) -- Delta Air Lines is acknowledging the birthday of the late Coretta Scott King by announcing the first recipient of the Coretta Scott King/Delta Air Lines Scholarship. India Davis, a 20-year-old theatre major from Seattle, Wash., is the first winner and will be introduced Saturday during commencement exercises at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio.
Davis will receive $10,000 as part of Delta's effort to acknowledge the widow of civil rights leader Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The scholarship is the first of five $10,000 gifts to students from the Delta Air Lines Foundation, a company-managed giving system that is a separate entity from Delta.
``Delta is delighted to provide students like India an opportunity to further their academic goals and fulfill their dreams much the way Mrs. King did,'' said Scarlet Pressley-Brown, general manager - Global Diversity and Community Affairs at Delta. ``In addition, our partnership with Antioch will allow many students to travel to locations around the world to fulfill their undergraduate requirements in community service.''
Davis, a sophomore, is a member of the Coretta Scott King Center committee and is interested in working with the group to pass the Antioch Racial Discrimination Prevention Policy, which would be the first policy of its kind in the country. The theatre major will study in Mali this summer on an Antioch Education Abroad Program.
``I have always been a performer, acting and singing wherever I went,'' said Davis. ``When I came to Antioch, I didn't think I wanted to be a theater major. But for me, performance is a vessel through which I can explore and claim my own identity while creating social change.''
The Coretta Scott King/Delta Air Lines Scholarship, which was created shortly after Mrs. King died in January, supports the work of the Coretta Scott King Center for Cultural & Intellectual Freedom, which focuses its efforts on applied ethics, including the philosophy of human rights and equality at Antioch. Mrs. King, who lent her support to democracy movements worldwide and served as a consultant on nonviolence to many world leaders, graduated from Antioch with a degree in music. Mrs. King would have celebrated her 79th birthday on April 27.
The Delta Air Lines Foundation will provide additional in-kind support of $50,000 a year for five years to provide travel on Delta Air Lines for undergraduate students to fulfill public service requirements and expand advocacy for civil rights and human rights efforts around the world. The Foundation's gift also will provide travel for college symposium participants conducting lectures related to King's work.
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