It's close to impossible to define Alan Page by any singular accomplishment. He spent the bulk of his Hall of Fame NFL career with the Vikings. He was a member of the Minnesota Supreme Court. And he started the Page Education Foundation in 1988 to improve access to higher education for students of color. Page, 71, touched on all those facets of his life and more in a recent interview with the Star Tribune's Michael Rand.
Q What was the impetus for the Page Education Foundation and the gala event Saturday at U.S. Bank Stadium?
A We started it back in 1988 with the goal of encouraging, motivating and assisting young men and women of color to pursue education beyond high school. We do that in two ways. One is providing financial assistance, and two, more importantly, we require our grant recipients — we call them Page Scholars — to spend 50 hours per academic year working with young children in kindergarten through eighth grade. They act as tutors, mentors and role models.
Q Education has been important to you. I recall a story of you playing in a Monday night road game and traveling back in time for a Tuesday morning class at the U of M Law School. How were you able to strike that balance between sports and education?
A I don't know that I would call it striking a balance. It's recognizing what's important and managing your time to do those things you have to do — whether it's on the football side, the law side, the academic side.
Q Did you feel different from a lot of your peers in the game at that point?
A I didn't spend a lot of time thinking about that. I was on my own path and others were on their own path.
Q What are your impressions of the new stadium?