Posts made in March, 2012

Claire Hughes Johnson ’90 Joins Board of Trustees

Posted on Mar 23, 2012

Claire Hughes Johnson ’90 Joins Board of Trustees

Claire Hughes Johnson ’90 is vice president of the global online sales division of Google. She was a speaker at Google’s 2010 National Economic Impact conference in Washington, D.C. and was a panelist at the 2011 New York Times Small Business Summit. Daughter of the late Guy Hughes (English department), Claire has hosted events for Milton and served on her 20th Reunion committee. Claire graduated from Brown University and earned her M.B.A. from Yale University.

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Wendy Nicholson ’86 Joins Board of Trustees

Posted on Mar 23, 2012

Wendy Nicholson ’86 Joins Board of Trustees

Wendy Nicholson ’86 is managing director of Citigroup’s investment research division and has been rated one of the best analysts in her sector. She has been involved with Milton in recent years as a member of the Head of School’s Council. Wendy completed her undergraduate studies at the University of Pennsylvania and earned her M.B.A. from New York University.

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My Journey Translated by Katherine 
Gratwick Baker ’55

Posted on Mar 23, 2012

My Journey: How One Woman Survived Stalin’s Gulag by Olga Adamova-Sliozberg Translated by Katherine 
Gratwick Baker ’55 Northwestern University Press, August 2011 In the spring of 1936, Olga Adamova-Sliozberg’s husband, a professor at Moscow State University, was arrested and accused of being a Trotskyite. A short time later, Adamova-Sliozberg herself was arrested as the wife of “an enemy of the people.” Torn from her children, she spent a decade subjected to grueling interrogations and a prison regime designed to crush inmates both physically and psychologically. Released in...

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Cherry Blossoms by Ann McClellan ’68

Posted on Mar 23, 2012

Cherry Blossoms: 
The Official Book of the National Cherry Blossom Festival by Ann McClellan ’68 National Geographic Society, January 2012 Washington, D.C.’s cherry blossom trees have enchanted residents and visitors for one hundred years. This spring, the National Cherry Blossom Festival celebrates the centennial of the gift of 3,000 cherry trees from Tokyo to our nation’s capital. To mark the event, National Geographic has published this richly illustrated history by Ann McClellan. The book tells the story of how the gift spawned our country’s greatest springtime celebration,...

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American Veterans on War by Elise Forbes Tripp ’60

Posted on Mar 23, 2012

American Veterans on War: Personal Stories from World War II to Afghanistan by Elise Forbes Tripp ’60 Olive Branch Press, November 2011 American Veterans on War is a timely, oral-history collection that gathers stories of war as experienced by those involved firsthand. The words of 55 veterans—ranging in age from 20 to 90 years—raise questions about when the wars are worth fighting, what missions can and can’t be won, and the costs and benefits of the United States intervention, both around the world and domestically. Recent veterans tell stories of coping with hostile forces and of...

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Fragile Beginnings by Adam Wolfberg, M.D. ’88

Posted on Mar 23, 2012

Fragile Beginnings: 
Discoveries and Triumphs in the Newborn ICU by Adam Wolfberg, M.D. ’88 A Harvard Health 
Publications Book Beacon Press, February 2012 Half a million babies are born prematurely in the United States every year. As doctors and parents make decisions about life-saving care in the first hours of a premature infant’s life, they must grapple with profound ethical and scientific questions: Who should be saved? How aggres-sively should doctors try to salvage the life of a premature baby, who may be severely neurologically and physically impaired? What will that child’s...

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Mainers in the Civil War by Harry Gratwick ’55

Posted on Mar 23, 2012

Mainers in the Civil War by Harry Gratwick ’55 The History Press, April 2011 Early on the morning of April 12, 1861, a mortar shell arched across the sky and exploded over Fort Sumter in the middle of Charleston Harbor. For the next 34 hours, Confederate artillery pounded Federal troops with shot and shell until the fort’s commander, Major Robert Anderson, surrendered and agreed to evacuate his men. Far to the north, the great state of Maine did not witness any Civil War battles. Mainers, however, contributed to the war in many important ways. Hailing from the mainland to the islands,...

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Who’s Afraid of 
Post-Blackness? by Touré ’89

Posted on Mar 23, 2012

Who’s Afraid of 
Post-Blackness? What It Means to 
Be Black Now by Touré ’89 Free Press, September 2011 In the 21st century, racial attitudes have become more complicated and nuanced than ever. Inspired by a president unlike any Black man ever seen on America’s national stage, many are searching for new ways of understanding Blackness. Commentator and journalist Touré begins his book by examining the concept of “Post-Blackness,” a term defining artists who are proud to be Black but don’t want to be limited by identity politics and boxed in by race. He discovers that the...

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