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CSI/CUNY News Release |
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For Immediate Release |
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CSI STUDENT WINS CUNY’S MOST PRESTIGIOUS SCHOLARSHIP
Staten Island, NY – December 6, 2004 – Eileen Brown, a
suddenly disabled single parent fighting for survival, is one of
eleven students in The City University of New York (CUNY) that was
awarded a Belle Zeller Scholarship in November by the Professional
Staff Congress.
But Brown, whose award pays her tuition as long as she is an
undergraduate at CUNY, had few thoughts of going to college after
high school, desiring only to be a wife and mother. Today, this
Westerleigh resident is a senior at the College of Staten Island
(CSI) with a 3.966 grade point average.
Dr. Adrienne Siegel, the CSI faculty adviser who helps CSI students
prepare their applications, has called Brown “one of our college’s
most accomplished individuals.”
After a twenty-year marriage, Brown was diagnosed with a progressive
eye disease that has diminished her eyesight to mere light
perception, and is now looking to the future through different eyes.
“As devastating as my diagnosis was, I chose to see what the world
had to offer rather than what it lacked,” Brown wrote in her
scholarship application essay. “I came to understand that having a
disability meant that I had to learn not what I would be unable to
do, but rather, I would have to train myself to do things
differently. Most important, I realized that I could survive as an
independent person who could use my experience to help others.”
Brown has assisted the New York State Attorney General’s Office in
sting operations that were created to challenge and evaluate the
effectiveness of the Americans with Disabilities Act, and worked in
conjunction with reporters from the New York Daily News where Brown
helped expose problems with the city’s Access-A-Ride program.
Not content with these accomplishments, she continues to promote
independence for the disabled by serving as a volunteer at the
Staten Island Center for Independent Living and with the Guide Dog
Users of America.
Realizing that the world is a connected place, she also attends
Moving Forward, a support group that enables visually impaired
individuals to vent, vocalize and solve problems affecting them.
Eager to share her personal struggle with others, Brown derives
pride from demonstrating her guide dog Jitney’s intelligence and
abilities at schools, community groups and other organizations. Each
year she and Jitney participate in a ten-mile walk to increase
awareness and to raise funds to train guide dogs.
In addition to the Belle Zeller, Brown has also received the CSI
James Ortiz Memorial award for academic excellence, the CSI’s
Student government service award, the American Association of
University Women’s Merit Scholarship, and the Patricia Milton
Scholarship from Guiding Eyes for the Blind.
“Eileen is living proof that a disability does not condemn an
individual to a disabled life…and that physical problems do not have
to hinder one’s ability to help others,” said Siegel. “Eileen
realizes that she still has a long journey ahead of her.”
Once she completes her Bachelor’s degree, she plans to enroll in a
Masters program in Social Work or Rehabilitative Counseling.
When asked about her inspiration, Brown quotes the late 18th Century
writer Hugh White: “The past cannot be changed; the future is in
your power.”
BACKGROUND:
The Professional Staff Congress is the union that represents more
than 20,000 faculty and staff at The City University of New York
(CUNY). The Belle Zeller Scholarship Trust Fund was established in
1979 by the PSC to honor its founding president, Belle Zeller,
Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Brooklyn College, where
she taught for over 40 years. To qualify for a Belle Zeller,
candidates must have at least a 3.75 grade point average,
demonstrate a record of service to their college and community and
be enrolled in a full-time academic program.
The College of Staten Island (CSI) is a senior college of The City
University of New York (CUNY), the nation’s leading urban
university. CSI offers 35 academic programs, 15 graduate degree
programs, and challenging doctoral programs to 12,000 students.
The 204-acre landscaped campus of CSI, the largest in NYC, is fully
accessible and contains an advanced, networked infrastructure to
support technology-based teaching, learning, and research. For more
information, visit www.csi.cuny.edu
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