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The Cardinal

The Cardinal is your home for stories from the SAAS community. Read your friends’ stories and share your own—our staff will help!

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  • Sports (28)
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  • Opinion (31)
  • Arts (62)
  • Entertainment (76)
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  • Visual (261)

@TheSAASCardinal

  • The Cardinal
    Head of School Joe Puggelli will soon retire after 22 years @SeattleAcademy. Seniors Avidan B., Avi S., and Ben G.… https://t.co/xQehfEjC9v
    Jun 7, 2018, 4:13 PM
  • The Cardinal
    Joe Puggelli will soon retire from @SeattleAcademy after 22 years of service. Seniors Avi S., Avidan B., and Ben G.… https://t.co/IfhCaejYTJ
    Jun 7, 2018, 2:22 PM
  • The Cardinal
    Seniors Jujaar S. and Kaleabe Abebe bring us this profile of Craig Tomlinson @SeattleAcademy: https://t.co/XZR4QOQH7v
    May 22, 2018, 11:44 AM

Latest Stories

Featured
Joe Puggelli: A Story of Chance, Challenge, and Change
Ben Gode '18, Avidan Baral '18, and Avi Shapiro '18
Jun 7, 2018
Joe Puggelli: A Story of Chance, Challenge, and Change
Ben Gode '18, Avidan Baral '18, and Avi Shapiro '18
Jun 7, 2018

Seattle Academy Head of School Joe Puggelli is retiring after serving the school for 22 years. Next year, Joe is looking forward to “sleeping a little bit more,” reading material that has piled up over the last two decades, and “working out during daylight hours for a change.”

Ben Gode '18, Avidan Baral '18, and Avi Shapiro '18
Jun 7, 2018
Faculty Profile: Coach and Coordinator Craig Tomlinson
Kaleabe Abebe '18 and Jujaar Singh '18
May 22, 2018
Faculty Profile: Coach and Coordinator Craig Tomlinson
Kaleabe Abebe '18 and Jujaar Singh '18
May 22, 2018
Kaleabe Abebe '18 and Jujaar Singh '18
May 22, 2018
No More BAD EGG Days: Seattle Academy Schedule Gets Scrambled
Ben Gode '18, Avidan Baral '18, and Avi Shapiro '18
May 4, 2018
No More BAD EGG Days: Seattle Academy Schedule Gets Scrambled
Ben Gode '18, Avidan Baral '18, and Avi Shapiro '18
May 4, 2018

The new schedule adds an 8th period to be filled with new required classes, and makes blocks longer, to further develop Seattle Academy’s curriculum and advance the school in a new direction. Seniors Avidan Baral, Ben Gode, and Avi Shapiro sat down with Deans of Faculty Alison Ray and Fred Strong to get some answers.

Ben Gode '18, Avidan Baral '18, and Avi Shapiro '18
May 4, 2018

Alumni Blog

Featured
Interview with Jordan Frank '04
Oct 10, 2016
Interview with Jordan Frank '04
Oct 10, 2016
Oct 10, 2016
Interview with Dhani Mau '06
May 20, 2016
Interview with Dhani Mau '06
May 20, 2016

An interview with SAAS grad Dhani Mau '06.

May 20, 2016

"How to Stand"

April 26, 2017 in Arts, Visual

Keep your heels together; don’t have one foot more turned out than the other; keep them as rotated as possible but don’t strain it; lengthen the back of your legs, engage your hamstrings and not your quads; keep your legs straight but don’t lock them, you don’t want to hurt yourself; don’t stand too far away from the barre, but also don’t be too close; you need to estimate the perfect distance to create the right line when you take the barre; make sure you keep equal weight on both of your feet; spread your toes on the floor and don’t roll forward onto your front ones; don’t sickle your feet and don’t let your lower legs bend in; rotate from your hips not your knees; engage your deep six rotators but not your glutes; imagine your pelvis is a bowl, don’t spill the water in the bowl forwards or backwards; keep your torso straight and tilting slightly forwards, but don’t stick your butt out, that breaks the line; shoulders should be back and down, but don’t pinch your shoulder blades; don’t tense up, stay relaxed; make sure you keep space in your armpits and between your arms and your torso; keep a soft bend in your arms, it should look effortless; tilt your upper arms forwards and your forearms back and your hands forwards, that’s how to create the perfect line; now hold your thumbs out and pull your index fingers up a bit, now pull your middle finger in, ring finger out a little more, and pinky the furthest back; but don’t have any tension in your fingers, they should appear to be floating; make sure your elbows are in front of your body but not in front of your hands; lengthen your neck but don’t strain it; keep it aligned with the rest of your body, you can’t have any breaks in your line; keep your shoulders down; tilt your head up and to the right, but just slightly, you don’t want it to look forced; keep your gaze lifted, and don’t smile, but look like you’re having fun; take a deep breath and let go of any remaining tension in your body; now you are ready to begin dancing.

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