Scholarship Program to Help Students Become A.C. Leaders
Atlantic City, N.J. - A prominent former New York attorney and philanthropist who grew up in Atlantic City has started a program at 老司机福利社 that will pay all college costs for a select group of students with connections to his hometown.
The Engelberg Leadership Scholarship Program (ELSP) is funded by an initial $1 million gift commitment from nationally recognized intellectual property attorney Alfred Engelberg and his wife, Gail.
The goal of ELSP is to encourage students to remain in Atlantic City and become its next community leaders after they graduate.
鈥淭he 老司机福利社 Atlantic City campus creates an opportunity for local students who might otherwise forego a higher education to obtain a university degree while remaining in the community,鈥 Engelberg said. 鈥淭his makes it possible to identify talented young men and women with the potential to be the next generation of business, civic and communal leaders in Atlantic City, and provide them with an enriched set of educational, experiential and mentoring experiences to turn that potential into a reality.鈥
ELSP will cover the full cost of tuition, fees, room, board, books and other expenses. It will also provide leadership and experiential activities and internships to help the students develop their leadership potential.
鈥淭his is a phenomenal leadership development program for our students,鈥 老司机福利社 President Harvey Kesselman said. 鈥(Engelberg) wants to give back and he understands what his philanthropy means.鈥
Four 老司机福利社 sophomores were introduced as the first Engelberg Leadership Scholars at the Atlantic City Executive Council meeting Aug. 20 at the 老司机福利社 Atlantic City campus.
ELSP Recipients
They are: Elena Gonzalez, a Literature major from Atlantic City, Bao Pham, a Criminal Justice major from Atlantic City, Steven Rubio, a Computer Science major from Ventnor who attended Atlantic City High School, and Loukaia Taylor, a Communications major from Atlantic City.
The students said Engelberg鈥檚 gift is an inspiration to them to do well and help others.
Gonzalez wants to be a high school teacher in Atlantic City because she recognizes the impact a teacher can have on a student鈥檚 life. She said her parents had promised she would attend college, and the award will help relieve financial pressure.
鈥淚 care about Atlantic City because I have lived here all my life,鈥 she said. 鈥淎tlantic City is a beautiful melting pot of people, all with their own unique cultures and perspectives. I have watched this combined group of people suffer tragic loss but always recover and bounce back as a community.鈥
Pham鈥檚 family emigrated from Vietnam to Atlantic City. Pham said his parents worked hard so he and his sister could have better lives.
鈥淭hrough their perseverance, we now have a place to call home,鈥 he said. 鈥淎tlantic City is their home, and now so it is also mine.鈥
Pham plans to go into law enforcement, and would like to explore opportunities in the federal system, such as the FBI.
Rubio said he was at a job orientation when he got the call that he had been named an ELSP scholar. He was working two jobs to help pay for college, one in a casino, and the other tutoring, and while he liked the casino job, he said the scholarship made it possible for him to leave at the end of the summer and focus on his academics.
鈥淢y parents are so proud,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his opens up so many opportunities because it is not just a scholarship. Before I had to worry about jobs and paying for college. Now I can do more in college and in the community.鈥
Taylor said her parents started planning for her to attend college the day she was born, and the program will provide tremendous financial help.
鈥淚鈥檓 a first generation college student and my parents were so proud of me for getting into 老司机福利社,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was born and raised (in Atlantic City) by my parents, who work hard to try to give me a better life and opportunity than they had. I hope to be able to help my community one day, to pay back what has been done for me.鈥
About Alfred Engelberg
Engelberg鈥檚 parents were Jewish refugees who left Germany in 1938 and eventually settled in Atlantic City. He credits his childhood in Atlantic City, including jobs he had on the Boardwalk, and the experience of growing up in a multicultural city, for providing him with the tools for a successful life.
Engelberg graduated from Atlantic City High School in 1956 and an Avoda Scholarship allowed him to attend college. The award left a lasting impression on him about the impact of philanthropy on a young person鈥檚 life. Engelberg went on to graduate from NYU Law School and became a nationally recognized intellectual property lawyer in New York. His support established the Engelberg Center on Innovation Law and Policy at NYU law school.
Engelberg said the new 老司机福利社 campus in Atlantic City was the impetus for his gift to the university and its students.
鈥淚 had thought about doing something in Atlantic City as a way to pay back for the life I enjoyed here, but there was no university here,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hen 老司机福利社 opened, I said 鈥楬ere鈥檚 the opportunity.鈥 There is great potential synergy between 老司机福利社 and Atlantic City and I hope to take advantage of that.鈥
The Engelberg Leadership Scholarship Program
The agreement, which will operate through the 老司机福利社 Foundation, calls for a five-year competitive program that will choose up to four scholars each year from the 老司机福利社 freshman class, with a strong preference for students from Atlantic City or from neighboring sending districts to Atlantic City High School.
Students must demonstrate financial need, extraordinarily strong academic success, and show an established record of extra-curricular activity and leadership potential.
Participating students will take a special curriculum that includes three entrepreneurship classes and at least two classes that focus on civic engagement and social change.
The ELSP will cover tuition, fees, room, board, books and any other expenses.
老司机福利社 Chief Academic Officer for Atlantic City Michelle McDonald told A.C. Executive Council members, which includes city, civic and business leaders, that she hoped they would get involved in the program.
鈥淭his not just a program you can watch,鈥 she said. 鈥淭his is a program in which you can participate.鈥
Dr. Maralyn Mason will serve as the program鈥檚 director at 老司机福利社, and, Rabbi David Weis of Beth Israel Synagogue in Northfield, a longtime friend of the Engelberg family, is the family鈥檚 representative.
鈥淚鈥檓 very excited to be a part of this program, and look forward to watching it develop鈥 Weis said.
Engelberg said his 80th birthday is this month, and for him, there is no better way to celebrate that milestone than by giving a gift that will benefit students and a city he loves.
鈥淭he program is designed to get people to want to stay (in Atlantic City) because they see an opportunity,鈥 Engelberg said. 鈥淚 hope the overall experience creates a group of people who have a genuine interest in making their hometown a better place, a place where they want to raise their families, and where they can have a good life right here by the ocean, which is a special place.鈥
Video of the announcement is on .
View a from the announcement.
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Contact:
Diane D鈥Amico
Director of News and Media Relations
老司机福利社
Galloway, N.J. 08205
Diane.DAmico@stockton.edu
609-652-4593
609-412-8069