Weber State program geared to Spanish speakers experiences ‘staggering' uptick in interest
During the fall 2024 semester, the program's first, just a handful of students took part in Building Puentes, which offers online instruction in Spanish and English, one of its unique features. Then interest ballooned.
'We knew there was a need for this program in Utah, but the leap from four students to more than 100 students was pretty staggering. It just confirms the demand for classes like this and how excited people are to participate,' said Bryan Magaña, spokesman for the Ogden-based university.
Weber State has made outreach to Latinos a priority — about 30% of Ogden residents are Hispanics — and the launch of Building Puentes last fall figures in the efforts. In its initial phase, the focus of the bilingual program — geared to those whose primary language is Spanish — has been on helping business-minded students earn certificates of entrepreneurship to aid them in building their own businesses. Now, it also includes programming for those interested in getting early childhood education certificates, with plans in the works to create pathways to associate and bachelor's degrees.
'This program is offering a unique opportunity for individuals who have postponed or perceived higher education as out of reach due to language barriers,' said Yesenia Quintana, who helped develop Building Puentes and leads Weber State's Community Education Center. Salt Lake Community College in Salt Lake County also has some class offerings in Spanish.
The focus of Building Puentes is to create a pool of professionals to meet the needs that university officials see in the community. Some of the first cohort of students have started businesses that offer care for the elderly, home cleaning, mental health services and more, according to Quintana. Looking ahead, plans are coming together to offer computer science-related certificates while additional elements call for the integration of English-as-a-second-language classes into the programming.
Of the students who took part during the 2024-2025 school year, 31 participated in commencement exercises on April 25, though they formally won't finish their classwork to get certificates until the summer semester. 'Seeing the pride in their children's eyes was so moving. It's exciting to think about the ways our graduates will use the skills they learned here to bring new ideas and businesses to Utah,' Magaña said.
University officials characterize Building Puentes as helping serve Utah's Spanish-speaking population. 'These classes are for anyone who speaks Spanish, so we've seen people from all over, from Utah and beyond,' Magaña said.
But it's hardly Weber State's only effort targeting Latinos. The university is also striving to become an emerging Hispanic-Serving Institution with at least 15% of its students Latino. Becoming a Hispanic Serving Institution, with a student body that's 25% Latino, opens the door to additional federal funding.
A $2.5 million grant from the Utah Governor's Office of Economic Opportunity and private donations fund Building Puentes. It still faces years of development, as university officials describe it, but they're optimistic.
'It's an innovative program that has expanded access to higher education in our region,' said Doris Geide-Stevenson, interim dean of Weber State's John B. Goddard School of Business and Economics. 'We're thrilled to recognize this milestone and look forward to expanding the program in the years ahead.'
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Associated Press
2 minutes ago
- Associated Press
Joseph Schnaier Launches National Scholarship to Support Future Leaders in Finance
Joseph Schnaier Launches National Scholarship to Support Future Leaders in Finance 'Joseph Schnaier Scholarship for Finance Students'— Joseph Schnaier NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES, August 21, 2025 / / -- New York financier and entrepreneur Joseph Schnaier has officially announced the launch of the Joseph Schnaier Scholarship for Finance Students, a nationwide initiative designed to support undergraduate students pursuing careers in finance and related fields. The scholarship program is now accepting applications and aims to recognize driven students who demonstrate a strong commitment to shaping the future of the financial industry. With over 25 years of experience in investment and private equity, Joseph Schnaier understands the critical role that young talent plays in the evolution of global finance. Having built a career on Wall Street beginning in 1996 and co-founded multiple successful ventures, Joseph Schnaier now seeks to invest in the next generation of financial professionals through this philanthropic effort. The scholarship is open to undergraduate students enrolled at accredited colleges and universities in the United States who are pursuing degrees in finance, business, accounting, economics, or closely related fields. Applicants are required to submit a thoughtful essay that responds to the following prompt: 'What inspires you to pursue a career in finance, and how do you plan to make a meaningful impact in the financial world?' The essay should be original, between 500 to 800 words, and submitted in English in either PDF or Word format. The deadline for applications is January 15, 2026, with the selected recipient to be announced on February 15, 2026. Through this scholarship, Joseph Schnaier seeks to support ambitious students who not only aim for professional success but also aspire to bring innovation and ethical leadership into the finance sector. His long-standing passion for developing scalable business strategies and supporting visionary initiatives finds a new avenue in this academic support program. 'Finance is more than numbers—it's about responsibility, foresight, and building systems that impact people's lives. Students who understand this are the ones who will lead tomorrow's financial world,' says Joseph Schnaier, who is currently leading this scholarship initiative with personal commitment and active involvement. The Joseph Schnaier Scholarship for Finance Students is designed as a one-time award, intended to ease the financial challenges faced by students as they progress in their academic and professional journey. By offering this opportunity, Joseph Schnaier continues his broader mission to contribute to the industry's future by nurturing ethical and thoughtful financial leaders. Applicants and interested parties can find more details and submit their applications by visiting the official scholarship website: This scholarship is not restricted to any specific city or state, allowing eligible students across the United States to apply and participate. The initiative reflects Joseph Schnaier's dedication to creating meaningful educational opportunities for individuals committed to excellence in the field of finance. Joseph Schnaier Joseph Schnaier Scholarship +1 561-926-5281 email us here Legal Disclaimer: EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Could Dame Jillian Sackler's prized NYC home list for sale?
Manhattan's most alluring mansion stands to return to market for the first time in decades, leaving luxury property looky-loos salivating for a grand reveal — after the property spent years hidden from view. In May, Dame Jillian Sackler, widow to the Purdue Pharma kingpin Arthur Sackler — Purdue and Sackler being names linked to the years-long opioid crisis — died at age 84 from esophageal cancer. Since the 1980s, she had been the primary resident of the devilish address 666 Park Ave., a triplex maisonette at the base of the 660 Park Ave. co-op tower, which stands at East 67th Street. She shared it with her late husband, who died in 1987. And now, the one-of-a-kind dwelling could head into a new generation of ownership. 10 Dame Jillian Sackler passed away in June. She was the widow of Arthur Sackler, who died in the 1980s — and was a member of the now-disgraced Purdue Pharma family. The Washington Post via Getty Images 10 The maisonette has its own entry, seen at left. Olga Ginzburg for N.Y. Post In case your family name doesn't grace a wing at the Met, here's a little catching up: A maisonette is the stuffed pheasant of rarefied Manhattan real estate — a townhouse-like residence within a larger building, usually on the ground floor with a separate entrance. Spot their inconspicuous front doors — easily mistaken for the entries to doctors' offices — around Beekman and Sutton places or Fifth and Park avenues. Though traditionally bearing the No. 666 mark, it appears the address has changed recently to blend in with the existing No. 666 edifice. Address aside, this perch is nonpareil even within the competitive, money-no-object milieu of Upper East Side roosts. 'Surely,' the New York Times gushed in 1981, it's 'the greatest maisonette ever constructed in New York.' Not only is it massive — it occupies the complete second, third and fourth floors (each roughly 4,000 square feet) in the 14-story, 12-residence building — it's decked out like an English country seat. It's the kind of serious house where a 50-foot long, 24-foot-high drawing room dressed with 18th-century pine paneling excised from the old Spetisbury House manor in Dorset sits comfortably. There are between 21 and 27 rooms in total that have served as vessels for early 17th-century French Chinoiserie from the Château de Courcelles in northwestern France, sections of Georgian paneling pinched from a house on Grosvenor Street in London — as well as Sackler's bowerbird hoard of antiques. Arthur collected Renaissance majolica, Shang dynasty oracle bones, Post-Impressionist paintings and whatever else he could get his hands on. Elsewhere, Corinthian columns frame a large window, a grand oval staircase slithers past a mezzanine, ornate chimney pieces radiate warmth and a wonderfully obsolete 'card room' receives guests. 10 The building bore the addresses 660 and 666, as seen in this archival image. Google Maps At the time it was built, plans called for 10 servants' rooms. 'If you include the entrance and its small foyer and stairway, it's actually a quadruplex apartment,' said Andrew Alpern, who has visited the splendid spread and featured it in his 1992 book 'Luxury Apartment Houses of Manhattan.' If all that seems offensively old fashioned for a building built in 1927 at the height of the Jazz Age, that's the point. Its developer Frederick Ecker, a captain of Metropolitan Life Insurance, tapped staid and conservative architects York & Sawyer to conceive the limestone facade — a firm best known for institutions like banks, clubs and colleges, not to mention the New York Historical Society. It would be erected in opposition to the emerging Chrysler Building-modernism that was coating the city in chrome. It wasn't alone in its rigid traditionalism, but in a city that never sits still, where homes are expected to be updated with the latest fashions — and where developers dice up historic charmers like mad vivisectionists — No. 666 somehow survives much as it always has. 'I cannot imagine that Sackler made changes of any significance to the main rooms,' added Alpern. 'I suspect that he threw together some of the maids' rooms — there were a ton of maids' rooms and only a couple of guest rooms. I'm sure he updated the kitchen and the bathrooms and air conditioned the place, and probably put in new electricity. But other than that, I would bet that the place probably looks very, very similar to the way it looked when it was first built.' Alpern suspects all that because only a few privileged visitors have seen inside the home in recent decades. Moreover, it has only had four owners in nearly 100 years. And except to society figures and boldface names — such as Samuel Goldwyn and Lana Turner in the 1940s; Imelda Marcos in the early 1980s (who bought the contents of the home at that time), and more recently singers Luciano Pavarotti and Placido Domingo — the home is a closed book. Its most recent photos come from a 2002 Architectural Digest feature. 10 The interior of the Vanderbilts' former Fifth Avenue mansion. Library of Congress 10 The exterior of that former dwelling, which stood on 52nd Street and Fifth Avenue. NYPL Digital Collections As for its slightly satanic sounding address, thank turn-of-the-century socialite Virginia Fair Vanderbilt for that. Newly unwed from playboy hubby William K. Vanderbilt II, she ditched the family nest, a Stanford White-designed palace at 666 Fifth Ave., to custom-design the maisonette at 660, for which she paid a then-record-setting $185,000. Insisting on a separate address, she christened it No. 666, a reference to her former Fifth Avenue digs. It was a brash exercise in real estate one upmanship — and perhaps spite. Not long before, Vanderbilt's ex-husband had moved into another maisonette across the street at 655 Park Ave. Hers was better. Hers was bigger. Trump card played, and she never moved in. Instead, she fled farther uptown where she commissioned a new standalone mansion at 60 E. 93rd St., which last traded hands in 2022 for $52.5 million. Prohibition Era booze business behemoth Seton Porter picked up the pieces. He purchased No. 666 and completed the construction, creating much of what can still be seen today. But now, many years on, could this kind of residence find its next owner? 10 The maisonette alone takes up three floors of the co-op building. Olga Ginzburg for N.Y. Post 10 The co-op saw its most recent sale in 2022 — and it was in the millions of dollars. Olga Ginzburg for N.Y. Post Corcoran broker Kane Manera said that maisonettes are a unique niche of New York's upscale real estate environment and attract an equally niche buyer. Like townhouses, he said, they typically trade at a lower price per square foot compared to upper-floor apartments. The most recent sale in the building was back in 2022, when billionaire heiress Aerin Lauder sold her 11th-floor spread to a Goldman Sachs exec for $19.5 million. Despite being roughly three times larger, Manera doesn't think that you can simply triple that price for the Sackler's shack. 'People want a view. They want light. They want privacy,' he said. 'Some people don't feel secure with their door directly on the street in New York. Other people are completely fine with it.' There are other obstacles, too. The building is ruled by a tough board, insiders said, that will put any potential buyer through the wringer. The co-op also requires deals to be made in cash, with multiples of the sale price held in liquid reserves. 'The weakest segment of the luxury market is high-end Park, Fifth and Central Park West co-ops,' said real-estate appraiser Jonathan Miller, of Miller Samuel. 'The condo invasion has crushed the co-op. In fact, over the last decade, values for high-end co-ops are lower. The problem is that difficult co-op boards are devaluing these places by being a barrier to entry. The other thing is that the new condo product is tall and generally narrower. So they have 360-degree views.' Then there is the small matter of its splendiferous anachronistic outfitting. A buyer who wants to take on the preservation, or reinvention, of a home this dated, on this scale, may be one in a million. Still experts guess that a ballpark of $40 million, give or take, sounds about right without having seen it. 'So long as the interior is not landmarked, as long as you and your designer can take the best of what's there and incorporate that into something more livable and modern that doesn't feel like an interior at Harvard University, you have exciting potential,' Manera said. 10 The building is known for its handsome limestone facade. Olga Ginzburg for N.Y. Post 10 A world of opulence is known to live within the maisonette's walls. Olga Ginzburg for N.Y. Post Finally, there's the question of the previous owners. In June, millions of Americans finally got justice in the form of a $7.4 billion judgement against the Sackler family and Purdue. Roughly $6.5 billion of those funds will come from the family's personal fortunes. However, Arthur purchased No. 666 and died years before the company started its OxyContin campaign; Jillian isn't specifically named in the settlement. The couple produced no children and it's currently unclear who will inherit the home, or if it will get tied up in the settlement, details or which have yet to be released. 'He died over 30 years ago, and he's the scapegoat,'' Jillian told the Washington Post in 2019 in defense of her late husband's legacy. 'It's absolutely incredible.'' Regardless, Miller thinks that for the right cloven-footed billionaire, this could be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to raise a little hell. 'If I were a wealthy enough person to buy something like this, just the fact that it was No. 666 would appeal to me as an FU to society.' he says. 'That's pretty cool.'


Associated Press
an hour ago
- Associated Press
CNA offers "paid media release" service in partnership with Media OutReach Newswire
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