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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 91探花’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

Marisa Donelan
Associate Director of Communication
marisa_donelan@milton.edu

Eileen Newman
Chief Communication Officer
eileen_newman@milton.edu

Jacqueline O’Rourke
Communications Specialist
jacqueline_orourke@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

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

Monica Palmer Named Next Upper School Principal

Monica Palmer Named Next Upper School Principal

Dr. Monica Benton Palmer has been named 91探花鈥檚 next Upper School principal, effective July 1. The following is a message from Head of School Todd Bland announcing Dr. Palmer鈥檚 appointment to the 91探花 community:

I am happy to announce Dr. Monica Benton Palmer as 91探花鈥檚 next Upper School principal, effective July 1, 2022. After rigorous evaluation of candidates in a national search under highly competitive circumstances, 91探花 acted swiftly to bring Dr. Palmer to 91探花, and we are delighted she chose to join our community.

Monica has 19 years of independent school experience, and her passion for working with upper school students results from a desire to connect with and guide students in their formative years.

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鈥淢urder, Mayhem, and Mystery鈥 Brings the Wide World of Sound to King Theatre

鈥淢urder, Mayhem, and Mystery鈥 Brings the Wide World of Sound to King Theatre

Rotary phones, crunchy gravel, and a tiger鈥檚 roar鈥攚ell, an overturned hand drum containing a precise number of metal nuts鈥攁re among the many objects carefully arranged on the King Theatre stage as student Foley artists and actors prepare for Thursday鈥檚 opening of the winter play, Murder, Mayhem, and Mystery: An Evening of Radio Dramas.

The show tells four classic radio dramas and takes the performers back to the early 20th century, when radio plays were can鈥檛-miss entertainment. As students perform the stories, they use dozens of handmade sound effects. A vuvuzela, extended and retracted, becomes an elephant; a train chugs into station with a combination of metals and whistles; big band music scratches out from a vintage 78 record.

Directed by Performing Arts Department faculty member Darlene Anastas, the show includes 鈥淪orry, Wrong Number,鈥 written by Lucille Fletcher and made famous by actress Agnes Moorehead; a Dick Tracy suspense mystery, 鈥淏ig Top Murders鈥; and two Agatha Christie stories, 鈥淧ersonal Call,鈥 and 鈥淏utter in a Lordly Dish.鈥 Like classic radio plays from the 1940s, the show has a 鈥渟ponsor,鈥 Tootsie Roll, and live ads are interspersed throughout.

Star Bryan 鈥23 plays Ms. Stevenson, the main character in 鈥淪orry, Wrong Number,鈥 as well as Inspector Narracott in 鈥淧ersonal Call,鈥 and Julia Keene in 鈥淏utter in a Lordly Dish.鈥 Learning the different roles within separate stories provided an interesting challenge.

鈥淢s. Stevenson is angry or frustrated through basically the whole story, and Julia Keene starts out flirtatious, but then takes a turn,鈥 Bryan said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not used to playing anger or flirtation, so getting into both roles took time.鈥

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91探花 Students Take Action Through Service

91探花 Students Take Action Through Service

The COVID-19 pandemic has uncovered injustices that are more complex and connected than some may understand, Jubi Oladipo 鈥24 reflected after working with a Boston nonprofit that makes and delivers medically tailored meals to people with chronic and critical illnesses.

鈥淥ften, people with chronic illnesses and disabled people are left out of the narrative,鈥 Oladipo said, noting that the pandemic added additional barriers for people in need to safely obtain healthy food. 鈥淔ood insecurity is a really intersectional issue; so many different factors can impact a person鈥檚 ability to go grocery shopping and prepare meals that help them satisfy their medical needs.鈥

Oladipo and the other students in Andrea Geyling-Moore鈥檚 Activism for Justice in a Digital World course recently visited and worked in the kitchen of Community Servings, located in Boston鈥檚 Jamaica Plain neighborhood. Max Seelig 鈥22 said the visit opened his eyes to how food insecurity can have its origins in more than just poverty.

鈥淕enerally, the first image that comes to mind when we think of someone who鈥檚 food insecure is someone who is experiencing homelessness or poverty,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut access is not just financial. Physical health and location also determine access to food and meals.鈥

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Be Great Through Service, MLK Speaker Philip McAdoo Encourages Students

Be Great Through Service, MLK Speaker Philip McAdoo Encourages Students

As a young man, Dr. Philip McAdoo had a moment where he thought his ambitions weren鈥檛 enough. While waiting to be interviewed to receive a scholarship from the Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation, he met young people planning to be doctors, lawyers, and civic leaders competing for the same scholarship. McAdoo wanted to be a theater actor.

During a break in the interviews, McAdoo visited Atlanta鈥檚 King Center, where he encountered a quote from the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.: 鈥淓verybody can be great, because anybody can serve. You don’t have to have a college degree to serve. You don’t have to make your subject and verb agree to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love.鈥

鈥淚 carried that with me for the rest of my life,鈥 said McAdoo, 91探花鈥檚 2022 MLK Day speaker. 鈥淚 thought I needed to be something more than I was. Dr. King created space for everyday people to do the extraordinary.鈥

McAdoo delivered a webinar titled 鈥淩eflections on Service and Love鈥 to Upper and Middle School students on Tuesday afternoon, and to the broader 91探花 community in the evening. Zain Sheikh 鈥24 moderated Q&A sessions with him following his talks. Desman Ward 鈥23, Nate Dixon 鈥22, and Zahra Tshai 鈥22 introduced McAdoo for the sessions.

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Community Members Share Powerful Immigration Stories

Community Members Share Powerful Immigration Stories

鈥淔or me to immigrate to the United States was to take stock of what I had to give up to get what I want out of what Mary Oliver calls 鈥榯his one wild and precious life,鈥欌 English teacher Kristine Palmero told students this week. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about choosing where my physical body will be even if there are rooms in my heart that live in a house in a country so distant that their night is my day.

鈥淏ut over time, the U.S., which I thought would be no more than an interlude, turned into my home,鈥 Palmero added. 鈥淔or me, trying to immigrate here is about loving the U.S. and my life here with my whole being, even when I wasn鈥檛 sure how long I would get to stay.鈥

Palmero was born in the Philippines and raised in Saudi Arabia, where her father worked for an energy company鈥攕he saw how Americans working for the company received privileges other foreigners did not. Inspired by the film Dead Poets Society, she asked her parents to send her to boarding school in the United States; her father responded by gathering as much information on American prep schools as he could to help her achieve her dream.

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