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51 Scholarships Awarded
What does it look like when students receive the opportunity to pursue their dreams? On a Tuesday night in South Minneapolis it looked like an auditorium filled past capacity to celebrate 51 teenagers on their way to college.
Families, mentors, teachers, and neighbors gathered at Urban Ventures to recognize the fifth year of Act Six cadres. These scholars are emerging leaders in their communities who received full-need four-year scholarships to one of six partner Minnesota colleges and universities. The Act Six program recognizes both the scholars’ contribution and their potential to change their neighborhood.
Laughter, tears of joy, smiles, and a near-tangible feeling of hope filled the room. Senior staff from their respective colleges congratulated each scholarship recipient. The students then stood before the large crowd to offer a brief word of thanks and aspiration.
“I want to be an example to the young girls in my neighborhood that they don’t have to settle for anything less than their dreams,” one scholar shared, “to show them women can be doctors and CEOs and engineers and leaders in our community.”
Another scholar told the crowd, “I am going to study psychology to work with children who have been abused and had their childhood stolen from them, to restore their peace.”
The 2019 class was as diverse in motivation as it was in heritage. Many students shared in both English and their native tongue, including Spanish, Thai, Hmong, and French. Some scholars shared their experience growing up in refugee camps, others described their struggles right here in the metro. They each spoke with pride and dignity about where they came from and where they are going.
The students weren’t the only ones given a chance to share. The event concluded with “community shout-outs” where friends and family encouraged their college-bound loved ones.
A senior community member commented on their own experience breaking down educational barriers. “I want to say to each of you who are the first in your family to go to college, so was I. It was many years ago, and most people weren’t sure they wanted to take a chance on me. Thank God they did. And thank goodness you are getting the opportunity now, too.”
One mother beamed as she addressed her child. “We dreamed of this when we came to this country. Your father loves you, I love you, your siblings love you. We are so supportive of you and so proud of you.”
Act Six Program Manager Miriam Medina reminded the scholars that the hard work is just beginning. The program’s ongoing support, leadership training, and connection throughout the college experience comes with high expectations. “You are not here because you are finished products,” Miriam challenged them. “If you work hard we know you will be great leaders. Everyone here is supporting you and not settling for less than your best.”
The evening ended with hugs, congratulations, and cupcakes. Families mingled in the lobby, and students from past cadres greeted their new classmates. The evening was a wonderful culmination of a thorough process that filtered nearly 500 applicants down to the 51 recipients.
The Act Six program is a key part of Urban Ventures’ cradle-to-career pipeline, which provides holistic support for students and their families from birth to adulthood.
North Central Airlines - 1963
(via NCA DC3 N28385 Midway 759 | Mel Lawrence | Flickr)
North Central Airlines DC3
Midway Airport
Chicago
July 1959
Photo by Mel Lawrence
Inaugural NCAA Women's Wrestling Champions
Team title went to McKendree, Illinois with 171 pts 2nd - Iowa (166) 3rd - North Central (123.5) 4th - Grand Valley St (110.5) 5th - Presbyterian (83.5)
Minneapolis, MN – One year after falling in the national championship game on their home court, #1 North Central University finished the sto
Congratulations to North Central for winning their first-ever NCCAA Division II National Championship!
North Central: 2024 NCAA Division III Football National Champions
HOUSTON -- Luke Lehnen accounted for five touchdowns Sunday night and North Central beat Mount Union 41-25 to win its third Division III national championship.
The Cardinals (15-0) appeared in their fifth consecutive Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl.
Lehnen threw two of his four touchdown passes to Jacob Paradee and has 162 in his career, tied with John Matocha (D-II Colorado School of Mines, 2019 to 2023) for college football's all-divisions record.
Mount Union's Tyler Echeverry ran 29 yards untouched to open the scoring -- the first time North Central has trailed this season.
Lehnen, who went 57-2 over his college career, threw a 24-yard touchdown pass to Myles Walton to make it 7-7 with 4:35 left in the first quarter. It gave Lehnen 159 career TD passes, breaking Braxton Plunk's (Mount Union, 2019 to 2023) D-III record.
After the Purple Raiders failed to convert on fourth down deep in North Central territory, Lehnen scored on a 16-yard run about seven minutes into the second quarter to make it 14-7 and the Cardinals led the rest of the way.
Mount Union (14-1) made trips into the red zone on four consecutive possessions but scored just once, a 30-yard field goal by Ivan Maric with 3:57 remaining in the first half.
The Purple Raiders (75) and North Central (47) have won a combined 122 consecutive regular-season games.
Mount Union has won 13 D-III championships in 23 title-game appearances, both of which are records. North Central -- which captured its first title in 2019, the first championship-game berth in program history -- beat the Purple Raiders 28-21 in the 2022 title game.
Echeverry, who had 68 yards rushing and a touchdown on eight carries in the first quarter, finished with 20 carries for 83 yards.
The North Central has abundance of natural resources, arable land, hardworking and committed people. But we lack leaders with vision and purpose. If we had the likes of Wike in terms of doggedness, determination, sticking to election promises while dealing with problems at hand the North Central would have been a gem in the Sahara. But we are left with leaders who lack priorities and are not even ashamed to stand with their performing mates from the south south and South west. Look at what Wike and Sanwo-olu are doing with their states.