|
A Milton News Week |
| February 2007 |
Milton alumnus profiled in the Boston Globe Magazine;
the Jazz Combo’s trip to South Africa highlighted in Globe
South.
On
Sunday, February 25, 2007, the Boston Globe Magazine profiled
Eli Wolff, Milton Academy Class of ‘95 who has become a world
leader in galvanizing U.S. and international sports organizations
to recognize the right of athletes with disabilities to compete
with other elite athletes.
Milton faculty and classmates remember Eli Wolff’s courage
and resolve, character traits evident in Eli’s persistent
and successful drive to build awareness and official support for
athletes who have disabilities to be coached, to train, to compete
and to be recognized with all other successful athletes.
Eli played varsity soccer at Milton, on the U.S. national team for
the disabled at 17 and on the Brown University soccer team. He played
in three Pan Am Games for the Disabled and in the Paralympic Games
in 1996 and 2004. According to the Globe, “at Brown,
he began researching the relationship between U.S. sports organizations
and disabled athletes, and when he graduated in 2000 and joined
Sport in Society, he was already a leader in the field.”
In “Taking His Shot,” writer Barbara Matson chronicles
evidence of Eli’s success: “In December, the United
Nations General Assembly adopted the Convention on the Rights of
Persons with Disabilities, which features a section on sports drafted
by Wolff and Northeastern University’s Center for the Study
of Sport in Society. The treaty, which recognizes sports as a human
right for the disabled, calls on nations to create laws and other
measures to include people with disabilities in recreational, leisure,
and sporting activities.”
Matson notes that Eli, “a founder of Sport in Society’s
disability program and its manager of research and advocacy, coordinated
the effort, reaching out to a vast network of groups.”
Having sustained a stroke as a result of surgery on his heart when
he was two years old, Eli has been a driven athlete, especially
at soccer. He is a Ph.D. candidate at Northeastern in the law, policy
and society program.
Eli’s goal, according to Barbara Watson is that “organized
sports–whether recreational, amateur, or pro–accommodate
and include divisions for disabled athletes.”
In
the Globe’s section for South Shore residents, “Globe
South,” reporter Rich Fahey writes that this March will be
the sixth time faculty member Bob Sinicrope has taken Milton’s
Jazz Combo to South Africa.
The reporter notes the Jazz Combo’s recent performance at
the inaugural gala for Governor Deval Patrick, as well as other
performances in past years: “twice at the White House for
the Clintons; at the North Sea, Fribourg, Viennes, and Montreux
jazz festivals; and in local jazz clubs. Milton's jazz players won
Down Beat magazine's award for best high school combo in
the country in 1992 and 1999.”
According to Fahey, "While in South Africa, the students will
jam with Johnny Mekoa's Music Academy of Gauteng, Darius Brubeck
and his students at the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal, the Sinikthemba
Choir, and students at the Amy Biehl Foundation School. Brubeck
is the son of jazz icon and famed pianist Dave Brubeck."
Justin Kahn (Class I) spoke with Fahey, and as a second-time visitor
to South Africa, shared his reflections: "’One day, we
would go on these incredible game drives, seeing lions go after
wildebeests and giraffes scuffle with zebras, and things like that.
A few days later, we would go on walking tours of townships and
meet artisans who still live on Nelson Mandela's street. …South
Africa is still troubled by issues of race and class, just as the
United States is, and South Africa, along with many other African
countries, has also been devastated by AIDS.’”
The Milton Jazz Combo leaves March 8, after a farewell concert at
2:30 p.m. March 4 at the Real Deal Jazz Club & Cafe in Cambridge.

|