Thirty years after Alex Haley conducted an interview with jazz trumpeter Miles Davis, which inaugurated the Playboy magazine interview series, the Chicago-based Playboy Foundation has created the Alex Haley Playboy Interview Scholarship in Magazine Journalism. The scholarship would provide financial assistance to minority students at the University of Tennessee who are either enrolled as full-time undergraduate upperclassmen or master's degree candidates at UT's journalism school.
One student each year will be selected to receive the $5,000 scholarship which will be awarded on the basis of three criteria: academic performance (the students must have a 3.0 grade point average as the minimum, equivalent to a B), professional promise, and financial need. Along with the scholarship is a paid summer internship in Playboy's New York office. However, says Cleo Wilson, the foundation's executive director, the student will be responsible for providing his or her own housing during the internship. Applications for the scholarship must be submitted to the university by January of each year. The recipient will start the internship in June and will be given the scholarship the following September.
Haley was the author of the famed Roots family saga, which later became a classic television miniseries. At the time of his death earlier this year, he was an adjunct professor at the University of Tennessee's Knoxville campus. He is regarded by Christie Hefner, Playboy Enterprises chairwoman and CEO, as "the closest to the soul of the Playboy Interview."
Others interviewed by Haley for the magazine include American Nazi Party leader George Lincoln Rockwell, Malcolm X, and Quincy Jones.
This article was originally published in the New York Amsterdam News (October 31, 1992).
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Alex Haley Journalism Scholarship Created By Playboy Magazine
Labels:
Alex Haley,
American Journalism,
Journalism,
Playboy,
Scholarships
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