
 Arthur Koenig meets with students at
Amherst College after the announcement of the Koenig Scholarship
Fund, which will provide scholarships for students from Latin
America and Africa, support their academic program, and sponsor
annual recruitment trips to those regions. With Koenig is Elvis
Maradzike ’10 of Harare, Zimbabwe.
Davis Philanthropy Leverages Other
Donors
One
objective of the Davis UWC Scholars Program is to leverage the
philanthropy of others. Here
are two examples, one at Amherst and one at the University of
Florida.
At Amherst College and the University of Florida, new scholarship
initiatives inspired by or modeled on the Davis UWC Scholars
Program will provide exciting support for the studies of promising
international students.
A pledge of $6 million over the next six years by alumnus
Arthur W. Koenig ‘66 is enabling Amherst College to create
the Koenig Scholarship Program. Koenig calls the program an
investment: It will benefit talented students of limited means
from Latin America and Africa and also will support annual
recruitment trips to those regions.
Koenig hopes not only that the scholarship recipients will
succeed, both at Amherst and in their lives, but also “that
the students and staff at Amherst are influenced by these students.” Inspiring
Koenig’s gift, in part, was a recent recommendation by
Amherst’s faculty that the college increase the number
of international students on campus and extend its need-blind
financial-aid policies to those students.
“The structure of the Koenig Scholars Program is modeled
on the Davis UWC Scholars Program in several ways,” said
Robyn Piggott, special assistant to Amherst President Anthony
W. Marx. “It will support entering cohorts of five students
from Latin America or Africa each year, meeting their full
demonstrated financial need for all their four years at the
college. The program also provides some funding for admission
staff recruitment trips to both continents each year.
“Mr. Koenig’s unique twist on the UWC model, which
we are all very excited about, is providing small stipends
to African and Latin American students who do recruitment work
at underserved secondary schools in their home countries in
the summer vacation,” she added. “This will create
a very powerful partnership between students and admission
staff.”
“Personally,” Arthur Koenig said, “I would
like to step out of my usual life by watching the development
of these students.”
At the University of Florida, emerita professor of education
Dr. Margaret Early was inspired by a lunch she had with Davis
UWC Scholars from Italy and Nepal. Later she met several more
Scholars, and decided to fund a portion of one Davis UWC Scholar’s
education through a gift to the University of Florida Foundation.
“I prefer not to know which one!” said Early,
who continues to enjoy getting together for meals with various
Davis UWC Scholars. A lifelong educator, Early believes the
Davis UWC Scholars Program is doing something important.
“Mixing young people from many different nationalities
and parts of the world — that seems like a very good idea,” she
said.
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