Orlando Sentinel

Evans High School senior

Evans senior stunned after he receives scholarshi­p at concert

- By Martin E. Comas and Leslie Postal Staff Writers

Keshawn Morgan, right, was thrilled to catch a Beyoncé and Jay-Z concert recently. Imagine the thrill, then, when he became the recipient of a surprise $100,000 college scholarshi­p, one of 11 offerend by the musical megastars.

Keshawn Morgan, a senior at Evans High School, had never been to a concert before. So he was thrilled Wednesday when his local Boys & Girls Club — where he’d been going since second grade — invited him to the Beyoncé and Jay-Z show that night. When club leaders told him and the other teenagers who had been invited that they had V.I.P. seating, he was even more excited.

But when DJ Khaled, who opened the show at Camping World Stadium, told the audience he had a surprise $100,000 college scholarshi­p to announce, the 17-year-old didn’t think much about it at all.

Until the performer began to describe the winner, saying he was ranked third in his class and was president of the Spanish honor society; then a puzzled Keshawn thought, “What? That’s me.”

A video of the event shows his mouth drop and his hands briefly cover his face as he realizes he’s the winner, and then his name is announced. He and his friends erupt in cheers, as they jump up and down and hug him.

“Oh my gosh,” a stunned Keshawn said in the video posted on Facebook by the Boys & Girls Cubs of America. “I can’t believe this. I want to be a lawyer. I can’t believe I won this.”

In a phone interview Thursday, he still sounded stunned. “I really couldn’t believe it,” he said.

“I couldn’t even like put it in words,” Keshawn added. “It was crazy.”

He said it was crazy again when he got home and celebrated with his family, then again Thursday morning when his classmates in the Internatio­nal Baccalaure­ate program — designed for high-achieving, college-bound teenagers — cheered, clapped and hugged him.

“My classmates, I love them,” he said.

Keshawn, who is just starting college applicatio­ns, said he has his sights on some elite schools, including Harvard University, and some well-known historical­ly black colleges, such as Howard University and Morehouse College. Plenty of Florida schools are on his list, too.

And he’ll need scholarshi­ps to make attendance possible. “It’s like a big weight lifted off my shoulders,” he said of the scholarshi­p. “Not just my shoulders but my mom’s shoulders and my dad’s.”

Beyoncé and Jay-Z plan to award $100,000 to a high-school senior at each of the 11 cities where they perform during the On The Run II tour. They will grant scholarshi­ps to students in: San Diego; Los Angeles; Santa Clara, Calif.; Atlanta; Miami; Arlington, Texas; New Orleans; Houston; Phoenix; and Seattle.

The scholarshi­ps go to students who have excelled academical­ly in high school but don’t have the financial means to afford college.

The Boys & Girls Club of America selects the winners.

Keshawn said he’s been a regular at the center off Pine Hills Road for years — now most often as a volunteer to help younger kids — but still seeing the counselor there for advice and help in the college applicatio­n process.

At Evans, he is a top student, president of the theater society and a member of the UNICEF Club and Poetry Club.

Teachers in Evan’s I.B. program, he added, have helped him to blossom academical­ly and to grow from a quiet, unsure ninth grader into a confident senior who tries to “uplift the people around me.”

On Thursday, he said he was grateful for everyone at school, at home and in his community who had helped him — and was still stunned at what happened when he made what he thought was a very regular stop at the Boys & Girls Club: “It turned out to be so much more.”

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 ?? COURTESY OF KESHAWN MORGAN ?? Keshawn Morgan, 17, an Evans High School senior, has been awarded $100,000 for college tuition.
COURTESY OF KESHAWN MORGAN Keshawn Morgan, 17, an Evans High School senior, has been awarded $100,000 for college tuition.

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