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Sophomores Get “Trapped” In Mind-Bending Game

Sophomores Get “Trapped” In Mind-Bending Game

Starting with a series of Instagram videos featuring a grim industrial kitchen and some seemingly random letters, Class III students embarked on a mission to solve a complex puzzle Wednesday morning. From that point, they solved equations and a riddle, and unlocked a code with instructions for completion, ultimately ending with some prizes from Trapology Boston, whose co-founder, Nicole Chan, visited Class III as the math department’s invited speaker. As the different pieces of the puzzle fell into place, small groups of students raced down the bleachers in the Fitzgibbons Convocation Center to receive their next hint from Ms. Chan and her colleague, Karen Eng.

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Conor French ’99 Will Be 2016 Graduation Speaker

Conor French ’99 Will Be 2016 Graduation Speaker

A corporate attorney turned social entrepreneur, Conor French ’99 is the CEO of Indego Africa—a nonprofit enterprise that partners with cooperatives of nearly 500 female artisans in Rwanda and Ghana. Indego Africa tries to break cycles of poverty by providing women with the tools and support to flourish as independent businesswomen and drive development in their communities.

Indego Africa supports its artisan partners by exporting, marketing, and selling their products—clothing, jewelry, accessories, home décor—online and to retailers like J.Crew and Nicole Miller. Indego Africa pools profits from sales, donations and grant support to fund training in business management, entrepreneurship, technology and literacy for its artisan partners.

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Big Solutions Need Big Teamwork, Says Greentown Labs CEO

Big Solutions Need Big Teamwork, Says Greentown Labs CEO

“You can make a difference. You may not know what that is today, but keep your ears open as you’re learning, as you’re growing, to how you can make an impact,” Dr. Emily Reichert told students Wednesday morning. Dr. Reichert is CEO of Greentown Labs, a clean technology startup incubator. She encouraged students to think about the environmental problems facing the world today—climate change, energy deficiencies, water scarcity, deforestation, waste management—and the actions they can take to solve them.

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Milton Gets Wicked Sketchy This Weekend

Milton Gets Wicked Sketchy This Weekend

It’s turning into an annual spring tradition as the 1212 play brings another taste of Saturday Night Live comedy to campus. Wicked Sketchy is an original production made up of sketches, written and performed by students. For this third production, Wicked Sketchy veterans Mack Makishima (I), Alex Gistis (I) and Melody Tan (I) took on lead writing and directorial roles in this collaborative project. The 12-student cast pitched ideas to each other and wrote draft skits in small groups, eventually choosing the final ones, which each student had a hand in editing. Director and performing arts faculty member Peter Parisi says sketch topics range from pirates to family relationships, Greek mythology to dating, and the production includes two musical numbers.

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Milton Seniors Are “On Project”

Milton Seniors Are “On Project”

“Going on project,” is a familiar Milton term; it refers to Class I students beginning their long-awaited “Senior Project” at the start of May. Senior Projects are a Milton tradition dating back to the 1960s, and they’ve evolved over the decades. The projects that seniors undertake today fit within four categories: scholarly or academic; community service; internships; and the arts. The procedural hoops to set up a project begin during early winter when students who are interested submit their ideas and plans. They must recruit a member of the faculty or staff as a project advisor, and a committee of faculty decides whether the project meets certain criteria and can be approved, or needs amendment. The faculty committee looks at the size of the group, how the students plan to divide the work, how many hours each week they’re likely to spend on their plan, and why they’re interested in this particular project.

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What Happens When Centrists are Marginalized? Seminar Day 2016

What Happens When Centrists are Marginalized? Seminar Day 2016

“If you’re tempted to disengage from politics as a result of this surrealist campaign, don’t” students heard this morning from John Avlon ’91, editor in chief of The Daily Beast and a CNN political analyst. Ceding political debate to “hyper-partisans” is partly to blame for the highly polarized state of Congress and political campaigns right now, he explained. John Avlon launched Seminar Day 2016 as the Sally Bowles ’56 Keynote Speaker. John has long advocated for the power and importance of political centrism, a level of discourse that has before and can again generate real progress in the United States. He has written Independent Nation: How Centrists Can Change American Politics as well as Wingnuts: How the Lunatic Fringe is Hijacking America. Earlier in his career John was a columnist and associate editor for The New York Sun, and a chief speechwriter for New York Mayor Rudolph Guliani. He won the National Society of Newspaper Columnists’ award for best online column in 2012. Avlon has appeared on “The Daily Show” with Jon Stewart, “Real Time” with Bill Maher, PBS, and C-Span.

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Milton Debaters On Top of Their Game

Milton Debaters On Top of Their Game

Keeping up with current events is a must for Milton’s Daneis League Debate Team members. The team is a “small but mighty group,” says faculty advisor Susan Marianelli. This year’s team—which includes 20 students—had great success in recent league tournaments.

The Daneis League is made up of independent schools from across New England. Students compete in parliamentary-style debate on Sundays throughout the year. About 30 teams compete in each division at each tournament; team members typically compete as pairs in either the novice or varsity division.

Romain Speciel (III) and Ben Pratt (IV)—both new to the team this year—competed as a pair this season. “Team practices helped us understand not only the structure and strategies of debate, but also the delicate techniques that can mean the difference between winning and losing,” says Romain.

In their first tournament at Andover, the pair took second place in the novice division, and Romain earned third as individual speaker.

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Dr. Öngür On the Science Behind Mental Illness

Dr. Öngür On the Science Behind Mental Illness

Dr. Dost Öngür, this year’s Science Assembly Speaker, talked with students about his research into the causes of schizophrenia. Chief of the Psychotic Disorders Division at McLean Hospital, Dr. Öngür addressed mental illness in general, as well as the associated stigmas.

“Mental illnesses are common. They are not a small thing we can ignore, but rather a significant public health issue, and people need help,” said Dr. Öngür. “The best way to deal with mental illness is head on—the way we approach any other medical condition.” Dr. Öngür cited worldwide statistics: 350 million people suffer from depression, and 48 million live with dementia.

Dr. Öngür explained that there is no test or imaging that can help diagnose a condition like schizophrenia. “We know it when we see it, but we don’t know how to measure it scientifically,” he says.

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Dr. Lisa Miller Is This Year’s Speaker for Religious Understanding

Dr. Lisa Miller Is This Year’s Speaker for Religious Understanding

Alumna Dr. Lisa Miller ’84, author of the bestseller The Spiritual Child, spoke with students as this year’s Class of 1952 Endowed Speaker for Religious Understanding. Dr. Miller is a professor of psychology and education, and director of the Clinical Psychology Program at Columbia University Teachers College. Dr. Miller is also founder of the Spirituality Mind Body Institute—the first Ivy League graduate program in spirituality and psychology.

Dr. Miller spoke about when she started in the field of psychology and the absence of research on the effects of spirituality and the mind at that time. Today, psychological and neurological research shows direct correlation between spirituality and mental health, particularly evidence that children and adolescents with any form of spiritual practice are happier and thriving.

“Everyone is born with some innate spirituality. The most important thing you can do as a teenage is to expand this and establish a spiritual core,” said Dr. Miller. “It will help protect you from the ‘holes’ in life. If you set it up now, you will live that way for the rest of your life.”

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For Spring Break, Students Travel to Belize, the Czech Republic, and Mexico

For Spring Break, Students Travel to Belize, the Czech Republic, and Mexico

By Elizabeth Muse ’16

March break is here, and many students are heading out on School-sponsored trips. Fifteen students will travel to Belize for the annual service trip organized by the Community Service Board. At Ocean Academy, on the island of Caye Caulker, they will work on school improvement projects and tutor children.
“I’m so glad I got the opportunity to go last year. We worked with kids, helped with construction, and even met fellow students our own age. The trip was a lot of work, but it was also a ton of fun,” says Cameron DiGiovanni (I).
The work is done in conjunction with Peacework, a nonprofit organization. This is Milton’s eleventh year working with the organization. While Peacework coordinates the work done on the island, students raise money leading up to the trip, through t-shirt and raffle sales.

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