| Graduation
2007

One-hundred-eighty-four seniors received their Milton Academy
diplomas during the School's commencement exercises on June 8, 2007.
A longstanding tradition of the ceremony is the election of student
valedictorian speakers to assure seniors that they will, at their
last Milton gathering, hear from classmates they have chosen. This
year’s student body elected Kabeer Parwani and Jee-Ahn Suh.
Delivering the commencement address was alumna and artist Sarah
Sze, Milton Academy Class of 1987. Sarah is well known in the United
States and around the world as a compelling contemporary artist.
Her sculptures and installations are intricate works that use objects
of everyday life in expansive or even dizzying relationship, making
spaces come alive.
Click here to view photos and
read speeches from the 2007 graduation ceremony.
Milton
Places Third in Applied Science & Engineering Competition

Milton students placed third in the 2007 Tests of Engineering, Aptitude,
Mathematics, and Science (TEAMS) competition, a national tournament of
over 1,200 high schools competing to solve real-world engineering problems.
Milton's team of six traveled to Harvard University to compete in division
4 of the varsity teams, a group of high schools with similar admission
policies and number of enrolled students. Milton’s winning team
included (from left to right) Ho Chan Lee (Class II), Tim Fram (Class
I), Ivan Kozyryev (Class I), and Coach Michael Kassatly. Team members
not pictured are Austin Cheng (Class I), Kyle Song (Class II) and Yoo-Na
Kim (Class I).
Athletes
Honored at "M Club" Dinner

The Milton Academy athletics department celebrated Milton’s athletes
at the annual “M Club” Dinner on Wednesday, May 30, in the
FCC. Several Class I students were awarded various distinctions for their
contributions to Milton’s athletic teams. The Dorothy J. Sullivan
Award was presented to Jacqueline Macdonald for her role on the varsity
field hockey, basketball and softball teams. Teresa Curtis, captain of
the girls’ varsity field hockey and lacrosse teams, received the
Priscilla Bailey Award. Michael Matczak, captain of Milton’s varsity
hockey and baseball, was awarded the Robert Saltonstall Medal. Trevor
Prophet took home the Alfred Elliot Memorial Trophy for his success on
the varsity soccer, diving and tennis teams.
Milton’s
Boys’ Tennis Maintains an Unblemished Season

Captained by Charlie Posner (Class
I), the boys' tennis team recently clinched the New England Championship
for the fifth year in a row and wrapped up their second perfect
season of Independent School League play. Including matches in the
pre- and post-season, the team has won 43 consecutive matches, and
coach Michael Duseau will finish his second season of coaching Milton’s
varsity boys’ tennis with an unblemished record.
[Read More]
Who
Can Resist a Good Book?
Milton Academy hosts the annual Book Fair in Cox Library on Wednesday,
May 30, through Friday, June 1, from 8 a.m.–4 p.m. The event offers
an opportunity for students to purchase books on their required summer
reading list.
Bridget
Johnson Appointed Dean of Students
Principal Rick Hardy announced last Monday that Milton’s new Dean
of Students will be Ms. Bridget Johnson. A graduate of Georgetown University,
Ms. Johnson comes to Milton from the Episcopal School in Alexandria, Virginia,
where she has worked for eight years, the last six as associate dean of
admissions. "As the search committee saw for themselves and heard
from many of you," Mr. Hardy said, "Ms. Johnson is energetic,
well-grounded, and enthusiastic about working with adolescents."
She has been very active with the National Association of Independent
Schools, serving as part of a delegation for diversity to both India and
South Africa, participating in the Equity and Justice Call to Action Committee,
and presenting at the People of Color Conference. She also contributes
to the Georgetown University Alumni Admissions Program. Bridget will join
the administration this summer.
Members of the search committee included
Ms. Suzanne DeBuhr, Mr. Larry Fitzpatrick, Mr. Brad Moriarty, Ms. Carly
Wade, and Mr. André Heard from the faculty, and students Christi
Hong and Daniel Abrams.
Success
on the Water: Milton’s Sailing Team Competes at National Level

The Milton Academy co-ed sailing team traveled to Long Beach, California,
the weekend of May 12 to compete in the National High School Sailing Championship
where they finished sixth in the country for fleet racing. The team’s
road to nationals has been paved by a successful season overall.
[Read More]
Two
Milton Juniors Nominated to the 2008 All-American Football Bowl
Each year, the U.S. Army All-American Bowl Selection Committee nominates
the top high school football players to be a part of the nation’s
premier high school sporting event, the U.S. Army All-American Bowl. Class
II students Walter McCarthy and Steve Aborn are two of 400 athletes nationwide
being considered for final selection to play in next year’s game.
The All-American Bowl, broadcast live on NBC and in 177 countries, provides
America’s top recruits a global platform to showcase their talents.
Jazz
Students Perform on National Public Radio

Performances by Milton Academy’s Jazz Combos will air on NPR’s
nationally broadcast quiz show “Says You” on May 19 and May
26 at 8 p.m. Students performing on-air include Danny Brandt (I) and Brian
Wu (I) on saxophones, Chris Côte (III) on trumpet, Samara Oster
(III) on vocals, Yoo-Na Kim (I) on piano, Will English (II) on guitar,
Steve Sando (I) on keyboard bass, and Will Davis (II) on congas. Zach
Moore (II) is the show’s associate producer. The show can be heard
locally on radio station WGBH 89.7 FM.
Senior’s
Quartet Wins Bronze Medal at National Competition

Chris Chang (Class I) and members of his group, Attacca Quartet, were
awarded the bronze medal at this year’s Fischoff National Chamber
Music Competition held at the University of Notre Dame on May 11-13. Now
in its 34th year, the competition includes 48 participating ensembles
from around the world performing in both wind and string categories. Chris’s
group performed pieces by Johannes Brahms and Béla Bartók
to win the bronze medal and a $1,000 scholarship.
“A
Fitting Legacy”
Class I Student Awarded Princeton Prize
Tara
Venkatraman (Class I) will receive The Princeton Prize in Race Relations certificate of accomplishment
at a ceremony on May 17 at the Massachusetts State House. This prize
recognizes high school students whose efforts have had a significant,
positive effect on race relations in their schools or communities.
In her time at Milton, Tara has been the co-head of Common Ground—a
multi-cultural, student-action organization—and was a key
contributor to the annual Culturefest. She has also traveled to
the Gulf Coast with Milton’s spring break community service
trip to help rebuild areas devastated by Hurricane Katrina. Tara’s
senior project involves a proposal to develop and lead a Student
Social Justice Conference and Social Action Curriculum and Resource
List, which Upper School Principal Rick Hardy describes as “a
fitting legacy for her years at Milton.”
As Princeton University’s Web site states, The Princeton Prize in
Race Relations was developed to “identify and commend young people
who are working to increase understanding and mutual respect among all
races. [It aims] to encourage others to join in these or similar efforts
and to undertake initiatives of their own.” The awards ceremony
will feature former Princeton University president and president of the
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, William G. Bowen, discussing "Race and
Educational Attainment."
Milton’s
R.O.V. Team Takes Third Place in New England Regionals
Milton Academy’s remotely operated underwater vehicle team (M.A.R.O.V.)
recently earned third place in the fifth annual New England Regional R.O.V.
Competition, facing high school teams from New York, New Jersey and around
New England. Students traveled to the Massachusetts Maritime Academy in
Bourne, Massachusetts, for this year’s competition.
[Read More]
A Day of Service and Generous Spirit

Students fanned out around town and into Boston on May 2 committing good
deeds as part of Milton’s Community Service Day. Faculty advisors
led groups of students to over 30 different sites such as Rosie’s
Place women’s shelter, the Greater Boston Food Bank, Berea Academy
and the Massachusetts Hospital School. Volunteers rolled up their sleeves
performing a variety of tasks that included sorting donations, repairing
buildings, reading with young children, preparing food, beautifying grounds
and presenting workshops.
Class I students remained on campus hosting a field day for over 230 Boston
students on Milton’s track and football field. The children enjoyed
obstacle courses, face painting and other activities with Milton seniors
and the School’s own "Mustang."
Organized by the Community Service Board and Director of Community Service
Andrea Geyling, the day began with opening remarks from student leaders
and ended in a celebratory School-wide barbeque lunch. Although many Milton
students are involved in community service projects throughout the year,
this day—held every other year—is an opportunity for all students
to volunteer their time and energy to worthwhile organizations that may
be new to them.
Milton
Hosts Annual Gratwick Concert
Violist Roger Tapping and pianist Judith Gordon performed at the 77th
Annual Gratwick Concert on Sunday, April 22, in Straus Library. The duet
performed a complex and rather rare piece by English composer Rebecca
Clarke, a short piece by Benjamin Britten, and two romantic works of Schumann
and Brahms. Following the concert, audience members gathered in Pieh Commons
for refreshments and a chance to meet the artists. Held in honor of Katherine
Perkins Gratwick, this annual concert event has featured numerous legends
in the classical music world including Beverly Sills, the Emerson and
Julliard String Quartets and pianist Peter Serkin. Next year’s Gratwick
Concert, scheduled in November of 2007, will feature English percussionist
Evelyn Glennie. For more information about this concert or other musical
events at Milton Academy, please contact music department chair, Don Dregalla,
at 617-898-2136.
Speech
Team Wins State Championship

The Milton Academy Speech Team earned the right to call themselves the
best speech team in Massachusetts. Over the weekend, Milton's speechies
took first place in the State Championship Tournament at Silver Lake High
School in Kingston, Massachusetts. Milton won the tournament a full 50
points ahead of the second place competition, and six Milton students
were named State Champions in their category including Frank Smith in
Play Reading, Sabrina Lee in Original Oratory, Jacob Hentoff in Poetry,
Kenzie Bok in Student Congress, Matt Gottesdiener in Extemporaneous Speaking
and Lexa Gluck in Dramatic Interpretation.
[View More Results]
The
Importance of “Going Green”

We have not only become a force of nature, we have become the
largest force of nature.”
Climate change has become a pressing topic of conversation, especially
in the wake of former vice president Al Gore’s documentary,
An Inconvenient Truth, which illustrates humanity’s impact
on global warming. Nick d’Arbeloff ’79, executive director
of the New England Energy Innovation Collaborative, is a “Gore
trainee,” as he told students during a visit on April 24.
He “studied in Nashville under the climate master himself”
and travels the country explaining the causes of global warming
and what must be done to slow its effects.
[Read More]
Alumna
Science Writer Reviewed in Prestigious Medical Journal
Science journalist and Milton graduate, Cynthia Fox ’79, recently
visited campus to talk with biology students about her newly published
book Cell of Cells: The Global Race to Capture and Control the Stem
Cell. Anne Harding of The Lancet, one of the world’s
oldest peer-reviewed medical journals, reviewed Cynthia’s book less
than two weeks later. Ms. Harding’s review points not only to Cynthia’s
sound scientific research, but also to her ability as a writer to engage
the reader with lively and compelling detail.
[Read More]
A Weekend
of Music

Students performing the works of great composers—such as Mozart,
Chapin, Bach, Brahms and Arthur Sullivan—filled King Theatre
with music during Milton’s annual Spring Concerts on Friday,
April 27 and Sunday, April 29.
[Read More]
Arts
Night Highlight
Milton alums from the World War II era connect with students as
they shape a remarkable performance
Arts Night—an annual favorite—showcased Milton artists
of all types and levels of experience in venues all over campus.
Students love sharing their work with one another in music, dance,
drama, speech, painting, sculpture, creative writing and artistic
ventures of many kinds.
This year a unique event unfolded before the audience, a distillation
of interviews between 10 students in Advanced Oral Interpretation and
33 Milton alumni, who answered students’ questions with their stories
about Milton during World War II years. “Milton Generations: A World
War II Oral History Project” took place on Arts Night,
April 20, in King Theatre.
[Read More]
Former
President of El Salvador Visits Milton's Campus
Former President of El Salvador,
Francisco Flores, will speak with students, faculty and members
of the Milton community on the topics of leadership and the history
of El Salvador. Mr. Flores speaks on Thursday, April 19, at 6:30
p.m. in Straus Library. He is a speaker in the Straus Dessert speaker
series. The Straus Desserts are presented by the student Public
Issues Board of Milton Academy.
David
Lindsay-Abaire '88 Wins the Pulitzer Prize for Drama
The board of the Pulitzer Prize announced
yesterday that David Lindsay-Abaire, Milton Academy Class of 1988,
had won the 2007 prize for drama, for his play Rabbit Hole.
The Pulitzer announcement notes that Rabbit Hole is David’s
fourth play produced in New York by the Manhattan Theatre Club.
In an interview several years ago with the Milton Magazine,
David talked about beginning to develop his strength in playwriting
at Milton. “I did a number of different kinds of writing, starting
at Milton—in creative writing class, in English class. After we
did a Fourth Class play, a classmate said ‘You know, we should do
a Third Class Play,” … You’re the funny one; you write it.’ Not
knowing any better, I did. And that’s how I became a playwright:
Amy Stevens ('88) said ‘Go be one.’”
[Read More]
Myths
and Miracles
Heyburn Speaker, Taylor Branch exhorts Milton
students to use the lessons of the civil rights movement to create
change
Taylor Branch, the prize-winning historian
and chronicler of the United States civil rights movement and the
Martin Luther King years, told students that he wrote history by
telling stories. That way he avoids using the stock political labels
that dominate public discussion—“fools’ gold”
he called these terms—that we use as self-protection when
we need to learn about something unknown and fearsome.
[Read More]
Science Journalist Cynthia Fox ’79 Visits Campus

Cynthia Fox ’79, author of the recently published Cell of Cells: The
Global Race to Capture and Control the Stem Cell, visited campus
April 10 to speak with students in Linde Eyster’s biology classes. Cynthia
has combined her talent for writing and her fascination with science,
traveling the world talking with scientists, physicians and patients about
their experience with stem cells and stem cell research. She explained
to students, “Stem cells are an incredible medicine, because they know
more than we do. But, because we are still in our early stages of fully
understanding how they work, they also have the potential to be very dangerous.”
[Read More]
Hammers
and Hope: Milton Students Help to Rebuild

Over spring break, 21 students, faculty and parents traveled to the Mississippi
Gulf Coast for Milton’s second annual Community Service Break Trip.
The group helped repair several houses in various stages of recovery from
the disaster wrought by Hurricane Katrina. In one case, they laid the
gravel driveway, regraded the yard to avoid flooding, assembled a storage
shed and dug a long trench to house pipes that will connect the home with
town water. This work resulted in the house passing final inspection so
its owner could finally move back in; a highlight for the group was meeting
this owner who had returned from her temporary situation in Alabama.
The biggest test of teamwork came in gutting the inside of a house that
had not been touched since the five-foot deluge of water and mud swept
through it one and a half years ago. The group moved every piece of furniture
and personal belonging out onto the street, and then demolished and removed
all the drywall, carpeting, and electrical wiring, as well as the kitchen
and bathrooms. Witnessing the change in the owner's face, from depression
to renewed hope, was tremendously rewarding. The group ended their trip
with sightseeing in New Orleans. Click here to view a photo of the group.
Incognito at Milton
Imagine discovering you are not
the person you thought you were. That you have a family, a history,
an ethnicity you never knew. How would this discovery impact your
life, the lives of those around you; your vision of yourself and
society?
Michael Fosberg strives to answer this question in his solo-show
Incognito, which he performed for Classes I and II in King
Theatre on March 28. Mr. Fosberg grew up just north of Chicago,
raised “white” by his mother and adoptive stepfather.
When he was 32 years old, he met his biological father and learned
that half of his heritage was African-American.
[Read More]
Milton's
Jazz Students Tour South Africa

On the eve of their trip to South Africa, the Milton Academy jazz students
launched their upcoming two weeks of performances with a set at The Real
Deal Jazz Club and Café in Cambridge for 175 people. Now they have
returned to School—28 Milton Academy jazz students and 15 adults—at
the close of Milton’s sixth South Africa tour. Their tour brought
them to performances in six cities, including Johannesburg, Durban and
Cape Town. They visited with and played for South African students and
adults at township music schools, high schools, at a university and at
a jazz club. Highlights included one concert with the Siphithemba Choir
at the University of Kwa-Zulu Natal and another as part of the Amy Biehl
Township Jazz Festival in Cape Town. The group delivered $19,000 worth
of music materials to needy township schools; the gifts came from 16 corporations
who were solicited during preparations for the trip. Students also visited
the Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg; the infamous Robben Island, which
was used primarily as a prison from the mid-1600s until 1997 when it became
a museum; the Hector Peterson Museum in Soweto, named for one of the first
students to be killed during the 1976 student uprising in the township;
and two game reserves, Pilansberg and Robberg.
Just
an Ordinary March Weekend?
On the weekend before spring break, the
campus was alive with overlapping events that drew crowds happy for good
food, fun, and great artistic entertainment.

The Winter Dance Concert packed King Theatre for three nights, as in years
past. With work ranging from classical Indian to slapstick vaudeville,
the concert was an opportunity for boys and girls, Classes IV through
I with varying degrees of dance experience, to showcase their talent.
This year's concert included thirteen dances and nine student choreographers.
Click here to read more
about the concert and view photos of the event.

Milton Academy’s CultureFest energized a late-winter weekend with
dancing, a wide variety of great food, performances and music in the Fitzgibbons
Convocation Center. Students and faculty explored booths from around the
world and from regions of the United States. The Lowell-based Angkor Cambodian
Dance Troupe, special guests, anchored the performances. Other groups
and individuals joined in. Partygoers—the whole community of students,
many families, faculty and staff—enjoyed a world’s-worth of
sights and sounds and tasted a world’s-worth of treats. Click
here to read more about Culturefest.
Other events this weekend that involved Milton students included the New
England wrestling championships and the New England swimming championships,
both held off campus. Milton’s swim team competed at Deerfield Academy
and finished 11th overall. Alex Tin (II) was a finalist in the 200 individual
medley and the 100 breastroke; Robert Bailey (III) was a consolation finalist
in the 50 and 100 freestyles; Robert St. Laurence (I) was a consolation
finalist in the 50 freestyle. The 200 medley relay of Alvin Tin, Alex
Tin, Joo-Young Song, and Robert Bailey finished in the top 8, as did the
200 freestyle relay with the same individuals.
Milton alumni arrived on campus, as well, for Mr. Frank Millet’s
30th annual Graduates’ Squash Tournament. Among the approximately
125 alumni and their families who attended were 48 accomplished
contenders for the winner’s title, arriving to play at the
Williams Squash Courts from locations across the country. No one
wants to miss luncheon, with Mr. Millet’s witty solo performance
at the podium. Mr. Millet has taught at Milton Academy since 1942,
founded the squash program in 1964 and coaches varsity squash today.
Michael
Matczak is Flood Shield Winner

Milton’s hockey captain, Michael Matczak (Class I), was named the
2006–07 Flood Shield winner by the ISL Keller coaches. The coveted
award is given to “the player whose enthusiasm for hockey and true
devotion to the game is marked by his playing ability and physical toughness,
yet whose competitive spirit is balanced by emotional control and a desire
to play within the rules of the game." Michael was presented the
award by Milton’s hockey coach, Paul Cannata, during the School’s
Winter Athletes' Dessert in the Fitzgibbons Convocation Center on Wednesday,
February 28. Michael also received the Milton Hockey Award and was named
All-League by the ISL Keller coaches.
“Michael is well-deserving
of this recognition,” said Paul Cannata. “In addition to being
one of the top performers in prep hockey, he is a strong leader and his
character is outstanding. Yale is getting one heck of a player and Michael
will be sorely missed at Milton, although he leaves distinguished fingerprints
on our hockey program and the School.”
Bingham
Visiting Artist, Edwidge Danticat, Speaks With Students

Edwidge Danticat, award-winning author of several collections of stories
and novels, visited campus on February 28 as the 2007 Bingham Visiting
Artist. Ms. Danticat addressed students in the Athletic and Convocation
Center and read two short stories from her collection entitled Krik?
Krak!. The story “New York Day Women,” she explained,
was based around the Haitian proverb “Shame is heavier than 100
bags of salt.” The story is—like much of Ms. Danticat’s
writing—founded in her experience as a Haitian immigrant growing
up in Brooklyn, New York.
[Read More]
A Milton
News Week
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.
[Read More]
Volunteer
Work You Can Do Lying Down
The Community Service Board, in cooperation with the Red Cross, is sponsoring
a blood drive on Tuesday, February 27, from 11 a.m.–4 p.m. in Wigg
Hall. Organizers of the event are calling on all faculty, staff, parents,
alumni, students (17 years of age and older) and members of the Milton
community to help reach the goal of collecting 60 pints of blood during
the five-hour blood drive. To sign up for an appointment please email
community service director, Andrea Geyling, at andrea_geyling@milton.edu.
Parents' Association Hosts Annual Faculty and Staff Appreciation Brunch

Transporting
the entire Upper School faculty and staff to a tropical paradise on a
bitter February day was no mean feat. Those who came, however, had no
doubt that venturing over the ice brought them to an unimaginable place.
Bright pinks, yellows, and greens of tropical plants and festive table
decorations transformed Straus Library into as much of an island as it
has ever been. Delectable foods of all kinds and in great numbers once
again treated faculty and staff members to life beyond what they know
in the day-to-day School world. The event was the much-heralded annual
faculty and staff appreciation brunch, organized, produced and graciously
extended by the Upper School Parents’ Association. Through snow,
torrential rain, flooding and then ice, the Parents’ Association
persevered and provided an extraordinary party and expression of thanks
from grateful parents to faculty and staff, who were likewise, grateful
(and full).
Milton
Academy Celebrates Debbie Simon's Gift

For all of her 27 years at Milton, Debbie Simon has generously given books,
texts, and scripts to students in the Speech program. Her expertise at
identifying excellent material, acquiring it herself, and then donating
it to students and to the School helped Speech team contestants develop
skills and compete successfully. While the collection will remain in the
Speech Team classroom—lining the walls—the Milton Academy
library staff began the project of classifying and labeling each book
so that all can be tracked through the library catalogue system. Inside
the front cover of each book is a bookplate created to recognize Debbie's
gift to generations of speechies and it reads:
Milton Academy acknowledges
this gift from DEBORAH E. SIMON
English and Performing Arts Faculty,
Beloved Speech Team coach, mentor and advisor
Nesto
Gallery Presents In Nature
Painters Elizabeth Awalt and Stoney Conley have brought their shared visions
together in a show entitled In Nature, an exhibit opening on
Tuesday, February 6, in Milton’s Nesto Gallery. Both Awalt and Conley
have followed the landscape tradition in painting. Awalt’s work
straddles two worlds: the events of nature and the experience of it, while
Conley engages in the more spiritual side of nature. With over two decades
of observation, both artists magnify the miracles of growth, renewal and
rebirth.
“Irene Li (Class II) has at the bottom of each email ‘painting
is life’ and I think that sums it up for these two artists,”
says art faculty member, Anne Neely. “This is indeed a beautiful
and passionate show.”
In Nature runs from February 6–March 6, and is open
to the public weekdays from 8:30 a.m.–3:30 p.m.
Llewellyn
Smith ’72 Produces and Directs NOVA Film, Forgotten Genius
A two-hour documentary produced and directed by alumnus Llewellyn
Smith about the life and work of chemist and civil rights champion,
Percy Julian, aired on Tuesday, February 6, on PBS.
Percy Julian—one of the great African American scientists of the
20th century and grandson of Alabama slaves—won worldwide acclaim
for his work in organic chemistry and broke the color barrier in American
science more than a decade before Jackie Robinson did so in baseball.
A brilliant chemist, Julian discovered a way to turn soybeans into synthetic
steroids on an industrial scale. His innovative approach to chemistry
helped to make drugs like cortisone widely available.
[Read More]
Marie
Wilson Visits Campus as this Year’s Margaret A. Johnson Speaker
When Alexandra Desaulniers (I) visited the White House as an eight-year
old, she wondered why all the portraits on the walls were of men. Alex
wrote a letter posing her question to Marie Wilson, founder and president
of the White House Project. Ms. Wilson visited Milton on January 31 as
this year’s Margaret A. Johnson Speaker, which brings noted female
leaders to campus each year.
[Read More]
Frank Smith '07 Named National Forensics League Academic All-American
Who doesn’t love to laugh? Frank Smith (I) has used his love of
laughter and skill at entertaining to win awards. A member of the Milton
Academy Speech Team and the National Forensics League (NFL), Frank was
recently awarded the League’s Academic All-American Award.
Each year the NFL presents this award to students meeting several qualifying
criteria. The winners must have: accumulated at least 750 NFL points,
earning Superior Distinction through participation in local, regional
and national tournaments; scored a combined 27 or higher on the ACT or
a combined 2000 or higher on the SAT I; maintained a GPA of 3.7 (A-) or
higher through five or more semesters of high school; and submitted two
character references from his or her school principal and speech team
coach.
[Read More]
Milton
Hosts Jazz Evening to Raise Funds for Victims of Hurricane Katrina
Twenty Milton students, faculty and parents are traveling once again
to the Mississippi Gulf Coast during spring break to help the victims
of Hurricane Katrina rebuild their homes. To raise money for much
needed building supplies, the community service program is hosting
the New Orleans Jazz Evening on Friday, February 2, from 7:30-9
p.m. in the Kellner Performing Arts Center. The evening will include
great food, raffles and live music from jazz artists, Jimmy Mazzy,
Dave Whitney and music faculty member, Bob Sinicrope. Tickets are
a suggested price of $5 for students and $20 for adults, and attendees
will automatically be entered in various raffle drawings. The raffle
items include marimba and calligraphy lessons, hand-made jewelry,
and a three-course, home-cooked dinner for two delivered to your
dorm. Tickets will be on sale at the community service office during
lunch from January 30–Februay 2 and at the door on the night
of the event. Payment for tickets and donations may be made by IA-charge,
cash or checks payable to Milton Academy, Attention: Hurricane Relief.
Call the community service office at 617-898-2320 if you have questions.
Visiting
Artist, Samuel Pott '94, Rehearses with Milton Students

Earlier this month, alumnus Samuel Pott brought his talents back to Milton
for two weekend-long rehearsals with students in Kelli Edwards’
dance program. Sam, most recently known for his work as lead dancer with
New Jersey’s American Repertory Ballet and his company, Nimbus Dance
Works, is the choreographer for Bloodlines 1944, a performance
that will be included in Milton’s annual Winter Dance Concert from
March 1-3 in Ruth King Theatre. Some rehearsals included the full cast
of dancers and others involved Sam working one-on-one with individual
students and duets.
[Read More]
Milton
Academy Hosts Special Olympics

Milton’s community service program hosted the annual Martin Luther
King Special Olympics Basketball Tournament on Sunday, January 14, in
the Athletic and Convocation Center. Nine teams from the Boston and South
Shore regions competed as part of an invitational meet for some competitive
practice before state qualifying games. Milton Academy students organized
the opening ceremony, complete with emcee, anthem, Special Olympics oath
and poetry in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King; volunteered as referees,
scorekeepers and cheerleaders; and served lunch to the athletes.
Click
here to view photos from the event.
Milton Academy also hosts its own Special Olympics basketball team that
practices every Sunday afternoon on campus. The Mustangs play with Milton
Academy student volunteers as partners and coaches.
Alumna
Ashley Phillips Placed on Division I All-American Team
Recent Milton graduate, Ashley Phillips
’04, has been named to the Women’s Division I All-American
team by the National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA).
Now a junior at Clemson University, Phillips has excelled for three
consecutive years as starting goalie for the Lady Tigers. According
to Clemson’s Web site, “Phillips helped lead the Lady
Tigers to the NCAA Final Eight this season. She finished the season
with a 0.97 goals allowed average and had 119 saves. She also had
nine solo shutouts and shared with two other shutouts on the season.”
Dr. Henry Louis Gates Visits Milton as 2007 Martin Luther
King Speaker
Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. of Harvard
University will talk with students this Wednesday as the 2007 Martin
Luther King Speaker. After addressing students in the Fitzgibbons
Convocation Center he will meet with them for questions and further
discussion in Straus Library during third period.
One of the most influential American cultural critics, Dr. Gates
is the W. E. B. Du Bois Professor of the Humanities and the Director
of the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American
Research at Harvard. He is widely acknowledged for moving African
American studies from the ideological positioning of the 1970s and
'80s to a scholarly sphere. Dr. Gates has authored and edited several
books and written numerous articles for The New Yorker,
Time Magazine, The New Republic and The New
York Times. He is also the editor of Transition magazine,
an international review of African, Caribbean, and African American
politics.
[Read More]
Bob Sinicrope Receives John
LaPorta Jazz Educator of Year Award
Milton Academy Jazz Director Bob Sinicrope
will receive the inaugural John LaPorta Jazz Educator of the Year
Award on Wednesday, January 10, at the 34th Annual International
Association for Jazz Education (IAJE) Conference in New York City.
Underwritten in part by Berklee College of Music, the John LaPorta
Jazz Educator of the Year Award was created to recognize an outstanding
international high school educator with five or more year’s
classroom experience who represents the highest standards of teaching
and whose results in the classroom have brought distinction to their
institution and their students.
[Read More]
Milton Musicians Participate
in Music Festival
Over
the weekend, seven Milton Academy musicians participated in the
Forty-ninth Annual Southeastern District Senior High School Music
Festival. The seven attended rehearsals in Duxbury all day Friday
and during Saturday morning. They participated in a culminating
series of concerts: jazz, chorus, orchestra, and concert band. Each
student had been chosen from a large group of high school musicians
to participate in this event based on competition earlier in the
fall. Alexandra Desaulniers (I) and Nathaniel Stetson (I) were selected
to participate in the chorus of two hundred voices. Alisha Magnus-Louis
(III), Karen Lively (IV), Chris Cote (III), Samantha Bondaryk (II),
William Yu (III), and Elizabeth Bloom (II) were selected to participate
in the orchestra and concert band ensembles.
Jazz
Combo Perform at Inaugural Ball for Governor Deval Patrick '74

An exciting night: the Milton Academy Jazz Combo were performers at the
inaugural ball of Governor Deval Patrick on Thursday, January 4, at the
Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. Click
here to view more photos of the performance.
Students Receive Tips on Relaxation Just in Time for Exam Week

Dr. Jeffrey Dusek and Rana Chudnofsky
from the Benson-Henry Institute for Mind Body Medicine spoke with
students Wednesday morning about the role of relaxation response
in reducing stress, a timely topic with exam week quickly approaching.
Representing the Institute’s Education Initiative—which
collaborates with K-12 schools as well as colleges and universities—they
explained the body’s physiological response to stress and
then practiced breathing and relaxation techniques with students.
Dr. Dusek and Ms. Chudnofsky were this year’s Samuel S. Talbot
II ’65 Memorial Fund Speakers.
Four
Milton Students Named NFAA Award Recipients
Alex Alves (Class I) has been named a finalist for her fiction writing
in the annual nationwide competition held by the National Foundation for
Advancement in the Arts (NFAA). Along with other finalists from around
the country, she will travel to Miami in January for the NFAA week-long
conference. She will read her work, attend seminars and meet with other
young writers. Every year, the NFAA awards a select group of high school
students who have demonstrated exceptional achievement in areas such as
performance, music and creative writing. This year, four Milton students
received recognition from the NFAA in the 2007 Arts Recognition and Talent
Search.
Other Milton award winners included Hannah Pulit (Class I) and Tara Venkatraman
(Class I), who received Honorable Mentions for their fiction and poetry,
respectively. Elise Wanger (Class I) (pictured here) received Honorable
Mention in the category of Theater. Award winners were selected by a panel
of professional artists and were chosen from among thousands of submissions.
Each student will be awarded a cash prize for her accomplishment.
Milton
Speech Coach Awarded George Mason University Mentor Award
In early December, speech team coach and English faculty member, Susan
Marianelli, was awarded the prestigious George Mason University Mentor
Award. Susan is one of only 11 speech team directors in the nation to
receive this award. The Mason Mentor is given to speech coaches with the
“highest level of dedication and excellence who represent the best
in teaching and coaching.”
Raffle Raises Money for a Good Cause

The Community Service Board hosted the annual gingerbread house raffle
to raise funds for food baskets to feed needy families this holiday season.
At the holiday assembly on Thursday, December 14, Head of School Robin
Robertson and community service director, Andrea Geyling, announced that
the raffle raised over $900. The gingerbread
masterpiece was created by Margie Stone, parent of Andrew Stone ’99.
Milton Presents the Winter Concerts

Students took to the stage in King Theatre on Friday, December 8, and
Sunday, December 10, for the annual Winter Concert events. The two concerts
featured music performed by Milton Academy's Orchestra, Chamber Singers,
Chamber Orchestra and Glee Club.
Click
here to view photos of Sunday's performance.
The Power of the Tale
World-renowned and award-winning storyteller,
Jay O’Callahan, recently visited Milton to work with Peter
Parisi’s Oral Interpretation class for a morning of “sculpting
stories.” Mr. O’Callahan began his visit with a journey
story about a grasshopper who wants desperately to become a butterfly.
With an incredible talent for becoming each of his characters, Mr.
O’Callahan showed the power that committing to a story can
have.
[Read More]
The
1212 Fall Play: The School for Wives
Directed by performing arts faculty
member, Peter Parisi, Milton’s production of Moliere’s
The School for Wives taught a lesson in comedy to audiences
this past weekend. The fall 1212 Play starred Frank Smith (Class
I) as Arnolphe, Michelle Kim (Class II) as his young ward Agnes,
and Gordon Sayre (Class II) as Agnes’ handsome suitor, Horace.
Outside this love triangle, the cast of players included Gemma Soldati
as Alain, Lexa Gluck as Georgette, Kabeer Parwani as Chrysalde,
Anthony Portillo as Enrique, Corina Chase as Oronte and Paloma Velazquez
as the Notary. Assistant directors were Sarah Medeiros and Maria
Steiner.
[Read More]
Renowned
Photographer Lauren Greenfield Visits Campus
Documentary photographer and photojournalist Lauren Greenfield,
named by American Photo Magazine as one of the top 25 photographers
working today, will be on campus November 29 through December 1
as this year’s Melissa Dilworth Gold Visiting Artist. Ms.
Greenfield was one of only three females chosen, along with Mary
Ellen Mark and Annie Leibowitz. Ms. Greenfield is the creator of
"Girl Culture" and many related projects that deal with
the influence of popular culture on how we live. Her photography
deals most specifically with issues of gender identity, body image
and eating disorders. Her photographs have been published regularly
in magazines including the New York Times Magazine, Time,
The New Yorker, ELLE, and Harper's Bazaar.
[Read More]
Eggs-periments in Class IV Physics

As part of their introduction to the study of momentum and freefall acceleration, Milton’s Class IV physics students undertake the challenging task of protecting a raw egg dropped from approximately 15 feet using materials such as wooden sticks, rubber bands, paper cups and string. Working with a partner, each student must design and build an “egg protector” device with the goal of keeping the egg in one piece upon impact. The students take what they have learned about momentum up to this point and apply that knowledge to creating their contraptions.
[Read More]
Alumni Named Great Minds of
the Business World

Two Milton alumni—Kim Steimle Gori ’92 and Milton trustee,
Austan Goolsbee ’87—were each named one of the “Top
Forty Under Forty” business executives in their respective
cities, Boston and Chicago.
Kim, who is the vice president
of marketing and business development for Suffolk Construction,
was honored as one of the city’s top young business executives
by the Boston Business Journal in its annual “40
Under 40” listing which bases its selection on “professional,
civic and personal accomplishments.”
[Read More]
Deval,
as Milton knows him

Deval Patrick ’74, newly-elected governor of Massachusetts,
in Ware Hall with Elliot Richardson ’37, former U.S. Attorney General
and Secretary of Defense; Health, Education and Welfare; and Commerce.
The first African-American and the first Milton graduate to serve as governor
of Massachusetts, Deval Patrick ’74 tapped his own wellspring of
optimism, motivation, creativity and charisma, attracting thousands to
help in his quest for office. Based on an extraordinary grassroots effort,
Deval earned the opportunity to try his hand at a new kind of leadership—having
already succeeded as a student, an advocate, a volunteer, a lawyer in
a private firm, an assistant attorney general for the United States, and
counsel to corporations with complex challenges.
Deval honors Milton frequently: he is grateful for the experience of community
here that profoundly affected his life. In fact, generating that sense
of community—understanding that “we have a stake in the dreams
and struggles of others” as he says—is a core element of his
political vision. Faculty and students who were close to Deval during
his Milton years describe a young man who came with unusual aptitudes
and capabilities, who gained much and gave much over his time here.
[Read More]
Milton election victories beyond
Massachusetts
Harold Janeway, Milton graduate from
the Class of 1954 and trustee emeritus at the School, was elected
to the New Hampshire Senate on November 7, beating the three-term
incumbent 58% to 42%. Harold joins Martha Fuller Clark ’60
and Peter Burling ’63 in the 24-person body. “Three
Milties” in the Granite State Senate “may well be something
of a record,” as Harold noted.
"I believe that we must bring balance to the New Hampshire Senate
to make the legislature work for the people of the state,” Harold
said during his campaign. “Governor Lynch’s non-partisan approach
deserves and requires a Senate that will work collaboratively to do what
is best for New Hampshire. As your senator, I will make my top priorities:
affordable and accessible healthcare, a superior education system, fiscal
discipline, and a sustainable environment."
Raffle and Senior Performances Raise Funds for Senior Prom
An annual tradition, the Senior Showcase
features a raffle and a night of performances from Class I students
to help raise money for the senior prom. The event takes place in
Wigg Hall on Saturday, December 9, from 8-11 p.m. One raffle ticket
that includes admission to the senior performances is $5, and addition
raffle tickets may be purchased for an additional $5 each.
Click here to view a list of raffle items.
Jazz Brunch to Benefit South Africa
Tour
Members of Milton Academy’s jazz program will perform during the
Jam ‘n’ Cakes Jazz Brunch at the First Parish Church in Milton
on Saturday, November 18, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. All donations collected
at the performance will help fund the Jazz Combos' tour of South Africa
in March of 2007. For more information about the brunch or the jazz program’s
trip to South Africa, email jazz@milton.edu.
Click here
to download the event flyer (pdf).
The
Class IV Play: A Time-Honored Tradition

On the evenings of November 2-4, the curtains of the King Theatre stage
rose for the Class of 2010’s production of To Kill a Mockingbird,
the well-known novel by Harper Lee adapted to the stage by Christopher
Sergel. The cast and crew presented a moving production to the applause
of a full house each night. Director and performing arts faculty member,
Pam McArdle, said of the production, “Long a Class IV tradition,
the play is comprised of ninth-graders who spent many weeks perfecting
their roles. The talented cast and crew dedicated themselves to this production,
which was so well received by the community. Thank you to all who came
to see it!”
Author Lorrie Moore Visits Campus as Bingham Reader

Lorrie Moore, author of the award-winning short story collection Birds
of America, visited campus on November 1 as this year’s Bingham Visiting
Writer. Ms. Moore read her story, “Dance in America”: a dancer visits
a school and, on the same trip, an old friend with a seriously ill child.
Ms. Moore then answered students’ questions and continued her conversation
in Straus during 3rd and 4th periods. She is visiting classes throughout
her two-day stay.
[Read More]
Squash
Magazine Highlights “A Living Legacy”
Milton’s beloved Frank Millet as a magazine cover? Mr. Millet would
be the last to allow that idea. Squash Magazine, however, succeeded
at a wholly appropriate endeavor: the November 2006 issue tells the tale
of a avid life-long player, coach and teacher. “Millet has been
teaching at Milton Academy since the autumn of 1942,” says writer
James Zug. “He’s not a throwback to an earlier era. He looks
forward. He still gets on the court. He still plays. He still coaches.
He still coaches well—Milton boys went 12–1 last season and
came in fifth at the New Englands. He still teaches.”
[Read More]
Jazz
Educator of the Year
Bob Sinicrope, Milton Academy music department, has been named Jazz Educator
of the Year by the International Association for Jazz Education (IAJE)
in partnership with the Berklee College of Music. Bob is the first recipient
of this award, which was created to honor the memory of John Laporta,
legendary teacher at Berklee College of Music. Mr. Laporta taught at Berklee
for 30 years, “becoming one of the college’s most respected
and influential educators,” according to Principal Rick Hardy, who
announced this award to Milton students. “In a 1995 interview,”
Mr. Hardy noted, “Mr. Laporta said ‘I think I’ve been
able to bring out the unknown talents in students. I think as a teacher
I should be concerned about hidden talents, not obvious ones. We’re
supposed to help people grow and become whatever they can.’”
Mr. Sinicrope, a former student of Mr. LaPorta, will receive the LaPorta
Award and its honorary stipend at the IAJE annual conference in New York
this January; Mr. Laporta's wife will join the celebration. He also receives
an invitation to speak at a major student assembly at Berklee College
of Music, and is profiled in an advertising series for Berklee.
Milton
Hosts Annual Special Olympics Fall Tournament
The Special Olympics soccer tournament is a day of friendly competition,
community service and camaraderie that Milton Academy hosts every fall.
It took place on October 15 and was a great success, due to the hard work
of many.
Nearly 250 athletes—28 teams—from the Greater Boston Area
competed throughout the day. One hundred student and community volunteers
joined them, refereeing games, greeting and escorting athletes, packaging
and distributing lunches, running activities in “Olympic Town”
and presenting medals during the awards ceremony.
[Read More]
Nesto
Gallery Presents the Work of Hydrogeologist and Photographer, Jonathon
Wells

An exhibit of photomontages created by hydrogeologist, Jonathon Wells,
opens on October 24 in Milton Academy’s Nesto Gallery. Aptly titled
Sub/Surface Constructions, this show contains large-scale, digitally
altered photomontages that focus on urban areas, hazardous waste sites
and residential areas. Through his highly documented reconfigured imagery,
Jonathon reveals the subtle and not-so-subtle shifts and movements under
Earth’s surface. Sub/Surface Constructions is firmly rooted
in the genre of social responsibility as it maps various areas in the
United States and visibly dissects them. Jonathon’s work joins panoramic
views of the land surface with reconstructions of the underlying geology,
and in doing so asks fundamental questions about the relationship between
humankind and the environment. An opening reception is scheduled for Tuesday,
October 24, from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m., in the Nesto Gallery located on the
lower level of the Science Building. The exhibit will run from October
24 through November 30 and is open to the public on weekdays from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. For more information, please contact Anne Neely at 617-898-2335.
Milton Academy Hosts Parents' Weekend
On Friday, October 20, and Saturday, October 21, parents are invited to
share in their child’s school lives by attending classes, meeting
with teachers, talking with advisors, cheering on athletic teams, and
learning about Milton programs. The schedule of events includes Head of
School Robin Robertson's speech on the topic of “The Circles”
at Milton Academy, Parents' Association receptions, group meetings with
Milton’s college counselors, performances and presentations, and
much more. The weekend is as full and interesting as Milton days are for
our students.
If you are a Class I parent, join Head of School Robin Robertson and fellow
Class I parents for tea and refreshments in the Nesto Gallery (lower level
of the Science Building) on Friday, October 20, at 4:30 p.m. to learn
about the Class I 2007 Parent Gift Drive and the future of science at
Milton. For more information about this event, contact Hilary Wirtz at
617-898-2386.
Class III parents are invited to presentations on off-campus programs
in Ware Hall, including a discussion with Alden Smith, director of the
Mountain School, and David Dunbar from CITYterm.
Click here
to download a printable schedule (pdf) of all the activities planned for
Parents' Weekend. For more information, please contact the Upper School
office at (617) 898-2145.
Discussion with NepRWA Addresses
Milton’s Environmental Issues
Ian Cooke, executive director of the Neponset River Watershed Association
(NepRWA), will talk with community members about Milton’s environmental
issues in Straus Library on Monday, October 23, at 7 p.m. The discussion
will focus on the town’s role as a Neponset River Watershed community;
watersheds, storm water and the storm water treatment structures built
along Pine Tree Brook; and the significance and prospective future of
dams and fisheries along the Neponset River and its tributaries. This
annual conservation lecture of the Milton Garden Club is co-sponsored
by the environmental clubs of Milton Academy, C.A.R.E. and LORAX, and
Milton Academy’s science department. For more information, please
contact Barb Phinney of the Milton Garden Club at 617-696-8009.
Milton
Sailors Making Waves
Will Hutchings (Class III) of Wolcott House and Massimo Soriano (Class
II) of Norris House are serious sailors: both placed near the top of their
respective classes this past summer in major national and international
regattas. They are already looking forward to Milton’s sailing team
competitions next spring.
[Read More]
Milton
Gears Up for Swap-It
Every fall, Upper School students flock to Milton’s annual Swap-It
sale to load up on second-hand finery that they then sport at the traditional
Swap-It Dance, held this year in the Schwarz Student Center on Friday,
October 27. Students adorn themselves in everything from fedoras and boas
to sports gear and evening gowns—all of the garb purchased from
donations made to support the Lower School’s largest fundraising
event.
Organizers are looking for donations of clothing, athletic equipment,
furniture, home goods, toys, books and other new or gently-used items.
Please drop off your donations in the back of the Athletic and Convocation
Center from Monday, October 16 through Sunday, October 22, 8 a.m. to 5
p.m., then come back and shop Friday, October 27 through Sunday, October
29. For more information, please call 617-898-2395.
Alumni
Return to Campus for Benefit Concert
Milton graduates Jason Yeager '05 and Ben Stepner '06 returned to
campus on Sunday, October 15, to perform in a piano duet jazz performance
in the Kellner Orchestra room. These extraordinary musicians are
enrolled in five-year dual degree programs—Jason at Tufts/New
England Conservatory and Ben at Oberlin. The performance was a fundraiser
to benefit the Milton jazz group’s March 2007 South Africa
tour.
Hong
Kong Distinguished Speaker Paul Watanabe Talks to Students
A Japanese American originally from Murray, Utah, Dr. Paul Watanabe knows
firsthand of the Japanese internment that took place in the United States
following the Pearl Harbor bombing. He recalls that his brother, only
five days old at the time, and mother were sent to an assembly center—essentially
a former horse stall at the Santa Ana racetrack in California—and
later to a concentration camp in the early 1940s. For Milton students,
he traced the history of the internment initiative: it was supported numerous
times by the Supreme Court, and it spawned multiple and diverse reactions
among Japanese Americans. The question of that time is the question of
today, he said. “What is the right balance between preserving
civil rights and protecting national security?” Dr. Watanabe
of the University of Massachusetts Department of Political Science, Milton’s
ninth annual speaker in the Hong Kong Distinguished Lecture Series, posed
the question.
[Read More]
Jazz
Concert Pays Tribute to Horace Silver
Students in the Milton Academy Jazz Combos performed in King Theatre on
Friday, October 6. The concert featured music by Horace Silver
including Song for My Father, Doodlin’, Sister
Sadie, Strollin’, Peace, Nutville,
Silver’s Serenade and more. Click
here to view the evening's program (pdf).
Milton Alums: Making News Right Now
Deval Patrick ’74
Deval won the Massachusetts gubernatorial primary—the first African American to do so—and will face the Republican nominee on November 7, 2006. He mounted a broad-based, grassroots campaign that was 14,000-volunteers strong at election day, bringing together what has been deemed a new coalition of Massachusetts voters.
David Lindsay-Abaire ’88
David wrote the stage book for the musical
High Fidelity (music and lyrics by Tom Kitt and Amanda Green)—based
on the novel by Nick Hornby—which previews in Boston this week, prior
to its November opening on Broadway. David has written four plays that
have been produced on- and off-Broadway. One, Rabbit Hole, which
was nominated for a Tony Award earlier this year, will open at the Huntington
Theatre in Boston this October. David is also working on the stage version
of Shrek.
Claire Messud ’83
Claire’s recently-released novel, The
Emperor’s Children, earned extraordinary praise in a front page New
York Times Book Review feature, and has been reviewed broadly and
positively in journals and blogs throughout the United States and Europe
from The Guardian online to The Economist, Slate
and numerous literary journals. The New York Times Book Review
calls Claire a writer “of near-miraculous perfection,” and “a literary
intelligence far surpassing most other writers of her generation.”
Paco Underhill ’70
President and CEO of Envirosell, Paco has
“carved a career out of observing shoppers shopping.” Paco’s book on the
subject is Why we Buy: The Science of Shopping. Paco and Envirosell
were discussed in the New York Times science section, in an article
exploring the science of individuals’ interaction and decision-making
in stores.
Students Perform at Town Festival

Milton jazz musicians performed on stage
at an afternoon event designed to bring together diverse people from the
town of Milton. Less than one week after school opened, the students played
a spirited program of four songs composed by Horace Silver. Student performers
were Chris Cote and Tom Shaw (trumpets); Danny Brandt (soprano sax); Yoo-Na
Kim (piano); Andy Bernard and Justin Kahn (guitar); Spencer Gaffney and
Steve Sando (bass); and Will Pride and Zubin Thomas (drums); directed
by Bob Sinicrope, Milton Academy music department.
Nesto
Gallery Presents Art Faculty Show

For the first time in over a decade, the
Nesto Gallery features the work of Milton Academy’s art faculty.
The Art Faculty Show begins on Tuesday, September 19, with an opening
reception from 5:30–7:30 p.m. The exhibit will be opened to the
public September 19–October 21, from 8:30 a.m.–3:30 p.m. on
weekdays. The show includes work submitted by Sandra Butler, Gordon Chase,
Bryan Cheney, Paul Menneg, Anne Neely, Larry Pollans and Maggie Stark.
The Nesto Gallery is located in the lower level of the Science Building.
For more information, contact Anne Neely at anne_neely@milton.edu.
Milton
Welcomes the New Year

Familiar ritual launched the new school year at Milton as faculty and
students processed into the Fitzgibbons Convocation Center on Monday,
September 11. The Academy’s new interfaith chaplain, Suzanne De
Buhr, led the invocation reflecting upon the tragedies that occurred on
that date five years ago and since then, and considering the thoughts
and actions we might take in response. Samm
Yu and Adit Basheer—co-head monitors—welcomed fellow students,
especially those new to Milton.
[Full Story]
Sarah
Sze '87 Creates "The Edge of One of Many Circles"

What looks fragile, whimsical, spun of thread, filled with light—and
at the same time is shaped of steel, designed to hold—balanced in
the air, several stories high—more than 800 pounds of visual intricacy?
What is complex, multidimensional, chock full of shapes, colors and objects
and ideas, and at the same time affirms the grace, simplicity and openness
of an extraordinary building?
Sarah Sze’s work, “The Edge of One of Many Circles”
in the Schwarz Student Center bonds sculpture and architecture to yield
an extraordinary artistic experience. The experience is new each day,
because her piece beckons you in from different starting points and draws
you toward the center along different routes.
[Full Story]
Milton Grads Top the Pages
of the Boston Globe and New York Times
The familiar faces of Aida Sadr and Zoe Jick, Class of 2006, introduced
the article “Allies in the Middle East,” in the Boston Globe’s
Living Arts section today. The story looks at the deep friendship of two
girls who have to work to understand each other’s point of view.
Reporter Bella English writes: "Aida
Sadr and Zoe Jick are close friends. They were born two days apart. They
both moved from Brookline to Newton at age 16. They car-pooled to Milton
Academy and graduated in June. They're each taking a gap year before heading
to college: Aida to Columbia University, Zoe to Wesleyan." Click
here to read the full story.
In a New York Times story
today Motoko
Rich cites the ability of novelist Claire Messud, Milton Class of
1983, to write convincingly about what she doesn’t know firsthand. Ms.
Rich was discussing Claire’s newly released novel, The Emperor’s Children,
“set in the period just before Sept. 11, 2001, in Manhattan and features
characters whom many striving Ivy League graduates caught up in the media-obsessed
whirlwind might find familiar.” The Emperor’s Children was the
front page review in the Times Book Review on August 27 (“The
End of Irony”) and has been named an editor’s choice in the review.
The Times article notes that Claire Messud has been nominated
to the list for the Man Booker Prize in Britain.
Milton’s Underwater R.O.V.
Team Earns 11th Place in International Competition

Milton Academy’s remotely operated underwater vehicle team (M.A.R.O.V.)
earned 11th place overall in its 4th consecutive trip to the R.O.V. International
Competition on June 23-25. The Internationals, held at the Johnson Space
Center’s Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory in Houston, Texas, included
26 of the best teams from around the world.
Yoo-Na Kim ’07 controlled Milton’s underwater vehicle, Hallie,
on the competition dives. During Hallie’s second descent, Yoo-Na,
along with on-deck operators, Charles Johnson ’07, Tim Fram ’07
and Dan Abrams ’08, completed all required mission tasks successfully
with several minutes to spare. As a result, their underwater dive score
placed them in the “Top 10” among all other international
teams in the competition.
[Full Story]
|
|
Graduation 2007
Click here for the details
News Archives
2007-2008 News
2006-2007 News
2005-2006 News
2004-2005 News
2003-2004 News
2002-2003 News
2001-2002 News
|