
Writing Samples
Through their Massachusetts bakery, John Gates ’84 and Stu Witt ’84 are nourishing communities – and hearts – in the midst of a pandemic.
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From New Hampshire to Iowa (and back), students involved in the Marlin Fitzwater Center gain valuable experience as political journalists.
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Attorney Rhiya Trivedi ’08 defends clients not for their guilt or innocence, but because they
deserve mercy.
For decades, Harry Meyer has been building a one-of-a-kind signed book collection.
Gabe Norwood ’18 preserves 17th-century history as a first-person educator at Plimoth Plantation.
Cheshire Medical Center puts patients at the center of Primary Care through a collaborative team model that ensures continuity and efficiency.
As president and CEO of the Northeast Indiana Innovation Center, Karl LaPan is providing guidance, resources — and space — to entrepreneurs and spurring the state economy in the process.
Alexandra Whisnant uses natural ingredients and the greatest care to produce her whimsical (and delicious) chocolates.
Environmental Reporter Ashley Ahearn takes on the personal stories of sustainability.
Joe Fennessy is known around the Notre Dame campus as the Leprechaun - the mythical, shillelagh-toting symbol of Notre Dame school spirit. But when Fennessy is not leading the Irish football team onto the field, he is a marketing and English major, who takes his studies as seriously as his role as a cheerleader and public figure on campus.
Citizen scientists meet up to monitor life in the Merrimack River
Shep Paine admits that sometimes, when his job comes up at cocktail parties, people glaze over as he’s discussing his passion for military miniatures.
When the physical archivists of St. Paul's School unearthed a gift from Thomas Edison in a dusty attic, history revealed that the inventor's two eldest sons spent three unhappy years at the School, competing with their father's real baby. This article was awarded the 2010 Grand Gold Award for Best Article in an Independent School Magazine by the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE).
Visiting mathematical sculptor George Hart works with students on large-scale, math-inspired art installation
As increasingly early specialization, college pressure, and youth organizational changes become factors, high school athletes are getting caught in the middle.
At the family retreat in Stowe, Vt., Sound of Music descendant Sam von Trapp forges a name for himself against the backdrop of his storied family.
Nine months after he won the 2006 Kentucky Derby, the thoroughbred Barbaro succumbed to a tragic injury. Barbaro's owner, Roy Jackson, talks about what he, his wife, Gretchen, and a surprising number of horse racing fans are doing to perpetuate the good that has come from the honored colt's life.
At one point in her life, artist-turned-aerobatic-pilot Lise Lemeland was gripped by a fear of flying. Now, she zigzags through the sky with abandon.
With Zooborns, a website devoted to the births of baby animals at zoos and aquariums across the world, Andrew Bleiman has finally found an outlet for his animal obsession.
For more than three decades, woodcarver John Gregory Wiggins preserved the history of St. Paul's School. After a 20-year gap, his legacy continues.
The best-selling cookbook author (and Weber's official grilling chef) has taken grilling to the next level - for himself, and for the millions of backyard grillers who follow his masterful instructions.
An alumnus unveils his collection of vintage racing car photos, recalling a time in which car enthusiasts once roamed free among racing's legends.





















