Park District Awards Eight Scholarships to Lincoln-Way East Seniors
The Frankfort Square Park District awarded $1,000 scholarships to eight graduating seniors from Lincoln-Way East High School at the school’s Community Scholarship Night on May 7.
Park Board Commissioners Frank Florentine and Phil Cherry represented the district at the event, presenting checks to the students. This year’s recipients are Addison Blievernicht, Samantha Lewandowski, Olivia Meister, Ethan Philbin, Abigail Salgado, Clara Schutzius, Kayla Toman, and Kiera Wirth.
Executive Director Audrey Marcquenski praised the students in her May report, calling them “eight well-deserving high school seniors.”
The scholarship program is a point of pride for the district, which contributed significantly to the community-wide effort. According to a summary from the Lincoln-Way East Pupil Personnel Services office, 77 local organizations sponsored 169 scholarships for 136 different students, totaling $152,100. The Frankfort Square Park District’s $8,000 in awards accounted for over 5% of that total.
The grand total awarded to students that night, including major awards like the Chick Evans and Naval ROTC scholarships, was more than $1.1 million.
The park district’s scholarship fund is supported by proceeds from its annual golf outing and the generosity of community donors.
Latest News Stories
Minnesota authorities cut out of ICE shooting investigation
WATCH: SCOTUS considers gun ban; Pritzker responds to funding freeze; Bailey’s blueprint
Illinois quick hits: Killeen stepping down from U of I in 2027
Op-Ed: The Supreme Court must stop Louisiana’s retroactive lawsuits
Trump requests $6.2M in attorney fees from Fulton County
U.S. economy added more than 500,000 jobs in 2025
Trump eyes striking Mexican cartels
Robots and AI dominate major trade show in Las Vegas
Mike Tyson, Ric Flair accuse ex-CBD products partners of $50M+ fraud
WATCH: Newsom says he’s an alternate to White House ‘chaos’ in his final State of the State
Prosecutor calls Newsom ‘king of fraud’ for oversight failures
Seattle’s new mayor has no plans to look into possible local daycare fraud