Berklee Scifres ’23 Signs to Play Basketball For Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
The career of Berklee Scifres ’23 is only going in one direction – up! Scifres is signing a college scholarship to play basketball at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida, where she also plans to pursue a career in aviation.
For Scifres, heading to the Florida coast was an easy choice. “I decided on Embry-Riddle because my dad is an alum and because it provides me with everything I need to be the most successful in my future aviation career.”
Scifres arrived at Hutchison as a freshman and immediately made an impact around the campus with her determination, hard work, and kindness. During her sophomore year, she was named a Daily Memphian All-Metro team member, playing as a starter on the historic 2020-21 Hutchison basketball team that took home the TSSAA Division II State Championship. “It was a surreal, once-in-a-lifetime experience,” Scifres said. “I will remember jumping on the floor after the buzzer went off and feeling like everything I ever worked for finally paid off.”
She continued to perform at a high level last season, again being named to the Daily Memphian All-Metro team and to the TSSAA All-Region West team. With the basketball season just days away, she will be the only senior on a young Sting varsity squad.
Scifres has made a big impact in her time as a high schooler, and she credits those around her for her success. “Hutchison has provided me so many great coaches and teachers that have made me a better person on and off the court, and I am very thankful for that,” Scifres said.
By her own admission, she’s a perfectionist and has worked tirelessly to pursue her aviation dreams while going to high school. She stands out among her peers for her passion for studying aviation and is a part of Hutchison’s inaugural cohort of Dual Enrollment aviation students through the University of Memphis. She completed the Weather and Climate course in 11th grade and is currently enrolled in the Aviation Safety course.
Both of her parents are pilots, and flying is a way of life in the Scifres home. “I’ve grown up in a family that is embedded in aviation, on both sides of my family,” she said. Embry-Riddle will provide Scifres with an opportunity to fly through the sky and soar on the court, all at the same time. Scifres plans on spending much of her life in the air. “I want to become a commercial aviation pilot. Later in life, I’d like to create my own private charter company,” she said.
Signing with Embry-Riddle is the first step toward making that dream a reality.
Eleanor Merchant '23 wanted to find a way to help fight the national ongoing blood shortage, so she organized a blood drive at Hutchison. With her efforts over the past two years, blood donations at the Hutchison blood drive could have saved as many as 192 lives.
Allison Blankenship ’12 has committed her 10 years since graduating from Hutchison to working in the political arena, spending the last five years working in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Becca Coopwood ’27 serves as a student ambassador for The Social Institute, an organization that works to empower students to use social media and technology in a positive way. In her role, she helps produce blog posts from the perspective of students.
If you want to see Coach Thomas Jones light up, ask him about Maxine Engel ’21 and her journey from a rising ninth grader with a broken leg to a senior walking away as a State Champion. “You know how most coaches say, ‘I helped a kid?’ Well, she helped me. Helped me grow as a coach.
Seniors had a lot to say about the Tom Lee Park redevelopment after a recent Rogers Scholars excursion. And that's the point of these forays into the community. “They keep us aware of what is happening in our city, ultimately making us more well-rounded citizens,” said Emma Couch ’23.
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The College Board has named Antonella Lejwa ’23 a National Hispanic Recognition Program Scholar, an honor reserved for a select number of outstanding students. She has proven herself through academic achievement and various extracurricular activities.
Middle school teacher Joe Koelsch loves quadratic equations like only a math teacher can. He wants his students to spend time understanding the equations before they rush to solve them. Koelsch, a national expert in Illustrative Math (IM), wrote in a leading blog for educators that IM’s focus on understanding processes, not just the pursuit of a right answer, can be a game-changer for math students.
Solving global issues requires research, critical thinking, proposal crafting, and challenging discussions, and our 7th and 8th graders are honing their diplomacy skills through Model United Nations. The YMCA Middle School Model UN Conference provides an opportunity for students to practice their debate and public speaking skills in a formal setting while encouraging them to find ways to join together as a community to solve current global issues.
Hutchison Lacrosse Head Coach David Gearhardt has been selected as an inductee into the Tennessee Lacrosse Hall of Fame. The longtime Sting coach is in the inaugural class of four, one of a very select group of historically significant contributors to lacrosse in the state of Tennessee.
The career of Berklee Scifres ’23 is only going in one direction – up! Scifres is signing a college scholarship to play basketball at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Daytona Beach, Florida, where she also plans to pursue a career in aviation.
Two Hutchison seniors signed to continue their athletic careers at the collegiate level and received athletic scholarships after terrific high school careers. Morgan Simmons ’23 and Kolby Cohen ’23 were honored at a signing ceremony held at the new Keras Complex.
Meet Lorraine Gagliano, Hutchison's Latin teacher. Mrs. Gagliano enjoys seeing individual students' English vocabulary and confidence grow. She hopes to spread her passion for the language and culture with her students.
It is a vivid memory for Lynn Witte Rodriguez ’78. She was a sophomore at Hutchison and on a field trip with her biology class, taught by Elsie Yeates, at the Veterans Administration Medical Center. “They packed us into this little room to watch hemodialysis,” she recalled. “I was horrified by the experience. The whole thing scared me to pieces. I remember sitting there, and someone told me not to lean on one of those little silver instrument trays they put out. All of a sudden I woke up in another room. I had completely passed out.”