Friends Seminary
Edition 3
May 2016
An Interview with Chelsea Clinton By ZARA SCHREIBER ’17
Campus Redevelopment Underway By NAHID MAHMUD ’17
Among the numerous treasures in Bo Lauder’s office — rows of textbooks, stacks of newspapers, colorful artwork and a couple of exotic birds — sits a model of the Friends campus, incredibly detailed down to the black, wrought iron fence that borders Fifteenth and Sixteenth Streets and Rutherford Place. The model is a representation of how the school’s campus will look after a three-year, $69 million renovation project. After being sent to the repair shop several times over the past few months
due to several adjustments, the model now sits complete under an office window that looks out onto the scaffolding that has recently been installed along the exterior of Hunter Hall — a sign that the school’s long-awaited renovation project has begun. There have been several hurdles along the way since development began in 2003. “This important academic redevelopment went through a rigorous public review
process, and was approved by the Landmarks Preservation Commission unanimously last May,” Principal Bo Lauder said. “It was carefully designed to meet the needs of our approximately 1,000 students, teachers and staff, including making our facilities 100% ADA accessible (in accordance with Americans with Disabilities Act accessibility standards), while still remaining faithful to the architectural and historic character of the
Inside
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WHO IS FRIENDS VOTING FOR?
TALKING WITH “BOB THE SUB”
PRANKS AT FRIENDS
R.I.P. MARIELLA’S
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Chelsea Clinton, daughter of former President Bill Clinton and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and a board member of the Clinton Foundation, recently visited Friends Seminary as the featured speaker of Peace Week. Clinton graduated Sidwell Friends in 1997, attending school there during Bo Lauder’s tenure as Dean of Students. She went on to Stanford, and more recently has published a children’s activism book entitled It’s Your World, which educates young readers about major world issues such as poverty, gender equality, and climate change, and advises them on how they can contribute to society. During her talk at Friends, Clinton discussed her novel, her plans for the future, and encouraged students to pursue their passions. Before her speech, the editors-in-chief of The Insight were able to interview her alongside Lauder. Bo Lauder: Twenty years after we were both at Sidwell Friends, why do you think your parents chose a Quaker school? Chelsea Clinton (CC): I think my family, it was really a family decision, chose Sidwell for a couple of pretty simple reasons. When my mother and I came to Washington to look at schools and we took a few different tours, Sidwell was the place where we just felt most comfortable and where I could really envision myself being able to be treated as a student and not primarily as my parents’ daughter, where I really liked the group of kids who took me on my tour and I could imagine or I hoped I could imagine being friends with them one day. So it was really, I think, the environment and the students and clearly my parents thought I would get a good education scholastically as well as ethically, and I’m just so grateful that we made that choice.
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