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Outstanding History Research Spans Wide Range of Topics and
Timeframes |
| June 2005 |
Following a tradition in 1983, Milton Academy
annually chooses among students works the most outstanding examples
of research and historical writing. Milton awards The Ethan Wyatt
Bisbee Prize to students each June, and this year's winners have
explored topics from the black athlete in the 1936 Berlin Olympics
to the influence of the 1800 election on American political science
to a century of Chinese-American stereotypes. The winners include:
Molly Cohen
“Racing for Racial Equality:
The Black Athlete and the 1936 Berlin Olympics”
Will Faulkner
“The U-2: America’s Risky
Savior”
Lee Anne Filosa
“The Unattainable Compromise:
The Clashing Cultures of the New England Colonists and Indians Leading
up to King Philip’s War”
Julia Friedman
“Adolph Zukor and the Creation
of Hollywood”
Jessalyn Gale
“Segregation in South Africa
and the United States: Origins, Evolution and Legal Termination”
Hyunjin Kim
“Chinese American Stereotypes
from 1850 to 1950”
Harry O’Hanley
“The Manhattan Project:
Driven by Fear”
Stephanie Richards
“The Armory Show: Modern
Art and America”
Rachel Schwerin
“A New Chapter in the History
of Man: The Election of 1800 and Its Role in American Political
Science”
Ben Stepner
“The Growth and Evolution of
Jazz: From a Perceived Part of Black Culture into the American Art
Form”
Sofia Warner
“The Cuban-American Dream”
Jason Yeager
“Native and African Americans:
The Connections between Two Oppressed Peoples”

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