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Alan Page

Alan Cedric Page (born August 7, 1945) is an American retired judge and former professional football player.[1]

Alan Page
Page in 2020
Associate Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
In office
January 4, 1993 – August 31, 2015
Preceded byLawrence R. Yetka
Succeeded byNatalie Hudson
Personal details
Born (1945-08-07) August 7, 1945 (age 77)
Canton, Ohio, U.S.
Spouse
Diane Sims Page
(m. 1973; died 2018)
Children4
Alma materUniversity of Notre Dame (BA)
University of Minnesota (JD)
Profession
Awards Presidential Medal of Freedom (2018)

Football career
Page in 1969
No. 88, 82
Position:Defensive tackle
Personal information
Height:6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
Weight:245 lb (111 kg)
Career information
High school:Central Catholic
(Canton, Ohio)
College:Notre Dame (1964–1966)
NFL Draft:1967 / Round: 1 / Pick: 15
Career history
Career highlights and awards
NFL record
  • Most safeties in a season: 2 (tied)
Career NFL statistics
Sacks:148.5
Safeties:3
Interceptions:2
Interception yards:42
Fumble recoveries:23
Touchdowns:3
Player stats at NFL.com · PFR
Pro Football Hall of Fame
College Football Hall of Fame

He gained national recognition as a defensive tackle in the National Football League (NFL) during 15 seasons with the Minnesota Vikings and Chicago Bears, and then embarked on a legal career. Page earned a B.A. in political science from the University of Notre Dame in 1967 and a J.D. from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1978. Page served as an associate justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court from 1993 until he reached the court's mandatory retirement age of 70 in 2015.

Page was the first defensive player in NFL history to win the MVP Award and only Lawrence Taylor has done it since. He is a member of both the College Football Hall of Fame (1993) and the Pro Football Hall of Fame (1988), and is considered one of the greatest defensive linemen ever to play the game.[2]

In 2018, President Donald Trump awarded Page the Presidential Medal of Freedom.[3]

Early years

Page was born and raised in Canton, Ohio.[4] His parents stressed the importance of education and of doing his best regardless of what others did.[4] His mother died when he was 13.[4] Page said he wanted to become a lawyer when he was a child.[4]

Page graduated from Canton Central Catholic High School in 1963, where he starred in several sports and excelled in football. He worked on a construction team that erected the Pro Football Hall of Fame, laying the groundwork for the building in which he would one day be enshrined.

College football

After high school, Page played college football at the University of Notre Dame. As a senior, he led the Fighting Irish to a national championship in 1966, and was a consensus All-American.[1]

Page was presented with one of the 1992 Silver Anniversary Awards (NCAA) for achieving personal distinction since his graduation. In 1993, he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. In 2005, he was awarded the National Football Foundation Distinguished American Award.

In 1967, Page participated in the East-West Shrine Game and 25 years later received the "Babe Hollingbery" Award for his performance as he was inducted to that game's Hall of Fame. Page was named to the Academic All-American Hall of Fame in 2001 and as such received the Dick Enberg Award. Page also won the Walter Camp Alumni of the Year award in 1988.[5]

Professional football

 
Page tackling running back Lawrence McCutcheon in 1977

Page was a first round selection (15th overall) in the 1967 NFL/AFL Draft by the Minnesota Vikings, for whom he played for 11 seasons, through 1977. He is one of 11 Vikings to have played in all four Super Bowls (IV, VIII, IX, XI) in which the team appeared. Page joined the Chicago Bears in 1978 and played there for four seasons and amassed an additional 40 sacks.

As a right defensive tackle, Page had an unusual 3-point stance, placing his left rather than his right hand on the ground. During his 15-year career, the Vikings won four conference titles and one league championship. Page was a member of the Vikings' "Purple People Eaters," a defensive line adept at sacking or hurrying the quarterback. Page played in 218 consecutive games without an absence (215 consecutive in the starting line-up), during which he recovered 22 fumbles, made 148½ sacks (Vikings-108½,[6] Bears-40), and scored three touchdowns (two on fumble recoveries and one on an interception return). He also had three safeties, the second most in NFL history. He set a career-high with 18 sacks in 1976 and is unofficially credited with five other seasons of 10 sacks or more.[7][8]

While in the NFL, Page earned All-Pro honors six times and made second-team all-league three additional times.[9] He was voted to nine consecutive Pro Bowls.[9] He was voted All-Conference 10 times, in 1968 and 1969 as All-Western Conference and in 1970 through 1977 and 1980 as an All-National Football Conference.[10]

In 1971 Page was named both the AP NFL Defensive Player of the Year (the first player to be named such) and the AP's NFL Most Valuable Player.[11] Page was the first defensive player to be named MVP since the award's inception. Only one other defensive player, Lawrence Taylor, has ever received the award. Page was also voted the NEA NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 1973.[12] In 2019 Page was chosen as a member of the NFL's 100th Anniversary All-Time Team.

NFL player representative

Page was National Football League Players Association player representative from 1970 to 1974 and in 1976–1977, and a member of the NFLPA Association Executive Committee from 1972 to 1975. He was named to the Vikings' 40th Anniversary Team in 2000. Along the way, Page was named the Associated Press NFL Defensive Player of the Week three times: Week 9, 1967; Week 8, 1968; Week 13, 1971. In 1988 Page was further honored by his induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame. In 1999, he was ranked number 34 on The Sporting News' list of the 100 Greatest Football Players, the highest-ranking Viking player. He received the NFL Alumni Career Achievement Award in 1995 for attaining success in his post-NFL career.

Post career

Broadcasting

After his playing career he dabbled in the media, first as a commentator on Turner Broadcasting System covering the College Football Game of the Week series during the Fall of 1982 and then as a commentator on National Public Radio in 1982–1983.[citation needed]

Legal career

Long before Page's football career came to a close, he was laying the groundwork for his future role as a justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court. While still playing for the Vikings, Page attended the University of Minnesota Law School, from which he received a Juris Doctor in 1978. After graduating, he worked at the Minneapolis law firm Lindquist and Vennum from 1979 to 1984 outside the football season. Page was appointed Special Assistant Attorney General in 1985, and soon thereafter promoted to Assistant Attorney General.[13]

In 1992, Page was elected to an open seat as an associate justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court, becoming the first African-American to serve on that court. He was reelected in 1998 (becoming the biggest vote-getter in Minnesota history), again in 2004, and for a final time in 2010: Minnesota has mandatory retirement for judges at the end of the month in which they turn 70.

On January 7, 2009, Page was appointed by Chief Justice Eric Magnuson to select the three-judge panel that heard the election contest brought by Norm Coleman in the 2008 U.S. Senate election.[14]

Personal life, community work and other activities

 
President Donald J. Trump presents the Medal of Freedom to Alan Page Friday, November 16, 2018, in the East Room of the White House.

Alan and Diane Sims Page were married from 1973 until her death in 2018.[15] They met while she was working for General Mills and he was playing for the Minnesota Vikings.[16] Page is a Catholic.[17]

In 1988, the Pages founded the Page Education Foundation. It provides financial and mentoring assistance to students of color in exchange for those students' commitment to further volunteer service in the community, an idea suggested by their daughter Georgi. The Page Education Foundation has awarded grants to more than 7,500 students, who in turn have given more than 475,000 hours of their time to young children. Upon his retirement from the bench, Page plans to continue the foundation's work and find other ways to encourage students of color to be successful in school, especially by developing critical thinking skills.[18]

Page and his daughter Kamie Page have written four children's books: Alan and His Perfectly Pointy Impossibly Perpendicular Pinky (2013), The Invisible You (2014), Grandpa Alan's Sugar Shack (2017), and Bee Love (Can Be Hard) (2020). Proceeds from the sales of these books support the Page Education Foundation.[19] Page is the subject of the authorized biography All Rise: The Remarkable Journey of Alan Page (2010).[20]

Page has a passion for running and runs on a regular basis. In 1979, he became the first active NFL player to complete a marathon. His running routine, which he took up while helping his wife quit smoking, is believed to have contributed to his dismissal from the Minnesota Vikings. His running schedule of 35–40 miles per week during the season, and 55 miles per week in the offseason, caused his weight to drop below that dictated by the Vikings.[21]

Page owns an extensive collection of Jim Crow-related memorabilia.[22] He appeared in a 2012 Minnesota-filmed episode of PBS's Antiques Roadshow with an 1865 banner mourning the death of Abraham Lincoln.[23] In 2018, items in his collection were exhibited at the Minneapolis Central Library, coinciding with Super Bowl LII in Minneapolis.[24]

In June 2017, after a campaign initiated by students at Alexander Ramsey Middle School in Minneapolis, the school's name was changed to Justice Page Middle School.[25]

In November 2018, President Donald Trump awarded Page the Presidential Medal of Freedom.[26]

In January 2020, Page and Neel Kashkari proposed amending a portion of the Minnesota State Constitution to read, "All children have a fundamental right to a quality education that fully prepares them with the skills necessary for participation in the economy, our democracy, and society, as measured against uniform achievement standards set forth by the state. It is a paramount duty of the state to ensure quality public schools that fulfill this fundamental right."[27]

On October 30, 2020, the North St. Paul/Maplewood/Oakdale School District (ISD 622) announced a new elementary school to be built at 2410 Holloway Avenue in Maplewood will be named Justice Alan Page Elementary School, scheduled to open in September 2022.[28]

Professional accolades and memberships

Honorary degrees

Honorary Doctorates in Humane Letters: Macalester College, 1999; Winston-Salem State University, 2000; Gustavus Adolphus College, 2003; University of Notre Dame, 2004; Duke University, 2011; Hamline University, 2019.

Honorary Doctorates of Law: University of Notre Dame, 1993; St. John's University, 1994; Westfield State College, 1994; Luther College, 1995; University of New Haven, 1999; Carleton College, 2016.

Professional organizations

  • Member, American Law Institute, 1993–present
  • Member, Minnesota State Bar Association, 1979–1985, 1990–present
  • Member, Minnesota Association of Black Lawyers, 1980–present
  • Member, National Bar Association, 1979–present
  • Member, American Bar Association, 1979–present
  • Member, Advisory Board, Mixed Blood Theater, 1984–present
  • Founder, Page Education Foundation, 1988. Assists minority youth with post-secondary education.
  • Member, Board of Regents, University of Minnesota, 1989–1993
  • Helped establish Kodak/Alan Page Challenge, a nationwide essay contest encouraging urban youth to recognize the value of education.
  • Member, Institute of Bill of Rights Law Task Force on Drug Testing in the Workplace, 1990–1991
  • Board of Directors, Minneapolis Urban League, 1987–1990

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Litke, James (November 25, 1981). "Alan Page: leaving 23 years behind isn't easy". Lewiston Morning Tribune. (Idaho). Associated Press. p. 1C.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on January 30, 2015. Retrieved January 6, 2015.
  3. ^ Boren, Cindy (November 16, 2018). "Medal of Freedom honoree Alan Page will put aside his feelings about Trump". The Washington Post.
  4. ^ a b c d Former Minn. Supreme Court Justice Alan Page on life, education, football and the law, Minnesota Public Radio. May 16, 2017.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on July 1, 2007. Retrieved May 1, 2007.
  6. ^ startribune.com February 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine,
  7. ^ purplepride.org May 2, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ chicagobears.com February 29, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ a b "Alan Page Stats". Pro-Football-Reference.com.
  10. ^ "Alan Page". profootballhof.com. Pro Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  11. ^ "AP NFL Most Valuable Player Winners". pro-football-reference.com. Sports-Reference, LLC. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  12. ^ "Alan Page Highlights". profootballhof.com. Pro Football Hall of Fame. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  13. ^ "Alan C. Page". Minnesota State Law Library. Retrieved November 29, 2018.
  14. ^ "Top justice won't pick Minn. Senate lawsuit judges". Minnesota Public Radio. January 7, 2009. Retrieved January 7, 2009.
  15. ^ "Diane Sims Page, revered philanthropist and wife of Alan Page, dies at 74". twincities.com. October 2, 2018.
  16. ^ "Diane & Alan Page's storybook began with chance meeting". Minnesota Vikings. December 17, 2017.
  17. ^ "Former pro athlete and jurist says faith about doing good, avoiding evil". Catholic Philly. Retrieved October 26, 2022.
  18. ^ "Alan Page leaving Supreme Court to focus on youth". Twin Cities Pioneer Press. April 4, 2015. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  19. ^ "Home". page-ed.org.
  20. ^ "All Rise". www.triumphbooks.com. Retrieved December 29, 2019.
  21. ^ Martz, Ron. "A lineman who runs and runs". St. Petersburg Times. October 22, 1978
  22. ^ Ward, Bill (August 3, 2007). (PDF). Minneapolis Star Tribune. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 11, 2012. Retrieved January 1, 2011.
  23. ^ Olson, Mark W. (May 7, 2012). "Behind the scenes at Antiques Roadshow". Chaska Herald. Retrieved April 29, 2014.[permanent dead link]
  24. ^ "Alan Page exhibits slavery artifacts in time for Super Bowl". USA Today. January 31, 2018. Retrieved February 15, 2018.
  25. ^ "Rename Ramsey". Justice Page School. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  26. ^ "Alan Page Receives Presidential Medal Of Freedom". November 16, 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  27. ^ "Proposed Minnesota Constitutional Amendment" (PDF). Federal Reserve Bank Of Minneapolis. Retrieved February 7, 2021.
  28. ^ "Name selected! Justice Alan Page Elementary School". ISD622.org. Retrieved October 30, 2020.

External links

Legal offices
Preceded by Associate Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
1993–2015
Succeeded by

alan, page, british, olympic, hockey, player, field, hockey, alan, cedric, page, born, august, 1945, american, retired, judge, former, professional, football, player, page, 2020associate, justice, minnesota, supreme, courtin, office, january, 1993, august, 201. For the British Olympic hockey player see Alan Page field hockey Alan Cedric Page born August 7 1945 is an American retired judge and former professional football player 1 Alan PagePage in 2020Associate Justice of the Minnesota Supreme CourtIn office January 4 1993 August 31 2015Preceded byLawrence R YetkaSucceeded byNatalie HudsonPersonal detailsBorn 1945 08 07 August 7 1945 age 77 Canton Ohio U S SpouseDiane Sims Page m 1973 died 2018 wbr Children4Alma materUniversity of Notre Dame BA University of Minnesota JD ProfessionAttorneyJudgeAwardsPresidential Medal of Freedom 2018 Football careerPage in 1969No 88 82Position Defensive tacklePersonal informationHeight 6 ft 4 in 1 93 m Weight 245 lb 111 kg Career informationHigh school Central Catholic Canton Ohio College Notre Dame 1964 1966 NFL Draft 1967 Round 1 Pick 15Career historyMinnesota Vikings 1967 1978 Chicago Bears 1978 1981 Career highlights and awardsNFL champion 1969 NFL Most Valuable Player 1971 2 NFL Defensive Player of the Year 1971 1973 6 First team All Pro 1969 1971 1973 1975 3 Second team All Pro 1968 1972 1976 9 Pro Bowl 1968 1976 NFL 100th Anniversary All Time Team NFL 1970s All Decade Team 50 Greatest Vikings Minnesota Vikings 25th Anniversary Team Minnesota Vikings 40th Anniversary Team Minnesota Vikings Ring of Honor Minnesota Vikings No 88 retired 2 National champion 1964 1966 Consensus All American 1966 NFL recordMost safeties in a season 2 tied Career NFL statisticsSacks 148 5Safeties 3Interceptions 2Interception yards 42Fumble recoveries 23Touchdowns 3Player stats at NFL com PFRPro Football Hall of FameCollege Football Hall of FameHe gained national recognition as a defensive tackle in the National Football League NFL during 15 seasons with the Minnesota Vikings and Chicago Bears and then embarked on a legal career Page earned a B A in political science from the University of Notre Dame in 1967 and a J D from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1978 Page served as an associate justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court from 1993 until he reached the court s mandatory retirement age of 70 in 2015 Page was the first defensive player in NFL history to win the MVP Award and only Lawrence Taylor has done it since He is a member of both the College Football Hall of Fame 1993 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame 1988 and is considered one of the greatest defensive linemen ever to play the game 2 In 2018 President Donald Trump awarded Page the Presidential Medal of Freedom 3 Contents 1 Early years 2 College football 3 Professional football 3 1 NFL player representative 4 Post career 4 1 Broadcasting 4 2 Legal career 5 Personal life community work and other activities 6 Professional accolades and memberships 6 1 Honorary degrees 6 2 Professional organizations 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly years EditPage was born and raised in Canton Ohio 4 His parents stressed the importance of education and of doing his best regardless of what others did 4 His mother died when he was 13 4 Page said he wanted to become a lawyer when he was a child 4 Page graduated from Canton Central Catholic High School in 1963 where he starred in several sports and excelled in football He worked on a construction team that erected the Pro Football Hall of Fame laying the groundwork for the building in which he would one day be enshrined College football EditAfter high school Page played college football at the University of Notre Dame As a senior he led the Fighting Irish to a national championship in 1966 and was a consensus All American 1 Page was presented with one of the 1992 Silver Anniversary Awards NCAA for achieving personal distinction since his graduation In 1993 he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame In 2005 he was awarded the National Football Foundation Distinguished American Award In 1967 Page participated in the East West Shrine Game and 25 years later received the Babe Hollingbery Award for his performance as he was inducted to that game s Hall of Fame Page was named to the Academic All American Hall of Fame in 2001 and as such received the Dick Enberg Award Page also won the Walter Camp Alumni of the Year award in 1988 5 Professional football Edit Page tackling running back Lawrence McCutcheon in 1977 Page was a first round selection 15th overall in the 1967 NFL AFL Draft by the Minnesota Vikings for whom he played for 11 seasons through 1977 He is one of 11 Vikings to have played in all four Super Bowls IV VIII IX XI in which the team appeared Page joined the Chicago Bears in 1978 and played there for four seasons and amassed an additional 40 sacks As a right defensive tackle Page had an unusual 3 point stance placing his left rather than his right hand on the ground During his 15 year career the Vikings won four conference titles and one league championship Page was a member of the Vikings Purple People Eaters a defensive line adept at sacking or hurrying the quarterback Page played in 218 consecutive games without an absence 215 consecutive in the starting line up during which he recovered 22 fumbles made 148 sacks Vikings 108 6 Bears 40 and scored three touchdowns two on fumble recoveries and one on an interception return He also had three safeties the second most in NFL history He set a career high with 18 sacks in 1976 and is unofficially credited with five other seasons of 10 sacks or more 7 8 While in the NFL Page earned All Pro honors six times and made second team all league three additional times 9 He was voted to nine consecutive Pro Bowls 9 He was voted All Conference 10 times in 1968 and 1969 as All Western Conference and in 1970 through 1977 and 1980 as an All National Football Conference 10 In 1971 Page was named both the AP NFL Defensive Player of the Year the first player to be named such and the AP s NFL Most Valuable Player 11 Page was the first defensive player to be named MVP since the award s inception Only one other defensive player Lawrence Taylor has ever received the award Page was also voted the NEA NFL Defensive Player of the Year in 1973 12 In 2019 Page was chosen as a member of the NFL s 100th Anniversary All Time Team NFL player representative Edit Page was National Football League Players Association player representative from 1970 to 1974 and in 1976 1977 and a member of the NFLPA Association Executive Committee from 1972 to 1975 He was named to the Vikings 40th Anniversary Team in 2000 Along the way Page was named the Associated Press NFL Defensive Player of the Week three times Week 9 1967 Week 8 1968 Week 13 1971 In 1988 Page was further honored by his induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame In 1999 he was ranked number 34 on The Sporting News list of the 100 Greatest Football Players the highest ranking Viking player He received the NFL Alumni Career Achievement Award in 1995 for attaining success in his post NFL career Post career EditBroadcasting Edit After his playing career he dabbled in the media first as a commentator on Turner Broadcasting System covering the College Football Game of the Week series during the Fall of 1982 and then as a commentator on National Public Radio in 1982 1983 citation needed Legal career Edit Long before Page s football career came to a close he was laying the groundwork for his future role as a justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court While still playing for the Vikings Page attended the University of Minnesota Law School from which he received a Juris Doctor in 1978 After graduating he worked at the Minneapolis law firm Lindquist and Vennum from 1979 to 1984 outside the football season Page was appointed Special Assistant Attorney General in 1985 and soon thereafter promoted to Assistant Attorney General 13 In 1992 Page was elected to an open seat as an associate justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court becoming the first African American to serve on that court He was reelected in 1998 becoming the biggest vote getter in Minnesota history again in 2004 and for a final time in 2010 Minnesota has mandatory retirement for judges at the end of the month in which they turn 70 On January 7 2009 Page was appointed by Chief Justice Eric Magnuson to select the three judge panel that heard the election contest brought by Norm Coleman in the 2008 U S Senate election 14 Personal life community work and other activities Edit President Donald J Trump presents the Medal of Freedom to Alan Page Friday November 16 2018 in the East Room of the White House Alan and Diane Sims Page were married from 1973 until her death in 2018 15 They met while she was working for General Mills and he was playing for the Minnesota Vikings 16 Page is a Catholic 17 In 1988 the Pages founded the Page Education Foundation It provides financial and mentoring assistance to students of color in exchange for those students commitment to further volunteer service in the community an idea suggested by their daughter Georgi The Page Education Foundation has awarded grants to more than 7 500 students who in turn have given more than 475 000 hours of their time to young children Upon his retirement from the bench Page plans to continue the foundation s work and find other ways to encourage students of color to be successful in school especially by developing critical thinking skills 18 Page and his daughter Kamie Page have written four children s books Alan and His Perfectly Pointy Impossibly Perpendicular Pinky 2013 The Invisible You 2014 Grandpa Alan s Sugar Shack 2017 and Bee Love Can Be Hard 2020 Proceeds from the sales of these books support the Page Education Foundation 19 Page is the subject of the authorized biography All Rise The Remarkable Journey of Alan Page 2010 20 Page has a passion for running and runs on a regular basis In 1979 he became the first active NFL player to complete a marathon His running routine which he took up while helping his wife quit smoking is believed to have contributed to his dismissal from the Minnesota Vikings His running schedule of 35 40 miles per week during the season and 55 miles per week in the offseason caused his weight to drop below that dictated by the Vikings 21 Page owns an extensive collection of Jim Crow related memorabilia 22 He appeared in a 2012 Minnesota filmed episode of PBS s Antiques Roadshow with an 1865 banner mourning the death of Abraham Lincoln 23 In 2018 items in his collection were exhibited at the Minneapolis Central Library coinciding with Super Bowl LII in Minneapolis 24 In June 2017 after a campaign initiated by students at Alexander Ramsey Middle School in Minneapolis the school s name was changed to Justice Page Middle School 25 In November 2018 President Donald Trump awarded Page the Presidential Medal of Freedom 26 In January 2020 Page and Neel Kashkari proposed amending a portion of the Minnesota State Constitution to read All children have a fundamental right to a quality education that fully prepares them with the skills necessary for participation in the economy our democracy and society as measured against uniform achievement standards set forth by the state It is a paramount duty of the state to ensure quality public schools that fulfill this fundamental right 27 On October 30 2020 the North St Paul Maplewood Oakdale School District ISD 622 announced a new elementary school to be built at 2410 Holloway Avenue in Maplewood will be named Justice Alan Page Elementary School scheduled to open in September 2022 28 Professional accolades and memberships EditThis section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Alan Page news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Honorary degrees Edit Honorary Doctorates in Humane Letters Macalester College 1999 Winston Salem State University 2000 Gustavus Adolphus College 2003 University of Notre Dame 2004 Duke University 2011 Hamline University 2019 Honorary Doctorates of Law University of Notre Dame 1993 St John s University 1994 Westfield State College 1994 Luther College 1995 University of New Haven 1999 Carleton College 2016 Professional organizations Edit Member American Law Institute 1993 present Member Minnesota State Bar Association 1979 1985 1990 present Member Minnesota Association of Black Lawyers 1980 present Member National Bar Association 1979 present Member American Bar Association 1979 present Member Advisory Board Mixed Blood Theater 1984 present Founder Page Education Foundation 1988 Assists minority youth with post secondary education Member Board of Regents University of Minnesota 1989 1993 Helped establish Kodak Alan Page Challenge a nationwide essay contest encouraging urban youth to recognize the value of education Member Institute of Bill of Rights Law Task Force on Drug Testing in the Workplace 1990 1991 Board of Directors Minneapolis Urban League 1987 1990See also EditList of consecutive starts by National Football League players Purple People Eaters List of African American jurists List of American professional sports figures who held elective office List of first minority male lawyers and judges in MinnesotaReferences Edit a b Litke James November 25 1981 Alan Page leaving 23 years behind isn t easy Lewiston Morning Tribune Idaho Associated Press p 1C Wall Street Cheat Sheet The Greatest Defensive Linemen of All Time Archived from the original on January 30 2015 Retrieved January 6 2015 Boren Cindy November 16 2018 Medal of Freedom honoree Alan Page will put aside his feelings about Trump The Washington Post a b c d Former Minn Supreme Court Justice Alan Page on life education football and the law Minnesota Public Radio May 16 2017 Walter Camp News Release Archived from the original on July 1 2007 Retrieved May 1 2007 startribune com Archived February 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine purplepride org Archived May 2 2008 at the Wayback Machine chicagobears com Archived February 29 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b Alan Page Stats Pro Football Reference com Alan Page profootballhof com Pro Football Hall of Fame Retrieved August 31 2021 AP NFL Most Valuable Player Winners pro football reference com Sports Reference LLC Retrieved August 31 2021 Alan Page Highlights profootballhof com Pro Football Hall of Fame Retrieved August 31 2021 Alan C Page Minnesota State Law Library Retrieved November 29 2018 Top justice won t pick Minn Senate lawsuit judges Minnesota Public Radio January 7 2009 Retrieved January 7 2009 Diane Sims Page revered philanthropist and wife of Alan Page dies at 74 twincities com October 2 2018 Diane amp Alan Page s storybook began with chance meeting Minnesota Vikings December 17 2017 Former pro athlete and jurist says faith about doing good avoiding evil Catholic Philly Retrieved October 26 2022 Alan Page leaving Supreme Court to focus on youth Twin Cities Pioneer Press April 4 2015 Retrieved March 4 2016 Home page ed org All Rise www triumphbooks com Retrieved December 29 2019 Martz Ron A lineman who runs and runs St Petersburg Times October 22 1978 Ward Bill August 3 2007 Going on the offensive PDF Minneapolis Star Tribune Archived from the original PDF on January 11 2012 Retrieved January 1 2011 Olson Mark W May 7 2012 Behind the scenes at Antiques Roadshow Chaska Herald Retrieved April 29 2014 permanent dead link Alan Page exhibits slavery artifacts in time for Super Bowl USA Today January 31 2018 Retrieved February 15 2018 Rename Ramsey Justice Page School Retrieved May 24 2018 Alan Page Receives Presidential Medal Of Freedom November 16 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 Proposed Minnesota Constitutional Amendment PDF Federal Reserve Bank Of Minneapolis Retrieved February 7 2021 Name selected Justice Alan Page Elementary School ISD622 org Retrieved October 30 2020 External links EditAlan Page at the Pro Football Hall of Fame Alan Page at the College Football Hall of Fame Career statistics and player information from NFL com Pro Football Reference Appearances on C SPANLegal officesPreceded byLawrence R Yetka Associate Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court1993 2015 Succeeded byNatalie Hudson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alan Page amp oldid 1134953887, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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