Stories and updates from around campus

Sending Their Thanks: Students Particpate in Holiday Mail for Heroes Program

All across campus, groups of students were busy Wednesday morning signing cards to people they did not know. “Happy Holidays,” they wrote, “Thank you for keeping us safe. Thank you for your service.”

Before turning to topics such as exams and the upcoming holiday break, students took a few minutes during advisor meetings to remember members of the military and write them messages of thanks.

The cards were part of the Holiday Mail for Heroes Program, an annual event organized by the American Red Cross. Collected between October and December, the cards are eventually distributed to military installations and veterans hospitals, according to the Red Cross website.

This is the second time Williston Northampton has participated in the program. Last year, during an effort coordinated by Maddy Stern ’14 and Ben Wheeler ’14, students signed roughly 300 holiday cards for service members. This year, Stern and the junior class officers once again spearheaded the effort.

“I believe this program is important to participate in throughout the entire year but especially surrounding the holiday season,” Stern wrote in an email. “It is important for the Williston Community to remember that this isn’t only the brief three weeks before winter break, but also the time of the year meant for reflection and contribution to others.”

Stern said that she was anticipating sending around 150 cards to soldiers stationed overseas this year.

“Hopefully, by exchanging a fraction of our day to write a small note to a soldier, Williston students can not only help brighten the soldier’s day, but gain a sense of perspective and selflessness, which this busy season is truly about,” she wrote.

In his advisor meeting with Associate Director of Admission Derek Cunha, senior Thomas Walsh was wishing military personnel a “safe and happy holiday season,” he said.

Down the hall, Julia Krupp ’15 was also writing out a holiday card, while others in her advisor group decorated their messages with stars.

“Thank you so much for all you do. You’re amazing and a total hero,” Krupp said, reading aloud what she had written. “Sorry you cannot be with your family during the season, but I’m sure they are so proud.”

Pilot Science Program Tackles the Big Problems

An outbreak of fungal meningitis. That’s the problem that University of Massachusetts Professor of Chemistry Dr. Scott Auerbach asked AP Integrated Science students to solve when he visited The Williston Northampton School on November 15.

As the students settled into groups of three and four, Auerbach outlined the grim statistics: 438 cases in 19 states with a death total of at least 32.

“Today’s goal is to understand the role science plays in making sense of understanding this outbreak,” Auerbach said. “Your job is to be Beth Bell, the director of the National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases.”

This was one problem that the students weren’t going to be able to solve by looking in the back of their textbook—and not being able to immediately find the solution is the point. When Science Department Chair Bill Berghoff put together the pilot program for the integrated science class, his aim was to encourage collaboration and scientific creative thinking.

“I’m really big into inquiry-based learning,” he said. “You have to do experiments, you have to do activities, to really understand what’s going on.”

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Williston Students to Sing at Fenway

As they stroll around the park, taking in the sights and sounds of the holiday season, visitors to Fenway Park on November 30 might also perk their ears at renditions of Williston Northampton favorites, “O Williston” and “Sammy.”

As part of the Fenway Park Holiday Bash, a winter wonderland-themed event on Friday night, 14 Widdigers and Caterwaulers will perform Christmas carols and group favorites.

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Luma Mufleh to Speak at Wattles Perry ’77 Lecture

Fodbold.  Fuβball.  Pêl-droed.  Sokker.  Zúqiú.  Soccer.

Soccer is an international pastime and Luma Mufleh has used it as a stepping-stone to foster harmony and order in the lives of Clarkston, Georgia’s refugee children; children who have witnessed the worst of our modern age.

Born in Amman, Jordan, Mufleh moved to Atlanta a year and a half after graduating from Smith College.  One day, as she drove down a street in Clarkston, she happened upon a group of young boys playing soccer in the street.  “They played without some of the most basic equipment–but they played for the sheer enjoyment of the game–something that reminded [her] of home,” she said.

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Remembrance of Al Lavalle

Dear Williston Community,

It is with great sadness and a heavy heart that I report the passing of a highly respected and beloved member of our community. Al Lavalle, a 13-year employee in our Physical Plant Department, died on Sunday, November 25 after a long battle with colon cancer.

One of Al’s positions on campus was working in The Cage in the Athletic Center. It was there that he had a tremendous impact on Williston students and acquired such a great deal of respect that the yearbook was dedicated to him in 2007. Mr. Lavalle, a lover of athletics and a major presence in local youth sports leagues, bestowed life lessons on Williston students about integrity and treating others with respect. His positive effect on the lives of those in this community will long be felt.
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Stories and updates from around campus