BACK, left to right: Assistant Athletics Director Jill Allen, Nancy Rie Adams ’30, Ellie Willson ’29, Maggie Mavar ’28, Margaret Campbell ’28, Ann Smith ’28, Leighton Lanaux ’29, Stewart Dobbs ’29, and Coach Jorge Woog | FRONT, left to right: Leni Jane Johnston ’29, Martha Kate Palmer ’29, Caroline Jefferies ’29, and Zoë Young ’29
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Middle School Tennis Team Wins State Championship, Several Local Titles
The Hutchison middle school tennis team finished strong as Shelby League and Tennessee Gold Division Champions!
The team won in the gold division at the Tennessee Middle School Tennis State Championship event hosted by USTA Tennessee and TMSAA in Murfreesboro over the weekend. Over 20 schools participated in the tournament. Eleven Hutchison girls competed at state, and the team that earned first place included Ann Smith ’28, Ellie Willson ’29, Maggie Mavar ’28, Margaret Campbell ’28, and Leighton Lanaux ’29.
The state champions posed for a photo with Hutchison tennis coaches Jorge Woog and Phil Chamberlain.
The team also ended as the undefeated middle school Shelby League regular season champions. In the Shelby League tournament, our girls won the team, singles, and doubles titles. Ann Smith ’28 and Maggie Mavar '28 placed 1st and 2nd in singles, and Margaret Campbell '28 and Whitney Bricken ’28 won doubles.
Left: Shelby League singles winners Ann Smith ’28 and Maggie Mavar '28 Right: Shelby League doubles champions Margaret Campbell '28 and Whitney Bricken ’28
Dakota Shelton ’21, who is studying political science and Latin American studies at Tulane University, is spending the fall semester in Chile after receiving a Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship.
Hutchison Now highlights recent graduates early in their careers who embody how a Hutchison education can lead anywhere you can imagine. We spoke with Brittany-Rae Gregory Rivers ’08, Communications Director for Next Century Cities in Washington, D.C.
About four minutes into her 2017 TEDx talk, Dr. Lauren Pharr Parks ’02 jokes that if you’re ever on a bad first date, you might reference her TED talk and likely never have to worry about the potential suitor giving you another call. It’s not because her talk isn’t interesting. After all, it has nearly a million and a half views on TED.com.
A collection of plein-air oil paintings by Sally Hughes Smith ’64 is on display at the Dixon Gallery & Gardens through October 1. Smith credits Hutchison with inspiring her to become an artist.
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Elizabeth Austin ’20, a junior at Middlebury College in Vermont, has been selected for a Udall Foundation Scholarship. She will receive a $7,000 grant to focus on her research in the emerging field of conservation paleontology.
Rising juniors and seniors who are part of four myExperience cohorts in Hutchison's Institute for Responsible Citizenship – global civic engagement, entrepreneurship, STEM, and art and design – explored their respective fields of study on trips to New York and Boston.
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The National Merit Finalist and 15-year student has distinguished herself by pursuing challenging academic opportunities in math and science and following her various interests along the way. She credits Hutchison for fostering her intellectual curiosity and love of learning.
Fifteen-year student and National Merit Commended Student Brooke Fair ’23 is an award-winning singer-songwriter who has released an album, an EP, and several singles all before graduating high school. This talented artist also is a dedicated student whose music accomplishments have come while achieving academic success.
Fifteen-year student Emmy Walton ’23 has put her heart into becoming a rocket scientist one day. After developing her interests in science and math through various STEM opportunities at Hutchison, she will follow her dreams at one of the nation’s top schools for engineering, Purdue University.
The National Merit Finalist was challenged by Hutchison’s various academic and extracurricular activities. From the tennis court to the courtroom to the classroom, Sarah is a well-rounded, hardworking Hutchison student who lives up to the school’s mission of inspiring girls to go anywhere they can imagine.
Eve-Elyse Hall ’23 has been known for setting up her teammates on the volleyball court throughout an excellent high school career. Now she’s setting herself up for a bright future after choosing to sign to play volleyball at Asbury University in Kentucky.