Mikayla Consalvo: My time at NYU law was defined by
AnBryce. I got to law school and I'd
never had any lawyers in my family. Everything was kind of a new experience to me.
Raymond Diggs: Coming to a school like NYU with
resources that are provided by the
AnBryce program, I knew it would
definitely put me on the path towards success.
Richard Diggs: I came to law school with a lot of plans, a lot of things I wanted to do. One of
those things is work at a big law firm
here in New York City, another thing I
want to do is get a judicial clerkship
after law school and I think the AnBryce
program has afforded me the
relationships to accomplish those things
in a much easier fashion than I would
have done on my own.
Damaris Hernández: The AnBryce program opened doors and provided opportunities that I never knew existed.
I sit here today as the first Latina partner
at Cravath and when I sat on my stoop in
Brooklyn years ago I didn't know what
that meant.
Couldn't imagine what that would look
like, let alone think that it would be me.
I would not have been able to afford
law school and to continue supporting my
family without the full tuition
scholarship provided by AnBryce.
Mikayla Consalvo: It's kind of more than an official thing, a formal program, a line on your resume.
It's, it's this thing you have, it's this family
you have. Your AnBryce family to call it.
And I think that's why we think of it
kind of in a special way.
Beatrice Welters: The relationship that we build with each one of these students, there's not a place we
wouldn't go if they were in trouble or
ill, they are like my son or daughter.
That's how I feel and I believe they
feel that way as well.
Evan Chesler: I think Tony and B are involved in the program in a way that is really extraordinary. They don't just
give their money, they give themselves
to the program.
Judge Raymond Lohier: I have seen with my own eyes their total commitment to the program
and not only to the program, when I say the program, it is really the students.
Damaris Hernández: Tony and B were just invaluable mentors,
and I wanted to be them when I grew up
right, I wanted to be someone who
understood, who could give back, who
wanted to give back and then could
because they had reached some level of
success.
Anthony Welters: Success is not driven by one person, it's driven by a group of people and if you
can map it out and create a community
where the members of that community are
really committed to each other's success,
the sky's the limit and I think in many
instances that's what's happened here at
NYU and inside the AnBryce program.
