ALUMNUS PAYS ‘DEBT’ TO ALMA MATER AND MENTORS WITH $100,000 GIFT TO UNIVERSITY

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Also offers $5,000 in cash prizes for best student organizations’ social programs

David Payne ’95LINCOLN UNIVERSITY, PA – When David Payne first arrived at The Lincoln University in 1991, he had completed 10th grade, a General Equivalency Diploma and a four and half year stint in the United States Army. Throughout his Lincoln tenure, he said he kept two things in his wallet, a $1 food stamp and a $1 million check he had written himself – the two items meant to keep him grounded and focused.

And it paid off. Payne, now a successful entrepreneur, announced yesterday at the university’s monthly faculty meeting that he can now begin to pay a ‘debt’ to his alma mater and specific faculty, administrators and a coach—who he credits with his transformation and success—with a $100,000 gift to the university to establish the Dream Deferred Endowed Scholarship and another $5,000 in cash prizes to recognize campus organizations with the best social programs for the upcoming year in honor of slain Ferguson, Missouri teen Michael Brown.

“Some debt is good,” said the 1995 summa cum laude graduate and class valedictorian. “Debt is what makes you get up in the morning and brings you home at night.”

Payne, who was accompanied by business partners, Harvey Grant and Steve Gerald, not only praised his Lincoln mentors in his remarks, but designated them to establish the criteria and select the recipients for the endowed scholarship from their respective areas.

They were: Jernice Lea, who was responsible for him attending Lincoln, for the Master’s in Human Services program, Dr. Levi Nwachuku for history, Dr. William K. Dadson for business & entrepreneurial studies, Dr. Emmanuel Babatunde for the sciences and Prof. Cyrus Jones, also a former longtime university track coach, for athletics, with particular priority to track & field athletes.

“There was this presence, these people, no matter how bad things got, they would recharge your batteries.”

He also recognized one current and other former faculty members who impacted his life as well, including: Dr. Denise Gaither-Hardy, Dr. Goro Nagase, the late-Dr. Frank “Tick” Coleman and Dr. Judith Thomas.

“This is not about me,” he said referring to the establishment of the scholarship. “It’s about them. This is the first step to bring to fruition some of the goals I had as a student, to give that speech that was 25 years in the making and to acknowledge those great people who were the single biggest influence to my life and the life I can provide my children.”

Jones, who spoke briefly at a luncheon in the alumnus’ honor, said Payne’s recognition of him as a mentor and influence was like “somebody putting me on the top of the Empire State Building.”

Kimberly Lloyd ‘94, chair of the university’s board of trustees, who attended Lincoln at the same time as Payne, emphasized the faculty’s unexpected impact on every student.

“You never know who you have in the midst of your classroom,” Lloyd said. “It’s not always the student who sits in the front and has the answer to every question. It can be the person who just sits and listens to everything you say and does the work who makes the difference.”

Payne, who received his bachelor’s degree in accounting and graduated summa cum laude from Lincoln, later earned an online master’s degree in holistic nutrition elsewhere as well as several certifications. Having worked for accounting firm, KPMG, and later the Kellogg Company, he also worked in the health and wellness industry for several years.

However, he said he had his greatest success with a snack food business he started and later sold for a significant sum. Since then, he has been involved in a number of business ventures, including real estate and other investments, but his primary business is Capital Beverage, a water distribution company in the Washington Metropolitan area.

“I was fortunate to get an opportunity to come to Lincoln and then prove I deserved to be here,” he said. “Now is my chance to help other young people who are seeking that same opportunity. It’s our time to make good on the promises that were not kept to us that we questioned.”

EDITOR’S NOTE: ‘THE LINCOLN UNIVERSITY’ IS NOW THE OFFICIAL NAME FOR THE INSTITUTION FORMERLY REFERRED TO AS ‘LINCOLN UNIVERSITY’ OR ‘LINCOLN UNIVERSITY OF PA’ AND SHOULD BE ADHERED TO IN ALL REFERENCES.


Founded in 1854, The Lincoln University (PA) is the FIRST of four Lincoln Universities in the world and is the nation’s FIRST degree-granting Historically Black College and University (HBCU). The University combines the elements of a liberal arts and science-based undergraduate curriculum along with select graduate programs to meet the needs of those living in a highly technological and global society. Today, Lincoln, which enrolls a diverse student body of approximately 2,000 men and women, possesses an international reputation for preparing and producing world-class leaders such as Thurgood Marshall, the FIRST African American U.S. Supreme Court Justice; Lillian Fishburne, the FIRST African American woman promoted to Rear Admiral in the U.S. Navy; Langston Hughes,the noted poet; Kwame Nkrumah, the FIRST president of Ghana; Nnamdi Azikiwe, the FIRST president of Nigeria and a myriad of others.

 

Lincoln University, the nation’s first degree-granting Historically Black College and University (HBCU), educates and empowers students to lead their communities and change the world. Lincoln offers a rigorous liberal arts education to a diverse student body of approximately 2,200 men and women in more than 35 undergraduate and graduate programs.