• Ernesto Guerra wins children’s literature award

    Ernesto Guerra wins children’s literature award

    Ernesto Guerra, who teaches Spanish and history at Roxbury Latin, won the 2015 El Barco de Vapor Award for Children’s Literature with his latest children’s novel Las palabras perdidas [Lost Words]. The annual award is sponsored by Fundación SM.

     

    Born in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Dr. Guerra studied Comparative Literature at Brown University and holds a PhD in Romance Languages and Literatures from Harvard University. He joined the RL faculty in 2008. Las palabras perdidas, to be published in April by SM’s El Barco de Vapor Series, is his second children’s book; in 2006 he published Tú, ellos y los otros [You, Them, and the Others], for children eight years and older, which he also illustrated.

     

    Read more here. 

  • RL woods benefits from work of ECOS

    RL’s global-thinking, local-acting students spent a brisk November Saturday scouring the RL woods, cleaning up “non-organic” detritus wherever they found it. With faculty advisor Peter Hyde, members of ECOS, Environmentally Concerned Organization of Students, Noah Piou I, Brent Samuels I, Albie Giandomenico I, Adam Banks II, Mitchell Garvey II, Liam Rimas IV, Liam O’Connor V, and Rijs Johansen-Gordet V, filled about six full bags of aluminum, plastic, and other recyclables before they called it a day.

    See photos here.

  • RL X-C take 1st, 4th in Division Championships

    RL X-C take 1st, 4th in Division Championships

    RL Varsity ran their best race of the fall, earning the 4th place plaque at the Dll Championships, defeating, among many others, strong teams from Tabor, Groton, and Hopkins. Ben Lawlor (13th) and Rafa Brantley (15th) led RL to the surprising 4th place finish. Xander Boyd (28th), Ian Kelly (35th), and Jim McCoy (52nd) were RL’s other scorers. Jacob Gendelman (54th) and Dan Penella (70th) also were part of the Varsity.

    RL Junior Varsity ran a great team race and garnered the NE DII JV championship. As usual, the JVs ran as a pack, particularly in the early stages of the race. In a field of 158 runners, RL’s runners all placed in the top 25, with those finishing in the top 20 earning individual medals. The spread—the difference between RL’s 1st and 5th finishers—was a mere 38 seconds. Erik Zou (3rd), Robert Cunningham (4th), Daniel Gillis (7th), Will Connaughton (14th), Esteban Enrique (17th), Robert Crawford (18th), and Evan Lim (25th) represented RL in the JV race.

     

    The team improved dramatically as the season progressed, avenging earlier losses to Nobles and Williston at the New England meet.

  • Junior XC wins Jamboree

    Junior XC wins Jamboree

    Despite a chaotic start in which the entire field of runners went the wrong way on the course, the RL Junior Cross Country team kept its cool and relied on its patience and experience to take home the Jamboree title on Wednesday, 4 November. The team was missing two of its top-10 runners due to injury, but the squad still rallied to place 6 runners in the top 20—an excellent showing, given that there were 134 finishers overall! Daniel Gillis V led the way for the RL harriers, finishing 5th. Javi Werner VI, Daniel McElroy IV, and Nolan McKenna VI took places 7, 10, and 13, respectively. Luke Streckenbach IV returned to his early-season form to grab the all-important final scoring spot at 14th place. All five of these boys averaged under 6:10 per mile pace for the 1.65 mile course!

     

    This year’s Junior team scored just 49 points at the Jamboree; in cross country, as in golf, the lowest point total wins. Since last year’s winning Jamboree team scored 72 points in 2014, it is easy to see that the 2015 squad is even better than ever! Congratulations to all the RL runners on defending their home turf by winning their second Jamboree in a row.See Mike Pojman’s photos here, and John Werner’s photos here.

  • Land Art unit with Sue McCrory

    Land Art unit with Sue McCrory

    Inspired by the sculpture of British earthworks artist Andy Goldsworthy, Class III students of Technology and Art produced organic sculptures for their Land Art unit, in which the boys explored form, color, texture, and ephemerality in a genre that eschews modern technological practices. See photos of their creations here.