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BANDANA PROJECT: MVHS program honored nationally PAGE 2
Mounds View preparing for school year decision
Shoreview woman celebrates 100th birthday BY ELIZABETH CALLEN EDITOR
BY BRUCE STRAND CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Awaiting a decision on what form the academic school year will take during the pandemic, schools in Minnesota have been preparing for all scenarios. A Mounds View school official said the school’s preferred option is clear but would be “very difficult” to implement. Gov. Tim Walz, in partnership and consultation with the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) and Minnesota Department of Health (MDH), is expected to make an announcement by July 27. Schools have been directed by MDE to choose between three options: 1) In-person learning for all students 2) Hybrid learning with strict social distancing and capacity limits 3) Distance learning only. Assistant Superintendent Dr. Jeff Ridlehoover cited option one as the ideal, if at all possible. “From the beginning, and for a variety of reasons, the administration, teachers, and support staff have indicated that our preference is to have our students back in-person,” Ridlehoover stated.
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Though she had to stay several feet away from most of her guests, Shoreview resident Marian Wocken rang in her 100th birthday July 10 with a party for friends and family. Wocken, who was born and raised in St. Cloud, was one of seven children in what her daughter Joan Gordon called a “very active and outgoing family.” She attended Cathedral High School, where her time in the school’s drum corps led her to fall in love with music. Wocken played the snare drum and “enjoyed playing so much that she and two girlfriends started a drum corps for the grade school-aged children staying at the St. Cloud Orphanage,” Gordon said. “The local veterans organization supplied drums and Scotch plaid uniforms.” After high school, Wocken attended St. Cloud Business College and moved to the East Coast after marrying her husband, Adolph. During her time there, Wocken “was always hoping for a transfer back to Minnesota,” according to Gordon. That transfer eventually came, bringing the growing Wocken family back to the Midwest. In 1963, the Wockens moved to Shoreview. “Mom happily built the house she still lives in on Richmond Avenue,” Gordon said. “At that time, the road in front was not yet paved, and the house sat by itself in a grassy field.” That same house was the site of
Shoreview resident Marian Wocken celebrated her 100th birthday July 10 with a surprise pop-up concert planned by her family and friends.
SEE 100TH BIRTHDAY, PAGE 15
Student launches organization to aid restaurant, hospital workers
BY ELIZABETH CALLEN EDITOR
The COVID-19 pandemic has hit the restaurant and health care industries especially hard. That’s why one local high school student has launched an initiative for residents to simultaneously help out people working in both fields. Sruthi Subramanian is a rising senior at Mounds View High School. She is
also the founder of the Twin Cities branch of the Meal Bridge, which was started in Atlanta. It has since grown to include branches in four other metro areas, including Minneapolis-St. Paul, throughout the country. Meal Bridge serves as a bridge between restaurants and hospitals, Subramanian said. “Basically, it’s a way for individuals in our community to support local restaurants and health care workers on
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the frontline,” she explained. “Through the Meal Bridge, individuals can select a restaurant of their choice and sign up for a specific hospital unit and date to donate the meal to. That meal can be breakfast, lunch or dinner.” After hearing about the Atlanta-based organization, Subramanian reached out to the founder, also a high school student, for guidance. Shortly after, she launched a website and got to work.
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Subramanian said her motivation to bring the Meal Bridge to the Twin Cities metro area simply came from a desire to make a difference. “My aunt is an anesthesiologist, and she regularly called my mom and told her how much she and her colleagues were struggling during this time,” she said. “I think a meal donation means at least one thing we can take off SEE MEAL BRIDGE, PAGE 8
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Sruthi Subramanian, a rising senior at Mounds View High School, started a local branch of the Meal Bridge, which aims to aid both the restaurant and healthcare industries by enabling users to donate meals from selected restaurants to staff at local hospitals.
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