Larry Cox, executive director of Amnesty International USA, will speak about its 50th anniversary, and four 91̽»¨students will receive awards at the on Monday, May 2.
Scheduled for 6 p.m. in the Walker Ames Room in Kane Hall, the event is sponsored by the 91̽»¨Center for Human Rights, which will mark its second anniversary.

Abby Temple and Melanie Robinson, who lead the Kenya Human Rights Group at the UW, will use their $1,000 awards to help a primary school In Loitokitok, Kenya implement a new curriculum and a learning resource center. Temple is a junior majoring in history and minoring in African studies and global health. Robinson is a senior majoring in the comparative history of ideas and philosophy.
Those two awards come from the . A 91̽»¨graduate who died in a 2009 traffic accident, Caldwell was a volunteer for Fair Trade in Tourism South Africa, which advocates for fair wages, fair purchasing and respect for human rights. Caldwell also had worked on a Guatemala scholarship program at the UW, and helped push the University to use 100 percent fair-trade coffee.
Geoff Morgan and Ana Lottis, the other two student winners, will receive $1,300 apiece from the , which recognizes Osheroffs dedication as a human rights activist.
Morgan will work in Guatemala, helping gauge impacts of agroindustrial plantations. He is a sixth-year student, planning to graduate this quarter in civil and environmental engineering as well as international studies. Lottis will work with former political prisoners in El Salvador. She is a senior majoring in Latin American and Caribbean studies and minoring in human rights.