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Friday, April 10, 2015
vol. 64, no. 15
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K i C K S tA R t e R S
All 8 ivys, M.i.t. say ‘yes’ to elmont senior Harold Ekeh goes 13-for-13 in college acceptances By Ja M es G a l l o w ay Sewanhaka senior Harold Ekeh has a tantalizing decision facing him: Yale or Harvard? Or maybe MIT? Or, if he decides he wants still more options, he can always fall back on Princeton, Columbia, Dartmouth, Brown, the University of Pennsylvania or Cornell. Ekeh, the Elmont Memorial High School salutatorian, achieved the rare feat of being accepted to all eight Ivy League schools — and the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology to top it off. “This is a very exciting moment in my life, and I’m very grateful,� he said. At the moment, Ekeh is leaning toward Yale, he said. “I visited Yale with my school’s Model U.N. team and I loved how passionate the people were,� he said. “I did try my best and tried to take advantage of everything my high school had to offer. Now I’m going to see where I feel the most comfortable.� Yale’s annually accepts just 6.9 percent of applicants, still
a full percentage point higher than Harvard, which sits at 5.8 percent. Ekeh said he is planning upcoming trips to Harvard, MIT and Princeton. Born in Nigeria, he moved to Queens at age eight and then moved to Elmont for the schools. “Part of the reason we moved here was because my parents wanted me to have the best opportunity,â€? he said. “I had to double up on everything once I moved here‌I had a lot of catching up to do.â€? Continued on Page 60
Herricks music teacher with Olympic aspirations Laura Ahrens shows off Miakoda’s a-line tank top, long cardigan and printed shorts from the line’s spring collection. Laura and her sister started a ‘Kickstarter’ campaign to increase their company’s production. See story page 3.
Robertson runs to fourth place in L.A. marathon By Ja M es G a l l o w ay Herricks music teacher and elite runner Jodie Robertson’s day typically starts at 4 a.m. First, with a couple hours on the bike or maybe an hour or so in the pool. Then, it’s off to class, followed by a brisk 10-to-16 mile run in the after-
noon. She adds in one long run on the weekend for good measure, usually between 18 and 21 miles, she said. Bedtime is around 8:30 p.m. “I’ve actually been doing a lot less running than I used to do,� said Robertson, who is training for her first triathlon. “I actually swim and bike a lot
now, too.� In 2012, Robertson placed 57th in the U.S. Olympic Trials marathon with a personal best of 2 hours, 42 minutes, 31 seconds. But since then, her personal best has dropped by about eight minutes, and she is gearing up for the 2016 trials, for Continued on Page 60
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