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Sonya Redd remembers her first ACT-SO competition. The Rev. Jesse Jackson introduced a young teen abandoned by her family and living alone in a shell of a house in New York City. “An NAACP family found that young lady and took her into their home, said Redd, the State Conference NAACP ACT-SO chairperson. “The next year, she came to ACT-SO and won $7,000 in awards and scholarships. That blew my mind. I said we got to have this here in New Jersey.” Inspired by that story, Redd, a branch president at the time and state vice president for the NJ NAACP, started the New Jersey ACT-SO program. On Sun…