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Lino Lakes hosts veterans dinner

BY SARA MARIE MOORE STAFF WRITER

SARA MARIE MOORE | PRESS PUBLICATIONS

A free spaghetti dinner for veterans and their families was hosted by the Lino Lakes Beyond the Yellow Ribbon steering committee Feb. 4.

LINO LAKES — The Beyond the Yellow Ribbon steering committee is well on its way to achieving the designation of Yellow Ribbon City. On Feb. 4 it hosted a free spaghetti dinner for military members, veterans and their families at St. Joseph's Catholic Church. The dinner offered the opportunity for networking. Several veteran service agency representatives were on hand to give advice and recommend resources. The Beyond the Yellow Ribbon Network is a program to connect service members and their families with community support, training, services and resources. It was started by Army Chaplain John Morris, a Minnesotan, in 2008. He wanted to increase the awareness of the military and rally community support. The network offers

American Indian theater presents contemporary storyline

communities the opportunity to be designated a Yellow Ribbon city or county if they offer designated support to service members. Lino Lakes is currently in the process of being officially designated a Yellow Ribbon City. Over 200 cities in Minnesota have received the designation. The dinner was one step in the 16step process to receive that official designation from the governor. “We are still working on our action plan to become a Yellow Ribbon community,” said Aaron Hoska, steering committee member. The action plan will outline how Lino Lakes plans to provide support to military and their families. The committee hopes to submit its action plan in April or May, and hopes to be recognized by August. The steering committee now has a website and phone number up and

BY SARA MARIE MOORE STAFF WRITER

Benzireg's host family from Lino Lakes has a 10-year-old girl. Benzireg has one older sister back home in Morocco, so she found her sibling experience switched around here. “I had an older sister,” she said. “I would rely on her a lot. It is the opposite here. It has been going really great with her.”

LINO LAKES — Centennial Indian Education is hosting Raving Native Productions Feb. 19. The American Indian theater troupe will be performing “Bring the Children Home” by Marcie R. Rendon. The play presents a story about a young child who is searching for meaning and identity. The child fi nds their identity by breaking free of the pull toward Western society and relying on spirits and elders. Playwright Rendon lives in the Twin Cities and is an enrolled member of the White Earth Anishinaabe Nation and is a former recipient of the Loft’s Inroads Writers of Color Award. “Bring the Children Home” debuted at the Fringe Festival in 2015. “It is a Native theater without the beads and feathers and flutes and drums,” said Trisha Garvie, American Indian education coordinator. “I like to bring in the contemporary. It is about the importance of a child having a name even during contemporary times.” Garvie visits every school in the Centennial district once a month to teach American Indian history, culture and heritage. “I bring culture and a little bit of language and history to our students,” she said. The program is open to all students who are enrolled in a tribe or have a parent or grandparent enrolled in a tribe. There are about 90 students enrolled in the program throughout the district who represent 15 different tribes, including 60 students with Ojibwe heritage, 15 with Dakota heritage, and a few with Athabascan, Karuk

SEE DIVERSITY AT CENTENNIAL, PAGE 3

SEE AMERICAN INDIAN, PAGE 3

SEE VETERANS DINNER PAGE 2

SARA MARIE MOORE | PRESS PUBLICATIONS

Asmae Benzireg from Morocco, left, and Lucia Scaringella from Italy joined the Cougar family this school year as exchange students.

Exchange students bring diversity to Centennial BY SARA MARIE MOORE STAFF WRITER

CIRCLE PINES — Asmae Benzireg and Lucia Scaringella look just like any other Centennial high school student. But if you strike up a conversation you will learn they are exchange students from Morocco and Italy, respectively. They are sponsored by

American Field Service Intercultural Programs (AFS). “We appreciate the enrichment ladies like this bring to our school,” said Brian Bohne, AFS advisor and World Culture Club advisor. “We are a little bit isolated here in the northern suburbs, so it is even more wonderful to bring the diversity from abroad.” Bohne was an AFS student in Brazil in 1974.

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