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Communication Office

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The communication office develops, implements, and evaluates communication plans and programs that support the mission of the School. The office facilitates Milton Academy’s efforts to promote awareness and good will among its various constituencies and external public; to recruit students and faculty; and to raise financial and volunteer support.

Communication Staff

Sarah Abrams
Editor, Milton Magazine
sarah_abrams@milton.edu

Marisa Donelan
Associate Director of Communication
marisa_donelan@milton.edu

Eileen Newman
Chief Communication Officer
eileen_newman@milton.edu

Esten Perez
Director of Communication and Media Relations
esten_perez@milton.edu

Emily Sedgwick
Social Media Manager / Video Content Producer
Emily_Sedgwick@milton.edu

Greg White
Director, Web Development and Academy Graphic Design
gregory_white@milton.edu

Media Contact

If you are a member of the media in need of information or press materials, please contact Esten Perez at 617-898-2395 or esten_perez@milton.edu

Campus News

Incarceration Practices Drive Inequality, Onyx Speaker Rahsaan D. Hall Tells Students

Incarceration Practices Drive Inequality, Onyx Speaker Rahsaan D. Hall Tells Students

The United States is home to five percent of the world’s population, but comprises 25 percent of the world’s prison population. And while Massachusetts is often heralded as a haven for progressivism, its ratio of black to white inmates is higher than the national average, said Rahsaan D. Hall, the Racial Justice Program Director for the ACLU of Massachusetts.

Mr. Hall visited campus as the Onyx Assembly speaker in recognition of Black History Month. A former prosecutor, Mr. Hall described policing, courts and the prisons as the “criminal legal system,” as opposed to the criminal justice system.

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Malia Chung Wins Poetry Award

Malia Chung Wins Poetry Award

Malia Chung (III) was one of two winners of the 12th-annual Helen Creeley Student Poetry Prize. Malia submitted two poems for consideration and a group of semi-finalists were invited to read their poems to judges as part of the selection process. The winners represented “exceptional quality of poetry, along with pitch perfect presentation and ability to command the audience.”

Malia began writing poems seriously in eighth grade. Last year, she won a Scholastic Writing Gold Key Award for poetry. She is taking Mr. Connelly’s Creative Writing class, where she worked on the two submitted poems for the Creeley Prize, “Crabbing in Bethany, Delaware” and “My Great-Grandfather’s Lithuanian Cavalry Stirrups.”

“There is something different about writing for this class; I don’t see it as homework. You can write on your own time and when you are inspired, which I really enjoy,” says Malia.

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Reading Delivers the World to Writers, Bingham Visiting Writer Paul Yoon Says

Reading Delivers the World to Writers, Bingham Visiting Writer Paul Yoon Says

“Books were my first teachers, my best teachers,” writer Paul Yoon told Milton students while on campus as this spring’s Bingham Visiting Writer.

During his reading, followed by a Q&A with students, Mr. Yoon described his evolution from a voracious reader to a writer (“It was like falling in love”) and explained that his inspiration for writing comes from the books that move him. When he reads something special, he writes to “respond” to that work.

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Student Directors Prepare for One-Acts

Student Directors Prepare for One-Acts

The student-directed one-act plays are a campus tradition that challenge drama students to follow a production from licensing to casting to performance. This year, three students will present one-acts, opening Thursday, February 22.

“I like that the one-acts give students an opportunity to try on the role of director and see the process through fully,” says Peter Parisi, director of performing arts. “They have to understand the audience and select pieces that will appeal to them. There’s a lot that goes into creating a cast.”

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Artists Create Artificial Atmospheres in Nesto

Artists Create Artificial Atmospheres in Nesto

On Thursday, February 22, Milton hosts an opening reception in the Nesto Gallery from 5:30 to 7 p.m. for a new exhibit, Artificial Atmospheres, featuring the work of Deb Tod Wheeler and Robert Tod. Using video, sound and light exclusively, the artists spotlight our relationship to the environment.

“Their work is poignant and plaintive,” says Nesto Gallery Director Larry Pollans. “Even though their work focuses on the dangers of a deteriorating environment, the aura is still optimistic. In the Renaissance, artists insisted that beauty in nature was a sign of the sacred.  Wheeler and Tod insist that beauty is a sign that we must work to protect the environment and hence our future.”

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