Choate Rosemary Hall

Choate Rosemary Hall (commonly referred to as Choate) is a New England preparatory school for students in grades 9-12, known as the third through sixth forms at the school. Year 1890 ( MDCCCXC) was a Common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar of the Gregorian calendar (or a Common For the film of this title see Private School (film. Private schools, or Independent schools are Schools not administered Wallingford is a town in New Haven County, Connecticut, United States. Connecticut ( is a state located in the New England region of the northeastern United States of America. The United States of America —commonly referred to as the South San Jose (cropjpg||thumb|A suburban development in San Jose California. There is also a post graduate program. With both boarding and day students (who make up nearly 25 percent of the student body), the school has been co-educational since 1971. Today, students come from nearly all fifty states and twenty-four countries. A diverse pool of ethnicities represents almost 30 percent of the student body. The admission rate is approximately 24 percent. Nearly 30 percent of the student body receives financial aid to pay the substantial tuition, and the average amount of aid given is 70 percent of the tuition. Choate is located in Wallingford, Connecticut, fifteen miles north of New Haven, Connecticut. Wallingford is a town in New Haven County, Connecticut, United States.
Overview
From its shared roots over a century ago as The Choate School and Rosemary Hall, through their merger in 1974, Choate Rosemary is part of The Ten Schools Admissions Organization, along with several other New England-based boarding schools.
Choate offers courses in English, mathematics, science, foreign languages, history, ethics, political science, economics, and a range of electives. In addition, the school offers a concentration program in the arts and a science research program. The Capstone Project during senior year allows students to focus on one type of academic area (such as the Capstone for Creative Writing).
Choate also offers a range of extracurricular activities, including eighty-one interscholastic teams in thirty-two sports (the school has a traditional athletic rivalry with Deerfield), academic clubs, and student-run publications. Deerfield Academy is a private, Coeducational Boarding school located in Deerfield Massachusetts.
The campus encompasses a blend of architectural styles from colonial homes and Georgian buildings to dramatic modern structures designed by noted architect I.M. Pei. American colonial architecture includes several building design styles associated with the colonial period of the United States including First Period English (late-medieval Georgian architecture is the name given in most English -speaking countries to the set of Architectural styles current between 1720 and 1840 Ieoh Ming Pei ( (b April 26, 1917) commonly known by his initials I 116 houses, dormitories, and classroom buildings grace the 450 acre large campus. As of the June 30, 2007, the school's endowment was approximately $267 million. Year 2007 ( MMVII) was a Common year starting on Monday of the Gregorian calendar in the 21st century. [1]
Traditions
There are many traditions kept by Choate Rosemary Hall. Among them are President's Day, Deerfield Day, the Physics Phlotilla, the Last Hurrah, the Garden Party, and Commencement.
President's Day is a day off from classes, declared by the headmaster on the night before. It is during the winter term, and is the subject of much speculation.
Deerfield Day, held during the last days of fall term, marks the end of the fall sports season. It culminates in matches between Choate and Deerfield in varsity girls and boys soccer, varsity boys' football, varsity girls' volleyball, and varsity girls' field hockey. Sub-varsity level teams also compete. Choate hosts a bonfire and pep rally the night before. During Dress Like Deerfield Day several days prior, the whole school dresses up in green or in very preppy outfits to make fun of Deerfield.
Another tradition, the Physics Phlotilla, takes place during the spring term. Students gather on the banks of the Science Center Pond to race makeshift cardboard boats, testing the principles of buoyancy—and often sinking.
The Last Hurrah, the year's last formal social event, is similar to a high school prom. Seniors prepare for the event by taking Senior Dance Lessons, where they learn ballroom dances. Each year, there is a dance contest, where students compete in the dances they have learned.
Garden Party, which is a Rosemary Hall tradition, takes place in the spring. Senior girls invite a junior girl and a faculty member. They exchange flowers, take pictures, and pass on Rosemarian traditions to the class of rising senior girls. A slideshow is also presented. Boys, in turn, have created a makeshift Garden Party, known as the "Parden Garty" and have recently been included for the slideshow portion of the event.
Weekend activities
On the weekend (Friday evening through Sunday, with the exception of a few Saturday classes per year), many students can use the opportunity to "hang out" around campus or enjoy the weekend trips offered by the Student Activities Center (SAC). The John Joseph Activities Center has the Tuck Shop (Choate's cyber cafe), mail room, and school store. It is also home to pool, foosball, and air hockey tables, as well as video games, TV, a PlayStation, and a dance floor used every Saturday for the weekly dances.
COSA (Committee on Student Activities) runs all weekend activities at the SAC. Many formal balls, dances, and festivals each year at Choate are held in the Hill House Dining Hall.
Sports
Choate offers a wide array of sports. Most sports are offered in varsity, junior varsity, and thirds sections. Thirds sections are for newcomers or first-timers to a sport. Also, there is a selection of intramural sports that act as fun exercise without the hectic schedule of an interscholastic sport.
Competitive fall sports consist of cross-country, field hockey, football, soccer, volleyball, and boys' water polo. Crew in fall is considered an intramural sport. Competitive winter sports are basketball, ice hockey, squash, swimming and diving, and wrestling. Intramural sports include aerobics, dance, senior weight training, yoga, winter running (winter only), rock climbing, fitness and conditioning, strength training for girls, and senior volleyball. Spring sports include co-ed archery, baseball, crew, golf, lacrosse, softball, tennis, track and field, volleyball, and girls' water polo.
The News
The News, previously known as The Choate News, is the weekly newspaper at Choate Rosemary Hall. Now in its 101st year, The News is one of the oldest high school newspapers in the country. The News has excellent coverage of both schoolwide and local events. Recently, The News covered the Choate-Karl Rove conflict in which Karl Rove was scheduled to be the commencement speaker but students strongly opposed. The News has also covered the access hole that was once found on the school's website in which confidential documents such as faculty salaries and student grades were open for public use.
Facilities and buildings
I.M. Pei, the prominent architect, designed two buildings on campus, the Paul Mellon Arts Center (known as the PMAC) and the Carl C. Ieoh Ming Pei ( (b April 26, 1917) commonly known by his initials I Icahn Center for Science (formerly the Paul Mellon Science Center). These buildings are near each other.
Other main buildings on campus include Hill House Dining Hall, Paul Mellon Humanities Center, St. John's Chapel (pictured above), St. John Hall (mathematics building), Steele Hall (language building), Andrew Mellon Library, Pratt Health Center, Worthington-Johnson Athletic Center (formerly the Winter Exercise Building, or "Winter Ex"), the Student Activities Center, and Archbold (admissions building and upper form dormitory).
Freshman year, students are generally housed in dorms next to each other, separated by gender. Girls are put into Nichols or Squire Stanley and boys into "Mem" (Memorial Hall).
Notable alumni
Paul Mellon Arts Center, designed by architect
I.M. Pei.
Ieoh Ming Pei ( (b April 26, 1917) commonly known by his initials I
- Edward Albee, playwright
- Lauren Ambrose, actress (did not graduate, left after her sophomore year)
- Chester Bowles, Governor of Connecticut, Undersecretary in the Kennedy Administration, Ambassador to India and Nepal, Responsible for bringing Svetlana Alliluyeva (Stalin's daughter) into political asylum. Edward Franklin Albee III ( "AWL-bee" born March 12 1928 is a three time Pulitzer Prize winning American playwright known for works including Lauren Ambrose (born Laura Anne D'Ambruoso, 20 February 1978) is an American Film and Television Actress, best Chester Bliss Bowles ( April 5, 1901 – May 25, 1986) was a liberal Democratic American diplomat and Svetlana Iosifovna Alliluyeva (sometimes Stalina, later Lana Peters) (born 28 February 1926 Moscow, Soviet Union) (Светлана Иосифовна
- Arne H. Carlson, Former Governor of Minnesota
- Dov Charney, founder of American Apparel
- Julie Chu, Olympic hockey player
- Glenn Close, actress
- David Colman. Arne Helge Carlson (born September 24, 1934) is an American politician active in the state of Minnesota. Dov Charney (born January 31, 1969 in Montreal, Canada) is the founder and CEO of American Apparel ("AA" a clothing Julie Chu (born March 13 1982) is an American Olympic Ice hockey player who plays the position of forward on the Women's Ice Glenn Close (born March 19, 1947) is an American Singer and Actress of stage and screen, perhaps best known writer, New York Times columnist
- Jamie Lee Curtis, actress
- Bruce Dern, actor
- John Dos Passos, writer
- Michael Douglas, actor
- Paul Draper, winemaker of Ridge Vineyards
- Caterina Fake, founder of Flickr
- Bruce Gelb, former president (and son of the founder) of Clairol, former ambassador to Belgium
- Paul Giamatti, actor
- Philip Gourevitch, journalist, editor of The Paris Review
- Langdon Hammer, Yale English Department Chair
- Amanda Hearst, heiress
- Buck Henry, comedian
- Jung-Wook Hong, Korean Congressman, Former President of the Korea Herald
- Kim Insalaco, Olympic hockey player
- Emily Judd, comedian
- Bob Kasten, U. Jamie Lee Curtis (born November 22 1958 is a two-time Golden Globe -winning BAFTA -winning and Emmy -nominated American Film Bruce MacLeish Dern (born June 4, 1936) is an Academy Award -nominated American Screen Actor. John Roderigo Dos Passos ( January 14, 1896 &ndash September 28, 1970) was an American Novelist and artist Michael Kirk Douglas (born September 25, 1944) is an American Actor and producer, primarily in Movies and Television Paul Draper (born March 10, 1936) is a distinguished California winemaker who has been the chief Winemaker at Ridge Vineyards in California Ridge Vineyards is a winery with two locations the original headquarters located at an elevation of on Monte Bello Ridge in the Santa Cruz Mountains near Cupertino California Caterina Fake is an American Businesswoman and Entrepreneur. Fake was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, attended Choate Bruce Gelb (born 1927 in New York New York) is an American businessman and Diplomat. Clairol is a Personal care products division of Procter & Gamble. The Kingdom of Belgium is a Country in northwest Europe. It is a founding member of the European Union and hosts its headquarters as well as those Paul Edward Valentine Giamatti (born June 6, 1967) is an Academy Award -nominated and Emmy Award -winning American Actor Philip Gourevitch (born 1961 an American -Jewish author and journalist is the editor of " The Paris Review " and a longtime staff writer of The Amanda Randolph Hearst (born January 5, 1984) is an American Heiress, Fashion model with IMG Models agency and one Henry Zuckerman better known as Buck Henry (born December 9 1930 is an Academy Award -nominated American Actor, Writer, Kim Insalaco (born November 4, 1980 in Rochester New York) is an American Ice hockey player Robert Walter "Bob" Kasten Jr (born June 19, 1942) is a Legislator from the state of Wisconsin, who served as a S. Senator
- John F. Kennedy, 35th president of the United States
- Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr., brother of JFK and RFK
- Whitman Knapp, federal judge
- Herbert Kohler, president of the Kohler Company. John Fitzgerald "Jack" Kennedy (May 29 1917&ndashNovember 22 1963 often referred to by his initials JFK, was the thirty-fifth President of Joseph Patrick Kennedy Jr (July 25 1915 &ndash August 12 1944 was the oldest of the nine children born to Joseph Patrick Kennedy Sr Percy Whitman Knapp ( February 24, 1909 - June 14, 2004) was a federal judge who led a far-reaching investigation into corruption in the Herbert Vollrath Kohler Jr (born February 20, 1939) is the president and chairman of the Kohler Company, a manufacturing company in Kohler Wisconsin
- Alan J. Lerner, songwriter
- Alan Lomax, folk musicologist
- Ali MacGraw, actress
- Paul Mellon, philanthropist
- Tift Merritt, singer/songwriter
- Robert Mosbacher, Secretary of Commerce
- Nicholas Negroponte, founder of MIT Media Lab
- Douglass North, Nobel Laureate in Economics
- Victoria Nuland, permanent U. Alan Jay Lerner ( August 31, 1918 &ndash June 14, 1986) was an American Broadway Lyricist and Librettist Alan Lomax ( January 15, 1915 &ndash July 19, 2002) was an American folklorist and musicologist. Alice "Ali" MacGraw (born April 1 1939 MacGraw has described her father as "violent" Paul Mellon KBE ( June 11 1907 &ndash February 1 1999) was an American Philanthropist, Thoroughbred racehorse Tift Merritt (born January 8, 1975) is an American Singer-songwriter. Robert Adam Mosbacher Sr (born March 11 1927) is a US businessman Nicholas Negroponte (born December 1, 1943) is a Greek-American Architect and Computer scientist best known as the founder and Chairman Douglass Cecil North (born November 5, 1920) was the co-recipient (with Robert William Fogel) of the 1993 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences Victoria Nuland was Ambassador of the United States to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization until Kurt Volker was sworn in as U S. Representative to NATO
- Tony Powell, Radio Talk Show Host
- Angela Ruggiero, Olympic hockey player, competitor on hit T. Tony Orlando Powell (born 22 December 1972 in St Catherine Jamaica) was a Jamaican Cricketer. Angela Marie Ruggiero (born January 3, 1980 in Panorama City California) is an American Ice hockey defenseman. V. show The Apprentice
- Bill Simmons, sportswriter
- Miles Spencer, angel investor
- Shep Bryan, a. Bill Simmons (born September 1969 is a columnist for Page2 on ESPN Miles Spencer (born April 30, 1963, Norristown PA) is a prolific Angel investor, media Entrepreneur and explorer k. a. "Tron", cartoonist
- Tom Dey, director
- Martha Schwendener, lead singer/songwriter of Bowery Electric
- Adlai Stevenson, Governor of Illinois, UN Ambassador, two-time Democratic presidential candidate
- James Surowiecki, author, New Yorker staff writer
- Ivanka Trump, fashion model and businesswoman
- Jigyel Ugyen Wangchuk, Prince of Bhutan
- Bruce Nelson, History Professor, Dartmouth College
Fictional alumni
- The fictional character of Charles Emerson Winchester from M*A*S*H* listed Choate as the prep school he attended before going on to Harvard Medical School. Thomas Ridgeway Dey (born 14 April 1965 in Hanover, New Hampshire) is an American film director Bowery Electric is a New York City -based musical duo formed by Lawrence Chandler and Martha Schwendener in 1994 This is about the mid-20th-century politician and diplomat for other American politicians so named see Adlai Stevenson (disambiguation. The Democratic Party is one of two major Political parties in the United States, the other being the Republican Party. James Michael Surowiecki ("soo-ro-wiki" (b 1967 is an American Journalist. The New Yorker is an American Magazine that publishes reportage commentary criticism essays fiction satire cartoons and poetry Ivanka Marie Trump (born October 30, 1981 in New York City, New York) is an American Businesswoman and one-time Prince Jigyel Ugyen Wangchuck (born 16 July 1984) is the Heir presumptive to the throne of Bhutan. Bruce Nelson may refer to Bruce Nelson (historian, a historian and labor scholar at Dartmouth College Major Charles Emerson Winchester III is a fictional character a principal on the Television series, M*A*S*H, played by David Ogden Stiers. Harvard Medical School ( HMS) is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University and currently the #1 medical school in America as ranked by U
- The fictional character of Clifford Calley from The West Wing attended Choate before going on to Brown University and Harvard Law School. Clifford Calley is a Fictional character played by Mark Feuerstein on the Television serial Drama
- The fictional character Al Pike, from Catcher in the Rye, who used to date Jane Gallagher and showoff at the swimming pool doing the same dive over and over wearing tight swimming trunks went to Choate.
- The television show The Family Guy had a character who attended Choate during the episode Road to Rupert, in which Stewie and Brian traveled to Aspen, CO to retrieve Rupert, Stewie's stuffed teddy bear.
- In the television show Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law one of Harvey's rival lawyers, Evelyn Spyro Archingduke, prepped at Choate before getting his law degree at Yale. Harvey Birdman Attorney at Law is a North American Animated television series comedy created by Williams Street that airs on Cartoon
- In the cartoon The Life and Times of Tarrnace Maas, starring "Cantinflas" (Fortino Mario Alfonso Moreno Reyes), drawn by renowned cartoonist Shep Bryan, Tarrnace Maas is listed as attending Choate for his high school education. Fortino Mario Alfonso Moreno Reyes ( August 12, 1911 &ndash April 20, 1993) was a Mexican comedian and actor
- Jimmy Bowman, all-football player in the book Jeff Bowman: The Bowman Story where Jimmy plays football at Choate, but tragically dies of cancer at the end.
References
- ^ Choate Rosemary Hall Bulletin, Spring 2008, page 9
External links
© 2009 citizendia.org; parts available under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License, from http://en.wikipedia.org
network: | |