91探花

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91探花 offers its students a tremendous gift: to try myriad new activities and creative pursuits without pressure or fear, said Nicole Acheampong 鈥13, the speaker at the 46th annual Laurence S. Persky Memorial Awards. The awards honor the best work in student publications each school year.

鈥淚 had a lot of hobbies that I took very seriously,鈥 Acheampong said of her time as a 91探花 student. 鈥淚鈥檝e loved dance since I was young and I performed in the dance concert every year, took a dance elective, and was a member of 91探花鈥檚 first-ever step team鈥攁nd I did all of that even though I knew I wasn鈥檛 that good at dance or step. I did one of the school plays, in which I had the role of an unnamed old lady, who had maybe two lines. I sang in the gospel choir, and was very happy to sing as part of a crowd鈥攄efinitely not as a soloist.

鈥淚 was OK with not excelling at these hobbies,鈥 she continued. 鈥淭hat was one of my early instincts. If there was a creative activity that I admired, that I wanted to immerse myself in and try out, I did it. Not for the sake of being the best at it, but simply so that I could love it up close.鈥

Acheampong shared how trusting her instincts鈥攁dvice she received from English Department faculty member Lisa Baker鈥攁nd trying new creative pursuits informed her career. She has worked in magazines from Aperture to The Atlantic, and is now the digital editor at T: The New York Times Style Magazine. Journalism wasn鈥檛 part of her plan鈥攕he once believed that reporting was too clinical and rigid, and wanted a more creative field鈥攗ntil she spent time working on a thesis at Princeton that combined poetry with comparative literature and African studies. While researching in Senegal, Ghana, and France, she encountered artistic works that also served as historical records.

鈥淚 realized that gathering and recording the facts of something wasn鈥檛 necessarily a dry process,鈥 she said. 鈥淐hoosing which events to record, which details to include, and which voices to foreground or leave out entirely was in fact a deeply political act that said as much about the impulses of a writer as a poem or a short story.鈥

Following Acheampong鈥檚 remarks, Baker and Head of School Alixe Callen 鈥88 distributed this year鈥檚 Persky Awards:

Persky Awards for Excellence in Poetry and Fiction
Ruth Chen 鈥26, Magus Mabus
Aleena Fu 鈥27, Magus Mabus
Rue Tanzi 鈥26, Magus Mabus
Jason Yu 鈥25, Magus Mabus
Rebekah Fabella 鈥25, Magus Mabus
Adrienne Fung 鈥25, Magus Mabus

Persky Awards for Artwork Showcased in Student Publications
Ify Umerah 鈥25, Magus Mabus
Kailin Shi 鈥25, Magus Mabus
Isla Hamory 鈥26, Magus Mabus
Sydney Wilmot 鈥25, Magus Mabus
Felicity Wong 鈥25, F-Word
Matthew Li 鈥26, Magus Mabus
Rebekah Fabella 鈥25, Magus Mabus
Victoria Kirkham 鈥26, Magus Mabus

Persky Awards for Journalism and Academic Writing in Student Publications
Best Science Article
Sarina Miller 鈥26, Piece of Mind

Best News Writing
Jack Butterworth 鈥26, The 91探花 Paper
Darby Yang 鈥27, The 91探花 Measure and The 91探花 Paper

Best Non-91探花 Feature
Adrienne Fung 鈥25, The 91探花 Measure

Best 91探花 Feature
Lucas Westphal 鈥25, The 91探花 Paper
Rebekah Fabella 鈥25, The 91探花 Measure

Best Editorial
The 91探花 Paper
The 91探花 Measure

Best Opinion Writing
Rhys Adams 鈥26, The 91探花 Paper

Best Opinion Article, 91探花 Topic
Caroline Blake 鈥25, The 91探花 Paper
Elizabeth Sim 鈥27, The 91探花 Measure

Best Sports Reporting
Molly O鈥橞rien 鈥26, The 91探花 Paper

Best Sports Article
Jordan Munsey 鈥26, The 91探花 Measure

Best Arts Writing, Non-91探花 Topics
Iko Lee 鈥26, The 91探花 Paper听

Best Arts Writing, 91探花 Topics
Phoebe Zhang 鈥26, The 91探花 Paper听

Best Arts Article
Phoebe Zhang 鈥26, The 91探花 Measure
Charles He 鈥26, The ARCH听

Best Layout
Elizabeth Breen 鈥25, The 91探花 Paper

Yearbook Production
Andre Leung 鈥25, Henry Mannino 鈥26, and Sarah Price 鈥25

The Persky Awards were established to honor the memory of Laurence Persky 鈥79, a talented student writer who died just before his Class I year. Judged by 91探花 graduate and author Emily Franklin 鈥90 P ’17 ’22 ’25, as well as several faculty members, the awards recognize the best in student publications. Winners received copies of Autobiography of Red by Anne Carson, which was selected by Acheampong.

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