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Cardigan Chronicle THE MAGAZINE OF CARDIGAN MOUNTAIN SCHOOL Fall/Winter 2013–14 IN THIS ISSUE . . . Service: Celebrating Those Who “Help the Other Fella

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The Cardigan Chronicle is published annually by the Communications Office for alumni, parents, and friends of the School. Please direct all inquiries to the editor at: Cardigan Mountain School 62 Alumni Drive Canaan, NH 03741

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Page 1: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

CardiganChronicleTHE MAGAZINE OF CARDIGAN MOUNTAIN SCHOOL Fall/Winter 2013–14

IN THIS ISSUE . . . Service:Celebrating Those Who “Help the Other Fella”

Page 2: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

You may or may not remember exactly how you spent the summer of your 13th or 14th year of life, but I recall that when I was that age, my summer activities were all about me. Oh, I might have been called on to help serve chicken pie at a church supper, or assist my grandmother with the occasional chore that required a young person’s balance or strength—but for the most part I was enjoying summer camp, getting spoiled by my “away” grandparents while staying at their home for a week or two, or hanging around with my friends.

I certainly wasn’t installing donated solar-powered lighting systems in village huts in Southeast Asia, or teaching math skills to children in a windowless schoolhouse in South Africa. But, then, I wasn’t a Cardigan Mountain School 14-year-old on summer vacation!

“Impressive” doesn’t begin to describe the range of service-oriented activities that today’s Cardigan boys take on during the course of their time here with us, but “speechless” very nearly captures the response of most people (myself included) when listening to these boys talk about the work they’re doing—both here in our local community and quite literally around the globe—to “help the other fella.”

And then, consider the countless ways that the adult members of the Cardigan family serve their communities and the world . . .

This issue of the Cardigan Chronicle is all about core values in action, and how this special place—with its mission to prepare boys for “responsible and meaningful lives in a global society”—nurtures not just the willingness but a yearning to contribute to the greater good. I think you’ll share my sense, after reading these pages, that “service” is much more than a thing to be done at Cardigan Mountain School. It’s a way of life, and it’s very much a part of the Cardigan Way.

Joy MichelsonDirector of Advancement Communications

CardiganMounta in Schoo l

Head of SchoolDavid J. McCusker, Jr. ’80, P’09,’10Assistant Head of School & Dean of FacultyMatthew S. Rinkin

Business ManagerJoseph P. McHugh

Director of AdmissionsEdward J. “Chip” Audett, Jr. P’16

Director of DevelopmentDavid G. Perfield

Director of Advancement CommunicationsJoy L. Michelson P’17

Dean of Student LifeRichard C. MacDonald

Director of StudiesTimothy J. Newbold

Director of AthleticsRyan E. Frost

Assistant Director of AthleticsAusten C. Hannis

Director of Summer ProgramsDevin M. Clifford ’00

PhotographyFlying Squirrel GraphicsPeapod Design/James HealeyRichard Clancy ’67Erin DruryRick Exton P’11Douglas LovellStephanie McCusker P’09,’10Ryan SinclairDesignJoy Michelson P’17 and Dawn Patnode

PrintingR.C. Brayshaw & Company, Warner, N.H.

The Cardigan Chronicle is published annually by the Communications Office for alumni, parents, and friends of the School. Please address any communications to the editor:

62 Alumni Drive Canaan, NH 03741 603.523.4321

Cardigan Mountain School does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, creed, handicap, sexual orientation, or national origin in the administration of its educational policies or any other program governed by the School.

Other policy, health, and safety information for Cardigan Mountain School (including an Asbestos Management Plan) is available to the public by contacting the Business Office.

From the Editor’s Desk

www.cardigan.org/chronicle

Above: Kimi Mu ’14 (center, in white hat), fellow CMS student Jack Gong ’15 (left), and Kimi’s father, Tong Mu, are rowed out to install a solar-powered lighting system on a houseboat on Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia.

Page 3: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

Fall/Winter 2013–14/ 1

ServiceCelebrating Those Who “Help the Other Fella”

Service Learning in CambodiaLighting Up the Lives of Others

by Yifu “Kimi” Mu ’14

28

Service in South Africaby Ryan Sinclair

30

Leadership ServiceOur Newest Trustee Volunteers

34

Celebrating Exemplary ServiceVolunteers Exemplify the “Heart of the Cougar”

36

Alumni in Service to Their Countryby Jeremiah Shipman ’00

99

The Cardigan Way2–3 David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80, P’09,’10

Head of School

In Our Community4 Homecoming 2013 6–14 Community Events

On The Point15, 97 Cardigan Commons Dedication16–17 Charles C. Gates Competition18–19 Class of 2013 Commencement20–23 Athletics Features24–27 Program Features

Advancing Cardigan38 Hayward Hall Re-Imagined39–70 Annual Report of Gifts

Introduction by David Martinelli P’13

71 Endowment for Excellence Challenge

Alumni News72-74 Alumni Awards75 Alumni Chapter Updates76 Class of 1963 Reunion77–101 Alumni Notes

Heritage Society98 Spotlight

In Memoriam102 Obituaries

Contents

Woo Shik “John” Lee ’14 helps a South African student learn arithmetic during an Ivy Leader trip experience in

the summer of 2013. Photo by Ryan Sinclair.

On the Cover

Page 4: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

2 / Cardigan Chronicle

Martin Luther King, Jr., is credited with these words, which resonate powerfully at Cardigan. If you believe that education is much more than acquiring knowledge,

if you understand that learning about people, places, and context is as essential to living as are facts and figures, if you believe that gaining hands-on experience deepens lasting meaning and appreciation, then you share our commitment to providing this distinctive brand of education, which we refer to as the “Cardigan Way.”

Earlier this fall, as Cardigan’s senior leaders arrived for a bit of training and to prepare a warm and supportive welcome for the more than 220 students arriving on The Point this year, they were presented with special tee-shirts with the words “How May I Help You?” emblazoned across the front. To the casual observer, those words and that question might simply feel like an appropriate courtesy that one community member would

pay to another. At Cardigan, though, that sentiment and spirit of helpfulness have been modeled by countless generations of students and faculty. Foremost among all of us in this regard is “Coach” Marrion, who concludes just about every interaction and conversation he has with a similar question—thus the inspiration for this year’s tee-shirt.

Cardigan’s culture of kindness and helpfulness began many years ago through good instincts and proper manners of many individuals, adults and students alike, and continues to evolve today in a similar, yet increasingly intentional manner, serving as the foundation of our lives together in this community. Time-tested over many years, Cardigan’s six core values provide the societal framework for Life on The Point. To counter the “out-of-

“Everybody Can Be Great…Because Anybody Can Serve.”

by David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80, P’09,’10Head of School

Time-tested over many years,

Cardigan’s six core values provide the

societal framework for life on The Point.

Chris Moore ’14 and Johnny Trotto ’14 on Registration Day.

Faculty Member Patrick Turcotte P’15 with Coach (James) Marrion this fall.

The Cardigan Way

Page 5: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

Cardigan Way / 3

Our MissionCardigan Mountain School offers a close-knit community that prepares middle school boys—in mind, body, and spirit—for responsible and meaningful lives in a global society.To achieve our mission, we reward effort and accomplishment, helping each boy realize his academic, physical, and personal potential through the integration of the following core values in all aspects of daily life.

COMPASSIONWe cherish the quality of kindness, asking each member of our community to “love thy neighbor as thyself,” and we embrace the importance of service for the greater good.

HONESTYWe expect rigorous honesty in all dealings.

RESPECTWe teach respect for all individuals, embracing an appreciation for diverse perspectives.

INTEGRITYWe cultivate personal integrity, underscoring our commitment to “doing the right thing,” through community discussion, public example, and role modeling.

SCHOLARSHIPWe instill a love of learning and promote intellectual curiosity and growth, recognizing that each person learns differently.

FAIRNESSWe believe that all people deserve the opportunity to grow and develop, succeed and fail, in a safe environment that values intent, effort, and accomplishment, free from bias and prejudice.

sight, out-of-mind” phenomenon, Cardigan’s boys, adults, and all of our visitors will find our mission statement and core values in just about every room on campus. More than just words on a page, our core values permeate all dimensions of Cardigan life and the education we provide.

In a recent effort to more fully integrate the benefits of our diverse community, the core values we espouse, and the important idea of “practicing what we preach” through service to others, Cardigan created the Global Community Initiative, also known as GCI. Recognizing the potential educational benefits, as well as opportunities for personal growth and a deeper understanding of others and oneself, GCI presents leadership courses during our academic periods, which explore themes around cultural norms, personal reflection, service, and leadership styles. Thoroughly integrated and coordinated with our residential life curriculum, advisory relationships, and our spiritual life program and Chapel services, GCI creates multiple opportunities for service and learning throughout the day, and all days of the week.

Drawing from Mahatma Gandhi’s quote “Be the change you wish to see in the world,” Cardigan has used the “Be the Change” tagline to organize the lessons and exercises of our Global Community Initiative. Our boys are asked “to think globally and act locally,” and the examples of kindness, compassion, and support for others have been simply inspiring. Whether our boys are conducting a food drive, as they are at this writing, participating in more personal outreach to our Cardigan neighbors, as they do each week, or taking what they’ve learned here and finding ways to make a significant difference around the world, it’s clear that the “Cardigan Way” will lead to positive change both through the boys we’re educating and through all others who will benefit from their service. (For some inspiration, visit this link: http://vimeo.com/cardigan/cambodia!)

On a personal note, what a blessing it is to live in a community where before every meal we pause as a community to give thanks and express our gratitude, and where we recognize members of the community for their service that goes “above and beyond” expectations, awarding these individuals with a “Heart of the Cougar” award. And what does it say about the adults in our community who have created the “Dudleys,” weekly awards that are bestowed upon certain faculty members for “above and beyond” efforts, and that have been so named in special recognition of long-time faculty member Dudley Clark, who himself is a living example of selfless service. Earlier this fall, several trustees of the School were recognized for their service, too, having committed extraordinary “time, talent, and treasure” for the betterment of Cardigan Mountain School.

As we have learned through our Global Community Initiative, there are certain universal values that all cultures share. One of Cardigan’s great strengths is the diversity of our students and faculty, individuals who represent more than 20 different countries of origin and who hale from just about every state in the country. Not surprisingly, the concept of expressing gratitude for our good fortune through service to others appeals to all and has long been a hallmark of Cardigan Mountain School.

Page 6: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

4 / Cardigan Chronicle

Homecoming 2013

Top row left: Jack Kavanugh ’15 (center) with his parents, David and Susannah; Top row center: Mr. Ramos helps with football.Center row left: Michael Hong ’14 (right) with his mom, Bok Sun Han. Center: Giorgo Carapidis Soto ’16 (right) with his parents, Dr. Juan Carapidis and Maria Soto.Bottom row left: Alumnus Greg Large ’12 showing off his “flow” with his mom, Ellie. Bottom row center: Jacob Slaughter ’16 per-forms for (among others) his mom, Lindsay Klecan (seated).

Top row right: Varsity football player John Seter ’14 enjoys a visit from younger brother.

Center row right: Thirds Soccer teammates Aiden Bourke ’15, Andrey Emme ’15, and Trey Parker ’16 show off their school spirit.

Bottom row right: Visiting parent Bill Pieroni examines a specimen under the watchful eye of his son Bill ’14 (behind, right) and Bill’s lab partner, Ryan Houx ’14.

Page 7: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

Community / 5

Top: Former faculty members Mr. Clark and Coach Marrion pose with Coach Frost.

Second row right: Nono Qiu ’16 shares some class time with his mom, Haiyun Ma.

Second row left: Cardigan brothers Emrys ’17 and Cedric ’14 Elkouh perform in the Needham Gallery. Center: Conor Caccivio ’16 (right) and his parents, Susan and James.

Third row left: Ricky Ochoa ’15 with his parents, Victor and Alejandra.

Bottom left: Alumnus and retiring Cardigan Trustee Tim Fleming ’70 with his new friend, Tibby.

Above: Head of School Mr. McCusker poses with three exceptionl Cardigan alumnae–yes, these three ladies are all official members of the Cardigan Mountain School Class of 1973! They are (l to r): Mary (Wakely) Laturnau, Sally (Goodspeed) Riley, and Tayo Sands.

&TellShow

October 18–19, 2013

Read more about alumni events on pages 72–102.

A Very Special Class of 1973 Reunion

Page 8: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

6 / Cardigan Chronicle

TOP: October 2013 community reception at Dartmouth’s Top of the Hop.

SECOND ROW Left: Beverly Wakely H’01, P’70,’73,’75 with Trustee Leslie Williamson and former faculty member Kate Pearce. Right: Myra and Clayton ’79 Johnson P’08, Beverly and Norman (seated) Wakely P’70,’73,’75, Penny and Schuyler ’63 Peck, and Craig Johnson ’78, P’01,’05.

THIRD ROW Left: Youngsuk Yoon and Gloria Yoo P’16; Center: Carole and George Mennen P’17. Right: Marianne Alberigi P’13, Laura Marshard, Carolyn Cole P’11, and Steff McCusker P’09,’10.

FOURTH ROW Left: Kathy Peters P’14 and Judy Pepe P’14. Center: Andrea and Stewart Walker P’15. Right: Dudley Clark H’05 with Alice and Phidias Dantos P’87.

Cardigan Community GatheringsGet Invited! Sign up at cardigan.org/mailinglist

Hanover, N.H.

ABOVE: Kimberly Stern P’15 and Shay Brine P’16.6 / Cardigan Chronicle

Page 9: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

Community / 7

The Midwest was alive with Cardigan spirit as alumni, parents, and friends gathered in September 2013 at the University Club of Chicago with host (and CMS trustee) Stewart Dixon ’80. TOP Left: Bruno and Kathleen Mangiardi P’14, Head of School David McCusker ’80, P’09,’10, Stew Dixon ’80, John Kelly P’09, Steff McCusker P’09,’10, and Sheila Kelly P’09. Right: David Glossberg ’87 winning the CMS sweatshirt door prize.

SECOND Row Left: Ellen Humphrey P’13,’14, Dave McCusker, and Amy Morro P’02. Center: Matt Hutchinson ’97 and Stafford McKay ’98. Right: William Morro P’02, Jeremiah Shipman ’00, Will Morro ’02, and Director of Development David Perfield.

THIRD Row left: Jerry and Molly Hughes SSP’13. Right: Kathleen and Bruno Mangiardi P’14 with Director of Annual Giving Marshall Wallach. RIGHT: Karen Schmid with host Stew Dixon ’80.

Chicago, Ill.

With the Red Sox in the house, Cardigan pulled together a group of alumni and friends at Coors field in Denver in September 2013 to enjoy a pregame reception and watch the Rockies/Sox game. TOP: Nancy Hale P’95, Clark Wallach ’06, Tom Hale ’60, P’95, Forbes Wallach, Diane Wallach P’06, Jim ’62 and Carol Sanford, Richard Clancy ’67, Chris Howe ’03, John Bayreuther P’09,’15,’17, Marshall Wallach, and Jeremiah Shipman ’00. ABOVE Center: Richard Clancy ’67 with Lisa Ephraimson and Timo Koring, both friends of Brooks Wallace ’76, with a message for Brooks (and other Colorado Cardigan alums)! ABOVE Right: Tom Hale ’60, Jim Sanford ’62, and Jon Joy ’62.

Denver, Colo.

Community / 7

Page 10: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

8 / Cardigan Chronicle

ABOVE: Cardigan reception at the home of Katya and Arturo Ramos P’13,’15 in Guadalajara.

RIGHT: Mr. Exton P’11 (left) and Mr. and Mrs. McCusker P’09,’10 (far right) catch up with alumni Arturo Ramos ’13, Luis Aranguren ’13, and Alvaro Covarrubias ’13.

Guadalajara, Mexico

TOP: A Cardigan alumni reception, held at the Caracas Country Club in Caracas, Venezuela, hosted by the Delgado and Rumbos families. INSET Top right: Right: Rick Exton P’11 with Claudia Garcia P’14. Bottom left: Mr. Exton with Doris and Juan Carapidis P’16. Bottom right: Gustavo Garcia P’14 with Mr. Exton.

Caracas, Venezuela

Cardigan Around the GlobeGet Invited! Sign up at cardigan.org/mailinglist

Monterrey, MexicoLEFT: Alvaro Martinez ’13 dined with the McCuskers and Mr. Exton in Guadalajara, along with CMS moms Lourdes Martinez P’10 and Monica Gonzales de Martinez P’10,’11,’13.

RIGHT: A lively group of Monterrey alumni gathered with the McCuskers and Mr. Exton

during their visit to Mexico.

8 / Cardigan Chronicle

Page 11: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

Community / 9

ABOVE: Members of Cardigan’s Chinese family—including several alumni—gathered in August 2013 in Beijing to welcome Head of School and Mrs. McCusker and Mr. Exton for their annual visit. INSET (Right): Students and alumni pose separately with the McCuskers and Mr. Exton.

LEFT: Host Hongwei Ma P’15 making remarks at the community dinner. Seated with him are Steff McCusker P’09,’10, Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10, Trustee Benjamin Wey, Rick Exton P’11, and Mao Mao Wei ’10.

Beijing, China

TOP: Members of Cardigan’s Mexican family gathered at the home of José and Adriana Harb P’14 in November 2013.

SECOND ROW Left: Grandmother of CMS ninth grader José, Mrs. Rodriguez (seated), celebrated a birthday during the Cardigan visit. With her are José’s parents and his other grandmother (center); Center: Rick Exton P’11 dines with Daniel Briseno ’00, and Emilio Rosas ’09 in Mexico City. Right: Diego Unanue De Aspe ’12 with Mr. Exton (far right) and CMS grandmother “extraordinario” Virginia De Aspe GP’00,’01,’02,’04,’10,’12.

Mexico City, Mexico

ABOVE: Monica and Juan Martinez P’14, Manuel Zesati P’15 and friend, and Silvia and Juan Montiel P’15.

Community / 9

Page 12: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

10 / Cardigan Chronicle

ABOVE: Members of Cardigan’s Chinese family gathered with the McCuskers and Mr. Exton in Shanghai in August 2013.

Shanghai, China

Cardigan Around the Globe

LEFT: Xiangdong Shi P’10, Steff McCusker P’09,’10, Rick Exton P’11, Xiangqun Chen P’15, Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10, Huaxin Huang P’15, and James Chen ’15.

www.cardigan.org/summer

Make this your best summer ever!

Cardigan Summer Session • June 28–August 7, 2014Canaan, New Hampshire • 603.523.3526 • [email protected]

FEATURING• Academic review and enrichment classes,

arts, athletics, and traditional summer camp activities on a scenic lakeside campus.

• Boarding or day program options.

• For girls and boys in grades 3–9.

• Three- or six-week options.

Page 13: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

Community / 11

TOP ROW Left: Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10 with classmate Dave ’80 and Kathleen Snyder. Center: Harleigh, Tom P’10, and Hayden Jenkins ’10.

SECOND ROW Left: Brian Tierney ’99 and Lorraine Gibbons P’78, GP’12,’15. Left Center: Art Cox ’62 and Schuyler Peck ’63. Right Center: Sharon and Scott Haire (former faculty) with Richard Clancy ’67. Right: Greenleaf ’94 and Christine Garrison, with Angie Tierney.

THIRD ROW Left: Classmates Bruce Marshard ’64 and Jim Nowak ’64 meet up after 50 years, and Bruce takes the opportunity to return a record he’d borrowed back then. Center: Luther and Marilyn Eldredge P’82,’87 with Penny Peck. Right: Sarah Schimmel P’72, Beverly Wakely H’01, P’70,’73,’75, and Nick Bakker (former business manager).

FOURTH ROW Left: Beth and Doug McLean ’55; Center: Kristen, Nathaniel ’13, and Peter Nugnes P’13. Right: Steven ’15 and Charlotte Garron P’12,’15, and Jeremiah Shipman ’00.

BOTTOM ROW Left: Director of Admissions Chip Audett P’16 with his wife, Kyle (center) P’16, son Jack ’16, and (left) Kyle’s mother, Noel Wood GP’16. Center: Ned Gibbons, Sr., P’78, GP’12,’15 with former Cardigan Headmaster Norman Wakely P’70,’73,’75.

Cape Cod, Mass.

TOP ROW Right: Hosts Penny and Schuyler ’63 Peck (standing right), with daughter Nicole and grandkids Brooke, Chad, Schuyler, and Sam.

Community / 11

Page 14: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

12 / Cardigan Chronicle

Portsmouth, N.H.

On November 28, 2012 former Cardigan Board member Geoff Turner ’69 hosted a group of alumni from the Phoenix/Scottsdale area for a dinner at the Desert Highlands Resort clubhouse.

TOP RIGHT: Rosemary Turner P’69,’76, GP ’90, Brad ’94 and Christina Pitassi, Mike Denby ’82, Fran and Geoff Blair ’68, Richard Clancy ’67, John Hogan ’66, Robert Turner P’69, ’76, GP ’90, Geoff Turner ’69.

BOTTOM RIGHT: Consecutive Cardigan years–John Hogan ’66, Richard Clancy ’67, Geoff Blair ’68, Geoff Turner ’69.

Phoenix, Ariz.Cardigan Community EventsGet Invited! Sign up at cardigan.org/mailinglist

Cardigan at the SeacoastRed Hook Brewery, August 2013

TOP ROW Left: Cardigan Trustee Jock Pearson ’65, P’98 with Head of School Dave McCusker ’80, P’09, ’10 and Jock’s son, John ’98. Center: Honorary alumnus Norman Wakely H’91, P’70,’73,’75, Barbara Pearson P’98 and Honorary Alumna Beverly Wakely. H’01, P’70,’73,’75. Right: Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67 and Caleb McCann ’88.

SECOND ROW Left: Kevin, Will ’13, and Pam Appleton P’13. Center left: Patrice and Richard Whiting ’71 take home the winnings of the business card drawing. Center right: Nate Gilbert ’08 with new grad Will Appleton ’13. Right: First Lady Steff McCusker P’09, ’10 with Deanna Mitchell P’09, ’12.

THIRD ROW Left: Former CMS roommates Cullen de Bournecht ’99 and John Pearson III ’98. Right: Ginger Pearson, Sally Pearson, and Barbara Pearson P’98. BOTTOM Left: Walzak family members Emily, Michael, Susan, and Sam ’16 with Director of Parent Relations Douglas Lovell. Right: Maurice Levy ’02 with Jennifer Cote and friend.

12 / Cardigan Chronicle

Page 15: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

Community / 13

A group of Cardigan alumni and friends gathered at the Beaver Creek Resort on December 1, 2012 to join the Cardigan alpine ski team as they wound down their Colorado training tour.ABOVE: Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67 with Rick Bolduc P’ 98. TOP ROW Center: Liz Gray P’ 14, ’16 and Michelle Bolduc P ’98 with Cardigan alpine coaches Alex Gray P’14, ’16 and Avery Scoville. Right: Dan Nixon ’79 and Brooks Wallace ’76.

SECOND ROW Center: George Cutting ’74 with Cardigan alpine ski coaches Travis Nevins and Avery Scoville. Right: Peter Blood ’02, Matt New ’07, George Cutting ’74 and Chris Howe ’03.

RIGHT: Head of School Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10 with Corbin Holland ’15 and his dad, Trustee Hank Holland P’12, ’15 . FAR RIGHT: Nancy and Tom Hale ’60, P ’95 with Richard Clancy ’67.

Beaver Creek, Colo.

Deerfield Beach, Fla.

Community / 13

Deer Creek Country Club–March 2013

TOP: Harry ’58 and Frances Whittelsey, Cedric DuPont ’91, Amy and George Brewer ’74, Bill and Bonnie Bradford, Beverly and Norman Wakely H’91, P’70,’73,’75, Joanie Simontoin and Sky Schrode ’67, Jerry ’69 and Silvia Good-speed, Richard Clancy ’67. TOP RIGHT: Frances and Harry Whittelsey ’58.

INSET Above Left: Beverly Wakely H’01, P’70,’73,’75 with Cedric DuPont ’91. Left: Event host Sky Schrode ’67 enjoys receiving the alumni tie that circumstances prevented him from receiving 46 years ago.

INSET Above Right: George ’74 and Amy Brewer with honorary alumnus Norman Wakely. Right: Jerry ’69 and Silvia Goodspeed with honorary alumna Bev Wakely.

Page 16: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

14 / Cardigan Chronicle

TOP RIGHT: Eli Guiterman ’91, David Wargin ’82, and Dwight DeKeyser ’71.

SECOND ROW Left: Marshall Wallach with Zach ’03 and Sarah Zimmerman. Center: Event host John Pearson III ’98 with Richard ’71 and Patrice Whiting. Right: Dwight DeKeyser ’71 wins the Cardigan long-sleeve tee!

THIRD ROW Left: U.S. servicemen, one and all. Army Major Darren Purcell ’84, Marine Sargent Richard Whiting ’71, Marine Corporal David Wargin ’82, Marine Sargent Josh Pellegrino ’93, and Marine Corporal Zach Zimmerman ’03. We thank you for your service! Right: Event host John Pearson III ’98 draws a business card.

FOURTH ROW: Marshall Wallachwith Bill Janes P’00 and Major Darren Purcell ’84.

LOWER RIGHT: Kirby Whyte ’63, Eli Guiterman ’91 and Richard Clancy ’67.

Washington, D.C.

Community / 14

Cardigan Community EventsGet Invited! Sign up at cardigan.org/mailinglist

Cardigan alumni gathered for conversation and cheer just around the corner from the White House at the Old Ebbitt Grill in January 2013.

Page 17: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

On The Point / 15

Grand Opening: Cardigan Commons

Hundreds gathered from near and far during the spring Parents’ Weekend last May—to

usher out the old (dining facility, that is) and ring in the new (dining facility and beyond!). The Cardigan Commons, which plays home to our brand-new dining spaces and expansive kitchen facility—but which houses so much more than those as well—was dedicated in a grand ceremony on May 4, 2013, under bright blue—and deliciously sunny—skies. Students and their parents and grandparents, as well as alumni, past parents, faculty, staff, trustees, and other friends of the School, donned the “Cardigan 2020—A Vision of Excellence” shades that were bestowed upon them and gathered on the outdoor patio as we celebrated the opening of this beautiful new campus hub. Speakers included Head of School David McCusker, Jr. ’80, P’09,’10, outgoing Board Chair Kim Kenly ’68, newly elected Board Chair Diane Wallach P’06, and School Leader Will Humphrey ’13. In addition to enjoying a delicious buffet (and a grand view of the lake) in the high-ceilinged, naturally lit dining area, guests were encouraged to explore the premises and experience for themselves the new and considerably larger school store, The Haven (our well-outfitted student center), and the multipurpose theater/classroom space. For those who currently enjoy all the Commons has to offer on a daily basis, the facility has far exceeded expectations.

See more Grand Opening photos on page 97.

On The Point / 15

Page 18: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

16 / Cardigan Chronicle

2013 Charles C. Gates Invention & Innovation Competition

Under the direction of Mr. Rhett Yelton, who was assisted by Mr. Travis Nevins, the Charles C. Gates Invention & Innovation Competition experienced its sixth year at Cardigan, and it is clear at this point that the momentum the Gates Program has gained from its ongoing success has ensured its longevity here on The Point. Not a single boy emerges from having participated in this endeavor without developing some valuable practical skills learned in the shop, in addition to having had the regular opportunity to exercise his imagination, hone his design skills, be part of a team, develop marketing and presentation skills, and simply “tinker” with things.

Though Gates is built right into the curriculum for both the sixth and seventh grades, creative means for making it accessible to interested older students continue to expand each year as well (for example, in addition to using daytime study hall periods if an eighth- or ninth-grade student so desires, in this current academic year he may also choose to sign up for the newly offered Gates Club on Thursdays).

The program—in which students are charged with identifying a specific problem in the real world and developing a “functioning innovation or invention to solve [that] problem”—typically culminates in a two-day exposition and contest format, which is primarily educational but also quite competitive (i.e., there are award winners, a few cash prizes, and very occasionally there may be an offer of financial/strategic support for an invention to be taken through the patent process!). The format of last year’s culminating event was no exception:

On Friday morning of Family Weekend in May, 49 teams of enthusiastic Gates students headed to Hayward Hall, our former dining space, to man their project exhibits at the Gates Open House. And visitors to the science fair–type setup arrived shortly afterward, eager to take in the creativity. The students demonstrated their inventions and innovations to each passerby (whether a parent, a grandparent, a trustee, a peer, or one of the official judges!).

From Friday’s large group of entries emerged six finalist teams who would each give a formal presentation in Humann Theatre on Saturday morning,

not only to many Family Weekend guests, but also to the expert panel of three “outside” judges, all experienced in the field of engineering, all with a wonderful connection to Cardigan (a past parent and two alumni, one of whom is now a trustee), and all clearly eager to make this a truly instructive experience for those presenting. The judges were tasked primarily with considering the functionality, creativity, marketability, and clarity of communication for each presentation and innovation. As special guests, several Gates coaches from Graland (a school in Colorado at which the Gates program first began(!) and which some of our faculty had visited in March) joined the other exhibit-goers, had a chance to informally confer with the judges, and offered wonderfully helpful comparative feedback following the competition as well.

Following the finalists’ presentations, trustee Ms. Diane Wallach P’06, whose late father, Charles C. Gates, was very much the inspiration for this program’s founding, provided a glimpse of her childhood, during which she was encouraged to engage her hands and her mind in tinkering with, taking apart, and putting together whatever was around; she then transitioned into an overview of the program’s history, after which each of the judges weighed in with his thoughts about this unique educational experience. One judge, Mr. John Pfeifle

The Spirit of Innovation IsAlive and Well at Cardigan Spring 2013 Gates Recap by Steff McCusker P’09,’10

The winning prototype (The Triple Trash Sorter) and its creator, Daniel Dumas ’13, at the Gates Expo in Hayward Hall.

Gates Frontiers Fund Representative (and daughter of the competition’s namesake) Diane G. Wallach with Cardigan’s program director, Rhett Yelton.

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On The Point / 17

P’86,’89, touched on the wonderful “international flair” he’d witnessed, beginning with Friday’s exposition. “Our own government and world leaders could learn a thing or two from all of you,” he said, noting that teamwork is critical to the process of inventing and innovating, and here were boys from all over the world working together to come up with real-world solutions to things. Mr. Matthew Brightman ’06 lauded the boys’ efforts and told them that he’d just come from a conference at the Google headquarters in Montreal, at which 300 college students presented their ideas, and “the ideas and prototypes I’ve seen here this weekend are every bit as good as those of the college students!” Mr. Karl Hutter ’92, in his third year of judging the competition, concluded by saying that the wonderful solutions these Cardigan boys had come up with were not only applicable to challenges seen right here at school, but were “universally applicable to the wider world.” Further, he emphasized the importance of “try, try again”—that inventing and innovating is an iterative process. He also suggested that, from a business perspective, for something to be manufacturable, it needs to be marketable and its creator needs to be able to articulate its benefits/purpose well. In conclusion, he noted that, importantly, “there are no losers in this endeavor! If you participated at all, the skills you gained are those that will benefit you for a lifetime.”

Prizes and Special AcknowledgmentsAfter six terrific presentations, the judges conferred for about a half hour, and then, with the entire community now present in the theater as well, the three announced their decisions. Before they handed out the typical third, second, and first prizes, they gave special acknowledgment to two inventions in a new category, which they loosely titled “immediate hit” or “fastest to market”: the “Sponge for Back,” a back-cleaning sponge (Daniel Gutierrez ’15 and Juan Alvaro Gomez ’15) and seventh grader Cedric Elkouh’s “Hockey Tape Cutter.” Taking home third prize was sixth grader Sam Walzak for his “Amazing Backpack Charger”; second prize went to Philip Huang ’15 and Zach Wennik ’15 for their “Easy Clip-on Lacrosse Heads and Shaft” (which the judges also later acknowledged with a special designation of “patentability”); and first prize went to eighth-grade Daniel Dumas’s “Triple Trash Sorter.” And finally, in an unprecedented move, the judges awarded Honorable Mentions to two young men from Friday’s exposition, whose inventions hadn’t made it to the final round on Saturday, but whose salesmanship was so remarkable they felt it warranted special acknowledgment: Joseph Jordan ’15 and Pablo De Saro ’16.

This year, the Gates “design territory” has spread out a bit to include

both the Charles C. Gates Innovation in Design, Engineering, and the Arts (I.D.E.A.) Shop and the new Engineering Possibilities Innovation Creativity (E.P.I.C.) Center, which resides in a beautifully ren-ovated space where the old school store once existed. In this latter location, boys enjoy instruction and guidance from Mr. Monte Blaustein in their design and marketing efforts. The actual construction facet of the program will continue to be carried out in the I.D.E.A. Shop with Mr. Yelton’s ongoing tutelage. Regardless of the locations in which students delve into this program, it’s safe to say that the program itself continues to fulfill the “relevant, engaging, and hands-on” criteria the School values in so much of its programming.

ABOVE: Judges Matt Brightman ’06, Karl Hutter ’92, and John Pfeifle P’86,’89, with Daniel Gutierrez ’15, Juan Alvaro Gomez ’15, and Cedric Elkouh ’15.

ABOVE: Judges Brightman ’06, Hutter ’92, and Pfeifle P’86,’89, with

Sam Walzak ’16.

RIGHT: Gates judges with Philip Huang ’15 and Zach Wennik ’15.

ABOVE: Gates judges with Joseph Jordan ’15 and Pablo De Saro ’16.

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2013 Commencement

It humbles me to be speaking to you now, graduates, and to an audience that includes men and women whom I have long considered mentors. It is also a joy coming back to Cardigan because I get to reconnect with old friends like my classmate Brian Tierney ’99, a Marine who has served in Iraq and is a member of the Cardigan Alumni Association Board. Seeing Brian again reminded me of a story involving the Marines.

A few years ago I was commanding a C-17 cargo aircraft, carrying 154 U.S. Marines into Helmand Province, Afghanistan. We were landing at night with our lights turned off so as not attract the attention of those who would do us harm. We were using NVGs (that stands for Night Vision Goggles), which allowed us to have limited visibility despite the blackness that was all around us. We were performing what we call an “assault landing,” which, as the term might imply, is a little more exciting than flying on Delta.

At about 500 feet from touchdown, another jet—whose pilot did not have NVGs (and thus did not see my 500,000-pound aircraft)—improperly pulled out onto the runway in front of us. My co-pilot was at the controls, and, despite my word of warning, he did not see the other jet. Happily for all involved, I took the controls and rather rapidly jerked my craft away from the ground. We missed the other aircraft by less than 200 feet.

No doubt this was unexpected for the troops in the back, and about a dozen or so lost their stomachs and threw up all over the place. However, despite the cries of commotion from behind me, the violent maneuver elicited a rousing cheer of “Semper Fi!!” from our Marines passengers, who evidently still managed to enjoy the roller coaster ride. Marines always had the best spirits!

Not all of you, of course, are going to experience this particular kind of drama

in your lives. But let me assure you that you will have your own challenges to face in life. How well prepared you will be depends on the manner in which you conduct yourself starting right now, as I will explain further in a few minutes.

But first: Mr. McCusker, members of the faculty, alumni, and friends, I thank you for the invitation to return to a place I hold very dear in my heart. And second, to the Class of 2013, congratulations! It might seem like a long time has passed,

Leadership and Resiliency: The Cardigan Way

By Capt. William “Mac” MacVittie ’99—From his address to the graduates.

USAF Capt. William “Mac” MacVittie ’99, as he ad-dressed the graduates at Commencement in June 2013.

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but I clearly remember my own Cardigan graduation 14 years ago in the spring of 1999. I know how hard I worked to earn that green and white tie, and thus you have my sincere respect AND empathy! This day marks the culmination of years of hard work on your part, and that fact is not lost on the rest of us.

It is a real joy to return to Cardigan Mountain School, a place I called home for three years and the place from which I and my classmates began the journey into adulthood. To be candid, my first year here on The Point was pretty abysmal. I remember being homesick, struggling with academics, and…I remember the bitter disappointment of failure. Luckily for me I had the encouragement of great teachers and advisors, and the iron determination of my father, who ensured that I did—in fact—return for that second year, despite my pleas to the contrary.

Despite those initial obstacles, I remember vividly the incredible bond that existed among classmates and between students and faculty. It was the power of those relationships that sustained me. Case in point: My roommate from senior year, Adam Schwamb, who remains one of my closest friends to this day. And beyond the excellent academics and athletics on The Point, there are two things that I feel stand out here at Cardigan that I want you—graduates in the Class of 2013—to remember and take with you when you leave Canaan. Cardigan is very special in the way it fosters leadership and resiliency.

It is very rare for young men to be given the level of responsibility granted you here, and yet Cardigan fosters an atmosphere where you are encouraged to step up and lead—whether on the playing fields or in the dormitory. If you need an example of what I’m talking about, go have a conversation with your school leader, Will Humphrey, or French II’s floor leader, Henry Day, or perhaps Chris Alberigi, a captain of this year’s baseball and basketball teams. And they are not the only ones who have lessons to share—by any stretch. Each one of you wearing that white jacket understands what it means to face obstacles, to be resilient, and to overcome.

I knew very little about leadership when I was 15, but that brings me to another great aspect of the Cardigan Way experience: This is a place that allows you to learn from your mistakes. We all fall short at times, but instead of casting us aside, the coaches, dorm parents, and faculty at Cardigan allowed us the space to learn and to pick ourselves up again. And this leads to a maturity that may otherwise be lacking in a young man today. I took the lessons of resiliency that I learned here with me to high school, and I took them with me to the Air Force Academy, and I like to think that they continue to serve me well. Gentlemen, I can say with 100 percent assurance that the challenges you faced here will be similar to those you will face again in the future. Having said that, if you internalize the examples of leadership that are in abundance here on The Point, you will be successful in life—whether that be in the classroom, in the board room, or on the battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan.

When I was in my first year at the Air Force Academy, I faced challenges and hardship just like I did here at Cardigan when I was new. At Cardigan my woes stemmed from tough academics, homesickness, and the occasional social conflict, while at the Air Force Academy I was forced to run mile after mile with a rifle on my shoulder, boots on my feet, and badgered by tyrannical upperclassmen whose sole purpose was to break me down to see if I would quit.

New guys like me were allowed to use the squadron payphone for only 15 minutes a week. Usually I would spend those precious minutes calling home to my family, where I would gripe about

my circumstances. However, I remember my father reminding me that life is full of challenges, and that what I faced now was no different than what I had faced at Cardigan years before. The names and places might have changed, but the attitude necessary to persevere remained the same.

So again, Class of 2013, it is an honor to stand before you today. The world ahead of you is not without peril or disappointment. But you all have a great head start on life, and I challenge you to take advantage of it. Your country and society needs you. More so now than ever, our republic is in need of leaders of character. The responsibility falls on men like you to step up to the plate. I know you will do great things, and I look forward to seeing you out there.

Thank you.

ABOVE: Capt. William and Amanda MacVittie.

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Conquering Both the “Lakes” and “the ’Brook”:

See our Wall of Fame photos, or make an online submission at www.cardigan.org/walloffame.

Go Cougars!

Cardigan Alumni: Were you a college-level athlete? We’d love to include you in one of the Cardigan Athletics Wall of Fame displays!

Back row from left: Jose Gomez ’14, Billy Boyle ’13, Augustin Cattoretti Lopez ’14, Jordan Abisch ’13, Jack McKeen ’14; Front row from left: Tanner Boyle ’14, Gustavo Garcia ’14, Leo Tejavibulya ’13, Morgan Himmer ’13, and Tucker Powell ’15.

VARSITY TENNIS 2012–2013

It began with the Lakes Region Championship title…The Varsity Tennis Cougars punctuated an undefeated season record in the Lakes Region League with impressive wins in all of their Lakes Region Tournament matches on May 18, 2013. In the Number One Singles category, Billy Boyle ’13 won the championship handily, scoring 8-1 in the finals. Agustin Cattoretti Lopez ’13 was equally impressive at Number Two Singles, breezing through the tournament with a display of power and variety in his shots. Playing in the Number One Doubles category, Leo Tejavibulya ’13 and Tanner Boyle ’14 were unmatched in their skill and strategy; they won all of their matches handily. Our Number Two tandem of José Gomez ’15 and Jack McKeen ’14 were challenged in the semifinals and finals, but settled down and completed the sweep of the tournament. All members of the team then anxiously awaited the much-anticipated annual rivalry match against Eaglebrook. Adding to the uneasiness was the fact that the Upper Valley had been inundated with rain for several days immediately preceding the scheduled matchup. But thanks to the initiative of our Athletic Department, the team was able to secure a two-hour time slot at the Boss Tennis Center at nearby Dartmouth College* to hold the last match of the season. On match day, Eaglebrook’s Varsity team arrived with six players, and the doubles event began as soon as the courts were made available. At number one, the tandem of Billy and Leo prevailed at 8-3 against a strong team, exhibiting long rallies and exciting net plays. At number two, Agustin and Tanner dominated their opponents with strong serves and returns, as well as a well-placed put-away. The number three duo of José and Jack started convincingly, but they were unable to close out their match, losing in a tiebreaker. In singles, Billy was challenged by Eaglebrook’s top player, but he rose to the occasion with two tiebreaker wins. Agustin, at number

two, disposed of his opponent convincingly, without losing a game in the process. At number three, Tanner won handily in the first set and went on to close out his opponent in the second set with a score of 6-4. Leo took care of business at number four, and although Morgan Himmer ’13 and Jordan Abisch ’13, at numbers five and six, began playing magnificent matches (each winning their first set), the time constraint precluded them from bringing these to completion. With six victories already in hand, however, the Cougars had themselves a team victory and ended their perfect season with a record of 12-0; this was the first undefeated season in the program’s history since CMS Varsity Tennis began competing in the Lakes Region League at the (high school) varsity level.

Coaches Rocha and Ramos and the entire team extend their gratitude to all of their supporters.

*Over the years, our tennis program has included a trip to watch Dartmouth Varsity Tennis teams play against NCAA Division I opponents, serving as a learning experience for our boys.

Varsity Tennis Enjoys Unparalleled Season!by Pablo Rocha-Vazquez

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Inaugural Alumni Lacrosse Event

A new Cardigan tradition was born this past year, when more than 30 Cardigan lacrosse players converged on campus for the first-ever alumni lacrosse game—which was a spirited contest. In the end, though, the white team (captained by Kirk Franklin ’78, shown above left with sons Austin ’13 and Cole ’10, and at right with Richard Clancy ’67 and the trophy) pulled out a narrow victory.

OnThe Point. . . August 2013

On The Point / 21

TOP ROW Center: Norman Wakely H’91, P’70,’73,’75, Head of School Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10, and former athletic director (and Honorary Alumnus) Jim “Coach” Marrion. Right: Jeremiah Shipman ’00 with Barrie Robson ’68, Tee Doggett ’68, and Richard Clancy ’67.

SECOND ROW Center: John Emery ’78 and Chris Aldrich ’78. Right: Justin Simon ’00.

THIRD ROW Left: Drew Philie ’05. Right: Adam Philie ’10.

FOURTH ROW Left: John Emery ’78 and Devin Clifford ’99 in green; Kirk Franklin ’78 and Josh Jordan ’12 in white. Center: Pierce

Want to play in 2014? www.cardigan.org/mailinglist

King ’05 with Michael Holden ’90 in chase. Right: Justin Simon ’00 and Z Ikeda ’13.

BOTTOM ROW Left: New Hampton School Head Andrew P’13 and Auden ’13 Menke. Right: Max ’10, Paul P’05,’10, and Pierce ’05 King.

ABOVE: Kneeling, left to right: Erik Uhlig ’96, Justin Simon ’00, Alex Gray H’12, P’14,’16, Brodie McCusker ’09, Jeremiah Shipman ’00, Drew Philie ’06, Josh Jordan ’12, Barry Robson ’68, John Bayreuther P’09,’15,’17, Director of Athletics Ryan Frost, Tim Frazier ’00, P.J. King ’05. Standing, left to right: Cole Franklin ’10, Austin Franklin ’13, Mike Holden ’90, Chris Aldrich ’78, Rick Hughes ’89, Gavin Bayreuther ’09, Kirk Franklin ’78, Dudley Clark H’05, “Z” Ikeda ’13, John Emery ’78, Tee Doggett ’68, Matt Stuart ’85, Myles Smith ’12, Devin Clifford ’99, Max King ’10, Adam Philie ’10, Auden Menke ’12.

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Honoring James “Coach” MarrionDuring Homecoming Weekend (October 2013), the Cardigan Family had

the chance to honor “Coach” (Jim) Marrion H’03, P’88, GP’03,’05,’14,

who recently moved a bit farther away from the Point but who still

provides his solid guidance, wisdom, and support from afar (and via

periodic visits to campus). At halftime of the Varsity Football game,

a short program honoring Coach and his invaluable commitment

to Cardigan took place. The rock near the Marrion Scoreboard was

dedicated to him during the occasion and is representative of Coach’s

“cornerstone strength” and of his support of the School, its faculty

and students, and its athletic program.

James “Coach” Marrion

LEFT: (From left) Head of School Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10, Athletic Director Ryan Frost, “Coach” Marrion H’03, P’88, GP’03,’05,’14, former faculty member Nick Lynch H’13, P’96,’97,’04, and Bob Low, former faculty member and current athletic director at Groton School.

ABOVE: Hands that held Cardigan together for many years: those of former Headmaster Norm Wakely (left) and former athletic director, teacher, coach, and advisor Jim “Coach” Marrion.

LEFT: Nick Spaulding ’14 seeks the end zone on the field appropriately named for his grandfather.

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ABOVE: Athletic Director Ryan Frost with his predecessor. Visible is “Marrion Rock,” where a bronze plaque is being placed in honor of its namesake.

“Coach” Marrion & “Coach” Lynch.

Former Headmaster Norman Wakely H’91, P’70,’73,’75 with “Coach” Marrion H’03, P’88, GP’03,’05,’14.

LEFT: Nick Lynch H’13, P’96,’97,’04 gets personal (and a bit sentimental) in his comments honoring “Coach.”

“Coach” with grandson Nick Spaulding ’14, daughter Stephanie, and son-in-law Joe Spaulding.

“Coach” Marrion with Andrew Noel ’16, son of former faculty member Andy Noel.

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Service: Prouty & CHaD

LEFT: Director of Studies Tim Newbold, Seth Gray ’16, Emery Gray ’14, Myles Shepard ’15, J.R. Kreuzburg ’14, and Ethan Kreuzburg ’17 sporting their official “Cardigan Hero for CHaD” tee shirts.

CENTER: Father and son runners Emery ’14 and Alex H’13, P’14,’16 Gray completed the entire half marathon together.

LEFT (wearing the blue CMS tees): Seth Gray ’16, Emery Gray ’14, and Alex Gray H’13, P’14,’16, joined by recent alumnus Nicholas Slaughter ’13 (wearing orange).

FAR LEFT: Cardigan pals Myles Shepard ’15, J.R. Kreuzburg ’14, and Ethan Kreuzburg ’17.

LEFT Center: The Frost family (left to right): Natalie, (dad) Ryan, Caroline, (mom) Meredith, and James.

LEFT: The littlest Cardigan Hero, James Frost.

PROUTY 2013—For the second year in a row, several members of our “extended family” united in July to enter a Cardigan team in the Prouty, a major annual (summer) fundraiser for the Children’s Hospital at Dartmouth. Participants in the Prouty may choose to walk or cycle sponsored distances, to play a round of charity golf, or to row for the cause (on the nearby Connecticut River). Most of our Cardigan participants chose to walk or cycle, and many were able to meet up with one another at the festive finish area.

ABOVE: Cardigan team captain Emery Gray ’14.

FRONT ROW: Former faculty member John Gartner, Alex Gray P’14,’16, Kat Rice, Tess Naroski, Kathleen Naroski, Ashley Wilson, Mary Exton P’11, and Diane Wallach P’06. SECOND ROW: Mike Cox, Jeph Shaw, Maureen Houx P’14, Tim Fleming ’70, Richard Clancy ’67, and Jeff Good. THIRD ROW: Joy Michelson P’17, Liz Gray P’14,’16, Clark Houx P’14, Rick Exton P’11, Ruth Conwell, Didi Wilson, Lindsey Klecan P’13,’16, Warren Klecan GP’13,’16, and former faculty member Cindy Blood. BACK ROW: Peter Lucas, Douglas Lovell, Marshall Wallach, Mike Fitzgerald, former faculty member Phil Blood (holding Molly), and Matt Slaughter P’13,’16.

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Preparing Global Citizens

Why focus on global issues at Cardigan?

The Global Community Initiative (GCI) enhances Cardigan’s core mission by raising awareness of our multicultural world and developing the skills necessary to be successful in it. Our residential program enables students from across the United States and around the world to learn and grow from one another’s different life experiences and cultural backgrounds. In addition, we strive to integrate global concepts throughout life at Cardigan. Whether it is in the dorm, the dining hall, Chapel, or in the classroom, we seek to inspire all members of the Cardigan community to become curious about and engaged with the world around them. This exposure is vital to preparing them to meet the ever-changing needs of our diverse global society.  

Tell me more about the Global Leadership class.

Boys from every grade participate in a weekly Global Leadership class. This in-teractive course is designed for students to become more self-aware while learn-

ing to respect different perspectives and social identities. Students also develop funda-mental value-driven leadership skills. This includes practic-ing critical thinking, open communication, inno-vative problem solv-ing, and ethical deci-sion making. In addi-tion, students compile a personal leadership journal throughout the year. This en-ables them to exam-ine new information

thoughtfully, further express their ideas and emotions, set individu-al goals, and reflect on what they have learned.

by Nora YasumuraEditor’s Note: The Global Community Initiative (GCI) was launched in 2012 to enhance awareness of our multicontextual world. As an integral part of the Cardigan education program, boys from every grade participate in a weekly Global Leadership class, and each month the entire community also explores a geographic location and observes cultural, religious, and educational holidays from around the world. Service learning projects, an annual conference, international trips, and guest speaker presentations further enrich learning. GCI also provides ongoing professional development and consultation to help Cardigan educators enhance the incorporation of global issues into the core curriculum and throughout the residential life experience.

What are other ways that students learn about global issues?Each month Cardigan focuses on a different geographic region. For example, throughout the month of November, student members of the National Junior Honor Society provided short presentations on India during lunch. As a community, we explored such topics as India’s sports, music, religions, language, and food. During Chapel, we learned about Diwali, the Hindu festival of lights. We also held our monthly community dinner discussion, in which our guest speaker provided information about the education system in India.

Another way we highlight global topics is by celebrating the different cultural holidays of our international students. This past fall we recognized Día de los Muertos (Mexico), Mid-Autumn Festival (China), and Chuseok (Korea). Cardigan students are also offered the chance to participate in international trips. Last year, there was a trip to France, and this coming spring two faculty members will take students to Peru.

Article continues . . .

LEFT: “Be the Change” Dinner Speaker Karla Zurita (left), a Dartmouth graduate who spoke to the Cardigan Community about her work with “undocumented youth,” shown here with Nora Yasumura in September 2013.

THINK GLOBALLY

ACT LOCALLY

The Cardigan Mission

Cardigan Mountain School offers a close-knit community that prepares middle school boys—in mind, body,

and spirit—for responsible and meaningful lives in a global society.

GCI

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Preparing Global Citizens, continued.What is the service-learning component?

Our service component enables the boys to think beyond themselves and reinforces the idea that we are all interconnected. It also encourages them to practice applying the Core Values within complex circumstances. Each grade has a different service theme for the year. The sixth graders are practicing different ways to exhibit empathy at Cardigan. Our seventh graders have been learning about service to the local community, and they coordinated a successful food drive this fall. The eighth graders are focused on environmental sustainability, and they have participated in faculty-led workshops on subjects such as water accessibility, consumption, solar power, and environmental footprint. The ninth graders all participate in our “Seniors with Seniors” program and visit a local senior citizen home each week. Valuable communication skills

“This class will help me

be a better leader in

the future because it

has taught me not only

about how to improve

as a leader, but about

recognizing perspective,

not judging people based

on background and

culture, and recognizing

my own leadership style in

order to improve upon it.”

~Eighth grader

are gained through asking seniors open-ended questions and actively listening to the inspiring personal stories they share with the boys. In turn, the seniors thoroughly enjoy conversing with the Cardigan students—so much that some of them even made a special trip to Cardigan for a day this fall, attending classes and joining the community for lunch in the dining hall.

ABOVE: Students deliver food to the local food pantry.

RIGHT: A guest speaker solicits a comment at one of the monthly “Community

Dinners” sponsored by GCI.

ABOVE: Students visit the Canaan Historical Society to gain an understanding of local history and culture.

ABOVE: A Geo Focus presentation at lunchtime, using the multimedia capabilities of the new Cardigan Commons/Kenly Dining Hall.

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Cardigan’s New E.P.I.C. Center

ABOVE LEFT: The E.P.I.C. Center’s “MakerBot” 3D printer attracts attention during the Fall Parents’ Weekend. RIGHT: Close-up of the MakerBot, which “prints” three-dimensional forms from data entered by designers.

ABOVE: E.P.I.C. Center designer/founder (and Science Department Chair) David Auerbach shows off the convertible work table, designed to accommodate Lego robotics as well as to provide a general tabletop standing work surface (as shown at left).

Playing the role of a satellite Gates design space—the new Engineering

Possibilities Innovation Creativity (E.P.I.C.) Center can be found in the lower level

of Hopkins Hall where once stood our school store. The space has been utterly

transformed into a special zone where ideas are formed and Gates inventions are

born. Students research, brainstorm, and draw (on the walls!) here—and even see

some of their ideas take (tangible) shape, thanks to the 3D printer housed in the

center. Enthusiastic tinkerers can be found working on LEGO robotics challenges

and Arduino-based projects in the E.P.I.C. Center as well.

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Jack Gong ’15, Kimi Mu ’14, and Kimi’s father, Tong Mu P’14, being rowed out to a houseboat on Tonle Sap Lake to prepare for a lighting project.

In the summer of 2012, I started a service program in

Cambodia, donating and installing solar-powered lighting systems to some families living near Tonle Sap Lake [Cambodia’s largest inland body of water] who did not have light. This unique experience is something I am really proud of, and the idea of the program all came from a spark.

One night, I was in my room doing homework. As usual, I took out my Cardigan planbook and started looking at the assignments. Not as usual, my phone rang. I picked it up, and it was my dad. This was a surprise, because he doesn’t usually call me during the week. We often talk for maybe half an hour at some point on the weekends, and that’s it. So why was he calling me on a weeknight? Was it something important? After a brief catch-up on my school life, I asked him, “So why did you call me?” He laughed and started to talk about his travel experience in Cambodia. After a few minutes, I admit I got bored with his “traveling journal,”

Service Learning in Cambodia:Lighting Up the Lives of Others

By Kimi Mu’14

but he kept going. Just before I was about to say, “Dad, if we can talk on weekends, it’ll be cool, but I have homework right now,” the spark came out.“So I was at this site…it was on a lake, and people literally build boat houses and live in them,” he told me. “I went in one of those houses, and it was tiny. Usually more than five people are living in these places that are maybe as big as our bathroom,” he said slowly, “and they don’t have light.” To be honest, that shocked me. No lights? Seriously? Can’t be! And then my dad went on, “Maybe we should do something.”

“Maybe we should,” I answered. “What can we do? Can we donate lights to them or something?”“Here is the deal, I’ll contact a solar company in China and—You know what? Go do your homework right now and have a good night.”

And we hung up.

My initial reaction was, “Wait, I was just saying . . . ‘are you for real?’” After a pause, I reopened my planbook.

After a couple days passed, he called me again, but this time with a full schedule of what would become our service program. The idea came through, and we made a plan, bought our equipment, and then there it was: We were doing it. As the leader and one of the initiators of this program, which we named “Lightup,” I’d say the past two years of the program have made really good memories.

The Lightup service program trip to Cambodia begins at the start of summer vacation and runs for five days, during which we install solar-powered lighting systems in house

ABOVE (from left): Andy Zhang ’13, Kimi Mu ’14, Jack Gong ’15, Charlie Ma ’15, James Chen ’15, and Jeff Shi ’14 holding a Cardigan flag at the edge of Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia.

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boats and village homes. In the first year (2012) we helped 37 people by installing seven light systems, and in the second year (2013) we helped 221 people with 47 light systems. This work could not have been done without the help of four of my Cardigan brothers’ families.

As I mentioned before, the trip was not easy. From planning and leadership to actually doing it, we encountered many problems. The first big problem, which almost cost the trip, happened in the airport: We were carrying lithium batteries, which were not allowed on the airplane, of course. To solve this, we contacted the local tour guide we knew in Cambodia and we asked him to buy some batteries for us. Also, when we were doing our testing trials, the lighting system didn’t work. At first, we could not figure out the reason, but it ended up being something we misunderstood in the brochure. And then there were challenges when we were actually doing the

service [installing the systems]: We had to work in a tight space. That’s when we were not being productive. (For the first year of the program, we only installed seven ssolar-powered lighting systems to the local people, whereas in the second year, after we decided to connect all the parts together in the hotel room first, which was a far more productive method, we installed 47.) Although we had countless problems while assembling the kits, it was actually almost fun to solve them.

The service itself is not the only valuable thing about the trip. The trip is also a learning process, just like what we call “service learning” at Cardigan. On the trip, I learned how to use basic tools. To be honest, I used more tools on the trip than I ever had! I also learned about Cambodian history and culture—at least a little bit, like how people greet others based on their different social status and age. I also

had a chance to see the city of Siem Reap at night, a city that is so bright and lively, even where there is not much electricity around. Anyway, the program is not only about service itself, or earning service hours. It is about learning and the experience.

I look back on the past two years of the program as a success. It was organized well, and everything seemed to be very smooth. People around us are giving us credit and posting positive comments about us, and more people are joining the program next year to show their support of what we are doing. Even those who cannot go on the trip are supporting us in other ways. I would say the program is having a good start, as it is entering the third year,

and we are hoping to expand the program a little more, just like we did after the first.

This experience is definitely something you want to know about, or maybe even try.

Scenes from life around Tonle Sap Lake in Cambodia.

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Service in South Africa:Leadership and Compassion Make a Powerful Combination

Ivy Leader is a four-week program that begins with orientation sessions at Dartmouth, followed by three weeks of humanitarian

and environmental service projects in South Africa. Through service learning and cultural immersion, students cultivate leadership skills as well as increase their understanding of the intricate interconnectedness of our global community. Experiential learning is the foundation of the program, which encourages students to engage in dialogue with people from very different backgrounds, participate in environmental conservation work, and ultimately become more active members of the communities they visit.

By Ryan Sinclair

This past summer, a total of 20 former and current Cardigan students participated in the Ivy Leader program at Dartmouth College and in South Africa. The young alumni included Emilio Rosas Montiel ’09, Paul Pettengill ’09, Jacob Kim ’11, Taichi Okada ’11, Cole Brennan ’12, Federico Serrano ’13, Fernando Garcia Vasquez ’14, and Morgan Himmer ’13, while the group of current students comprised Agustin Alban ’14, Young Jun “Jake” An ’14, Young Woo “Christopher” An ’14, Ruiwen “Raymond” Bai ’14, Gustavo Garcia ’14, Jose Harb ’14, Woohyun “Henry” Jung ’14, Joon Hyung Lee ’14, Woo Shik “John” Lee ’14, Zhuocheng “Tommy” Mi ’14, Nicholas Parker ’14, and Zuoquan “Jack” Wu ’14.

On Saturday, June 29, the Ivy Leader group arrived at the Dartmouth College campus to kick things off! At Dartmouth, the boys attended lectures by professors on journaling, nature writing, South African history and culture, as well as HIV/AIDS, and they participated in numerous team-building exercises. They also reaped the benefits of some dynamic instruction from Cardigan faculty members Andrew Cook, who facilitated a Socratic seminar on conflicts in post-apartheid South Africa, and Dougie Clark (also an Ivy Leader trip leader), who led a discussion with the boys about the rich history of the country and what the future holds for the Rainbow Nation. After the week’s activities in Hanover, N.H., they were ready to embark on their journey to South Africa.

Arriving in Johannesburg on Monday, July 8, the Cardigan boys met their Afrikaner driver at the airport and were shuttled to Letsitele, a town in the northeastern province of Limpopo. For the next eight days, they lived on a lush orange farm and helped coach soccer

and play with youth from local villages. They also had the chance to visit, prepare lesson plans for, and teach at the nearby Tshega Mission School. Tshega, a private primary school, was established in 2004 as a reaction to the underfunding and limited resources of the broken public school system of Limpopo, a province that typically does not receive the promised textbooks and materials needed to teach its children each year.

Each day, the boys woke up early to depart for the school, where they taught in the mornings and then assisted at an after-school program for vulnerable children in the community. Other afternoons, they went orange picking to learn about the lifestyle of those who do this for a living, delivered clothing to those in need, and participated in fun activities—including cooking and slingshot-making competitions—with boys from the local soccer team. Over the course of the week, the group built connections with people in the community through their classroom activities, interactions with students and teachers, attendance at a traditional church service, and out-of-the-classroom play time. The week of intensive cultural exchange allowed them to realize that not only was their

LEFT: Nick Parker ’14 with some new South African friends.

Page 33: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

On The Point / 31

work greatly appreciated by the local community, but they had benefited and learned from the experience themselves.

On Saturday, July 20, they departed Letsitele and were immediately shuttled two hours southeast to the Greater Makalali Private Game Reserve, also in the Limpopo province.

Through work with Siyafunda Wildlife and Conservation, a conservation volunteering organization in the reserve, the boys focused on a variety of projects, ranging from monitoring lions, leopards, cheetahs, elephants, giraffe, and other wild animals, to hands-on projects such as bush clearing. The eight days they spent at the research center were both exhausting and exhilarating, as the group learned about how conservation efforts can positively affect the welfare of the animals around them. Through work at a nearby orphanage for HIV-infected and vulnerable children, they also

learned how empathy and compassion can change the lives of others one day at a time. Other activities during this stretch included orienteering walks, survival-skills training, and a slingshot competition. The boys lived and worked next to highly experienced rangers who were focused on passing on their skills and making the group as comfortable as possible in a challenging environment. Cooking and cleaning together each day, the students learned quickly how to live responsibly and respectfully in a communal setting.

On Saturday, July 27, the boys waved goodbye to their gracious hosts at Makalali and headed back to Johannesburg. In “Jozi,” the Ivy Leader group was immersed in South African history and culture, predominantly focused on the country’s troubled apartheid history and the positive and hopeful strides it has made since then. The students learned about the legacy of Nelson Mandela

ABOVE LEFT: Jose Harb ’14 (standing left), Agustin Alban ’14 (grey shirt), Joon Hyung Lee ’14 (white shirt), and Woohyun “Henry” Jung ’14, standing with a group of South African soccer players. CENTER: A group of African elephants. RIGHT: Nick Parker ’14 leads a classroom activity.

by touring his former home in Soweto, about the student protests of the 1970s by visiting the Apartheid Museum, and about traditional music by participating in a drum workshop.

The Cardigan boys were wonderful ambassadors for the School. They exemplified leadership, intellectual curiosity, responsibility, and confidence in their work throughout the trip. In South Africa, the trip underscored the importance of becoming a traveler, and not just a tourist—encouraging students to embrace the culture, experiment with food, become friends with children from very different backgrounds, and learn about the land. The Cardigan boys confidently approached each of these challenges, which allowed them to shape their own experience and maximize the impact of their work. They should be commended for their passion, poise, and investment in global education throughout the program.

Views of some of the many “adventures” experienced by last year’s Ivy Leader participants.

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Johnson–Wakely DedicationA Transformational Gift—for Body and Mind

Based on remarks made by Cardigan Athletic Director Ryan Frost at the October 18, 2013, dedication of the Johnson–Wakely Fitness Center and the Johnson–Wakely Locker Room.

ABOVE: Hands that held Cardigan together for many years, those of Former Headmaster Norm Wakely (left) and Former Athletic Director, Teacher, and Advisor Jim “Coach” Marrion.

LEFT: Nick Spaulding ’14 seeks the end zone on the field appropriately named for his grandfather.

In his research volume titled, Spark: The Revolutionary New Science of Exercise and the Brain, Dr. John Ratey of Harvard University provided conclusive evidence that “. . . moving our muscles produces protein that travels through the bloodstream and into the brain; these proteins play a pivotal role in the mechanisms of our highest thought processes.”

Dr. Ratey’s findings are in line with what many already know about the importance of exercise, and they underscore how the recently completed enhancements to Cardigan’s athletics facilities—the Johnson–Wakely Locker Room in the Kenerson Athletic building and the Johnson–Wakely Fitness Center in the Wakely facility—will benefit the young men in our care. These spaces not only provide a way for boys to burn off excess energy and train for athletics; they make greater learning possible in the classroom—helping them push forward both physically and mentally.

It is clear that the Johnson family presented a transformational gift to the School by supporting these projects, and yet to say that the result is transformational feels like it might even be an understatement. This is a top-notch space that awes everyone who enters it; the reactions of students, faculty, alumni, and others during their first visits here tell the story perfectly: “Wow!”

“Amazing!”

“I have nothing to say, . . . I’m speechless.”

The gift of these new spaces is truly beneficial to the entire school community. The boys are working out, they’re excited and happy, and they can’t wait to be in here. The faculty and staff have an incredible new wellness resource that they’re geared up to take advantage of, and we’ve even fielded calls from alumni asking us, “How can I join the new fitness club?” And just think about the “wow factor” when Admissions brings a touring family through this place—they’ll find it hard to believe they’re in a middle school!

We are all immeasurably grateful to the members of the Johnson family for their determined generosity—and by extension to Norman and Beverly Wakely for the bond they forged, so many years ago, that inspired this extraordinary gift.

Thanks also go to members of the Cardigan Athletics staff for all they did to guide and accommodate the work; to Banwell Architects and Sullivan Construction for their high-quality and efficient work; to Director of Facilites Tim Jennings for his coordination of the project; to the family members who supported us all during a very hectic summer; and to the entire Cardigan community for their support and celebration of this work.

ABOVE: Craig Johnson ’78, P’01,’03.

Page 35: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

On The Point / 33

ABOVE: The newly renovated (and expanded) Johnson–Wakely Locker Room in the Kenerson Athletic Center.

RIGHT: Wakely family members Mary (Laturnau) ’73, Norman and Beverly P’70,’73,75, and Jonathan ’75.

RIGHT: Brit Flanagan, with Clayton ’79 and Myra Johnson P’08.

BELOW RIGHT: Marshall and Diane P’06 Wallach with Jeff and David Bradley P’78.

BELOW: The Johnson–Wakely Fitness Center fitness room.

LEFT: Craig ’78, P’01,’03 and Clayton ’79, P’08 Johnson.

ABOVE: Trustee Brit Flanagan with Clayton ’79 and Myra Johnson P’08.

LEFT: Nick Lynch P’06,’08, visiting from his new home in Hawaii.ABOVE: Exterior view of the Johnson–

Wakely Fitness Center, showing the completed addition of a second floor.

ABOVE: Dave McCusker ’80 with Anthony Scaramucci P’14.

ABOVE: David Martinelli P’13 talks with Athletic Trainer Len Angelli.

ABOVE LEFT: Nick Lynch H’13, P’96,’97,’04.

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34 / Cardigan Chronicle

Stew graduated from Cardigan Mountain School in 1980, Tabor Academy in 1983, and Ithaca College in 1987, where he received a BS from the Roy H. Park School of

Communications. Stew is founder and managing partner of Venture DNA, a boutique technology consulting firm that offers capital advisory services, business development consultation, and mobile technology platforms designed to help companies drive the strategic growth of their brands. Prior to Venture DNA, his focus was sales in media and technology industries for well-known global brands, including ABC News, The Chicago Tribune, and Motorola.

Stew spent 10 years in Los Angeles developing new technology for the entertainment industry. While in California, he served on the technology leadership boards for the American Film Institute and The Television Academy of Arts and Sciences. Stew has three boys and resides in Lake Forest, Ill., where he currently serves as an elected official on the city’s Zoning Board of Appeals. Stew also serves as a board member at the Lake Forest Symphony, regarded as one of the leading local symphonies in the United States.

Stewart S. Dixon Jr. ’80

Samuel M. V. Hamilton III ’01

Karl G. Hutter ’92 Karl is the chief operating officer for Click Bond. He was a four-year student at Cardigan. After graduation in 1992, Carl attended Phillips Academy, and he went on to the University of Pennsylvania to earn bachelor’s degrees from both the School of Engineering (systems engineering) and The Wharton School (applied science and operations management).

At Click Bond, Karl served first as applications engineer for the Southern California territory and then led the development of Click Bond’s Far East markets as Asia/Pacific sales manager. In 2005, Karl became vice president, sales and marketing, a role in which he leads a worldwide team of 10 company sales engineers and more than 30 representatives and authorized distributors in the marketing and development of engineered assembly solutions for the aerospace, naval, and ground transportation markets.

Before accepting the role of trustee at Cardigan, Karl was a member of the Alumni Board. Additionally, he has served as a judge for the Charles C. Gates Invention and Innovation Competition. He is the chairman of the Aerospace Locknut Manufacturer’s Association and on the board of the Industrial Fasteners Institute. Karl and his wife, Jennifer, have two daughters and reside in Reno, Nevada.

Sam graduated from Cardigan Mountain School in 2001, Haverford School in 2004, and the University of Richmond in 2008 (political science; urban development). While at Haverford School, he was awarded the Michael G. Dowling Award for athletic ability and for being a sportsman and gentleman on and off the field. Sam is currently employed as a leasing representative, focusing on healthcare properties for PREIT Services in Philadelphia.

The Hamilton family has a deep connection with Cardigan. Sam’s brothers, Crawford ’04, Gray ’08, and Miles ’10, are also Cardigan alumni, as are several cousins. Sam has followed his family’s lead in philanthropy and volunteerism. In addition to his trustee role at Cardigan, Sam is a member of the Grants Committee of The Hamilton Family Foundation. He is also involved with the Philadelphia Orchestra and the Philadelphia Zoo.

Introducting Our Newest Trustee Volunteers

Leadership Service

Since our last Chronicle introductions,

six new volunteers have joined the

Cardigan Board of Trustees to offer

their gift of service to the School

through leadership.

Page 37: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

On The Point / 35

ClaytonJohnson ’79, P’08

Schuyler V. Peck ’63

Schuyler has a longtime con-nection to Cardigan Mountain School as a member of the Class of 1963. After graduation, he attended Trinity-Pawling School and then Nichols

College. He then returned to Cardigan as a mem-ber of the teaching faculty from 1970 to 1980. He taught history and English, and coached Varsity Hockey, Varsity Football, and tennis. Additional-ly, he served as Cardigan’s director of development and alumni affairs from 1980 to 1982. Currently Schuyler is an independent investment manager. He and his wife, Penny, who have a son, Jason, and a daughter, Nicki, split their time between Cape Cod (Mass.) and Florida and are avid golf-ers and proud grandparents.

Clayton attended Cardigan for three years, graduating in 1979. He and his wife, Myra (Whipple) Johnson, have two children, Daniel and Erin, and reside in Victoria, Texas. (Daniel is a

member of the Cardigan Class of 2008.) Following Cardigan, Clayton attended Avon Old Farms and Kilgore College (1986-1989). Clayton is currently the president of CD Johnson Companies, which oversees a number of businesses, including Q.V. Services of Texas, Inc., Quality Liquid Mud Services, Inc., Pozo LL, Inc., Bob White Rentals, and La Paletera Corporation.

In addition to his work with Cardigan Mountain School, Clayton is on the board of trustees at The Vine School and Avon Old Farms, and he and Myra are involved with the Victoria Symphony.

Anthony is a financier, entre-preneur, and author, who hails from New York. He is the founder and a co-managing partner of SkyBridge Capital. In 2011, he was the recipient of the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year New York Award in the Financial Services category. Anthony earned a B.A. in economics from Tufts University and a J.D. from Harvard Law School.

Anthony is also the author of Goodbye Gordon Gekko: How to Find Your Fortune Without Losing Your Soul and The Little Book of Hedge Funds: What You Need to Know About Hedge Funds but the Managers Won’t Tell You. He is a frequent commentator and speaker for—as well as a regular contributor to—CNBC.

In addition to serving as a trustee at Cardigan Mountain School, Anthony is a board member of Warrior Gateway and The Brain Tumor Foundation, as well as a member of the Board of Advisors for the School of Arts & Sciences at Tufts University and of the Harvard Law School Leadership Counsel.

Anthony has three children, the youngest of whom (also an “Anthony”) is currently a ninth grader at Cardigan.

Anthony Scaramucci P’14

The Cardigan Board of Trustees, at their May 2013 meeting in the Powers Room, Cardigan Commons.

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The Cardigan Community thanks all of its trustees—both past and present—for their exemplary service to the School .

Celebrating Trustee Service

2013 Trustee Heart of the Cougar Award Recipients

Years of Board Service Recognition

Larry Prescott P’88.Board Member

2009–2013

Emanuel M. Alexiou P’98

Barbara S. O’Connell P’03Daniel D. DeMars P’11 Philip D. Harrision P’10

David H. Bradley P’78

Christopher S. Welles P’08Board Member

2007–2013

William “Tim” Fleming, Esq.’70Board Member

1998–2013

Charles “Chip” Haskell, Jr. ’80Board Member

2009–2013

Retiring trustees Tim Fleming ’70, Chip Haskell ’80, Larry Prescott P’88, and

Chris Welles P’08 were each honored for their service to the School, at the

Heart of the Cougar Dinner in May 2013.

David H. Bradley P’78 40 Years

Emanuel M. Alexiou P’98 15 Years

Barbara S. O’Connell P’03 10 Years

Daniel D. DeMars P’11 5 Years

Philip D. Harrison P’10 5 Years

Page 39: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

On The Point / 37

ABOVE: Andy and Maureen Gilbert P’08,’10,’13 with Dave McCusker ’80, receiving the first Gilbert Family Service Award on May 31, 2013.

Exemplary Service: The Gilbert FamilyWith our grateful appreciation for their many years of service to Cardigan Mountain School, Maureen and Andy Gilbert P’08,’10,’13 were honored at the Alumni Welcome Banquet on May 31, 2013, as the namesakes of a new Cardigan award tradition—the Gilbert Family Service Award. The decision to establish this award in honor of Maureen and Andy and their family acknowledges the Gilberts’ selfless support and exemplary leadership in our community, through countless hours of volunteerism, for opening their home to international students and to host numerous Cardigan events, and by sharing their three wonderful boys—Nate, Jake, and Max—with the Cardigan Family.

The Gilbert Family Service AwardThe Gilbert Family Service Award, established in 2013, is given annually to recognize a member or members of the Cardigan Mountain School community whose service to the School has been exceptional. A recipient of this award fully understands the importance of community and is recognized by his or her extended Cardigan family as a model of

servant leadership.

Congratu

lations and Thank You!2013 Recipient

Dr. Lisa Drummond P’11,’13Parents’ Association Chair 2012–2013

TOP ROW Left: Max ’13, Maureen, Andy, and Jake ’10 Gilbert at the 2011 Cardigan Auction. Center: Maureen and Max ’13 (as “Joe”) at the 2012 auction. Right: Maureen at the 2013 auction.

FAR LEFT: Max ’13, Jake ’10, Andy, and Maureen at their Newburyport, Mass., home. Center: Andy pressing apple cider at Homecoming, with help from Max ’13 (foreground), “Joe,” and Jake ’10 (right). Right: Nate ’08, accepting an alumni participation award on behalf of his CMS class.

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Hayward Hall . . . Re-Imagined

IMPORTANT UPDATE!Due to the late publication of the Fall/Winter Cardigan

Chronicle, the Hayward Challenge deadline has been

extended to June 30, 2014. Read on for details . . .

The Hayward ChallengeA Dollar-for-Dollar Gift Match

Help Cardigan Raise $500,000

The Challenge

The chair of Cardigan’s Board of Trustees has pledged to contribute up to $500,000 in matching funds to be able to “green light” the full renovation of the Hayward Hall dormitory, with construction to commence in the spring of 2014. Between September 1, 2013, and June 30, 2014, qualifying gift commitments will effectively be doubled by this generous donor.

Why Support the Hayward Hall project?

• Robustenrollmentnumbershastenthenecessityofupgradingandexpandingourstudentandfacultyresidenceshere on The Point. Cardigan is at an exciting place as we look ahead, and yet our dormitories—built in the 1950s and 1960s—speak more to the past.

• TheHaywardHallrenovationwillsetthestandardforfurtherimprovementandupgradestoourexistingdormitoryfacilities (which include French, Brewster, and Hinman Halls), with thoughtful 21st-century design and high-quality, energy-efficient construction specifications.

• Initscentralcampuslocation,thefullyrenovatedHaywardHallwillbeamodelofcampusimprovementsforourvisitors, and the site will open a lovely access from the Quad area to Marrion Field.

Does the size of my gift matter?

Capital gifts of all sizes are critical to the progress we’re making at the School. Cardigan Mountain School has developed a thoughtful, comprehensive scheme for campus improvements in The Strategic Plan for Cardigan 2020 that will enable further enhancements to our program, and to the experience of all Cardigan boys.

For More Information

To learn more about The Campaign for Cardigan 2020, please contact Director of Development David G. Perfield at 603.523.3522 or [email protected].

the Campaign for

Cardigan 2020

Page 41: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

Annual Report of Gifts / 39

Great things continue to happen on The Point. From a parent perspective, I could not be more pleased with Cardigan and the foundation our son received during his time as a student. The program is second to none—providing a good balance of academic and co-curricular activities, while teaching boys the skills they need to be successful in all areas of their life. The dedication of the faculty and staff is incredible. Though our son graduated in June 2013, our family will forever be proud to be a part of this special community.

From a fundraising perspective, it is my pleasure to share the news that for a second year in a row, Cardigan Mountain School experienced record-breaking fundraising success. During the 2012-2013 year, over $9.4 million dollars was raised in capital, endowment, and annual fund monies. What an incredible achievement for our school, and one that would not be possible without the support of the many individuals and families who care deeply about Cardigan.

Highlights of the 2012-2013 year include the opening of the Cardigan Commons, The Annual Fund for Cardigan surpassed $1 million for the first time, 71% Annul Fund participation from current parents, a $1 million endowment match challenge put forth by an anonymous donor to support faculty excellence, the auction raised over $200,000 despite being postponed by Winter Storm Nemo, the creation of a New York Alumni Chapter, and the public launch of The Campaign for Cardigan 2020.

With the Cardigan Commons fully operational, the focus of The Campaign for Cardigan 2020 has turned to the need to improve student and faculty residences. Renovating Hayward Hall is the next priority, and just the first of several projects focused on improving campus housing. The goal for this $4.6 million project is to begin work in June 2014 so renovations will be complete before the start of the 2014-2015 academic year in September.

On behalf of the Board of Trustees, thank you for your commitment to and support of Cardigan.

Sincerely,

David J. Martinelli P’13Cardigan Trustee and Campaign Committee Chair

A Vision of Excellence in the Education of Middle School Boys

the Campaign for

Cardigan 2020

Perspective: Parent, Trustee, Campaign Committee Chair

David J. Martinelli P’13

Annual Report of Gifts 2012–2013

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Fundraising Summary as of June 30, 2013

Summary of Annual Giving FY’13

Outright Gifts and New CommitmentsFY11 FY12 FY13

Annual Giving $982,400 $1,290,559 $1,072,670

Cardigan 2020 Campaign* $2,361,737 $5,145,324 $8,332,061

Grand Total $3,344,137 $6,435,883 $9,404,731*Includes Endowment

Annual Giving BreakoutFY11 FY12 FY13

Unrestricted Annual Fund $748,166 $777,999 $801,113

Auction Funds $135,034 $185,800 $208,782

Subtotal $883,200 $963,799 $1,009,895

Scholarship–Current Year $42,000 $41,000 $21,000

Restricted Annual Fund $57,200 $285,760 $41,775

Grand Total $982,400 $1,290,559 $1,072,670

Unrestricted Annual FundAuction FundsScholarship–Current YearRestricted Annual Fund

$21,0002%

$41,7754%

$24,000,000

22,000,000

20,000,000

18,000,000

16,000,000

14,000,000

12,000,000

10,000,000

8,000,000

6,000,000

4,000,000

2,000,000

02009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Capital, Endowment, and Annual Giving

Cumulative Totals Per Year

Cash and Pledges as of June 30, 2013Total $24,084,237.00

The Campaign for Cardigan 2020

Annual Giving

Endowment

Capital

A Vision of Excellence in the Education of Middle School Boys

the Campaign for

Cardigan 2020$801,113

75%$208,782

19%

Page 43: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

2013 Annual Report of Gifts / 41

The Point ClubAnonymous ^AnonymousMr. Sae Joo Chang and Mrs. Hee Jung NamGates Frontiers FundMr. and Mrs. Clayton D. Johnson ’79Mr. and Mrs. Craig M. Johnson ’78 ^Mr. and Mrs. David M. Johnson ^Mr. and Mrs. Hirohisa Okada ^Mr. and Mrs. Schuyler V. Peck ’63Mr. and Mrs. John R. PfefferMr. and Mrs. Scott F. Powers ’75 ^Mr. and Mrs. Christopher S. Welles ^Willard M. & Ruth Mayer Johnson Charitable Foundation^Mr. and Mrs. Marshall F. Wallach ^Mr. Jun Xiao

Pinnacle SocietyMr. and Mrs. Emanuel M. Alexiou ^Mr. Dam Lee and Mrs. Suk Young BangMs. Rika DilaMr. and Mrs. Bryan P. Marsal ^Mr. and Mrs. D. Bryan Ruez ^Mr. Anthony ScaramucciMr. Sarunyou Tejavibulya

Headmaster’s ClubMr. and Mrs. Richard J. DellaRusso ’82 ^Fidelity Brokerage Services LLCMr. Hank J. Holland *Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hutchinson III ^Mr. Young Duk Lee and Mrs. Eun Mi ChoMr. Hongwei Ma and Mrs. Jiachen GuMr. and Mrs. David J. MartinelliMr. Burton E. McGillivray ^Mr. and Mrs. Larry W. Prescott ^

5 years (or more) consecutive giving * in honor of# in memory of † deceased

ANNUAL REPORT OF GIFTS 2012–2013Cardigan Mountain School

The Point Club $75,000 and above

Pinnacle Society $50,000–$74,999

Headmaster’s Club $25,00–$49,999

Founders’ Club $15,000–$24,999

Hinman Society $10,000–$14,999

E. M. Hopkins Club $5,000–$9,999

Brewster Society $2,500–$4,999

Cardigan Club $1,000–$2,499

Cougar Club $500–$999

Green Team $1–$499

2012-13 Giving Clubs

Founders’ ClubMr. and Mrs. Clarence R. Banks *Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Callahan *Mr. and Mrs. Dean C. Durling ’70 ^The Edward H. Butler Foundation ^Ms. Louise K. GoodwinMr. and Mrs. Philip D. Harrison ^Mrs. Betty W. JohnsonMr. and Mrs. F. Corning Kenly III ’68 ^Mr. Neung Soo Lee and Mrs. Hoi Yun ChungLouise Kelso Goodwin Fund of the Marin Community FoundationMs. Candyce Martin *Mr. Xiuge Ouyang and Mrs. Li Liping *Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Righter ’62 ^The Robert Wood Johnson, Jr. Fund of the Princeton Area Community FoundationMr. Baoxiang Shi and Mrs. Yali ShouMr. and Mrs. Stanley B. Smith, Jr. ’77Dr. and Mrs. Robert Wickham ^

Hinman SocietyAnonymous *Anonymous (2)Mr. and Mrs. John J. Bello ^Mr. Xiangqun Chen and Mrs. Huang HuaxinMr. Xunqiang Chen and Mrs. Shaomin Wu *Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. duPont IV ’83 ^Mr. and Mrs. Karl G. Hutter ’92 ^Mr. and Mrs. Jeong Kyu KimMr. Bo Yoon Lee and Mrs. Eun Joo AhnNor’ Easter FoundationMr. and Mrs. Frank J. O’Connell ^Ms. Carla Powers ^Robert and Hoyle Rymer FoundationMr. and Mrs. J. Hoyle Rymer

Key to Symbols

A Vision of Excellence in the Education of Middle School Boys

Page 44: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

42 / Cardigan Chronicle

E.M. Hopkins ClubAnonymousMr. Agustin Alban and Mrs. Ana Madero *Mr. Wei Bai and Mrs. Yongmei Wang *Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Ball ’60Mrs. June BeaverMr. and Mrs. Chutinant BhiromBhakdi ’73 ^Mr. and Mrs. David A. Buchler *Mr. and Mrs. Finn M. W. Caspersen, Jr. ’84Mr. Seung-il Chae and Mrs. Bo Young Bae *Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy D. Cohen ’84 ^Mr. Ricardo Covarrubias and Mrs. Sofia L. Sahagun de CovarrubiasMr. and Mrs. Jeremy T. Crigler ’79CTW Foundation, Inc.Mr. Randy DayMr. Stewart S. Dixon, Jr. ’80 ^Mr. Mauricio Guzman Gonzalez and Mrs. Lorena Cedillo de GuzmanMr. Sang Woock Han and Dr. So Young Lee ^Mr. Charles T. Haskell, Jr. ’80 and Dr. Helma Haskell ^Mr. Tae Woong Hwang and Mrs. Young Joo Lee *Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Jessop *Mr. Untai Jung and Dr. Hyeongsim Jang *Mr. Kari O. Kontu ’80 ^Mr. and Mrs. Bon Hak KooMr. and Mrs. P. Edward Krayer ’82 ^Mr. and Mrs. Sangwon Lee *Mr. and Mrs. Wen Zeng LiuMr. Michael L. Lyon *^Dr. and Mrs. Paul F. MacVittie ^Mr. and Mrs. Ben J. MarcianoMr. and Mrs. Sanford N. McDonnell FoundationMr. Byunghoon Min and Mrs. Jisuk LeeMr. and Mrs. Malcolm C. Moran ’64 ^Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Pace, Jr. *Mr. and Mrs. William N. PieroniMr. Yong Wang and Ms. Jia Yue *Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin WeyDr. and Mrs. Douglas WilliamsonMr. Zhiliang Wu and Mrs. Lixia ZhangMr. De Gui Yuan and Mrs. Hong Wang *Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Zhang *

Brewster SocietyAnonymousMr. and Mrs. J. Kevin Appleton *Mr. Vernon ArmourMr. Tao Bi and Mrs. Liu XinrongBranleigh Educational AssociatesMr. and Mrs. John M. Camp IIIMr. and Mrs. Michael V. Capozzi *Dr. Juan Caripidis and Dr. Maria D. Soto De Caripidis *Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Chartener ’73 ^Dr. Min Young Cho and Dr. Jeeyoun LimMr. J. Dudley Clark #^Mr. and Mrs. Gary S. CooksonCraig E. Lighty Fund of the Sacramento Region Community Foundation ^Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Fay III ’65 ^Dr. Rush Fisher and Dr. Phoebe Fisher *

Mr. and Mrs. Henry FlanaganMr. and Mrs. Michael B. Garrison ’67 ^Mr. and Mrs. Joshua GlassGoldstone Family FoundationMr. Shan Hong Gong and Mrs. Shiwei Liu *Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Gordon ’89Hamilton Family FoundationMr. Samuel M. V. Hamilton III ’01 ^Mrs. Nancy KelsoDr. and Mrs. Robert F. Kenerson ^Mr. Yu Seoung Kim and Mrs. Seung Yuhn Yoo ^Mr. Cheoul Woo Lee and Mrs. Min Hee Kim *Mr. Jung Il Lee and Mrs. Ji Hyun An *Mr. and Mrs. Craig Lighty ’52 ^Ms. Leslie K. LyonMarsh & McLennan Companies Matching Gifts ProgramMarsteller Family Foundation *Mr. and Mrs. David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80 ^Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm C. Moran ’64^ Mr. Alfred Pace III ’10Mr. Zachary J. Pace ’02Mr. and Mrs. John H. Pearson, Jr. ’65 ^Mr. Russell PostMr. and Mrs. Andrew J. RothMs. Patrapon Tanakulthon *Mr. Sethanant R. Tejavibulya ’13 *Vanguard Charitable Endowment ProgramMr. Michael Walzak and Ms. Susan HillsMr. and Mrs. Sidney A. Weiss ’85Mr. Yong Xie and Mrs. Yi Gong *Mr. Ming Zhang and Mrs. Man Lei *

Cardigan ClubAnonymous *Anonymous (3)Mr. Jae Pil An and Mrs. So Young LeeMr. and Mrs. Steven W. August ’69 ^Mr. and Mrs. John Bagley IIIMr. and Mrs. Peter A. Baker ’78Mr. Cornelius N. Bakker and Ms. Sarah E. Schimmel ^The Baldwin Foundation ^Mr. and Mrs. Ronn M. Bronzetti ’89 ^Dr. and Mrs. Olaf Butchma #Mr. J. Hardwick Caldwell ’01Mr. John A. Camp ’06Camp-Younts FoundationMr. and Mrs. Byung Wook ChoiMr. Hyun Woo Choi ’09Dr. Sang Jun Chun and Ms. Joolie Kim *Mr. Richard A. Clancy ’67 *^Mr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Cunningham, Jr.Mr. Daniel D. DeMars and Dr. Leslie R. DeMars ^Mr. Zhinan Ding and Mrs. Hongbin Dong *Mr. Roger C. Earle ’64 ^Mr. Nabil Elkouh and Mrs. Sheila Cragg-ElkouhDr. and Mrs. Roger H. Emerson, Jr. *Engelberth Construction, Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Gustavo Escamilla ^Ms. Lenee EzellMr. and Mrs. John Faust *FBO Pack Sargent Janes TrustFidelity Charitable Gift Fund ^

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William T. Fleming, Esq. ’70 ^Fleming Law OfficesMr. and Mrs. Kirk J. Franklin ’78 *^Mrs. Dale Frehse ^Mr. Peter R. Garrison ’70 ^Mr. and Mrs. Andrew L. Gilbert *^Mr. Theodore Goddard ’51 ^Mr. and Mrs. Steve Goldsmith ^Mr. Reamy F. Goodwin *Mr. and Mrs. Wallace B. Goodwin IIMr. and Mrs. Harvey GrayMrs. Xiaohui GuoMr. and Mrs. S. Matthews V. Hamilton, Jr. ^Mr. Jose N. Harb Kallab and Mrs. M. Adriana Rodriguez Strauss *Mr. and Mrs. John C. HaysMr. and Mrs. Timothy J. Herbert ^Mr. Marshall Heuser and Ms. Mimi HeuserMr. and Mrs. Alan K. Himmer *Mr. David S. Hogan ’66 ^Mr. Corbin S. Holland ’15Mr. Hayden R. Holland ’12Mr. Ki Hun Hong and Mrs. Bok Sun HanMr. Man Pyo Hong and Mrs. Seon Mi YooMr. and Mrs. Charles H. Hood ^Mr. and Mrs. Clark HouxDr. Chang-Chih Huang and Dr. Pei-Shan TsaiMr. and Mrs. Il-Sup Huh ^Ms. Margaret Ikeda *Capt. Pack S. Janes ’00Dr. Ho Yoon Jang and Dr. Kyung Wha Oh ^Mr. Feng Jiang and Mrs. Danna LvJohn F. Maher Family Foundation ^Mr. Yeon Ho Jung and Mrs. Kyung Ah Kwak *Mr. and Mrs. Chongyub KimMr. Hun Gil Kim and Mrs. Sang Yeon ChoiMr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Klaus ’73 ^Mr. and Mrs. George P. Kooluris ^Mr. and Mrs. Franz Krieg *Mr. and Mrs. Colt Landreth ^Mr. and Mrs. David H. LeBreton *^Mr. Chun Hyuk Lee and Mrs. Sang Hee AhnMr. Yong Hee Lee and Mrs. Jeong Leem Chae ^Mr. Yanbin Li and Mrs. Jin Tian *Mr. and Mrs. Roger K. Lighty ’48Mr. Feng Liu and Mrs. Chao YangMr. Eduardo Lopez Garcia and Mrs. Ana O. Ramírez GonzalezMrs. Ellen MacNeille Charles ^Mr. Sung Hoon Mah and Mrs. Woo Jin Lee *Mrs. Helen S. Maher ^Mr. and Mrs. James MastalerzMr. and Mrs. Joseph P. McHugh ^Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. McNamara *Mr. and Mrs. Steven M. MelloMr. Xuenjun Mi and Mrs. Hong Wang *Mr. and Mrs. Keith MichelsonMr. David T. Moldenhauer and Ms. Julia M. Lichtblau *Mr. and Mrs. John MooreMr. and Mrs. Charles F. Morgan, Jr. ’77 ^Dr. and Mrs. Richard D. Morrison ’50 ^Mr. Tong Mu and Ms. Qing HeMr. Clarke M. Murdough ’87 ^Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Murdough ^

Mr. and Mrs. William B. Neuberg ^The New York Community Trust ^Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. NitzeMr. and Mrs. Kazuyuki OhashiOtzen Family FoundationMr. Leigh W. Otzen ’91Mr. John H. Pearson III ’98 ^Mr. Joaquin Perez Lopez and Mrs. Iliana Sanchez Arriaga *Mr. Daniel J. Philbrick *Mr. and Mrs. Eugene A. Pinover ^Mr. and Mrs. Peter Rand ’51 ^Ruth Camp and Henry Campbell FoundationMr. and Mrs. Michael J. SchaferMs. Amy SchoewMr. and Mrs. Charles P. Schutt, Jr. ’58 ^Mr. Julio Serrano Castro and Mrs. Maria del Carmen de la Torre *Mr. Kurt Silverstein and Mrs. Marie G. Surpris-Silverstein *Mr. Joel C. Solomon #Dr. Joon Ho Song and Dr. Rena LeeMr. and Mrs. Brennan Starkey *Mr. and Mrs. Peter SternMr. Stanley M. SternMr. and Mrs. Christopher M. Taliercio ’95Mr. and Mrs. Hideyuki TozawaTSWII Management Company ^Lt. Colonel and Mrs. David Van Esselstyn ’62Mr. and Mrs. Mario Velazquez Robinson *Mr. and Mrs. Peter N. von GalMrs. Xu Wang ^Mr. and Mrs. Anderson B. White ’76 ^Mr. and Mrs. Ogden White, Jr. ^

Cougar ClubAnonymous ^Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Alberigi *Mr. and Mrs. George M. Alvarez-CorreaMr. and Mrs. Stephen D. Austin ’67Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Baker ^Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Bedford, Jr. ’65 ^Mr. and Mrs. Anthony BielaMr. Monte BlausteinMr. and Mrs. David H. Bradley ^Mr. Parker J. Brown ’69Mr. and Mrs. Roy E. Byington, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Philip Cormier *Ms. Marnie CullenMr. John Cuticelli and Mrs. Elizabeth Schuette CuticelliMr. Harold A. Dawson, Jr. ^Mrs. Karen Diebel *#Mr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Dodge ’48Eastside Orthocare, LimitedMr. and Mrs. John R. Emery III ’78 ^Ethan Allen Medical CenterMr. and Mrs. Frank FabianFred Fuller Oil & Propane Co. Inc.Dr. Glen B. Gormezano and Dr. Masae KawamuraMr. Joseph G. Grasso and Ms. Rosalie Hunter *Mr. and Mrs. Edgar GreasonMr. Edward T. Griffin ’60 ^Mr. Jason E. Hammond ’86

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Mr. and Mrs. Austen HannisMr. and Mrs. Nicholas G. Harmon ’75 *^Ms. Charlotte B. Heartt ^Mr. and Mrs. Alan C. Herzig ’48 ^Herzig Family Foundation ^Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Hinman #Mr. and Mrs. Tom HollandJarvis Group, Inc ^Mr. Wallace F. Jarvis ’60 ^Mr. Stuart R. Kaplan ’47 and Ms. Bobbie BensaidDr. and Mrs. Chul Joong KimMr. Paul J. Leahy ’76 ^Mr. Jung Hun Lee and Mrs. Jae Kyoung ShimMr. Sangwook Lee ’01Mr. and Mrs. James L. Lenihan ^Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Lisicky ^Mr. and Mrs. Bruno R. MangiardiMr. and Mrs. James N. Marrion ^Mr. and Mrs. James A. McCalmont *^Mr. and Mrs. James A. McNairMr. Timothy R. McNair ’08Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Menke ^Dr. and Mrs. Craig Mines *Dr. and Mrs. Matthew R. MooreMr. and Mrs. Peter Moulton ^Nancy and Clive Runnells FoundationMr. and Mrs. Richard D. Nickerson ^Dr. Gideon G. PanterPanter FoundationMr. and Mrs. David G. PerfieldMr. and Mrs. Thomas PhillipsMr. and Mrs. David Plekenpol *Mr. Doug Poulter and Dr. Ji ChenMr. and Mrs. Mark R. Rainville ’76 ^Mr. John A. Reardon† and Mrs. Mary K. Reardon *^Mr. and Mrs. Clive Runnells ^Silicon Valley Community FoundationMr. Charles S. Smith III ’73 ^Mr. and Mrs. John C. Stowe ’60 ^Summit Distributing, LLCMr. Geoffrey C. Turner ’69Mr. Howard S. Tuthill III ’62 ^UBS Financial ServicesU.S. Games Systems, Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Peter E. Van Nice, Jr. ’85Mr. Brandon J. Wagner ’92 ^Mr. and Mrs. Nicholson B. WhiteMr. Gang Yin and Mrs. Li BingMr. Alexis M. Zambrano ’03

Green TeamAnonymous ^Anonymous (2)AAA Pump Service Inc.Mr. John Abisch *Mr. Jordan R. Abisch ’13Mr. and Mrs. Wayde H. Affleck ^Mr. Peter A. Albee, Sr. ’58 ^Mr. Christopher J. Alberigi ’13Mr. Blake D. Alessandroni ’08Mr. and Mrs. David G. Alessandroni ^Mr. Doug AllardMr. Leland AlperMr. and Mrs. Cheyenne B. Amos ’85

Mr. and Mrs. William AntonucciMr. William G. Appleton ’13 *Mr. Luis Aranguren Covarrubias ’13Mr. Luis Aranguren Trellez and Mrs. Carmen Covarrubias V de ArangurenMr. Sael A. Araujo, Jr. ’13 *Mr. Ian N. Arnof ’84 and Ms. Sunshine J. Greene ^Mr. and Mrs. James ArsenaultAssociation For Middle Level EducationMr. and Mrs. Edward Audett, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. David Auerbach ^Mr. Miguel A. Autrey ’02Mr. Sergio N. Autrey ’96Ms. Alison R. Bagley ^Mr. Henry H. Baker ’92Mrs. Lynn BakerMr. Malcolm G. Baker, Jr. ^Mr. Matthew R. Banks ’13 *Ms. Rhoda Bannon *Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H. BardenMr. James E. Barker ’62 ^Mr. and Mrs. William L. Barry ’74Mr. Andrew P. Bay ’92Mr. Gavin Bayreuther ’09Mr. and Mrs. John M. Bayreuther ^Mrs. Melinda P. BeachMr. Myles H. Beach ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. William S. BeardMr. and Mrs. Mark BeckwithMr. Juan L. C. Bellvis and Mrs. Carmen AlvoMr. Brandon A. Benson ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Bentsen, Jr. ’74Mr. and Mrs. John H. Bergeron ^Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Bergner ’77 ^Mr. and Mrs. David R. Berner ^Berner ArchitectsMr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Berry ^Betse and Winston Trice Charitable Gift Fund ^Mr. and Mrs. James E. Betts, Jr.Mr. James E. Betts III ’13 *Mr. Bradford R. Bevis ’94Mr. and Mrs. Frank Biela *Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey A. Blair ’68Ms. Kelly BlissMr. Peter W. Blood ’02Mr. and Mrs. Mark D. BoillotatMr. and Mrs. Richard C. Boothby ’63 ^Mr. Charley A. Borek ’12Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Borek ^Mr. and Mrs. Scott G. Borek ^Mr. and Mrs. Martin G. BourkeBox Tops for EducationMr. Donald S. Boy and Mrs. Carol B. Mason ^Mr. Malcolm Boyd ’03Mr. and Mrs. Courtland A. Boyle *Mr. William T. Boyle ’13Mr. Ian S. Brennick ’04 ^Dr. Jeoffry BrennickMr. and Mrs. Steven J. Bresky ’68Mr. and Mrs. Timothy J. BuckleyMs. Juli Bullard *Mr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Burack ’63 ^Ms. Rosalind M. BurkeMr. Daniel R. Byington ’04

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Mr. Jonathan R. Byington ’05Ms. Eunyoung Byunn *Ms. Carmen M. Calder *Mr. and Mrs. Kevin CalderMr. Timothy J. Callahan ’13 *Mrs. Dianne M. Campbell #Mr. Michael P. Capozzi II ’13 *Mr. Jarrod CaprowMr. Luis Carcoba and Ms. Nora de Alba *Mr. Richard A. Cardillo III ’12Mr. and Mrs. Anthony L. Carey # ^Mr. Owen CarpinoMr. and Mrs. James E. Casselman ’60Mr. Agustin Cattoretti Lopez ’13 *Dr. and Mrs. Richard ChaceMr. Dong Hyun Chae ’13 *Mr. Seung Ick Chang ’13Mr. Christopher H. Chapin ’09Mr. and Mrs. Timothy H. Chapin ^Mr. Chen Chen ’12Mr. Guanlin Chen ’13Mr. Haorong Chen ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. Tzu-Lin ChenMr. Jinwan Cho ’13 *Mr. Jae Won Choi ’12Mr. and Mrs. Michael Choukas, Jr. ^Mr. and Mrs. John H. Christy ’62Mr. and Mrs. John R. Clark III ^Mr. Thomas A. Clausen ’75 ^Mr. and Mrs. Dwight M. Cleveland *Mr. Peter L. Cleveland ’13Mr. and Mrs. Tristram C. Colket ^Mr. Thomas S. CongerMr. and Mrs. John C. ConklingMr. and Mrs. Richard T. Conly III ’88Mr. and Mrs. Scott D. Conwell ^Mr. Andrew CookMr. Spencer R. Cookson ’12Mr. Dillon S. Corkran ’07 ^Mr. Sewell H. Corkran IIIMr. Spencer W. Corkran ’06 ^Mr. Henry A. Cormier ’13 *Mr. John T. Costello ’12Mr. Ace C. Cowans ’12Mr. Christopher J. Cowans and Ms. Jennifer ParisellaMr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Cox ’62 ^Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. CrawfordMr. and Mrs. Todd C. Cromheecke *Crowell Family FoundationMr. and Mrs. James W. CrowellMr. George W. Cutting III ’74Mr. Douglas B. Dade ’62 ^Mr. Shane M. Dalton ’09 ^Mr. Shawn D. Damon ’91Mr. and Mrs. Phidias G. Dantos ^Mr. Clint A. Davis and Dr. Frankie A. HolmesMr. Charles S. Davison ’58Mr. Henry Day ’13 *Mr. Kastan V. Day ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. Arturo De Simone *Dwight G. deKeyser, Esq. ’71Deutsche Bank Americas FoundationDr. and Mrs. Cameron K. DewarMr. and Mrs. Morgan P. Dickerman III ’71

Mr. Jay DickmanMr. Joshua M. Dickman ’09Mr. and Mrs. John G. Diemar ’90Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence T. Diggs ’72 ^Mr. Brendan C. Dinan ’89Mr. and Mrs. Dennis A. Dinan ^LCPL Edward M. Dix ’07 ^Mr. and Mrs. George M. Dix ^Mr. Bruce E. Docherty ’49 ^Ms. Virginia Doherty #Mr. and Mrs. Michael L. DoyleMr. Michael L. Doyle, Jr. ’08Mr. Aidan P. Driscoll ’11Mr. George F. Driscoll and Dr. Mary Jane Houlihan *Mrs. Phoebe DriscollMr. Noah L. Drummond ’13 *Mr. Richard S. Drummond and Dr. Lisa A. Drummond ^Mrs. Henry B. duPont III ^The Eagle Rock Charitable Foundation, Inc.Mr. Scott EllisMrs. Catherine Eurich *Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell F. Eveleth ^Mr. Gordon E. Faust ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. Ryan FeeleyMr. and Mrs. Gregor E. Fellers ^Mr. Benjamin A. Finkelstein ’13 *Dr. and Mrs. Leonard Finkelstein *Mr. Justin P. Flessa-LaRoche ’04 ^Mr. Solomon E. Floyd ’11Mrs. Janet M. ForbushMr. Sumner J. Ford ’06Mr. and Mrs. David L. Foster ^Mr. Austin G. Franklin ’13 *Mr. Brendan J. Frazier ’95Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Frazier *^Mr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Frazier ’88Mr. Timothy Frazier ’00Mr. Jackson K. Freidberg ’13 *Mr. Michael FreidbergMr. and Mrs. Robert FrenchmanMrs. Donna D. FriedMr. Matthew S. Fried ’97Mr. Monte FriedMr. and Mrs. Ryan E. FrostMr. and Mrs. Thomas FunkhouserMr. James H. Funnell and Dr. Margaret Funnell ^Mrs. Mary D. Furth #Mr. Ian F. Gagnon ’08Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Gallagher ’74 ^Mr. Gustavo H. Garcia and Mrs. Claudia Orellana de Garcia *Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Gardent ’62Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Garrison ’94 ^Mr. Aidan S. Garron ’12Mr. and Mrs. Steven C. GarronMr. and Mrs. Andrew F. GeiselMr. and Mrs. C. Meade Geisel, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Gerard ’66 ^Mr. and Mrs. Howard A. Gewandter ’69Mr. Edward J. Gibbons, Jr. ’78Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gibbons, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. Byron J. Gierhart, Jr. ’80

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Mr. Jacob A. Gilbert ’10Mr. Maxwell L. Gilbert ’13 *Mr. Nathan J. Gilbert ’08 ^Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. GilbertMr. and Mrs. Lee I. Giller ’66 ^Mr. Avery R. Glass ’13 *Global ImpactMr. Joseph B. Glossberg ^Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Gohl ’62Mr. and Ms. Jose Gomez Castellanos *Mr. Jeffrey GoodMr. and Mrs. Jerome M. Goodspeed ’69Mr. James K. Goodwin ’13Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B. Gould ’71 ^Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. Grady *Mr. Ryan A. Grady III ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. George R. Graham, Jr. ^Ms. Sarah GravesMr. and Mrs. Alexander GrayMr. Emery L. Gray ’14Miss Lula GrayMr. Seth W. Gray ’16Mr. and Mrs. Robert GreggMr. Fred H. Groen ’04Mr. Daniel Gutierrez and Ms. Cynthia Hernandez *Mr. and Mrs. R. Phillip Haire ^Mr. and Mrs. Scott HaireMr. and Mrs. Tate S. Haire ’91Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Hall ’60 ^Mr. Crawford C. Hamilton ’04 ^Mr. Gray P. R. Hamilton ’08Mr. Miles N. P. Hamilton ’10Mr. and Mrs. Robert HammondMr. Chang Hyun Han ’13 *Rev. Canon and Mrs. Preston B. Hannibal ^Mr. and Mrs. David G. Hanson ’68Mr. Erland B. Hardy ^Mr. and Mrs. William D. HarleyMr. Elijah J. Harris ’13 *Rev. and Mrs. George E. Harris ’53Mr. and Mrs. Steven HarrisMr. and Mrs. William Hart *^Mr. Carl E. Hartdegen ’67Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood C. Haskins, Jr.Mr. Liam R. Hassett ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. John O. Hastings, Jr. ^Mr. Christopher D. HeaneyMr. Charles H. Heenan ’89Mrs. Jane Heenan *Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Heenan ’95Mr. and Mrs. David Helmstadter ’54Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Hewitt, Sr.Mr. George Hewitt ’12Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. Hicks ^Mr. Morgan A. Himmer ’13 *Mr. John L. Hogan ’87 ^Ms. Kathryn Holland ^Mr. Fred HoughtonHouston Endowment, Inc. ^Ms. Sheree D. Houston-FloydMr. and Mrs. Philip Hoversten ^Mr. Whitney A. Hoversten ’02 ^Ms. Lucia G. HowellMr. and Mrs. Scott A. Huff

Mr. William R. Humphrey IV ’13 *Major Warren D. Huse ’52Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. HutchinsMr. and Mrs. Charles G. Hutter III ^Mr. Yun Do Hwang ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. G. Kevin Hynes ^Mr. Charles Z. M. Ikeda ’13Mr. Benjamin Intarapuvasak ’12Mr. and Mrs. Smit IntarapuvasakMr. and Mrs. Richard G. JaegerMr. and Mrs. William S. JanesMr. Young Soo Jang ’08 ^Mr. and Mrs. Timothy P. JenningsMr. Hanlin Jiang ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Johnson ’60 ^Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. JohnsonMr. and Mrs. Alfred Johnston, Jr. ’66Mr. Benjamin M. Johnston ’12Mrs. Martha C. Jones ^JPMorgan Chase FoundationMr. Anthony J. Karalekas ’10Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan A. Karalekas ^Mr. and Mrs. Frederick KaudersMr. and Mrs. David Kavanaugh *Mrs. Maria C. KeilhauerMr. Andrew S. Kelley ’90Mr. and Mrs. David N. Kelley IIMr. Mark D. Kelly ’78Mr. and Mrs. Warren A. Kendall ’51 ^Mr. Byungmoo Kim ’13 *Mr. Jae Heon Kim ’12Mr. and Mrs. Jongil KimMr. Jung Woo Kim ’12Mr. Sun Hong Kim ’13Mr. and Mrs. Christopher J. King ’79Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Kinnaly ’81Mr. and Mrs. Harry Knowles, Jr.Mr. Heon Koh ’13 *Mr. Stephen KowalMr. Toby M. Kravet ’56 ^Mr. and Mrs. Allan KreuzburgKW Real Estate Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Peter KwiterovichMrs. Mercedese E. Large *Mr. Edward LaryMr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Lary ’71 ^Mr. and Mrs. Chris Laurence *Law Office of Richard MullalyMr. David B. LeBreton ’09 ^Mr. and Mrs. Joseph LedouxMr. Chi Kyu Lee ’13 *Mr. Joo Sang Lee ’13 *Mr. Seung Hwan Lee ’13 *The Lee F. & Phoebe A. Driscoll FoundationMr. Eugene J. M. Leone ’72Mr. Tim LeRoyMr. Malik G. Leslie ’12Ms. P. Diane LewisMr. Rui Li ’13Mr. James W. Little, Jr. ’03Mr. and Mrs. Richard Littlepage ^Ms. Juanzi Liu *Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Lovejoy ^Mr. Douglas Lovell and Ms. Elizabeth O’LearyMr. and Mrs. Robert Low *

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Mrs. Patricia LudemannDr. and Mrs. Leonard W. Luria ’63Mr. Jacob R. Lynch ’96Mr. Michael M. Lynch ’97Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas S. LynchMr. Zachary L. Lynch ’04Mr. William K. Lyon ’13Mr. Richard MacDonald and Ms. Nicole HapemanReverend Harry R. Mahoney ^Mr. and Mrs. Ray MahoneyMr. and Mrs. James S. Mainzer ’66 ^Mr. and Mrs. William E. Major ’62 ^Mr. Sean L. Mann ’03Dr. and Mrs. Steven MannMr. Eric L. Manstof ’02Mrs. Jane P. Manstof *Mr. and Mrs. Ralph N. Manuel ^Mr. and Mrs. Charles Margeson, Jr. ’51Mr. Marvin MarksMr. Piet H. Marks and Ms. Gloria BartonMr. and Mrs. Bruce Marshard ’64Mr. William H. Martinelli ’13Mascoma Savings Bank ^Dr. and Mrs. Walter E. Massey ^Mr. and Mrs. Richard MatteMr. Jacob R. Mayer ’13 *Mr. Donald McBride III #Dr. H. Charles McCormick, Jr. and Dr. Anne McCormickMr. Mark S. McCue and Mrs. Vasiliki M. Canotas * ^Mr. Cameron C. McCusker ’10Mr. Colin B. McCusker ’09Mr. David McCusker and Ms. Darlene Pike ^Dr. and Mrs. Norman F. McGowin III ^Mr. Norman F. McGowin IV ’05Mr. and Mrs. Mark McKeenMr. William N. McKenna IV ’85Mr. and Mrs. Michael P. McLean ’77Mrs. Alice McNamaraMr. and Mrs. Edward A. McNaught ^Mr. Edward A. McNaught III ’94Mr. Brian R. McQuillan ’07 ^Mr. and Mrs. Scott McQuillan ^Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Means IIIMs. Rebecca W. MeigsMr. Alexander Meigs-Rives ’09Mr. Theodore S. Mello ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. MelvilleMrs. Zella Mervis ^Mr. Eric C. Miller ’07Mr. James R. Miller II† and Mrs. JoAnne H. Miller ^Dr. Cecil J. MiltonMr. John L. Milton ’14Mr. Thomas F. Milton ’07Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. MiltonMr. William N. Milton ’14Ms. Alice Sydney Minkoff *^Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Mitchell III ’75Mr. and Mrs. William B. MorrisonMr. and Mrs. Frederick MoseleyMr. and Mrs. Richard E. MullalyMr. Raymond F. Murphy III

Mr. Angus S. Murray ’08 ^Mr. Bruce L. Murray and Dr. Hilary W. Coons ^Mr. and Mrs. John W. MyersMr. and Mrs. James L. Nagle ’73Mr. and Mrs. Michael NakadeMr. William B. Nearis ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. W. Carter Neild ’85 ^Mr. H. J. Nelson III ^Mr. and Mrs. Timothy NewboldRev. and Mrs. Kevin NicholsMr. Robert L. Nields, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Andrew B. Noel III ^Mr. Nathaniel O. Nugnes ’13Mr. David O’Brien and Ms. Donna KasianchukMr. and Mrs. Daniel E. O’Connor ^O’Connor Bus SalesMr. Carlos A. Ochoa ’13 *Dr. and Mrs. Afolabi Oguntoyinbo ^Mr. Young Hoon Oh ’12Mr. Kota Ohashi ’12Mr. Yuri Okada ’13 *Mr. Tianshuo Ouyang ’13 *Mr. Charles E. Pannaci ^Mr. Hugh Parker and Mrs. Kanya Numpradit Parker *Mr. and Mrs. James P. Parry ^Mr. Philip M. Parry ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. Matthew S. Paskus ’77Mr. Christopher R. Payne ’96Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Pearce III ’59Mrs. John H. Pearson, Sr. ^Mr. and Mrs. Edwin PeartMr. A. Thomas Pepe and Mrs. Judy Lacy-Pepe *Mr. Santiago Perez Sanchez ’13Perry Capital, LLCMs. Elizabeth PerrymanThe Pet Care TrustMr. and Mrs. David W. PetersMs. Joan A. PetersMr. Daniel J. Philbrick, Jr. ’14Mrs. Jennifer Philbrick *Mr. Adam E. Philie ’10Mr. Andrew G. Philie ’06 ^Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Philie ^Pitney Bowes Giving StationDr. Catherine PostMr. Tucker A. Powell ’14Mrs. Phyllis A. PowersMr. John M. Pratt ^Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. PucciMr. and Mrs. Robert W. Pullen *Major Darren K. Purcell ’84Mrs. Theresa Clancy PurcellMr. and Mrs. Paul RaiMr. and Mrs. Edilberto RamosMr. and Mrs. J. S. Ramsdell ^Mr. and Mrs. Theodore G. RandMr. Alden B. Reed ’06 ^Ms. Linda S. Reed ^Mr. and Mrs. Roger P. Rice ’60 ^Mr. and Mrs. Arch W. RileyMr. and Mrs. Matt RinkinMr. Ignacio Rivero ’91Ms. Susan Rives ^Mr. and Mrs. Ralph T. Robinson

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# in memory of † deceased

Dr. and Mrs. Carey R. Rodd ^Mr. Narric W. Rome ’87Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Rosen ^Mr. and Mrs. Matthew P. Rotan ’79The Very Rev. Richard W. RowlandMr. and Mrs. James W. Rowse, Jr. #Dr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Saint-DonatMr. Paul A. Saint-Donat ’04Mr. Robert D. Sanchez *Mr. and Mrs. Rex W. Savage ’88Mr. and Mrs. Paul Schwendener IIIMs. Meta Scott ^Mr. and Mrs. James K. SeatterMr. and Mrs. Kent L. Seith ’67 ^Mr. Federico Serrano Castro de la Torre ’13 *Mr. Palmer D. Sessel ’58Ms. Carolyn Shapiro-WallMs. Susan Shea *Mr. William Shepard and Ms. Lelia MellenMr. William M. Shepard ’12Mr. Adam N. Sherwood ’13Mr. and Mrs. Todd J. SherwoodMr. Jeremiah P. Shipman ’00Dr. and Mrs. Eric A. Shirley ^Mrs. Barbara J. Shragge-Stack *^Mr. Sky A. Silverstein ’13Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Sincerbeaux, Jr. ’81Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Sinclair ^Ms. Sally Singleton *Mrs. Allene SkallaMr. Nicholas Q. Slaughter ’13 *Mr. Carson Smith and Ms. Amy A. HowellMr. and Mrs. David L. Smith ^Mr. and Mrs. Dudley R. Smith ^Mr. and Mrs. Procter Smith IIIMr. Jose Manuel Soto and Mrs. Pilar GonzalezMr. and Mrs. Homer R. SpenceMr. and Mrs. William K. Starkey #Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Stefany ^Mrs. Anne M. Stowe *Dr. Gilbert R. Suitor ’60 ^Mr. and Mrs. Joseph SusiMrs. Linda R. SusmanMr. Joseph Sutton and Ms. Anne TraversMr. and Mrs. Guy A. Swenson III ’67 ^Mr. Napat Tanakulthon ’13 *Ms. Erika M. Taylor ^Mr. and Mrs. James TenagliaMr. Nicholas S. Thacher #Mr. and Mrs. Brian J. Tierney ’99Mr. and Mrs. Louis TobiaMr. and Mrs. Drew R. TrainorDr. and Mrs. Edmund W. Trice ’69 ^Trimfoot Co. LLCMr. Paul A. Trombetta ’85Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey M. Troy ’68Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Tucker, Jr. ^Mr. and Mrs. Matthew H. Tucker ’91Ms. Susan Turner *

Col. and Mrs. Richard J. Van Arnam, Jr. ^Verizon FoundationMr. and Mrs. Joseph VervierMr. and Mrs. Steven P. VoigtMrs. Amelie M. von Hollander ^Ms. Helen VrabelW. Paul Starkey Foundation #Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Wagg IIIMr. Ronald J. Wagner ’89 ^Mr. and Mrs. Norman C. WakelyMr. Eric B. Wald ’02 ^Mr. George W. N. Walker ’95 ^Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Walker IIIMr. Martin T. WallMr. John C. Wallach ’06Mr. Marshall C. Wallach *The Wally FoundationMrs. Karen Weber #Mr. and Mrs. David H. Webster ’55Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Weeks ’59Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Wennik *Dr. and Mrs. John WhalenMr. and Mrs. Frank P. White, Jr. ’74 ^Mr. Peter G. Whitehead ’87Mr. Hunter Whiting ’12Mr. and Mrs. Richard Whiting, Jr. ’71Mr. Thomas C. Wickham II ’13 *Mr. and Mrs. Wayne WilkeyMr. and Mrs. Richard Williams #^Ms. Vanessa Williams *Mr. Jonathan Wimbish ^Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence M. Wolman ’69 ^Mrs. Noel WoodMr. and Mrs. Bob WoodsMr. and Mrs. John C. WoodsMr. and Mrs. John C. Woods, Jr. ’72Mr. and Mrs. John Woodward *Mr. and Mrs. Christopher A. Wyskiel ^Mr. Everett YeltonMr. and Mrs. T. Rumsey Young, Jr. ’60Mr. Jae Eun Yu ’13 *Mr. Ming Yu Yuan ’13Zani Construction Co.Mr. Hongting Zhang ’13 *Mr. Yuze Zhang ’13 *

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2013 Annual Report of Gifts / 49

2012-13 Annual Report

ENDOWED FUNDS

Scholarship FundsAlbert F. Hill FundAlumni Legacy Fund Anonymous Scholarship FundCameron & Janet Dewar FundCharles Hayden Foundation FundChristian A. Johnson Fund DeWitt Wallace FundDiebel/Rich Scholarship FundEdward S. French FundElizabeth Porter FundFrehse Family Foundation FundH.P. & M.H. Hinman Memorial FundJames C. Alden FundJames N. Marrion Scholarship FundJennie Drew Hinman Memorial FundJoe Collins FundJohn H. Hinman FundJohn T. Hogan Memorial FundNorman Wakely FundO.W. Caspersen FundPatricia L. & Savage C. Frieze Jr. FundPrescott Family Scholarship FundRichard J. & Nellie Clancy Fund Robert & Helen Stoddard Fund Robert & Thurza Small FundRobert W. Stoddard FundStudent Scholarship FundTheodore F. Linn Jr. FundUndesignated Wayne G. Wickman Jr. FundWilliam K. Morrison Fund William Randolph Hearst Fund

Reserved Program FundsArtificial Ice Endowment FundAthletic Uniform FundCameron K. Dewar Faculty & Staff FundCameron K. Dewar PrizeCardigan 2020 Endowment FundCardigan 2020 Commons Endowment FundCardigan 2020 Endowment for ExcellenceChinese Family Fund for Faculty ExcellenceChristian Humann Theater FundDramatic Arts FundFaculty & Staff FundGates Invention and Innovation Competition FundGeneral Use FundGraduation Awards FundGymnasium Endowment FundHarvey P. Hood Library Fund Health Center FundJohn B. Coffin Utility FundKeith Wold Johnson Faculty FundLearning Center FundMichael Skibiski Prize FundNorman & Beverly Wakely Faculty Salary Fund Outdoor Education FundRichard & Beverly Morrison Infirmary FundScience Building Endowment FundThomas and Wendy Needham Fund

Unrestricted Funds Edward B. Hinman FundHarold P. Hinman FundJohn P. Kenerson FundKrannert Foundation FundMarie Heye Clemens FundRodd D. Brickell Foundation FundUndesignated FundVan Nice FundVickery Family Fund

We are grateful to our alumni, parents, and friends who have chosen to make gifts to the School’s endowment. By endowing their gifts, these donors leave a legacy of perpetual support for Cardigan students, faculty, programs, and facilities.

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† deceased

Alumni Giving by Class Year

Class of 1947 Stuart R. Kaplan Louis Tobia

Class of 1948 Thomas W. Dodge Alan C. Herzig Roger K. Lighty

Class of 1949 Bruce E. Docherty

Class of 1950 Richard D. Morrison

Class of 1951 Theodore Goddard Warren A. Kendall Charles Margeson, Jr.Peter Rand

Class of 1952 Warren D. Huse Craig Lighty

Class of 1953 George E. Harris

Class of 1954 David Helmstadter

Class of 1955 David H. Webster

Class of 1956 Toby M. Kravet

Class of 1958 Peter A. Albee, Sr.Charles S. Davison Charles P. Schutt, Jr.Palmer D. Sessel

Class of 1959 C. F. Pearce IIIRichard F. Weeks

Class of 1960 Edward A. Ball James E. Casselman Edward T. Griffin Charles H. Hall Wallace F. Jarvis Frederick A. Johnson Roger P. Rice John C. Stowe Gilbert R. Suitor T. Rumsey Young, Jr.

Class of 1962 James E. Barker John H. Christy Arthur C. Cox Douglas B. Dade Paul B. Gardent Frederick H. Gohl William E. Major Edward B. Righter Howard S. Tuthill IIIDavid Van Esselstyn

Class of 1963 Richard C. Boothby Daniel S. Burack Leonard W. Luria Schuyler V. Peck

Class of 1964 Roger C. Earle Bruce Marshard Malcolm C. Moran

Class of 1965 Sherman Bedford, Jr.Paul B. Fay IIIJohn H. Pearson, Jr.

Class of 1966 Peter C. Gerard Lee I. Giller David S. Hogan Alfred Johnston, Jr.James S. Mainzer

Class of 1967 Stephen D. Austin Richard A. Clancy Michael B. Garrison Carl E. Hartdegen Kent L. Seith Guy A. Swenson III

Class of 1968 Geoffrey A. Blair Steven J. Bresky David G. Hanson F. Corning Kenly IIIGeoffrey M. Troy

Class of 1969 Steven W. August Parker J. Brown Howard A. Gewandter Jerome M. Goodspeed Edmund W. Trice Geoffrey C. Turner Lawrence M. Wolman

Class of 1970 Dean C. Durling William T. Fleming Peter R. Garrison

Class of 1971 Dwight G. deKeyser Morgan P. Dickerman IIIKenneth B. Gould Kenneth E. Lary Richard Whiting, Jr.

Class of 1972 Anonymous Lawrence T. Diggs Eugene J. M. Leone John C. Woods, Jr.

Class of 1973 Chutinant BhiromBhakdi Robert V. Chartener Kenneth S. Klaus James L. Nagle Sally G. Riley Charles S. Smith III

Class of 1974 William L. Barry Kenneth E. Bentsen, Jr.George W. Cutting IIICharles W. Gallagher Frank P. White, Jr.

Class of 1975 Thomas A. Clausen Nicholas G. Harmon Thomas E. Mitchell IIIScott F. Powers

Class of 1976 Paul J. Leahy Mark R. Rainville Edward B. Wallace Anderson B. White

Class of 1977 Anonymous Joseph B. Bergner Michael P. McLean Charles F. Morgan, Jr.Matthew S. Paskus Stanley B. Smith, Jr.

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Class of 1978 Peter A. Baker John R. Emery IIIKirk J. Franklin Edward J. Gibbons, Jr.Craig M. Johnson Mark D. Kelly

Class of 1979 Jeremy T. Crigler Clayton D. Johnson Christopher J. King Matthew P. Rotan

Class of 1980 W. J. Boyle Stewart S. Dixon, Jr.Byron J. Gierhart, Jr.Charles T. Haskell, Jr.Kari O. Kontu David J. McCusker, Jr.

Class of 1981 Michael J. Kinnaly Richard M. Sincerbeaux, Jr.

Class of 1982 Richard J. DellaRusso P. Edward Krayer

Class of 1983 Henry B. duPont IV

Class of 1984 Ian N. Arnof Finn M. W. Caspersen, Jr.Jeremy D. Cohen Darren K. Purcell

Class of 1985 Cheyenne B. Amos William N. McKenna IVWilliam C. Neild Paul A. Trombetta Peter E. Van Nice, Jr.Sidney A. Weiss

Class of 1986 Jason E. Hammond

Class of 1987 John L. Hogan Clarke M. Murdough Narric W. Rome Peter G. Whitehead

Class of 1988 Richard T. Conly IIIMatthew J. Frazier Rex W. Savage

Class of 1989 Ronn M. Bronzetti Brendan C. Dinan Thomas E. Gordon Charles H. Heenan Ronald J. Wagner

Class of 1990 John G. Diemar Andrew S. Kelley

Class of 1991 Shawn D. Damon Tate S. Haire Leigh W. Otzen Ignacio Rivero Matthew H. Tucker

Class of 1992 Henry H. Baker Andrew P. Bay Karl G. Hutter Brandon J. Wagner

Class of 1994 Bradford R. Bevis Michael G. Garrison Andrew F. Geisel Edward A. McNaught IIIDrew R. Trainor

Class of 1995 Brendan J. Frazier Peter W. Heenan Christopher M. Taliercio George W. N. Walker

Class of 1996 Sergio N. Autrey Jacob R. Lynch Christopher R. Payne

Class of 1997 Matthew S. Fried Michael M. Lynch Frederick A. Meyer IVRafael H. Rojas

Class of 1998 Jay E. Christianson John H. Pearson III

Class of 1999 Devin M. Clifford Benjamin N. Lovejoy Brian J. Tierney

Class of 2000 Timothy A. Frazier Pack S. Janes Jeremiah P. Shipman

Class of 2001 J. Hardwick Caldwell Samuel M. V. Hamilton IIISangwook Lee

Class of 2002 Miguel A. Autrey Peter W. Blood Whitney A. Hoversten Eric L. Manstof Zachary J. Pace Eric B. Wald

Class of 2003 Malcolm Boyd James W. Little, Jr.Sean L. Mann Alexis M. Zambrano

Class of 2004 Ian S. Brennick Daniel R. Byington Justin P. Flessa-LaRoche Fred H. Groen Crawford C. Hamilton Zachary L. Lynch Paul A. Saint-Donat

Class of 2005 Jonathan R. Byington Norman F. McGowin IV

Class of 2006 John A. Camp Spencer W. Corkran Sumner J. Ford Andrew G. Philie Alden B. Reed John C. Wallach

Class of 2007 Dillon S. Corkran Brian R. McQuillan Eric C. Miller Thomas F. Milton

Class of 2008 Blake D. Alessandroni Michael L. Doyle, Jr.Ian F. Gagnon Nathan J. Gilbert Gray P. R. Hamilton Young Soo Jang Timothy R. McNair Angus S. Murray

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Class of 2009 Gavin Bayreuther Christopher H. Chapin Hyun Woo Choi Shane M. Dalton Joshua M. Dickman David B. LeBreton Colin B. McCusker Alexander Meigs-Rives

Class of 2010 Jacob A. Gilbert Miles N. P. Hamilton Anthony J. Karalekas Cameron C. McCusker Alfred Pace IIIAdam E. Philie

Class of 2011 Aidan P. Driscoll Solomon E. Floyd

Class of 2012 Charley A. Borek Richard A. Cardillo IIIChen Chen Jae Won Choi Spencer R. Cookson John T. Costello Ace C. Cowans Aidan S. Garron George Hewitt Hayden R. Holland Benjamin Intarapuvasak Benjamin M. Johnston Jae Heon Kim Jung Woo Kim Malik G. Leslie Young Hoon Oh Kota Ohashi William M. Shepard Hunter Whiting

Class of 2013 The Clark-Morgan Steps Society A long-standing tradition at Cardigan, all ninth-grade students are invited to participate in this society before graduation. Congratulations to the Class of 2013 for achieving 100 percent participation!

Jordan R. Abisch Christopher J. Alberigi William G. Appleton Luis Aranguren Covarrubias Sael A. Araujo, Jr.Matthew R. Banks Myles H. Beach Brandon A. Benson James E. Betts IIIWilliam T. Boyle Timothy J. Callahan Michael P. Capozzi IIAgustin Cattoretti Lopez Dong Hyun Chae Seung Ick Chang Guanlin Chen Haorong Chen Jinwan Cho Peter L. Cleveland Henry A. Cormier Henry Day Kastan V. Day Noah L. Drummond Gordon E. Faust Benjamin A. Finkelstein Austin G. Franklin Jackson K. Freidberg Maxwell L. Gilbert Avery R. Glass James K. Goodwin Ryan A. Grady IIIChang Hyun Han Elijah J. Harris Liam R. Hassett Morgan A. Himmer William R. Humphrey IVYun Do Hwang Charles Z. M. Ikeda Hanlin Jiang Byungmoo Kim Sun Hong Kim Heon Koh Chi Kyu Lee Joo Sang Lee Seung Hwan Lee Rui Li William K. Lyon

William H. Martinelli Jacob R. Mayer Theodore S. Mello William B. Nearis Nathaniel O. Nugnes Carlos A. Ochoa Yuri Okada Tianshuo Ouyang Philip M. Parry Santiago Perez Sanchez Federico Serrano Castro de la TorreAdam N. Sherwood Sky A. Silverstein Nicholas Q. Slaughter Napat Tanakulthon Sethanant R. Tejavibulya Thomas C. Wickham IIJae Eun Yu Ming Yu Yuan Hongting Zhang Yuze Zhang

Class of 2014 John L. Milton William N. Milton Daniel J. Philbrick, Jr.Tucker A. Powell

Class of 2015 Corbin S. Holland

Current ParentsAnonymous (2)Mr. John AbischMr. Agustin Alban and Mrs. Ana MaderoMr. and Mrs. Richard J. AlberigiMr. Jae Pil An and Mrs. So Young LeeMr. and Mrs. William AntonucciMr. and Mrs. J. Kevin AppletonMr. and Mrs. Edward Audett, Jr.Mr. Wei Bai and Mrs. Yongmei WangMr. and Mrs. Peter A. Baker ’78Mr. and Mrs. Clarence R. BanksMr. and Mrs. John M. BayreutherMrs. Melinda P. BeachMr. Juan L. C. Bellvis and Mrs. Carmen AlvoMr. and Mrs. James E. Betts, Jr.Mr. Tao Bi and Mrs. Liu XinrongMr. and Mrs. Anthony BielaMs. Kelly BlissMr. and Mrs. Scott G. BorekMr. and Mrs. Martin G. BourkeMr. and Mrs. Courtland A. BoyleMr. and Mrs. W. J. Boyle ’80Mr. and Mrs. David A. BuchlerMs. Juli BullardDr. and Mrs. Olaf ButchmaMs. Eunyoung Byunn† deceased

Read the

Chronicle ONLINE at cardigan.org/chronicle

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Mr. and Mrs. Kevin CalderMr. and Mrs. Kevin CallahanMr. and Mrs. Michael V. CapozziMr. Luis Carcoba and Ms. Nora de AlbaDr. Juan Caripidis and Dr. Maria D. Soto De CaripidisMr. Seung-il Chae and Mrs. Bo Young BaeMr. Sae Joo Chang and Mrs. Hee Jung NamMr. and Mrs. Tzu-Lin ChenMr. Xiangqun Chen and Mrs. Huang HuaxinMr. Xunqiang Chen and Mrs. Shaomin WuDr. Min Young Cho and Dr. Jeeyoun LimDr. Sang Jun Chun and Ms. Joolie KimMr. and Mrs. Dwight M. ClevelandMr. and Mrs. Philip CormierMr. Christopher J. Cowans and Ms. Jennifer ParisellaMr. and Mrs. Todd C. CromheeckeMs. Marnie CullenMr. John Cuticelli and Mrs. Elizabeth Schuette CuticelliMr. Randy DayMs. Rika DilaMr. Zhinan Ding and Mrs. Hongbin DongMr. Richard S. Drummond and Dr. Lisa A. DrummondMr. Nabil Elkouh and Mrs. Sheila Cragg-ElkouhMr. and Mrs. Frank FabianMr. and Mrs. John FaustMr. and Mrs. Ryan FeeleyDr. Rush Fisher and Dr. Phoebe FisherMr. and Mrs. Kirk J. Franklin ’78Mr. Michael FreidbergMr. and Mrs. Robert FrenchmanMr. Gustavo H. Garcia and Mrs. Claudia Orellana de GarciaMr. Sergio D. Garcia SuarezMr. and Mrs. Steven C. GarronMr. and Mrs. Andrew L. GilbertMr. and Mrs. Peter B. GilbertMr. and Mrs. Joshua GlassMr. and Ms. Jose Gomez CastellanosMr. Shan Hong Gong and Mrs. Shiwei LiuMs. Louise K. GoodwinMr. Reamy F. GoodwinMr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. GradyMr. Joseph G. Grasso and Ms. Rosalie HunterMr. and Mrs. Alexander GrayMrs. Xiaohui GuoMr. Daniel Gutierrez and Ms. Cynthia HernandezMr. Mauricio Guzman Gonzalez and Mrs. Lorena Cedillo de GuzmanMr. Sang Woock Han and Dr. So Young LeeMr. Jose N. Harb Kallab and Mrs. M. Adriana Rodriguez StraussMr. and Mrs. Nicholas G. Harmon ’75Mr. and Mrs. Steven Harris

Dr. Robert P. Hassett and Dr. Elizabeth CrockettMr. and Mrs. Alan K. HimmerMr. Hank J. HollandMr. Ki Hun Hong and Mrs. Bok Sun HanMr. and Mrs. Clark HouxDr. Chang-Chih Huang and Dr. Pei-Shan TsaiMr. and Mrs. Scott A. HuffMr. Tae Woong Hwang and Mrs. Young Joo LeeMs. Margaret IkedaMr. and Mrs. Richard B. JessopMr. Feng Jiang and Mrs. Danna LvMr. Untai Jung and Dr. Hyeongsim JangMr. Yeon Ho Jung and Mrs. Kyung Ah KwakMr. and Mrs. David KavanaughMr. William K. Kelley and Mrs. Melinda C. Marye-KelleyMr. and Mrs. Chongyub KimDr. and Mrs. Chul Joong KimMr. and Mrs. Jeong Kyu KimMr. and Mrs. Bon Hak KooMr. and Mrs. Allan KreuzburgMr. and Mrs. Franz KriegMr. and Mrs. Chris LaurenceMr. Bo Yoon Lee and Mrs. Eun Joo AhnMr. Cheoul Woo Lee and Mrs. Min Hee KimMr. Dam Lee and Mrs. Suk Young BangMr. Jung Hun Lee and Mrs. Jae Kyoung ShimMr. Jung Il Lee and Mrs. Ji Hyun AnMr. Neung Soo Lee and Mrs. Hoi Yun ChungMr. and Mrs. Sangwon LeeMs. P. Diane LewisMr. Yanbin Li and Mrs. Jin TianMr. Feng Liu and Mrs. Chao YangMs. Juanzi LiuMr. and Mrs. Wen Zeng LiuMr. Eduardo Lopez Garcia and Mrs. Ana O. Ramírez GonzalezMr. and Mrs. Danny LuiMs. Leslie K. LyonMr. Michael L. LyonMr. Hongwei Ma and Mrs. Jiachen GuMr. Sung Hoon Mah and Mrs. Woo Jin LeeMr. and Mrs. Bruno R. MangiardiMr. and Mrs. Ben J. MarcianoMs. Candyce MartinMr. and Mrs. David J. MartinelliMr. and Mrs. Mark McKeenMr. and Mrs. Thomas M. McNamaraMr. and Mrs. Steven M. MelloMr. Xuenjun Mi and Mrs. Hong WangMr. and Mrs. Keith MichelsonMr. and Mrs. Thomas J. MiltonMr. Byunghoon Min and Mrs. Jisuk LeeDr. and Mrs. Craig MinesMr. David T. Moldenhauer and Ms. Julia M. LichtblauMr. and Mrs. John Moore

Mr. Tong Mu and Ms. Qing HeRev. and Mrs. Kevin NicholsMr. and Mrs. Andrew B. Noel IIIMr. and Mrs. Hirohisa OkadaMr. Xiuge Ouyang and Mrs. Li LipingMr. Hugh Parker and Mrs. Kanya Numpradit ParkerMr. and Mrs. Richard Parker, Jr.Mr. A. Thomas Pepe and Mrs. Judy Lacy-PepeMr. Joaquin Perez Lopez and Mrs. Iliana Sanchez ArriagaMs. Elizabeth PerrymanMr. and Mrs. David W. PetersMr. Daniel J. PhilbrickMrs. Jennifer PhilbrickMr. and Mrs. William N. PieroniMr. and Mrs. David PlekenpolDr. Catherine PostMr. Russell PostMr. and Mrs. Dominic PowellMr. and Mrs. Andrew J. RothMr. and Mrs. J. Hoyle RymerMr. Anthony ScaramucciMr. and Mrs. Michael J. SchaferMr. Julio Serrano Castro and Mrs. Maria del Carmen de la TorreMs. Carolyn Shapiro-WallMr. William Shepard and Ms. Lelia MellenMr. and Mrs. Todd J. SherwoodMr. Baoxiang Shi and Mrs. Yali ShouMr. Kurt Silverstein and Mrs. Marie G. Surpris-SilversteinDr. Joon Ho Song and Dr. Rena LeeMr. and Mrs. Brennan StarkeyMr. and Mrs. Peter SternMs. Patrapon TanakulthonMr. Sarunyou TejavibulyaMr. and Mrs. Hideyuki TozawaMr. and Mrs. John TrottoMr. and Mrs. Mario Velazquez RobinsonMs. Helen VrabelMr. Martin T. WallMr. and Mrs. Michael WalshMr. Michael Walzak and Ms. Susan HillsMr. Yong Wang and Ms. Jia YueMr. and Mrs. Wayne WilkeyMs. Vanessa WilliamsMr. Zhiliang Wu and Mrs. Lixia ZhangMr. Jun XiaoMr. Yong Xie and Mrs. Yi GongMr. De Gui Yuan and Mrs. Hong WangMr. and Mrs. Kevin ZhangMr. Ming Zhang and Mrs. Man Lei

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Parents of AlumniAnonymous (3)Mr. and Mrs. Wayde H. AffleckMr. and Mrs. David G. AlessandroniMr. and Mrs. Emanuel M. AlexiouMr. and Mrs. George M. Alvarez-CorreaMr. and Mrs. William AntonucciMr. Luis Aranguren Trellez and Mrs. Carmen Covarrubias V de ArangurenMr. and Mrs. James ArsenaultMr. and Mrs. David AuerbachMs. Alison R. BagleyMr. and Mrs. Harold A. BakerMrs. Lynn BakerMr. Malcolm G. Baker, Jr.Ms. Rhoda BannonMr. and Mrs. Douglas H. BardenMr. and Mrs. John M. BayreutherMr. and Mrs. William S. BeardMr. and Mrs. John J. BelloMr. and Mrs. David R. BernerMr. and Mrs. Thomas H. BerryMr. and Mrs. Scott G. BorekMr. Donald S. Boy and Mrs. Carol B. MasonMr. and Mrs. David H. BradleyDr. Jeoffry BrennickMr. and Mrs. Timothy J. BuckleyMs. Rosalind M. BurkeMr. and Mrs. Roy E. Byington, Jr.Ms. Carmen M. CalderMr. and Mrs. Kevin CallahanMr. and Mrs. John M. Camp IIIMrs. Dianne M. CampbellMr. and Mrs. Richard A. Cardillo, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Steven G. CaronDr. and Mrs. Richard ChaceMr. and Mrs. Timothy H. ChapinMr. and Mrs. Byung Wook ChoiMr. and Mrs. Michael Choukas, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. John R. Clark IIIMr. and Mrs. Tristram C. ColketMr. and Mrs. John C. ConklingMr. and Mrs. Scott D. ConwellMr. and Mrs. Gary S. CooksonMr. Sewell H. Corkran IIIMr. Ricardo Covarrubias and Mrs. Sofia L. Sahagun de CovarrubiasMr. Christopher J. Cowans and Ms. Jennifer ParisellaMr. and Mrs. James W. CrowellMr. and Mrs. Phidias G. DantosMr. Clint A. Davis and Dr. Frankie A. HolmesMr. Harold A. Dawson, Jr.Mr. Daniel D. DeMars and Dr. Leslie R. DeMarsDr. and Mrs. Cameron K. DewarMr. Jay DickmanMrs. Karen DiebelMr. and Mrs. Dennis A. Dinan

Mr. and Mrs. George M. DixMr. and Mrs. Michael L. DoyleMr. George F. Driscoll and Dr. Mary Jane HoulihanMr. Richard S. Drummond and Dr. Lisa A. DrummondMrs. Henry B. duPont IIIMr. and Mrs. Dean C. Durling ’70Dr. and Mrs. Roger H. Emerson, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Gustavo EscamillaMr. and Mrs. Rick ExtonMs. Lenee EzellMr. and Mrs. Gregor E. FellersMr. and Mrs. David L. FosterMr. and Mrs. Kirk J. Franklin ’78Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. FrazierMrs. Dale FrehseMrs. Donna D. FriedMr. Monte FriedMr. James H. Funnell and Dr. Margaret FunnellMr. and Mrs. Michael B. Garrison ’67Mr. and Mrs. Steven C. GarronMr. and Mrs. C. Meade Geisel, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gibbons, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. Andrew L. GilbertMr. Joseph B. GlossbergMr. and Mrs. Steve GoldsmithDr. Glen B. Gormezano and Dr. Masae KawamuraMr. and Mrs. George R. Graham, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. R. Phillip HaireMr. and Mrs. S. Matthews V. Hamilton, Jr.Mr. Sang Woock Han and Dr. So Young LeeMr. and Mrs. Nicholas G. Harmon ’75Mr. and Mrs. Steven HarrisMr. and Mrs. Philip D. HarrisonMr. and Mrs. Sherwood C. Haskins, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. John O. Hastings, Jr.Mrs. Jane HeenanMr. and Mrs. Timothy J. HerbertMr. and Mrs. Anthony Hewitt, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. HicksMr. and Mrs. Alan K. HimmerMr. Hank J. HollandMr. Man Pyo Hong and Mrs. Seon Mi YooMs. Sheree D. Houston-FloydMr. and Mrs. Philip HoverstenMs. Lucia G. HowellMr. and Mrs. Il-Sup HuhMr. and Mrs. Richard F. HutchinsMr. and Mrs. Charles G. Hutter IIIMr. and Mrs. G. Kevin HynesMr. and Mrs. Smit IntarapuvasakMr. and Mrs. William S. JanesDr. Ho Yoon Jang and Dr. Kyung Wha OhMr. and Mrs. Timothy P. JenningsMrs. Betty W. JohnsonMr. and Mrs. Clayton D. Johnson ’79

† deceased

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Mr. and Mrs. Craig M. Johnson ’78Mr. and Mrs. David M. JohnsonMrs. Martha C. JonesMr. and Mrs. Jonathan A. KaralekasMrs. Maria C. KeilhauerMr. and Mrs. David N. Kelley IIDr. Jeong Gyoon Kim and Mrs. Seon Young ChungMr. and Mrs. Jongil KimMr. Seong Won Kim and Mrs. Yu Sun HwangMr. Yu Seoung Kim and Mrs. Seung Yuhn YooMr. and Mrs. Harry Knowles, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. George P. KoolurisMr. Steve Kuzara and Mrs. Beatriz von Ungern-SternbergMr. and Mrs. Colt LandrethDr. and Mrs. Brian LaPointeMrs. Mercedese E. LargeMr. Edward LaryMr. and Mrs. David H. LeBretonMr. Chun Hyuk Lee and Mrs. Sang Hee AhnMr. Yong Hee Lee and Mrs. Jeong Leem ChaeMr. Young Duk Lee and Mrs. Eun Mi ChoMr. and Mrs. Joseph G. LisickyMr. and Mrs. Richard LittlepageMr. and Mrs. Nicholas S. LynchMs. Leslie K. LyonMr. Michael L. LyonMrs. Ellen MacNeille CharlesDr. and Mrs. Paul F. MacVittieMrs. Helen S. MaherDr. and Mrs. Steven MannMrs. Jane P. ManstofMr. Piet H. Marks and Ms. Gloria BartonMr. and Mrs. James N. MarrionMr. and Mrs. Bryan P. MarsalDr. and Mrs. Walter E. MasseyMr. and Mrs. James MastalerzMr. and Mrs. James A. McCalmontMr. Mark S. McCue and Mrs. Vasiliki M. CanotasMr. David McCusker and Ms. Darlene PikeMr. and Mrs. David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80Mr. Burton E. McGillivrayDr. and Mrs. Norman F. McGowin IIIMr. and Mrs. James A. McNairMr. and Mrs. Thomas M. McNamaraMr. and Mrs. Edward A. McNaughtMr. and Mrs. Scott McQuillanMs. Rebecca W. MeigsMr. and Mrs. Arthur M. MelvilleMr. and Mrs. Andrew MenkeMrs. Zella MervisMr. and Mrs. Thomas J. MiltonMs. Alice Sydney MinkoffDr. and Mrs. Matthew R. MooreMr. and Mrs. Malcolm C. Moran ’64Dr. and Mrs. Richard D. Morrison ’50

Mr. and Mrs. William B. MorrisonMr. and Mrs. Richard E. MullalyMr. and Mrs. Samuel MurdoughMr. Bruce L. Murray and Dr. Hilary W. CoonsMr. and Mrs. John W. MyersMr. H. J. Nelson IIIMr. and Mrs. William B. NeubergMr. and Mrs. Richard D. NickersonMr. Robert L. Nields, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. NitzeMr. David O’Brien and Ms. Donna KasianchukMr. and Mrs. Frank J. O’ConnellMr. and Mrs. Daniel E. O’ConnorDr. and Mrs. Afolabi OguntoyinboMr. Jong Han Oh and Mrs. Seungmie LeeMr. and Mrs. Kazuyuki OhashiMr. and Mrs. Hirohisa OkadaMr. and Mrs. Alfred Pace, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. John H. Pearson, Jr. ’65Mrs. John H. Pearson, Sr.Mr. Wen Hui Peng and Ms. Tian Shu ChuMs. Joan A. PetersMr. Daniel J. PhilbrickMrs. Jennifer PhilbrickMr. and Mrs. Edward G. PhilieMr. and Mrs. Thomas PhillipsMr. and Mrs. Eugene A. PinoverMs. Carla PowersMrs. Phyllis A. PowersMr. and Mrs. Larry W. PrescottMr. and Mrs. Robert A. PucciMr. and Mrs. Robert W. PullenMrs. Theresa Clancy PurcellMr. and Mrs. Paul RaiMr. and Mrs. Edilberto RamosMr. and Mrs. J. S. RamsdellMs. Linda S. ReedMr. and Mrs. Ralph T. RobinsonDr. and Mrs. Carey R. RoddMr. and Mrs. Robert N. RosenMr. and Mrs. Andrew J. RothThe Very Rev. Richard W. RowlandMr. and Mrs. D. Bryan RuezMr. and Mrs. Clive RunnellsMr. and Mrs. J. Hoyle RymerDr. and Mrs. Bernard J. Saint-DonatMr. and Mrs. Paul Schwendener IIIMs. Meta ScottMr. and Mrs. James K. SeatterMr. William Shepard and Ms. Lelia MellenMr. Xiang Dong Shi and Ms. Mei Shan LiangDr. and Mrs. Eric A. ShirleyMrs. Barbara J. Shragge-StackMr. and Mrs. David L. SmithMr. and Mrs. Procter Smith IIIMr. Jose Manuel Soto and Mrs. Pilar GonzalezMrs. Linda R. SusmanMr. Joseph Sutton and Ms. Anne TraversMs. Erika M. Taylor

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Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Tucker, Jr.Ms. Susan TurnerCol. and Mrs. Richard J. Van Arnam, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Mario Velazquez RobinsonMr. and Mrs. Steven P. VoigtMr. and Mrs. Peter N. von GalMrs. Amelie M. von HollanderMr. and Mrs. Norman C. WakelyMr. and Mrs. J. O. Walker IIIMr. and Mrs. Marshall F. WallachMrs. Xu WangMrs. Karen WeberMr. and Mrs. Christopher S. WellesMr. and Mrs. John WhitingDr. and Mrs. Robert WickhamMr. and Mrs. Richard WilliamsMr. and Mrs. Bob WoodsMr. and Mrs. John C. WoodsMr. and Mrs. Christopher A. WyskielMr. Gang Yin and Mrs. Li Bing

Summer Session Parents Mr. and Mrs. Wayde H. AffleckMr. Jae Pil An and Mrs. So Young LeeMr. and Mrs. Edward Audett, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. John M. BayreutherMrs. Melinda P. BeachMr. and Mrs. Mark D. BoillotatMs. Rosalind M. BurkeDr. Juan Caripidis and Dr. Maria D. Soto De CaripidisMr. and Mrs. Steven G. CaronMr. Sae Joo Chang and Mrs. Hee Jung NamMr. Xiangqun Chen and Mrs. Huang HuaxinMr. Xunqiang Chen and Mrs. Shaomin WuMr. and Mrs. Byung Wook ChoiDr. Sang Jun Chun and Ms. Joolie KimMr. and Mrs. Scott D. ConwellMr. Ricardo Covarrubias and Mrs. Sofia L. Sahagun de CovarrubiasMr. and Mrs. Todd C. CromheeckeMr. Clint A. Davis and Dr. Frankie A. HolmesMr. and Mrs. Arturo De SimoneMr. Daniel D. DeMars and Dr. Leslie R. DeMarsMr. Zhinan Ding and Mrs. Hongbin DongDr. and Mrs. Roger H. Emerson, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Gustavo EscamillaMr. and Mrs. Rick ExtonMr. and Mrs. Ryan FeeleyMr. Gregor E. FellersMr. and Mrs. Joseph A. FrazierMr. Shan Hong Gong and Mrs. Shiwei LiuMr. Mauricio Guzman Gonzalez and Mrs. Lorena Cedillo de GuzmanMr. Sang Woock Han and Dr. So Young LeeMr. and Mrs. Nicholas G. Harmon ’75Mr. and Mrs. Steven HarrisMr. Christopher D. Heaney

Mr. and Mrs. Alan K. HimmerMs. Kathryn HollandMr. Ki Hun Hong and Mrs. Bok Sun HanMs. Sheree D. Houston-FloydMr. and Mrs. Philip HoverstenDr. Chang-Chih Huang and Dr. Pei-Shan TsaiMr. and Mrs. Il-Sup HuhMr. Tae Woong Hwang and Mrs. Young Joo LeeMr. and Mrs. Smit IntarapuvasakDr. Ho Yoon Jang and Dr. Kyung Wha OhMr. and Mrs. Timothy P. JenningsMr. Yeon Ho Jung and Mrs. Kyung Ah KwakMr. William K. Kelley and Mrs. Melinda C. Marye-KelleyDr. Jeong Gyoon Kim and Mrs. Seon Young ChungMr. and Mrs. Jeong Kyu KimMr. and Mrs. Jongil KimMr. Seong Won Kim and Mrs. Yu Sun HwangMr. Yu Seoung Kim and Mrs. Seung Yuhn YooMr. and Mrs. Bon Hak KooMr. and Mrs. Allan KreuzburgMr. Steve Kuzara and Mrs. Beatriz von Ungern-SternbergMr. Bo Yoon Lee and Mrs. Eun Joo AhnMr. Cheoul Woo Lee and Mrs. Min Hee KimMr. Dam Lee and Mrs. Suk Young BangMr. Neung Soo Lee and Mrs. Hoi Yun ChungMr. Yong Hee Lee and Mrs. Jeong Leem ChaeMr. Young Duk Lee and Mrs. Eun Mi ChoMr. and Mrs. Wen Zeng LiuMr. Douglas Lovell and Ms. Elizabeth O’LearyMr. Hongwei Ma and Mrs. Jiachen GuMr. Richard MacDonald and Ms. Nicole HapemanMr. and Mrs. David J. MartinelliMr. and Mrs. Joseph P. McHughMr. and Mrs. Augustus Means IIIMs. Rebecca W. MeigsMr. and Mrs. Keith MichelsonMr. and Mrs. Thomas J. MiltonMr. David T. Moldenhauer and Ms. Julia M. LichtblauDr. and Mrs. Matthew R. MooreMr. and Mrs. Malcolm C. Moran ’64Mr. and Mrs. John W. MyersDr. Seung Hyung Noh and Mrs. Mee Sun KangMr. and Mrs. Kazuyuki OhashiMr. and Mrs. Hirohisa OkadaDr. Gideon G. PanterMr. Hugh Parker and Mrs. Kanya Numpradit ParkerMr. and Mrs. Edwin PeartMr. Wen Hui Peng and Ms. Tian Shu ChuMr. and Mrs. William N. PieroniMr. Doug Poulter and Dr. Ji ChenMr. and Mrs. Dominic PowellMs. Carla Powers

† deceased

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Mr. Anthony ScaramucciMr. Baoxiang Shi and Mrs. Yali ShouMr. and Mrs. Richard M. Sincerbeaux, Jr. ’81Mr. and Mrs. Procter Smith IIIMr. and Mrs. Joseph SusiMr. and Mrs. Hideyuki TozawaMr. and Mrs. J. O. Walker IIIMr. and Mrs. Anderson B. White ’76Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wilkey

GrandparentsAnonymousMr. Vernon ArmourMr. and Mrs. John Bagley IIIMr. and Mrs. Harold A. BakerMrs. June BeaverMr. and Mrs. Frank BielaMr. and Mrs. Gordon BorekMrs. Phoebe DriscollMrs. Catherine EurichMr. and Mrs. Maxwell F. EvelethDr. and Mrs. Leonard FinkelsteinMr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gibbons, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. Wallace B. Goodwin IIMr. and Mrs. Harvey GrayMr. and Mrs. Edgar GreasonMr. and Mrs. Robert HammondMr. and Mrs. Richard H. HinmanMr. and Mrs. Tom HollandMs. Louise HortonDr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hutchinson IIIMr. and Mrs. David M. JohnsonMr. and Mrs. Frederick KaudersMrs. Nancy KelsoMr. Hun Gil Kim and Mrs. Sang Yeon ChoiMr. and Mrs. Harry Knowles, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. LovejoyMrs. Patricia LudemannMrs. Ellen MacNeille CharlesMr. and Mrs. Ray MahoneyMr. and Mrs. James N. MarrionMr. and Mrs. Richard MatteMr. David McCusker and Ms. Darlene PikeMrs. Alice McNamaraDr. Cecil J. MiltonMr. and Mrs. Frederick MoseleyMr. and Mrs. James P. ParryMrs. John H. Pearson, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. John R. PfefferMrs. Phyllis A. PowersMr. John A. Reardon † and Mrs. Mary K. ReardonMs. Sally SingletonMrs. Allene SkallaMr. and Mrs. Homer R. SpenceMr. Stanley M. SternMr. and Mrs. James TenagliaMr. and Mrs. Joseph VervierMr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Wagg III

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph B. WennikDr. and Mrs. John WhalenMr. and Mrs. Nicholson B. WhiteMr. and Mrs. Ogden White, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Richard WilliamsMrs. Noel Wood

Faculty and StaffMr. Ben AdamsMr. Edward Audett, Jr.Mr. David AuerbachMrs. Jessica L. BayreutherMr. John M. BayreutherMrs. Elizabeth BeckwithMr. Mark BeckwithMr. Monte BlausteinMs. Rosalind M. BurkeMr. Jarrod CaprowMr. Owen CarpinoMr. Richard A. Clancy ’67Mr. Douglas ClarkMr. Andrew CookMs. Patti CroweMr. Ken CushingMs. Erin DruryMr. Scott EllisMr. Rick ExtonMr. Ryan FeeleyMs. Ashley FinethyMrs. Haver A. FlahertyMrs. Barbara J. FrazierMr. Ryan E. FrostMrs. Shannon GahaganMr. Graham GauthierMr. Jeffrey GoodMr. Robert L. GrabillMs. Sarah GravesMr. Alexander GrayMs. Karen GrayMr. Michel GrayMrs. Alexis HannisMr. Austen HannisMr. Steven HarrisMr. William HartMr. Christopher D. HeaneyMs. Kathryn HollandMrs. Pat IacuzziMr. Timothy P. JenningsMr. Christopher J. KennyMr. Allan KreuzburgMr. Kristofor LangetiegMr. Corey LawsonMrs. Mary LedouxMrs. Lynne B. LenihanMr. Tim LeRoyMr. Douglas LovellMr. Richard MacDonaldMr. James N. MarrionMr. David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80

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Mrs. Stephanie G. McCuskerMr. Joseph P. McHughMrs. Kathryn McHughMrs. Joy MichelsonMr. Michael NakadeMr. Timothy NewboldMr. David G. PerfieldMrs. Lisa PerfieldMr. Daniel PerriconeMrs. Lindsay PerriconeMr. Edilberto RamosMr. Matt RinkinMr. Alberto P. Rocha VazquezMr. Jim Scott, Jr.Mrs. Samantha ScottMr. Ryan SinclairMr. Tad SkelleyMrs. Pamela J. SusiMr. Marshall C. WallachMs. Didi WilsonMr. Everett YeltonMs. Sarah Young

Former Faculty and StaffAnonymousMr. Cornelius N. Bakker and Ms. Sarah E. SchimmelMr. and Mrs. Anthony L. CareyMr. and Mrs. Michael Choukas, Jr.Mr. Richard A. Clancy ’67Mr. J. Dudley ClarkMr. and Mrs. Scott D. ConwellMr. and Mrs. Robert L. CrawfordMs. Virginia DohertyMr. and Mrs. Thomas FunkhouserMr. James H. Funnell and Dr. Margaret FunnellMr. and Mrs. Robert GreggMr. and Mrs. Scott HaireMr. Erland B. HardyMr. Charles T. Haskell, Jr. ’80 and Dr. Helma HaskellMr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. HicksMr. John L. Hogan ’87Mr. Fred HoughtonMr. and Mrs. Richard B. JohnsonMr. and Mrs. Peter KwiterovichMr. and Mrs. Robert LowMr. and Mrs. Nicholas S. LynchMr. and Mrs. Randy MacdonaldReverend Harry R. MahoneyMr. and Mrs. James N. MarrionMr. and Mrs. Bruce Marshard ’64Dr. H. Charles McCormick, Jr. and Dr. Anne McCormickMr. and Mrs. David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Means IIIMr. Raymond F. Murphy III

Mr. and Mrs. Andrew B. Noel IIIMr. and Mrs. Matthew OliverMr. and Mrs. C. F. Pearce III ’59Mr. and Mrs. Schuyler V. Peck ’63Mrs. Theresa Clancy PurcellMs. Susan RivesMr. Carson Smith and Ms. Amy A. HowellMr. Ronald J. Wagner ’89Mr. and Mrs. Norman C. WakelyMr. and Mrs. Richard F. Weeks ’59Mr. Jonathan Wimbish

FriendsAnonymous (2)Mr. Leland AlperMr. and Mrs. John H. BergeronMr. Thomas S. CongerMr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Cunningham, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Henry FlanaganMrs. Janet M. ForbushMrs. Mary D. FurthMr. and Mrs. Peter B. GilbertMiss Lula GrayRev. Canon and Mrs. Preston B. HannibalMr. and Mrs. William D. HarleyMr. and Mrs. John C. HaysMs. Charlotte B. HearttMr. Dud HendrickMr. Marshall Heuser and Ms. Mimi HeuserMr. and Mrs. Charles H. HoodMr. and Mrs. Richard G. JaegerDr. and Mrs. Robert F. KenersonMr. Stephen KowalMr. and Mrs. Ralph N. ManuelMr. and Mrs. Ben J. MarcianoMr. Marvin MarksMr. Donald McBride IIIMr. Chapin B. Miller IIMr. James R. Miller II † and Mrs. JoAnne H. MillerMr. and Mrs. Peter MoultonMr. Charles E. PannaciMr. John M. PrattMr. and Mrs. Theodore G. RandMr. and Mrs. James W. Rowse, Jr.Mr. Robert D. SanchezMs. Amy SchoewMs. Susan SheaMr. and Mrs. Dudley R. SmithMr. Joel C. SolomonMr. and Mrs. Bruce R. StefanyMrs. Anne M. StoweMr. Nicholas S. ThacherDr. and Mrs. Douglas WilliamsonMr. and Mrs. John Woodward

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In Honor ofMr. John AbischMr. Agustin Alban-Madero ’14Mr. Christopher J. Alberigi ’13 All of My Fellow Cardigan Alums!Ms. Phyllis AlleyneMr. Young Woo An ’14Mr. William G. Appleton ’13 Mr. Daniel A. Babcock ’80 Mr. David E. BabcockMr. Ruiwen Bai ’14Mr. Timothy Edward Granville Baker ’86Mr. Matthew R. Banks ’13Mr. Justin P. Biela ’14Mr. Tanner R. Boyle ’14Mr. Oren R. Buchler ’14Mr. Colton Bullard ’15Mr. Keetae Byunn ’16Mr. Jason A. Calder ’94Mr. Timothy Callahan ’13Mr. Michael P. Capozzi ’13Mr. Luis G. Carcoba ’14Cardigan Mountain SchoolMr. Giorgo Caripidis ’16Mr. Dong Hyun “Veo” Chae ’13Mr. Guanlin “Neil” Chen ’13 Mr. Haorong Chen ’13Mr. Jinwan Cho ’13Mr. Jae Young Chun ’16Mr. J. Dudley ClarkClass of 2013Class of 2013 Student CenterMr. Peter Cleveland ’13 Mr. Henry A. Cormier ’13 Mr. Jay C. Cromheecke ’14Mr. Kastan V. DayMr. Connor M. Diebel ’12N. Donald Diebel, Jr. M.D. ’82 †Mr. Longxuan Ding ’15Miss Catherine H. Emerson Mr. Christopher L. Emerson ’96 Mr. Gordon E. Faust ’13Mr. Benjamin A. Finkelstein ’13Mr. Oliver B. Fisher ’15Mr. Solomon E. Floyd ’11Mr. Austin G. Franklin ’13Frazier FamilyMr. James H. FunnellMr. Gustavo Garcia ’14Mr. Maxwell L. Gilbert ’13The Gilbert FamilyMr. Jose M. Gomez ’15Mr. Yuan Gong ’15Mr. James K. Goodwin ’13Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Gordon ’89Mr. Ryan A. Grady ’13Mr. Alexander G. Grasso ’15Mr. Daniel M. Gutierrez ’15

Mr. Jose Nasip Harb Rodriguez ’14Mr. Matthew G. Harmon ’14Mr. Wim HartMr. Christopher D. Heaney Mr. Charles H. Heenan ’89Mr. Peter W. Heenan ’95Mr. Morgan A. T. Himmer ’13Mr. Yun Do Hwang ’13Mr. Charles Z.M. Ikeda ’13Mr. Nicholas B. Jessop ’16Mr. Woohyun Jung ’14Mr. Jack Kavanaugh ’15Mr. Byungmoo “Brian” Kim ’13Mr. Heon Koh ’13Mr. P. Edward Krayer ’82Mr. Allan KreuzburgMr. Rex E. Krieg ’14Mr. Gregory L. Large ’12Mr. Luke A. Laurence ’16Mr. David B. LeBreton ’09 Mr. Chi Kyu Lee ’13Mr. Joon Hyung Lee ’14Mr. Tae Hee Lee ’14 Mr. Tim LeRoyMr. Yongbo Li ’14Mr. Robert S. Lyon ’05 Mr. William K. Lyon ’13Mr. Randy Macdonald Mr. Andrew L. Mah ’15Mr. Eric L. Manstof ’02Mrs. Connie MarrionMr. James N. MarrionMr. Peter T. Martin ’14Mr. David J. Martinelli Mr. Mikal McCalmont ’00Mr. Neil C. McCalmont ’11Mr. Matthew C. McCue ’09Mr. David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80Mr. Gavin D. McNamara ’14Mr. Theodore S. Mello ’13Mr. Zhuocheng Mi ’14Mr. Jared A. Mines ’14Mr. Sage R. Mines ’16 Mr. Jacob N. Minkoff ’99 Mr. Gabriel J. Moldenhauer ’15Mom/Dad, Grandmas/GrandfatherMy Grandfather’s HealthMy MomMy ParentsMy Teachers and My CoachesMr. Tianshuo Ouyang ’13Pace FamilyMr. Nicholas A. S. Parker ’14Mr. Jordan B. Pepe ’14Mr. Santiago Perez Sanchez ’13Mr. Daniel J. Philbrick ’14Mr. Garrett J. Plekenpol ’14Mr. Tian Qiu ’16Mrs. Mary K. Reardon

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Mr. Pablo Rocha-Vazquez Mr. Wayne RooneyMr. Federico Serrano Castro ’13Mr. Sky A. Silverstein ’13Ms. Sally Singleton Mr. Jacob W. Slaughter ’16Mr. Nicholas Q. Slaughter ’13Mr. William V. Starkey ’14Mr. Donald R. Stowe Mr. Napat “Bobby” Tanakulthon ’13 Tanakulthon FamilyMr. Diego P. Velazquez Pazos ’14Mr. Mario M. Velazquez Pazos ’11 Mrs. Beverly WakelyMr. Norman C. Wakely Mr. Yihan Wang ’16Mr. Jakob H. Wennik ’16Mr. Marten Wennik Mr. Zachary J. Wennik ’15 Mr. Adonis L. Williams ’14 Mr. Ming Yu Yuan ’13Mr. Hongting (Andy) Zhang ’13 Mr. Weizhen Zhang ’14Mr. Yuze Zhang ’13

In Memory ofMrs. Letitia ButchmaN. Donald Diebel, Jr. M.D. ’82 Mr. Savage C. Frieze, Jr.Dr. Crawford H. HinmanMr. John H. Hinman Mrs. Jacqueline A. LaryMr. Thomas F. McNamara ’03 Mr. Garfield H. Miller II ’61Mr. James R. Miller IIMr. Preston Thayer Miller Mrs. Thurza SmallMr. Peter E. Solomon ’62 Mrs. Betty StarkeyMr. Paul StarkeyMr. Jon Jason Otto Weber ’89 Mr. James R. Williams ’70

Matching Gift CompaniesGlobal ImpactHouston Endowment, Inc.Marsh & McLennan Companies Matching Gifts ProgramPerry Capital, LLCPitney Bowes Giving StationVerizon Foundation

Businesses, Corporations, and FoundationsAnonymous (2)AAA Pump Service Inc.Association for Middle Level EducationBald Peak Colony ClubThe Baldwin FoundationBerner ArchitectsBlue Sky Restaurant GroupBob Skinner Ski & SportBoston BruinsBoston Red SoxBox Tops for EducationBranleigh Educational AssociatesBrine Team SalesCamp-Younts FoundationCanaan HardwareCanaan Village Pizza and RestaurantCanobie Lake ParkCanyon Wind CellarsCardigan Mountain Lacrosse CampCarter Community Building AssociationClarence R. Banks, Attorney at LawCollege Formals & CostumaniaCourtyard by MarriottCraig E. Lighty Fund of the Sacramento Region Community FoundationCrowell Family FoundationCTW Foundation, Inc.Dartmouth SkiwayDeutsche Bank Americas FoundationDutille’s Jewelry Design StudioE&R - The Campus LaundryThe Eagle Rock Charitable Foundation, Inc.Eastside Orthocare, LimitedThe Edward H. Butler FoundationEnfield House of PizzaEngelberth Construction, Inc.Ethan Allen Medical CenterExecutive Edge Car ServiceFBO Pack Sargent Janes TrustFidelity Brokerage Services LLCFidelity Charitable Gift FundFireside Inn & SuitesFleming Law OfficesFore-U GolfFred Fuller Oil & Propane Co. Inc.Gates Frontiers FundGlobal ImpactGoldstone Family FoundationGolf & Ski WarehouseGrantham IndoorGreen Mountain Coffee RoastersHamilton Family FoundationHamilton JewelersHanover Limousine ServiceHanover Transfer and StorageHouston Endowment, Inc.

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Hubert’s Family OutfittersJarvis Group, IncJohn F. Maher Family FoundationJPMorgan Chase FoundationKleen Inc.KW Real Estate Inc.Law Office of Richard MullalyThe Lee F. & Phoebe A. Driscoll FoundationLoon Mountain ResortLouise Kelso Goodwin Fund of the Marin Community FoundationMagee Office ProductsMarsh & McLennan Companies Matching Gifts ProgramMarsteller Family FoundationMascoma Savings BankMickey’s Roadside CafeMitchell Paddles, Inc.Montshire Museum of ScienceMovie MarketMr. and Mrs. Sanford N. McDonnell FoundationNancy and Clive Runnells FoundationNew Hampshire Fisher CatsThe New York Community TrustNor’ Easter FoundationNorthern StageNugget TheatersO’Connor Bus SalesOpera NorthOtzen Family FoundationPanter FoundationPerry Capital, LLCThe Pet Care TrustPitney Bowes Giving StationThe Quechee ClubRagged Mountain ResortRed Brick Clothing CoResidence Inn by MarriottRiver Valley ClubRobert and Hoyle Rymer FoundationRobert Wood Johnson, Jr. Fund of the Princeton Area Community FoundationRuth Camp and Henry Campbell FoundationSafflowersSea Glass Fine ArtShaker Hill Bed & BreakfastSilicon Valley Community FoundationSix South Street HotelStarkey FoundationStave Puzzles, Inc.Summit Distributing, LLCTarkiln Hill Realty Corp.Thomas Fallon PhotographyThree Tomatoes TrattoriaTownline Equipment SalesTri State Fire Protection, LLCTrimfoot Co. LLCTSR HockeyTSWII Management Company

U.S. Games Systems, Inc.UBS Financial ServicesUSSAVanguard Charitable Endowment ProgramVerizon FoundationThe Wally FoundationWeathervane Seafood Restaurant Corporate Headquarters Whale’s Tale WaterparkWHDH 7NBC News The Whitehead Foundation, Inc.Willard M. & Ruth Mayer Johnson Charitable FoundationThe Woodstock Inn & ResortZani Construction Co.

Capital and Endowment GivingAnonymous (4)Mr. Jordan R. Abisch ’13Mr. Christopher J. Alberigi ’13Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. AlberigiMr. Blake D. Alessandroni ’08Mr. and Mrs. David G. AlessandroniMr. and Mrs. Emanuel M. AlexiouMr. and Mrs. J. Kevin AppletonMr. William G. Appleton ’13Mr. Sael A. Araujo, Jr. ’13Mr. and Mrs. Steven W. August ’69Mr. Wei Bai and Mrs. Yongmei WangMr. Cornelius N. Bakker and Ms. Sarah E. SchimmelMr. and Mrs. Clarence R. BanksMr. Matthew R. Banks ’13Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H. BardenMr. Myles H. Beach ’13Mrs. June BeaverMr. Brandon A. Benson ’13Mr. James E. Betts III ’13Mr. Tao Bi and Mrs. Liu XinrongMr. and Mrs. Geoffrey A. Blair ’68Mr. William T. Boyle ’13Mr. and Mrs. David H. BradleyBranleigh Educational AssociatesMr. Parker J. Brown ’69Mr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Burack ’63Ms. Carmen M. CalderMr. Timothy J. Callahan ’13Mrs. Dianne M. CampbellMr. Michael P. Capozzi II ’13Mr. Agustin Cattoretti Lopez ’13Mr. Dong Hyun Chae ’13Mr. Seung-il Chae and Mrs. Bo Young BaeMr. Sae Joo Chang and Mrs. Hee Jung NamMr. Seung Ick Chang ’13Mr. Christopher H. Chapin ’09Mr. and Mrs. Timothy H. ChapinMr. and Mrs. Robert V. Chartener ’73Mr. Guanlin Chen ’13Mr. Haorong Chen ’13

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Mr. Xiangqun Chen and Mrs. Huang HuaxinMr. Jinwan Cho ’13Mr. Richard A. Clancy ’67Mr. and Mrs. Dwight M. ClevelandMr. Peter L. Cleveland ’13Mr. and Mrs. Scott D. ConwellMr. and Mrs. Gary S. CooksonMr. Henry A. Cormier ’13Mr. and Mrs. Philip CormierMr. Ace C. Cowans ’12Mr. Christopher J. Cowans and Ms. Jennifer ParisellaCraig E. Lighty Fund of the Sacramento Region Community FoundationMr. and Mrs. Jeremy T. Crigler ’79Mr. and Mrs. Todd C. CromheeckeMr. Henry Day ’13Mr. Kastan V. Day ’13Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. DellaRusso ’82Mrs. Karen DiebelMs. Rika DilaMr. Zhinan Ding and Mrs. Hongbin DongMr. Stewart S. Dixon, Jr. ’80Mr. Michael L. Doyle, Jr. ’08Mr. Noah L. Drummond ’13Mr. and Mrs. Dean C. Durling ’70The Edward H. Butler FoundationMr. and Mrs. John R. Emery III ’78Mr. Gordon E. Faust ’13Mr. and Mrs. John FaustMr. and Mrs. Paul B. Fay III ’65FBO Pack Sargent Janes TrustFidelity Brokerage Services LLCMr. Benjamin A. Finkelstein ’13Mr. and Mrs. Henry FlanaganMr. Austin G. Franklin ’13Mr. Brendan J. Frazier ’95Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. FrazierMr. and Mrs. Matthew J. Frazier ’88Mr. Timothy Frazier ’00Mr. Jackson K. Freidberg ’13Mrs. Mary D. FurthMr. and Mrs. Andrew L. GilbertMr. Maxwell L. Gilbert ’13Mr. Avery R. Glass ’13Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Gohl ’62Mr. Shan Hong Gong and Mrs. Shiwei LiuMr. James K. Goodwin ’13Ms. Louise K. GoodwinMr. Reamy F. GoodwinMr. and Mrs. Wallace B. Goodwin IIMr. Ryan A. Grady III ’13Mr. Joseph G. Grasso and Ms. Rosalie HunterMr. and Mrs. Alexander GrayMr. and Mrs. Harvey GrayMrs. Xiaohui GuoMr. Samuel M. V. Hamilton III ’01Mr. Chang Hyun Han ’13Mr. Sang Woock Han and Dr. So Young Lee

Mr. and Mrs. Austen HannisMr. Elijah J. Harris ’13Mr. and Mrs. Philip D. HarrisonMr. and Mrs. William HartMr. Carl E. Hartdegen ’67Mr. Charles T. Haskell, Jr. ’80 and Dr. Helma HaskellMr. Liam R. Hassett ’13Mr. and Mrs. John C. HaysMr. Christopher D. HeaneyMr. Charles H. Heenan ’89Mrs. Jane HeenanMr. and Mrs. Peter W. Heenan ’95Mr. and Mrs. David Helmstadter ’54Mr. and Mrs. Alan K. HimmerMr. Morgan A. Himmer ’13Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. HinmanMr. Corbin S. Holland ’15Mr. Hank J. HollandMr. Hayden R. Holland ’12Mr. William R. Humphrey IV ’13Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Hutchinson IIIMr. Yun Do Hwang ’13Mr. Charles Z. M. Ikeda ’13Capt. Pack S. Janes ’00Mr. Hanlin Jiang ’13Mr. and Mrs. Clayton D. Johnson’79Mr. and Mrs. Craig M. Johnson ’78Mr. and Mrs. David M. JohnsonDr. and Mrs. Robert F. KenersonMr. and Mrs. F. Corning Kenly III ’68Mr. Byungmoo Kim ’13Dr. Jeong Gyoon Kim and Mrs. Seon Young ChungMr. Seong Won Kim and Mrs. Yu Sun HwangMr. Sun Hong Kim ’13Mr. Yu Seoung Kim and Mrs. Seung Yuhn YooMr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Klaus ’73Mr. Heon Koh ’13Mr. Kari O. Kontu ’80Mr. and Mrs. P. Edward Krayer ’82Mr. and Mrs. Franz KriegMr. Steve Kuzara and Mrs. Beatriz von Ungern-SternbergMrs. Mercedese E. LargeMr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Lary ’71Mr. and Mrs. David H. LeBretonMr. and Mrs. Joseph LedouxMr. Chi Kyu Lee ’13Mr. Dam Lee and Mrs. Suk Young BangMr. Joo Sang Lee ’13Mr. Neung Soo Lee and Mrs. Hoi Yun ChungMr. and Mrs. Sangwon LeeMr. Seung Hwan Lee ’13Mr. Young Duk Lee and Mrs. Eun Mi ChoMr. and Mrs. James L. LenihanMr. Malik G. Leslie ’12Mr. Rui Li ’13Mr. and Mrs. Craig Lighty ’52

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Mr. and Mrs. Wen Zeng LiuLouise Kelso Goodwin Fund of the Marin Community FoundationMr. Douglas Lovell and Ms. Elizabeth O’LearyMr. Jacob R. Lynch ’96Mr. Michael M. Lynch ’97Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas S. LynchMr. Zachary L. Lynch ’04Ms. Leslie K. LyonMr. Michael L. LyonMr. William K. Lyon ’13Mr. Hongwei Ma and Mrs. Jiachen GuMr. Richard MacDonald and Ms. Nicole HapemanDr. and Mrs. Paul F. MacVittieMr. and Mrs. James S. Mainzer ’66Mrs. Jane P. ManstofMr. and Mrs. Bryan P. MarsalMr. William H. Martinelli ’13Mr. Jacob R. Mayer ’13Mr. Donald McBride IIIMr. and Mrs. James A. McCalmontMr. Mark S. McCue and Mrs. Vasiliki M. CanotasMr. Cameron C. McCusker ’10Mr. Colin B. McCusker ’09Mr. and Mrs. David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80Mr. and Mrs. Sanford N. McDonnell FoundationMr. Burton E. McGillivrayMr. and Mrs. Joseph P. McHughMr. Theodore S. Mello ’13Mr. and Mrs. Keith MichelsonMr. Eric C. Miller ’07Dr. Cecil J. MiltonDr. and Mrs. Richard D. Morrison ’50Mr. Tong Mu and Ms. Qing HeMr. and Mrs. James L. Nagle ’73Mr. and Mrs. Michael NakadeMr. William B. Nearis ’13Mr. and Mrs. Andrew B. Noel IIIMr. Nathaniel O. Nugnes ’13Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. O’ConnellMr. Carlos A. Ochoa ’13Mr. Jong Han Oh and Mrs. Seungmie LeeMr. and Mrs. Hirohisa OkadaMr. Yuri Okada ’13Mr. Tianshuo Ouyang ’13Mr. Xiuge Ouyang and Mrs. Li LipingMr. and Mrs. Alfred Pace, Jr.Mr. Alfred Pace III ’10Mr. Zachary J. Pace ’02Mr. Philip M. Parry ’13Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Pearce III ’59Mr. John H. Pearson III ’98Mr. and Mrs. Schuyler V. Peck ’63Mr. Santiago Perez Sanchez ’13Mr. and Mrs. David G. PerfieldMr. and Mrs. John R. PfefferMr. Daniel J. Philbrick

Mr. Daniel J. Philbrick, Jr. ’14Mr. and Mrs. Scott F. Powers ’75Mr. and Mrs. Larry W. PrescottMr. and Mrs. Robert W. PullenMajor Darren K. Purcell ’84Mrs. Theresa Clancy PurcellMr. John A. Reardon † and Mrs. Mary K. ReardonMr. and Mrs. Roger P. Rice ’60Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Righter ’62Mr. and Mrs. Arch W. RileyMr. and Mrs. Matt RinkinRobert and Hoyle Rymer FoundationMr. Narric W. Rome ’87Mr. and Mrs. D. Bryan RuezMr. and Mrs. J. Hoyle RymerMr. Anthony ScaramucciMr. and Mrs. Charles P. Schutt, Jr. ’58Mr. Federico Serrano Castro de la Torre ’13Mr. William Shepard and Ms. Lelia MellenMr. Adam N. Sherwood ’13Mr. Baoxiang Shi and Mrs. Yali ShouMr. Sky A. Silverstein ’13Ms. Sally SingletonMr. Nicholas Q. Slaughter ’13Mr. and Mrs. Stanley B. Smith, Jr. ’77Mr. and Mrs. Brennan StarkeyMrs. Anne M. StoweMr. and Mrs. Joseph SusiMr. Napat Tanakulthon ’13Ms. Patrapon TanakulthonMr. Sarunyou TejavibulyaMr. Sethanant R. Tejavibulya ’13Mr. Nicholas S. ThacherMr. Paul A. Trombetta ’85Ms. Susan TurnerUBS Financial ServicesMr. and Mrs. Peter E. Van Nice, Jr. ’85Vanguard Charitable Endowment ProgramVerizon FoundationMr. and Mrs. Norman C. WakelyMr. Marshall C. WallachMr. and Mrs. Marshall F. WallachMr. Yong Wang and Ms. Jia YueMrs. Karen WeberMr. and Mrs. David H. Webster ’55Mr. and Mrs. Sidney A. Weiss ’85Mr. and Mrs. Christopher S. WellesMr. and Mrs. Ogden White, Jr.The Whitehead Foundation, Inc.Dr. and Mrs. Robert WickhamMr. Thomas C. Wickham II ’13Willard M. & Ruth Mayer Johnson Charitable FoundationDr. and Mrs. Douglas WilliamsonMr. and Mrs. John WoodwardMr. Zhiliang Wu and Mrs. Lixia ZhangMr. Jun XiaoMr. Yong Xie and Mrs. Yi Gong

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Mr. and Mrs. T. Rumsey Young, Jr. ’60Mr. Jae Eun Yu ’13Mr. Ming Yu Yuan ’13Mr. Hongting Zhang ’13Mr. and Mrs. Kevin ZhangMr. Ming Zhang and Mrs. Man LeiMr. Yuze Zhang ’13

Restricted GivingAnonymous (3)Mr. Agustin Alban and Mrs. Ana MaderoMr. and Mrs. Richard J. AlberigiAssociation for Middle Level EducationMr. Wei Bai and Mrs. Yongmei WangMr. and Mrs. Clarence R. BanksMrs. Melinda P. BeachMr. Juan L. C. Bellvis and Mrs. Carmen AlvoMr. and Mrs. Frank BielaMr. and Mrs. Courtland A. BoyleMr. and Mrs. David A. BuchlerMs. Juli BullardMs. Eunyoung ByunnMr. and Mrs. Kevin CallahanMr. and Mrs. Michael V. CapozziMr. Luis Carcoba and Ms. Nora de AlbaDr. Juan Caripidis and Dr. Maria D. Soto De CaripidisMr. Xunqiang Chen and Mrs. Shaomin WuDr. Min Young Cho and Dr. Jeeyoun LimDr. Sang Jun Chun and Ms. Joolie KimMr. J. Dudley ClarkMr. and Mrs. Todd C. CromheeckeMr. and Mrs. Andrew W. Cunningham, Jr.Mr. John Cuticelli and Mrs. Elizabeth Schuette CuticelliMr. Zhinan Ding and Mrs. Hongbin DongMr. and Mrs. John FaustMr. and Mrs. Ryan FeeleyDr. Rush Fisher and Dr. Phoebe FisherMr. and Mrs. Kirk J. Franklin ’78Mr. Michael FreidbergMr. and Mrs. Robert FrenchmanMr. Gustavo H. Garcia and Mrs. Claudia Orellana de GarciaMr. Theodore Goddard ’51Mr. and Ms. Jose Gomez CastellanosMr. Shan Hong Gong and Mrs. Shiwei LiuMr. Reamy F. GoodwinMr. and Mrs. Alexander GrayMr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. GradyMr. Daniel Gutierrez and Ms. Cynthia HernandezMr. Jose N. Harb Kallab and Mrs. M. Adriana Rodriguez StraussMr. and Mrs. Nicholas G. Harmon ’75Mr. Hank J. HollandMr. and Mrs. Clark HouxMr. and Mrs. Scott A. Huff

Mr. Tae Woong Hwang and Mrs. Young Joo LeeMs. Margaret IkedaMr. and Mrs. Richard B. JessopMr. Untai Jung and Dr. Hyeongsim JangMr. Yeon Ho Jung and Mrs. Kyung Ah KwakMr. and Mrs. David KavanaughMr. and Mrs. Franz KriegMr. and Mrs. Chris LaurenceMr. Cheoul Woo Lee and Mrs. Min Hee KimMr. Dam Lee and Mrs. Suk Young BangMr. Jung Il Lee and Mrs. Ji Hyun AnMr. Neung Soo Lee and Mrs. Hoi Yun ChungMr. and Mrs. Sangwon LeeMr. Yanbin Li and Mrs. Jin TianMs. Juanzi LiuMs. Leslie K. LyonMr. Michael L. LyonMr. Sung Hoon Mah and Mrs. Woo Jin LeeMs. Candyce MartinMr. and Mrs. Thomas M. McNamaraMr. Xuenjun Mi and Mrs. Hong WangDr. and Mrs. Craig MinesMr. David T. Moldenhauer and Ms. Julia M. LichtblauMr. and Mrs. Malcolm C. Moran ’64Mr. Xiuge Ouyang and Mrs. Li LipingMr. Hugh Parker and Mrs. Kanya Numpradit ParkerMr. A. Thomas Pepe and Mrs. Judy Lacy-PepeMr. Joaquin Perez Lopez and Mrs. Iliana Sanchez ArriagaThe Pet Care TrustMrs. Jennifer PhilbrickMr. and Mrs. David PlekenpolMr. Julio Serrano Castro and Mrs. Maria del Carmen de la TorreMr. Kurt Silverstein and Mrs. Marie G. Surpris-SilversteinMr. Joel C. SolomonSummit Distributing, LLCMr. Sarunyou TejavibulyaMr. Sethanant R. Tejavibulya ’13Mr. and Mrs. Hideyuki TozawaMr. and Mrs. Mario Velazquez RobinsonMr. Yong Wang and Ms. Jia YueMr. De Gui Yuan and Mrs. Hong WangMr. and Mrs. Kevin Zhang

Gifts-in-KindMr. and Mrs. Kevin CallahanE&R - The Campus LaundryMr. and Mrs. Rick ExtonMr. and Mrs. John FaustMr. and Mrs. Kirk J. Franklin ’78Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gibbons, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. Andrew L. GilbertMr. Jose N. Harb Kallab and Mrs. M. Adriana Rodriguez Strauss

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2013 Annual Report of Gifts / 65

Mr. and Mrs. William D. HarleyMr. Hank J. HollandMr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Klaus ’73Mr. Neung Soo Lee and Mrs. Hoi Yun ChungMr. Hongwei Ma and Mrs. Jiachen GuMr. and Mrs. Randy MacdonaldMr. Chapin B. Miller IIMr. David T. Moldenhauer and Ms. Julia M. LichtblauMr. and Mrs. Hirohisa OkadaMr. Wen Hui Peng and Ms. Tian Shu ChuMr. and Mrs. Roger P. Rice ’60Mr. Rafael H. Rojas ’97Mr. and Mrs. D. Bryan RuezMr. Baoxiang Shi and Mrs. Yali ShouMr. Xiang Dong Shi and Ms. Mei Shan LiangMr. Geoffrey C. Turner ’69Mr. Ming Zhang and Mrs. Man Lei

2013 Auction Sponsors AAA Pump Service Inc.Anonymous (3)Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. BakerMr. and Mrs. Clarence R. BanksMrs. June BeaverMr. and Mrs. Anthony BielaMr. and Mrs. Martin G. BourkeMr. and Mrs. David A. BuchlerMr. and Mrs. Kevin CalderMr. and Mrs. Michael V. CapozziMr. and Mrs. Dwight M. ClevelandMr. John Cuticelli and Mrs. Elizabeth Schuette CuticelliMr. Shawn D. Damon ’91Eastside Orthocare, LimitedEngelberth Construction, Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Frank FabianMr. and Mrs. John FaustDr. and Mrs. Leonard FinkelsteinMr. and Mrs. Kirk J. Franklin ’78Fred Fuller Oil & Propane Co. Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Robert FrenchmanMr. and Mrs. Andrew L. GilbertMr. and Mrs. Wallace B. Goodwin IIMr. and Mrs. Edgar GreasonMr. and Mrs. Nicholas G. Harmon ’75Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. JessopMr. Feng Jiang and Mrs. Danna LvMr. and Mrs. Frederick KaudersMr. and Mrs. David KavanaughMr. Hun Gil Kim and Mrs. Sang Yeon ChoiMr. Yu Seoung Kim and Mrs. Seung Yuhn YooMr. Bo Yoon Lee and Mrs. Eun Joo AhnMr. Cheoul Woo Lee and Mrs. Min Hee KimMr. Jung Il Lee and Mrs. Ji Hyun AnThe Lee F. & Phoebe A. Driscoll FoundationMr. Douglas Lovell and Ms. Elizabeth O’LearyMr. Michael L. Lyon

Ms. Candyce MartinMascoma Savings BankMrs. Alice McNamaraMr. Xuenjun Mi and Mrs. Hong WangDr. and Mrs. Craig MinesMr. and Mrs. John MooreRev. and Mrs. Kevin NicholsMr. and Mrs. Frank J. O’ConnellO’Connor Bus SalesMr. and Mrs. Schuyler V. Peck ’63Mr. A. Thomas Pepe and Mrs. Judy Lacy-PepeMr. and Mrs. David G. PerfieldMs. Elizabeth PerrymanMr. and Mrs. David W. PetersMr. and Mrs. Larry W. PrescottMr. John A. Reardon † and Mrs. Mary K. ReardonMr. and Mrs. Andrew J. RothMr. and Mrs. Michael J. SchaferMr. and Mrs. Homer R. SpenceTarkiln Hill Realty Corp.Mr. and Mrs. Nicholson B. White

2013 Auction DonorsMr. Agustin Alban and Mrs. Ana MaderoMr. and Mrs. Emanuel M. AlexiouMr. and Mrs. David AuerbachMr. Wei Bai and Mrs. Yongmei WangMr. and Mrs. Peter A. Baker ’78Bald Peak Colony ClubMr. and Mrs. Clarence R. BanksMr. and Mrs. Chutinant BhiromBhakdi ’73Mr. Tao Bi and Mrs. Liu XinrongBlue Sky Restaurant GroupBob Skinner Ski & SportBoston BruinsBoston Red SoxMr. and Mrs. Martin G. BourkeMr. and Mrs. Courtland A. BoyleMr. and Mrs. W. J. Boyle ’80Brine Team SalesDr. and Mrs. Olaf ButchmaCanaan HardwareCanaan Village Pizza and RestaurantCanobie Lake ParkCanyon Wind CellarsMr. and Mrs. Michael V. CapozziMr. Jarrod CaprowCardigan Mountain Lacrosse CampMr. and Mrs. Steven G. CaronMr. Owen CarpinoCarter Community Building AssociationMr. Richard A. Clancy ’67Mr. Douglas ClarkMr. J. Dudley ClarkMr. and Mrs. Dwight M. ClevelandMr. Devin M. Clifford ’99College Formals & CostumaniaMr. and Mrs. Philip Cormier

A Vision of Excellence in the Education of Middle School Boys

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66 / Cardigan Chronicle 5 years (or more) consecutive giving (Auction Donors only)

Courtyard by MarriottMr. and Mrs. Todd C. CromheeckeMs. Patti CroweMr. Ken CushingMr. George W. Cutting III ’74Dartmouth SkiwayMs. Rika DilaMr. Zhinan Ding and Mrs. Hongbin DongMr. Richard S. Drummond and Dr. Lisa A. DrummondMs. Erin DruryDutille’s Jewelry Design StudioMr. Scott EllisEnfield House of PizzaExecutive Edge Car ServiceMr. and Mrs. Ryan FeeleyMs. Ashley FinethyFireside Inn & SuitesMrs. Haver A. FlahertyWilliam T. Fleming, Esq. ’70Fore-U GolfMr. and Mrs. Joseph A. FrazierFred Fuller Oil & Propane Co. Inc.Mr. Sergio D. Garcia SuarezMr. and Mrs. Michael B. Garrison ’67Mr. and Mrs. Steven C. GarronMr. Graham GauthierMr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gibbons, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. Andrew L. GilbertGolf & Ski WarehouseMr. Robert L. GrabillMr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. GradyGrantham IndoorMr. Joseph G. Grasso and Ms. Rosalie HunterMr. and Mrs. Alexander GrayMs. Karen GrayMr. and Mrs. Michel GrayGreen Mountain Coffee RoastersHamilton JewelersMr. and Mrs. Austen HannisHanover Limousine ServiceHanover Transfer and StorageMr. and Mrs. Nicholas G. Harmon ’75Mr. and Mrs. William HartMr. Charles T. Haskell, Jr. ’80 and Dr. Helma HaskellDr. Robert P. Hassett and Dr. Elizabeth CrockettMr. Christopher D. HeaneyMr. Hank J. HollandMs. Louise HortonHubert’s Family OutfittersMr. and Mrs. Scott A. HuffMr. and Mrs. Stephen IacuzziMs. Margaret IkedaMr. William K. Kelley and Mrs. Melinda C. Marye-KelleyMr. and Mrs. Christopher J. Kenny

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth S. Klaus ’73Kleen Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Allan KreuzburgMr. and Mrs. Franz KriegMr. Kristofor Langetieg and Ms. Jungwon ParkDr. and Mrs. Brian LaPointeMr. Corey LawsonMr. and Mrs. Joseph LedouxMr. and Mrs. James L. LenihanMr. Tim LeRoyMr. Yanbin Li and Mrs. Jin TianMr. Feng Liu and Mrs. Chao YangLoon Mountain ResortMr. and Mrs. Benjamin N. Lovejoy ’99Mr. Douglas Lovell and Ms. Elizabeth O’LearyMr. and Mrs. Danny LuiMr. Michael L. LyonMr. Hongwei Ma and Mrs. Jiachen GuMr. Richard MacDonald and Ms. Nicole HapemanMagee Office ProductsMr. and Mrs. Bruno R. MangiardiMr. and Mrs. James N. MarrionMr. and Mrs. Bruce Marshard ’64Ms. Candyce MartinMr. and Mrs. James A. McCalmontMr. and Mrs. David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. McHughMr. and Mrs. Mark McKeenMr. and Mrs. Arthur M. MelvilleMr. and Mrs. Frederick A. Meyer IV ’97Mr. Xuenjun Mi and Mrs. Hong WangMr. and Mrs. Keith MichelsonMickey’s Roadside CafeMr. and Mrs. Thomas J. MiltonMitchell Paddles, Inc.Montshire Museum of ScienceMovie MarketMr. Tong Mu and Ms. Qing HeNew Hampshire Fisher CatsNorthern StageNugget TheatersMr. and Mrs. Matthew OliverOpera NorthMr. Xiuge Ouyang and Mrs. Li LipingMr. and Mrs. Richard Parker, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. John H. Pearson, Jr. ’65Mr. A. Thomas Pepe and Mrs. Judy Lacy-PepeMr. and Mrs. David G. PerfieldMr. and Mrs. Daniel PerriconeMr. and Mrs. David W. PetersMr. and Mrs. John R. PfefferMr. Daniel J. PhilbrickMr. and Mrs. David PlekenpolMr. Russell PostMr. and Mrs. Dominic PowellThe Quechee ClubRagged Mountain Resort

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2013 Annual Report of Gifts / 67

5 years (or more) consecutive giving (Auction Donors only)

Mr. and Mrs. Edilberto RamosRed Brick Clothing CoResidence Inn by MarriottRiver Valley ClubMr. Alberto P. Rocha Vazquez and Ms. Shannon GahaganSafflowersMr. Anthony ScaramucciMr. and Mrs. Michael J. SchaferMr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Scott, Jr.Sea Glass Fine ArtShaker Hill Bed & BreakfastMs. Carolyn Shapiro-WallMr. William Shepard and Ms. Lelia MellenMr. and Mrs. Ryan SinclairSix South Street HotelMr. Tad SkelleyMr. and Mrs. Brennan StarkeyStave Puzzles, Inc.Mr. and Mrs. Bruce R. StefanyMs. Patrapon TanakulthonThomas Fallon PhotographyThree Tomatoes TrattoriaMr. and Mrs. Brian J. Tierney ’99Townline Equipment SalesTri State Fire Protection, LLCMr. and Mrs. John TrottoTSR HockeyUSSAMr. and Mrs. Norman C. WakelyMr. and Mrs. Edward B. Wallace ’76Mr. Marshall C. WallachMr. and Mrs. Marshall F. WallachMr. and Mrs. Michael WalshMr. Michael Walzak and Ms. Susan HillsMr. Yong Wang and Ms. Jia YueWeathervane Seafood Restaurant Corporate Headquarters Whale’s Tale WaterparkWHDH 7NBC News Ms. Didi WilsonThe Woodstock Inn & ResortMr. Everett YeltonMs. Sarah YoungMr. and Mrs. Kevin ZhangMr. Ming Zhang and Mrs. Man Lei

2013 Auction PatronsAnonymousMr. Ben AdamsMr. Agustin Alban and Mrs. Ana MaderoMr. and Mrs. Richard J. AlberigiMr. and Mrs. Emanuel M. AlexiouMr. and Mrs. William AntonucciMr. and Mrs. J. Kevin AppletonMr. and Mrs. Edward Audett, Jr.Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Baker ’78Mr. and Mrs. Clarence R. BanksMr. and Mrs. Mark BeckwithMr. and Mrs. James E. Betts, Jr.Mr. Monte BlausteinMr. and Mrs. David A. BuchlerDr. and Mrs. Olaf Butchma

Mr. and Mrs. Kevin CallahanMr. and Mrs. Michael V. CapozziMr. and Mrs. Robert V. Chartener ’73Mr. Richard A. Clancy ’67Mr. and Mrs. Dwight M. ClevelandMr. and Mrs. Scott D. ConwellMr. Andrew CookMr. and Mrs. Philip CormierMr. and Mrs. Jeremy T. Crigler ’79Mr. and Mrs. Todd C. CromheeckeMs. Marnie CullenMr. John Cuticelli and Mrs. Elizabeth Schuette CuticelliMr. and Mrs. Richard J. DellaRusso ’82Ms. Rika DilaMr. Stewart S. Dixon, Jr. ’80Mr. and Mrs. John FaustMr. and Mrs. Paul B. Fay III ’65Dr. Rush Fisher and Dr. Phoebe FisherMr. and Mrs. Henry FlanaganMr. Timothy Frazier ’00Mr. and Mrs. Ryan E. FrostMr. Gustavo H. Garcia and Mrs. Claudia Orellana de GarciaMr. and Mrs. Michael B. Garrison ’67Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gibbons, Sr.Mr. and Mrs. Andrew L. GilbertMr. Jacob A. Gilbert ’10Mr. and Mrs. Steve GoldsmithMr. and Mrs. Jeffrey C. GradyMr. and Mrs. Robert HammondMr. and Mrs. Austen HannisMr. and Mrs. William D. HarleyMr. and Mrs. Nicholas G. Harmon ’75Mr. Charles T. Haskell, Jr. ’80 and Dr. Helma HaskellMr. Marshall Heuser and Ms. Mimi HeuserMs. Kathryn HollandMr. and Mrs. Tom HollandMr. and Mrs. Clark HouxMr. and Mrs. Karl G. Hutter ’92Ms. Margaret IkedaMr. and Mrs. Timothy P. JenningsMr. and Mrs. Richard B. JessopDr. and Mrs. Robert F. KenersonMr. and Mrs. F. Corning Kenly III ’68Mr. and Mrs. P. Edward Krayer ’82Mr. and Mrs. James L. LenihanMr. Douglas Lovell and Ms. Elizabeth O’LearyMr. Michael L. LyonMr. and Mrs. Bruno R. MangiardiMs. Candyce MartinMr. and Mrs. David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80Mr. Burton E. McGillivrayMr. and Mrs. Joseph P. McHughMr. and Mrs. Mark McKeenMr. and Mrs. Keith MichelsonMr. and Mrs. Thomas J. MiltonDr. and Mrs. Craig MinesMr. David T. Moldenhauer and Ms. Julia M. LichtblauMr. and Mrs. John MooreMr. and Mrs. Malcolm C. Moran ’64Mr. and Mrs. Michael Nakade

A Vision of Excellence in the Education of Middle School Boys

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The Heritage SocietyAlumni, parents, parents of alumni, faculty, staff, trustees, and friends of the Cardigan Mountain School community who have made provisions in their estate plans for the benefit of Cardigan are honored members of The Heritage Society. Thanks to their foresight and commitment to the Cardigan experience, the legacy of Cardigan Mountain School will continue for generations to come.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. O’ConnellMr. and Mrs. John H. Pearson, Jr. ’65Mr. A. Thomas Pepe and Mrs. Judy Lacy-PepeMr. and Mrs. David G. PerfieldMr. and Mrs. David W. PetersMr. Daniel J. PhilbrickDr. Catherine PostMr. Russell PostMs. Carla PowersMr. and Mrs. Larry W. PrescottMr. and Mrs. Edilberto RamosMs. Susan RivesMr. and Mrs. Andrew J. RothMr. and Mrs. D. Bryan RuezMr. and Mrs. J. Hoyle RymerMr. Anthony Scaramucci

Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. SchaferMs. Amy SchoewMs. Carolyn Shapiro-WallMr. William Shepard and Ms. Lelia MellenMr. and Mrs. Ryan SinclairMr. and Mrs. Brennan StarkeyMr. and Mrs. Peter SternMr. and Mrs. Joseph SusiMr. Marshall C. WallachMr. and Mrs. Marshall F. WallachMr. Michael Walzak and Ms. Susan HillsMr. and Mrs. Christopher S. WellesMr. and Mrs. Benjamin WeyMr. and Mrs. Nicholson B. WhiteMr. and Mrs. Wayne WilkeyMs. Sarah Young

Mr. Steven W. August ’69Mr. Ronn M. Bronzetti ’89 Mr. Stephen G. Carpenter ’55Mr. Finn M.W. Caspersen †Mr. Robert V. Chartener ’73Mr. Richard A. Clancy ’67Mr. J. Dudley Clark Mr. Juan A. CovarrubiasMr. Richard J. Cullen †Mr. Thomas P. DierlMr. Stewart S. Dixon, Jr. ’80 Mr. Roger C. Earle ’64Mr. Frank S. Fifield †William T. Fleming, Esq. ’70Mrs. Elizabeth S. French †Mr. Savage C. Frieze, Jr. †Mr. Michael B. Garrison ’67Mrs. Janet GilletteMr. Robert S. Gillette †Mr. Theodore Goddard ’51Dr. and Mrs. Crawford H. Hinman †Mr. Charles H. HoodMr. Il-Sup HuhMr. Donald R. Joyce ’36 †Mr. F. C. Kenly, Jr. †

Mr. F. Corning Kenly III ’68Mr. Kenneth S. Klaus ’73Mr. Craig Lighty ’52Mr. Douglas G. Lovell IIIReverend Harry R. MahoneyMr. and Mrs. David J. McCusker, Jr. ’80Mr. J. Michael McGean †Ms. Joy Leland MichelsonMr. and Mrs. Peter MoultonMr. John H. Pearson, Jr. ’65Mr. Larry W. PrescottMs. Nancy RathborneMr. Roger P. Rice ’60Mrs. Barbara J. Shragge-StackMrs. Katherine W. StaleyDr. Walter G. Staley, Jr †Mr. Geoffrey ThorntonMr. and Mrs. Davis P. ThurberMr. John L. Tower † Mrs. Shirley TowerMrs. Diane G. WallachMr. Anderson B. White ’76 Mrs. Lorraine WilliamsMr. Samuel C. Williams, Jr. †Mr. Roger C. Woodberry ’83

We encourage others to join those Heritage Society members honored here. If you have included Cardigan Mountain School in your estate, or would like more information about how to do so, please contact Director of Parent Relations and Planned Giving Douglas Lovell at 603.523.3662 or by email to [email protected].

† deceased

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2013 Annual Report of Gifts / 69

Cardigan Mountain School Board of Trustees 2012–2013

CMS Alumni Association Board 2012–2013

Mr. F. Corning Kenly III ’68, President Mr. Emanuel M. Alexiou P’98Mr. David H. Bradley P’78Mr. Robert V. Chartener ’73Mr. Jeremy T. Crigler ’79Mr. Richard J. DellaRusso ’82Mr. Daniel D. DeMars P’11Mr. Stewart S. Dixon, Jr. ’80Mr. Paul B. Fay III ’65Mrs. Barbara A. FlanaganWilliam T. Fleming, Esq. ’70Mr. Michael B. Garrison ’67, P’94,’96Mr. Samuel M. V. Hamilton III ’01Mr. Philip D. Harrison P’10Mr. Charles T. Haskell, Jr. ’80Mr. John C. HaysMr. Hank J. Holland P’12,’15Mr. Karl G. Hutter ’92Mr. Clayton D. Johnson ’79, P’08

Mr. Craig M. Johnson ’78, P’01,’03Dr. Robert F. KenersonMr. Kari O. Kontu ’80Mr. P. Edward Krayer ’82Mr. David J. Martinelli P’13Mr. Burton E. McGillivray P’07,’09,’09Mr. Malcolm C. Moran ’64, P’00Richard D. Morrison, M.D. ’50, P’76,’82Mrs. Barbara S. O’Connell P’03Mr. John H. Pearson, Jr. ’65, P’98Mr. Schuyler V. Peck ’63Ms. Carla Powers P’10Mr. Larry W. Prescott P’88Mr. Anthony Scaramucci P’14Mr. D. Bryan Ruez P’06Mrs. Diane G. Wallach P’06Mr. Christopher S. Welles P’08Mr. Benjamin WeyMrs. Leslie Williamson

Mr. Steven W. August ’69, PresidentMr. Peter A. Albee, Sr. ’58Mr. Jay E. Christianson ’98Mr. Shawn D. Damon ’91Mr. Peter H. Diebel ’88Mr. John R. Emery III ’78Mr. Kirk J. Franklin ’78, P’10,’13Mr. Edward J. Gibbons, Jr. ’78Mr. Nathan J. Gilbert ’08Mr. Patrick J. Gilligan ’80Mr. John L. Hogan ’87

Mr. Karl G. Hutter ’92Mr. T. Nicolas John ’03Mr. Kenneth S. Klaus ’73Mr. Bruce Marshard ’64Mr. Michael P. McLean ’77Mr. James L. Nagle ’73Mr. John H. Pearson III ’98Mr. Roger P. Rice ’60Mr. Brian J. Tierney ’99Mr. Brandon J. Wagner ’92

Cardigan Mountain School Development Office Staff

The 2012–2013 Annual Report of Gifts recognizes all gifts received by Cardigan Mountain School during the fiscal year July 1, 2012 through June 30, 2013. In an effort to recognize each contributor and provide a comprehensive account of every gift, credit is given to all supporters of Cardigan Mountain School’s fundraising efforts. Please contact Director of Development David Perfield at 603.523.3522 or [email protected] with any questions or corrections.

David G. Perfield Director of DevelopmentPamela J. Susi Associate Director of Development Richard A. Clancy ’67 Director of Alumni Programs Rick Exton P’11 Director of International RelationsBarbara Frazier P’88,’95,’00 Database ManagerKathryn Holland Development AssociateSandra M. Hollingsworth Campaign DirectorMary Ledoux Events CoordinatorDouglas Lovell Director of Parent Programs and Planned GivingJeremiah P. Shipman ’00 Assistant Director of Alumni ProgramsMarshall C. Wallach Director of Annual Giving

A Vision of Excellence in the Education of Middle School Boys

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70 / Cardigan Chronicle

On behalf of the entire Development Office, thank you for playing a significant role in another record-setting year. As David Martinelli P’13, chair of The Campaign for Cardigan 2020, shared in his letter at the beginning of this report, $9.4 million truly enables the School to think about what’s possible in the near and distant future. Whether you’re an alumnus, the parent of an alumnus, a current parent, a friend, a grandparent, or a volunteer, you are part of this year’s success.

With the launch of the public phase of The Campaign for Cardigan 2020 in May, we developed a thorough event schedule in major cities throughout the United States and overseas. While we are hopeful you have attended, or will attend, an event in your area or on campus, we would also be grateful for your effort in helping us connect with community members who may not be as familiar with all the great happenings on The Point.

Whether your support is directed to the Annual Fund for Cardigan (via the auction or otherwise), aimed at The Campaign for Cardigan 2020, or offered through hosting an event or volunteering on campus, we thank you for being part of our winning team!

With appreciation,

David G. PerfieldDirector of Development

A Vision of Excellence in the Education of Middle School Boys

the Campaign for

Cardigan 2020

Perspective: Director of DevelopmentDavid G. Perfield

Celebrating 25 Years of the

Silent AuctionHors d’Oeuvres & Cocktails

Live Auction

~ Students may attend with a parent or legal guardian. ~

fr i daY ev e n i n g

fe b r ua rY 7, 2014

anniversarY

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Advancing Cardigan / 71

the Strategic Plan for

Cardigan 2020

Our Distinctive Vision: The Cardigan Educator

Former Assistant Headmaster and Dean of Faculty Ryan G. Feeley at Cardigan Mountain School.

At Cardigan Mountain School, every member of the faculty, administration, and staff plays a role in our students’ education, and we believe that all boys can succeed. Using every opportunity both in and out of the classroom, Cardigan educators guide their students, as boys transform into young men who are prepared academically, physically, and socially—in mind, body, and spirit—for responsible and meaningful lives in a global society.

The Strategic Plan for Cardigan 2020 describes the Cardigan educator this way:

• Dedicated and Caring Cardigan educators dedicate countless hours both within and outside of the classroom to promote student success. Cardigan educators focus on reaching classroom and schoolwide goals. Our educators are determined in their focus to reach each student, by providing relevant, engaging, and hands-on opportunities to shine. They delight in the lifelong success of their students.

• Attentive Cardigan educators interact with students every day and throughout the day, speaking a common language of core values and consistent expectations that allows all students to feel comfortable taking chances in order to grow and learn. Our educators take time to listen and acknowledge each student as an individual, seeking to develop relationships that will foster mutual understanding and respect.

• Collaborative Cardigan educators collaborate as a professional community. They understand that they must succeed as a school team, in order to address the many aspects of each boy’s growth. They rely on each other professionally and personally for support in carrying out the School’s mission, and in order to put the needs of our boys first. Our team approach to teaching ensures that multiple strengths and perspectives are brought to bear to help students meet learning goals.

• Effective Communicators Cardigan educators are skilled communicators who exhibit strong interpersonal skills and who have the ability to connect both amiably and professionally to maintain positive relationships with all community members.

• Willing to Learn Cardigan educators participate in ongoing professional development provided within the School and by outside organizations that seek the most effective and developmentally appropriate approaches to teaching at the middle level. Our educators are expected to continually reflect on their practice, seek opportunities to hone their craft, and improve their effectiveness in every facet of school life in which they are involved.

Announcing the

Ryan G. Feeley Faculty Excellence Fund

As dean of faculty, Ryan Feeley brought to the educators of Cardigan Mountain School a standard of excellence, and the Ryan G. Feeley Faculty Excellence Fund—established by the School’s Board of Trustees in May 2013—will honor his diligent and thoughtful leadership by providing resources to continue his work to attract and retain an exceptional, collaborative faculty and staff by providing professional development opportunities, competitive compensation/benefits, and a healthy residential culture.

If you would like to support this vision with an endowment gift*, please contact DIrector of Development David G. Perfield at [email protected] or 603.523.3522.

*For a limited time, your endowment

gift may be eligible for a dollar-for-dollar

match through the Endowment for

Excellence Challenge.

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72 / Cardigan Chronicle

Alumni Award Winners

Robert Chartener ’73Distinguished Alumnus Award

2012 marks the 20th year of Robert Chartener’s service to Cardigan Mountain School as a dedicated and engaged member of Cardigan’s Board of Trustees. During that time, he has faithfully served on the Executive, Investment, Admissions & Marketing, and Real Estate & Finance

committees. His loyalty and dedication to Cardigan Mountain School is both constant and undeniable.

In recognition of his outstanding service to our school, the Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association is proud to honor Robert Chartener ’73 as the 2012 recipient of the Distinguished Alumnus Award.

William “Mac” MacVittie ’99Dr. N. Donald Diebel ’82 Distinguished Young Alumnus Award

Mac MacVittie is a decorated United States Air Force pilot who has been deployed three times to conflicts in the Middle East. During those deployments he has flown more than 120 combat missions over Afghanistan and Iraq. Mac has routinely piloted the C-17 Globemaster III strategic heavy airlifter, which provides rapid global delivery of cargo such as armored vehicles, tanks, personnel and humanitarian relief supplies. Since 2011 Mac has been reassigned to the task of flying Department of Defense leadership around the United States and South America.

For his leadership and service example, and for his continued support, defense, and protection of his country, his community, and his fellow man, the Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association is proud to honor Captain William “Mac” MacVittie ’99 as the 2012 recipient of the Dr. N. Donald Diebel ’82 Distinguished Young Alumnus Award.

Alexander Gray P’13,’16Cardigan Faculty MemberHonorary Alumnus Award

For 19 years, Alex Gray has been the consummate Cardigan faculty member. During that time he has proven himself to be a motivating teacher, inspiring coach, wise and encouraging advisor, and dedicated dormitory parent. The Cardigan community has been enriched, as have the lives of hundreds of young men, by Alex’s tenure at our school. The Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association is proud to honor Alex Gray as a most welcome and deserving fellow alumnus.

2012O n Saturday, October 20, 2012 the Cardigan Mountain School

Alumni Association was pleased to honor the following individuals at the Alumni Awards Ceremony in Humann Theatre in the Stoddard Center at Cardigan Mountain School.

Kenneth S. Klaus ’73Distinguished Service Award—The Green Jacket

The 2012 Green Jacket recipient is a longtime friend, supporter, and member of the Cardigan family. As a three-year boy, he was competitive in soccer, lacrosse, skiing, and sailing, while earning leadership positions as a dining room assistant, classroom superintendent, and dormitory floor leader. His classroom skills took him from Cardigan to Deerfield Academy, and then on to Villanova University, where he earned his degree in business administration. A gifted and lifelong musician, our recipient has most recently chosen to combine his business acumen with his love of music in the form of a production company specializing in the business of large-scale music festivals.

For the past 14 years he has been actively and enthusiastically engaged in the Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association, serving on its Board of Directors and culminating his tenure as its most recent past president.

This recpient has always had Cardigan’s best interest at heart. In many ways, he embodies the ideals of Cardigan Mountain School.

The Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association is pleased to have Ken Klaus ,73 as the recipient of its highest honor, the Green Jacket.

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Alumni / 73

Taylor Chace ’02Distinguished Alumnus Award

Taylor Chace entered Cardigan Mountain School as an eighth-grade student in September 2000. During his time at Cardigan, he was an honor roll student, a Green Key tour guide, and a floor leader in Banks House. He participated in drama and in the Christmas Pageant, but athletics were his greatest passion. He played varsity soccer, football, and lacrosse, and he captained the 2002 Varsity Hockey Team.

At the age of 16, just months after graduating from Cardigan, Taylor’s life changed forever. He suffered a broken back and a spinal cord injury during a hockey game as a member of the Eastern Junior Hockey League’s New Hampshire Monarchs. Undeterred, Taylor continued his education and matriculated to the University of New Hampshire, where he was introduced to the sport of sled hockey.

He became a member of the UNH Wildcats club sled hockey team in 2004, and in 2005 was named to the U.S. National Team. He was a bronze medal winner in the 2006 Winter Paralympics in Turin, Italy. He was named Most Valuable Player of the 2007 World Sled Hockey Challenge, and he helped the U.S. win another bronze medal at the 2008 IPC Ice Sled Hockey World Championships. At the 2009 World Championships he notched an assist on the winning goal in the gold-medal game against Norway. In 2010, Taylor captained the U.S. team and led them to a gold medal in the Paralympic Winter Games in Vancouver, British Columbia, and was named the top sled hockey defenseman in the world. Simultaneously, he was named Paralympic Athlete of the Year by the United States Olympic Committee. In 2012 and 2013, he again captained the U.S. sled hockey team to gold and silver medals, respectively, in the World Championships in Norway and Korea, both times being named the top defensemen of the tournament.

Throughout his competitive career, Taylor continued to recognize the importance of

earning a degree. In 2011 he graduated from the University of New Hampshire with a degree in the field of sports studies. Taylor currently serves as the sport performance coach for varsity athletes with disabilities at the University

of New Hampshire’s College of Health and Human Services Northeast Passage program. In recognition of his unwavering perseverance, his notable athletic achievement, and for his persistence in pursuing an education, the Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association is proud to honor our fellow alumnus Taylor Chace ’02 as the recipient of the 2013 Distinguished Alumnus Award.

Thomas C. Thayer ’69Distinguished Alumnus Award

Tom Thayer’s yearbook profile from 1969 was telling of his future. His athletic choices were mostly recreational, he held the position of student publicity director, and he was elected floor leader in the newly built Stowell House. However, his list of activities and hobbies—bridge and chess clubs, magic club, drama, and reading—are what tell the story. Tom was a thoughtful, responsible young man with a passion for performing. He was an avid magician, entertaining his fellow students with handcuff and straitjacket escapes. He even used his Cardigan woodshop class to build a Houdini-style escape cabinet for his performances. The field of entertainment seemed to be his natural calling.

Today, Tom is a highly regarded figure in the entertainment business. Beginning as a television producer in the early 1980s, and continuing through many years as an entertainment executive, he followed his creative instincts and has enjoyed considerable success in the television and

Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association

2013 Alumni Awards—October 19, 2013

film industries. Tom was appointed the founding president of MCA Television Entertainment in 1987, which was MCA/Universal Pictures’ first venture into cable television programming. Under his leadership, MCA produced more than 40 films for cable television. He later became president of Universal Television and has run his own production company, Traveler’s Rest Films, since 1997. His notable productions include The Great Gatsby with Mira Sorvino, The John McCain biography Faith of My Fathers, and the HBO adaptation of Dee Brown’s classic, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, which received the most Emmy nominations in television history and was the Emmy award winner for Best Picture in 2007. In 2008, Tom produced an adaptation of Michael Crichton’s best-seller, The Andromeda Strain, which garnered seven Emmy nom-

inations, and in 2012, he produced a theatrical biography of Alfred Hitchcock for Fox Searchlight Pictures.The movie, Hitchcock, starred Anthony Hopkins, Helen Mirren, and Scarlet Johansson and grossed more than $23 million in worldwide revenue.

Tom’s current projects include several note-worthy biographies, including that of his boyhood idol, Harry Houdini.

In recognition of his outstanding ac-complishments in his chosen profession, the Cardigan Mountain School Alumni As-sociation is proud to honor Thomas Courtney Thayer ’69 as the 2013 recipient of the Distinguished Alumnus Award.

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Alumni AwardsCaptain Pack S. Janes ’00 Dr. N. Donald Diebel ’82 Distinguished Young Alumnus Award

Pack Sargent Janes ’00 was a three-year student at Cardigan beginning in 1997. He was an honor roll student, a Knowledge Master, and a dormitory floor leader. He played soccer, football, hockey, and lacrosse. Upon his graduation from Cardigan he enrolled at Holderness School, where he was also an honor roll student. He excelled at lacrosse, and was selected for All-Division and Coaches All-County lacrosse teams. From Holderness, Pack was accepted to Bowdoin College.

Even before attending Bowdoin, Pack knew he wanted to be a Marine, and he spent the summers following his first and third years at the Marine Corps Officer Candidate School in Quantico, Virginia. Pack earned a B.A. in International Relations and Affairs at Bowdoin and was sworn in as a Marine Corps Second Lieutenant during a commissioning ceremony following Commencement exercises in 2009. As a member of the 1st Reconnaissance Battalion of the United States Marine Corps., Pack was deployed to Afghanistan through March 2012. Promoted to First Lieutenant, he served as Executive Officer for a Marine Special Operations Logistics Company November 2012–July 2013, and in July he was promoted to Captain. Captain Janes remains on active duty with the Marine Corps as a logistics officer based in Carlsbad, California. As a member of the Marine Special Operations Task Force, Pack will once again deploy overseas and serve as executive officer and logistics officer for the Task Force Support Center.

For his leadership and service example, and for his continued support, defense, and protection of his country and his fel-low man, the Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association is proud to honor

Captain Pack S. Janes ’00 as the 2013 recipient of the Dr. N.

Donald Diebel ’82 Distinguished Young Alumnus Award.

Nicholas S. LynchHonorary Alumnus Award

For 24 years, beginning in 1987, Nick Lynch worked tirelessly to make the Cardigan experience all that it could be for the boys in his care, while simultaneously bringing out the very best in each and every one of them. A graduate of St. John’s University in Collegeville, Min-nesota, Nick taught history, eventually becoming the History Department chairman. Additionally, he coached football, basketball, and baseball at all levels over his long Cardigan career. “Coach” Lynch never made things easy for his boys, neither in the classroom nor on the athletic field, but his insistence on accepting nothing less than their very best effort always paid dividends for those who came under his tutelage. In return, he earned their love and respect. His passion for history and his commitment to athletic competition made him an inspiring and motivating teacher and coach. The lives of thousands of Cardigan boys were truly enriched by Nick Lynch’s guidance.

And therefore, on this 19th day of October, 2013, we, the alumni of Cardigan Mountain School, are proud to deem Nick Lynch a most welcome and deserving fellow alumnus.

David H. Bradley, Esq.Honorary Alumnus Award

The 2013 Honorary Alumnus Award is presented to David H. Bradley, Esquire. Dave has been integral to the success of Cardigan Mountain School for more than four decades. He began his service to Cardigan as an incorporator in 1972. Since that time, he and his firm, Stebbins

and Bradley, have provided Cardigan with excellent guidance and advice relative to the legal needs of a growing institution. In 1973, Dave became a member of Cardigan’s Board of Trustees and continues to serve in this capacity today.

Dave’s personal and professional service to the Cardigan Mountain School

over so many years has benefited numerous constituents including Cardigan’s gov-erning board through its Governance Committee, the administration, the students and their families, and ultimately the alumni of the School. Thanks in large part to his steadfast support, leadership, and guidance, Cardigan Mountain School is as organizationally and financially strong as it has ever been.

In addition to his legal support of Cardigan, Dave and his wife, Ann, are also the proud parents of David, Jr., who is a Cardigan alumnus of the Class of 1978.

We feel that Dave embodies all of the traits and attributes to which a Cardigan alumnus aspires. And therefore, on this 19th day of October, 2013, we, the alumni of Cardigan Mountain School, are proud to deem Dave Bradley a most welcome and deserving fellow alumnus.

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Alumni Chapter NewsBostonSeventeen alumni gathered at Jillian's Restaurant in Boston to form the Greater Boston Chapter of the Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association with a charter signing and kick-off celebration.

New YorkEleven Alumni gathered at the Gin Mill restaurant in New York City on February 26, 2012, to form the N.Y. Chapter of the Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association with a charter signing and kick-off celebration.

FRONT: Chris King ’70 and Henry Baker ’92. BACK from left: Development Officer Marshall Wallach, Jorge Marcos ’00, Jimmy Little ’03, Sang Lee ’01, Andres Marcos-Bours ’03, Ben Mitchell ’02, Peter Mahler ’84, Brandon Wagner ,92, and Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67. Not pictured but present for the signing, Hardwick Caldwell ’01.

Mark Ruelle ,76 chats with Cheryl and Chris Kennedy ,79.

Fred Barney ’91 awaits his turn as Chris Kennedy ’79 signs the charter.

Tyson Pettitt ,02 wins the business-card drawing for a long-sleeve tee.

Mac O'Connell ’03 is the first to sign the Charter of the Greater Boston chapter of the Cardigan Mountain School Alumni Association.

Roger Rice ’60, with brothers Greenleaf ’94 and Aris Garrison ’96.

Classmates Roger Rice ’60 and John Stowe ’60 reminisce with

their old yearbook.

Tyson Pettitt ’02 and Ben Eischen ’02 with Caroline and Mac O'Connell ’03.

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Class of 1963 Reunion

Geoff Hoots ’63 with Beverly Wakely H'01, P'70,'73,'75.

50th Reunion • Class of 1963May 31–June 1, 2013

Mid-Atlantic Chapter NewsA rainy evening could not dampen the spirits of the alumni who turned out for a Mid-Atlantic Alumni Chapter cookout, hosted by Ken ’73 and Kitten Klaus at their house in Devon, Pennsylvania.

ABOVE: Host (and chef ) Ken Klaus ’73.

LEFT: Dave Pucci ’91, Rick Conly III ’88, and Richard Clancy ’67.

ABOVE: Mary Kate and Rick Conly III ’88.

ABOVE: Alan Wood ’60 and Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67.

ABOVE: Richard Clancy ’67 and Lionel Anderson-Perez ’97.

ABOVE: Ken ’73 and Kitten Klaus, Alex Brennan ’11, Richard Clancy ’67, Cole Brennan ’12, Rick Conly III ’88, Alan ’60 and Hillary Wood, Mary Kate Conly, Dave Pucci ’91, and Lionel Anderson-Perez ’97.

ABOVE: Brothers and recent grads Alex ’11 and Cole ’12 Brennan.

Joe Hallowell ’63 and Dan Burack ’63.

Schuyler Peck ’63 with

Bill Luria ’63.

Bill Luria ’63, Norman Wakely H'01, P'70,'73,'75, and Joe Hallowell ’63.

A small but spirited group of ’63 alums enjoyed being back on campus in late May.

Sky Peck

Danny Burack

Bill Luria

Geoff Hoots

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Alumni / 77

Alumni Notes by the Class

Lou Tobia—Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67 recently paid a visit to Lou at his business, New England Casket Company in East Boston, Massachusetts. The company is a major producer of beautiful wooden caskets, and while Lou’s son (Lou Jr.) is on board, Lou Sr. shows little sign of slowing down.

Richard Clancy ’67, Lou Tobia ’47, and Lou Tobia, Jr.

Stuart Kaplan—Stuart, or “Ronnie,” as his Cardigan schoolmates will remember him, remains very active with his company, US Games Systems of Stamford, Connecticut. The business, which grew out of Ronnie’s early passion for collecting card games, now produces hundreds of games, and his extensive collection of antique games includes examples from around the globe. He has written several texts on the history of games, and he even taught himself to speak Russian to deliver a speech at the opening of a museum in St. Petersburg that had purchased a portion of his collection at auction. His latest writing project is a novel that is reportedly set in a fictional New England region to which anyone reading this might relate.

1947

Phil Cox, Tom Dodge, and Roger Lighty all made it back to campus for the Founders’ Pride celebration late last year, with Phil and Roger traveling all the way from the West Coast. Photos from that event can be found elsewhere in this issue.

1948

1949John Oddy traveled down from his home in Biddeford Pool, Maine, to join in the festivities of last year’s Founders’ Pride event. John was particularly delighted to catch up with two of his mentors, Ted Peach and Dan Fleetham, at that event.

1950Dick Morrison—As a long-time Cardigan trustee, Dick visits campus often from his home in Essex Junction, Vt., but his visit during the Founders’ Pride celebration was particularly nostalgic, as he and other early Cardigan grads enjoyed a gala dinner in Cardigan’s original home on Canaan Street.

1951Ted Goddard was on campus in May for the grand opening celebration of the Cardigan Commons. Thanks go out to Ted for generously spearheading the drive to purchase the 3D printer for the new E.P.I.C. Center at Cardigan (see the E.P.I.C. Center article in the “On the Point” section of this issue).

1954Bruce Murray dropped over from his home in Perkinsville, Vt., to attend the Founders’ Pride event at Cardigan. While in attendance at the opening dinner at Breakfast on the Connecticut in Lyme, N.H., he was happy to spend some time with former Headmaster Norman Wakely.

Chuck Margeson recently wrote to the Alumni Office that he was sorry to miss the Cardigan at the Seacoast event in Portsmouth, N.H., in August. At the time he was quite busy preparing for an art show at his Black Swan Gallery in Georgetown, Mass. A few of Chuck’s paintings can be seen at bsgallery.com.

Peter Rand traveled up from his home in Gulf Breeze, Fla., to attend the Founders’ Pride event last fall. A professional photographer, Pete took extensive photos during the event, many of which are included elsewhere in this issue. View some of Pete’s stunning photography at http://www.rand-photography.com/

Share your news! Contact Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67 at [email protected] or 603.523.3601.

Get the Alumni Newsletter by email!Simply sign up at cardigan.org/mailinglist

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Alumni Notes

1956Robert Yoffe—Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67 caught up with Robert in Fairlee, Vt., where he was servicing one of many northern New England accounts of his eyewear sales business. Robert lives in Lexington, Mass., but spends much of each winter in Stowe, Vt. He is hoping for a snowy winter to satisfy his avid skiing habit.

1957Charles Kaplan remains active with his legal practice in Dallas, Tex. He contacted the Alumni Office in October when he and his wife, Desiree, were in New England to attend a reunion at Suffolk Law School in Boston. He looks forward to catching up with others from Cardigan at a future Texas gathering.

1958Harry Whittelsey and his wife, Francis, were happy to attend the Cardigan reception in Deerfield Beach, Fla., back in March. Harry was vacationing in Florida at the time, but he remains busy with his telecommunications business in Huntington, N.Y.

1959Chip Brown and his wife, Yvonne, live in Norwalk, Conn., and they combined a visit to his sister’s home in Lyme, N.H., with the Founders’ Pride event at Cardigan last fall.

Frank Miller dropped by campus last May to take part in the Alumni Tie Ceremony at Commencement. Frank lives in nearby Plymouth, N.H., and is delighted to become reconnected with Cardigan.

Bill Talbert sends word to the Alumni Office that he and his wife, Maureen, have finally “settled down” to enjoy their special home in Bonner, Montana.

Tom Hale and his wife, Nancy, played host to a group of Cardigan al-ums in Denver, Colo., in September. A true Red Sox fan, Tom suggested a reception at Coors Field during a Rockies vs. Sox game at the close of the season. The Rockies came out on top that evening, but the Sox took it all in ’13!

Roger Rice and John Stowe both took part in the charter-signing event (in April) at Jillian’s Restaurant in Boston to establish the Greater Bos-ton Chapter of the Cardigan Moun-tain School Alumni Association.

Alan Wood and his wife, Hillary, attended the spring cookout of the Mid-Atlantic Chapter of the Cardi-gan Mountain School Alumni Asso-ciation in Devon, Pa., back in June. Alan continues to work in real estate in the Philadelphia area and sends his regards to his Class of ’60 classmates.

Bill Wurster visited campus in April with his daughter, Birgit. Bill lives in Lakewood, Wash., and was visiting Birgit in Boston when they decided to take a side trip to Cardigan.

Birgit and Bill ’60 Wurster.

1955Tom Lovett recently wrote to express his sorrow over not being able to be on campus for Homecoming in October. Tom had umpired Cardigan baseball games for decades and was dismayed that he could not be present to see former baseball coach Nick Lynch become an honorary Cardigan alumnus or to witness the ceremony for Jim “Coach” Marrion. He sends his heartfelt “congrats” to both of these very special men.

Doug McLean and his wife, Beth, were happy to visit with Cardigan community members at the annual Cardigan reception on Cape Cod in July. And in October, after attending a wedding in Manchester, Vt., which Beth officiated, they chose to take a “foliage” drive up to The Point. Both were astounded to see the completed Cardigan Commons, which had been under construction during their previous visit to campus.

Phil Sharp and his companion, Janet Fatherly, were happy to be on campus in May for the grand opening ceremony of the Cardigan Commons.

1960

Honesty

For obituary submissions to the Spring 2013 issue of the Chronicle, please contact:

Richard Clancy ’67 Director of Alumni Programs 62 Alumni Drive Canaan, NH 03741 [email protected]

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Alumni / 79

facebook.com/cardigan.alumni

1961Dave Irwin visited campus in July with a friend from his college days at New England College in Henniker, N.H. Dave has been a physical education teacher for many years and currently lives in Belmont, Calif. He was touched to see his photo still hanging in Hopkins Hall beside those of his fellow Cardigan school leaders.

Dave Irwin ’61.

Jon Joy and Jim Sanford were among those who enjoyed an evening at the ballpark in Denver to watch the Rockies vs. Red Sox game in late September. The two had not seen each other in 50 years, but they quickly recalled their days together playing football at Cardigan. Jon, who lives in Telluride, Colo., has enjoyed a career in the ski industry and now works in the energy business. Jim has retired from the construction business and lives in Buena Vista, Colo.

Les Tibbets is living in the Columbia River Gorge of Oregon. He has a private practice providing outreach therapy to veterans and working with clients involved with the justice system.

Alva Adams—Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67 recently paid a visit to Alva at his business in Pueblo, Colo. Alva’s background includes a tour of duty in the Navy and many years in the banking business, but he now spends much of his time managing the many properties he owns in Pueblo.

Richard Clancy

’67 and Alva Adams

’64.

Jim Nowak stopped by The Point with his wife, Laura, to see the campus improvements and start preparations for the 50th reunion of his Class of 1964. Jim is the field announcer for the Brewster Whitecaps of the Cape Cod Baseball League.

Laura and Jim ’64 Nowak.

Brad West and his wife, Susan, stopped by campus in June while traveling in the Northeast. The Wests live in Glendale, Ariz. Brad retired in 2010, and they have enjoyed the opportunity to travel. It was Brad’s first time back to Cardigan since his graduation in 1964.

Brad West ’64 with Richard

Clancy ’67.

1962

1964 1965John Foster and his wife, Donna, report that they are still holding down the fort at Foster’s Crossroads in Twin Mountain, N.H. Alums who would remember John are encouraged to stop in at Foster’s while skiing at Bretton Woods or riding the Cog Railway to the top of Mount Washington.

John Foster

’65 and Richard

Clancy ’67.

1967Richard Bergeson and his wife, Carolyn, visited campus in June while visiting relatives in New Hampshire and Vermont. The Bergesons live in Green Bay, Wis., where Rich is a teacher for the Seventh Day Adventist School System.

Carl “Happy” Hartdegen stopped by The Point in October 2012. Happy lives in Westfield, Mass., where he has enjoyed a long career in photojournalism with the Westfield News.

Classmates Richard Clancy ’67 and Carl “Happy” Hartdegen ’67.

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Dozens of Cardigan’s earliest alumni and faculty

came together in late October, 2012, for three days

of camaraderie and reminiscing. Classes graduating

a minimum of 50 years ago were invited to join the

Cardigan community to see just how far their little school

had come. Participants enjoyed special receptions,

storytelling, and a gala dinner in The Lodge on Canaan

Street—Cardigan’s original home from 1946 to 1953.

Founders’ Pride CelebrationOctober 17–20, 2012

Peter Rand ’51.

Classmates Roger “Kent” Lighty ’48, Phillip “Warren”

Cox ’48, and Tom Dodge ’48.

Ernest “Chip” Brown ’59 chats with former first lady and honorary alumna Beverly Wakely H’01, P’70,’73,’75.

Stuart “Ronnie” Kaplan ’47 chats with Major Warren Huse ’52.

Doug McLean ’55

takes a turn in front

of the camera for

the Cardigan oral

history project.

Theresa “Terri” Clancy Purcell P’84 and former Headmaster Norman

Wakely H ’91, P ’70,’73,’75.

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Alumni / 81

LEFT: John Oddy ’49 with mentors Ted Peach and the Hon. Daniel Fleetham.

John Oddy ’49 and Phillip “Warren” Cox ’48.

RIGHT: Peter Rand ’51, Ted Goddard

’51, Chuck Margeson ’51, and Major

Warren Huse ’52.

Ernest “Chip” Brown ’59 signs the guest book at the opening reception.

Beloved inaugural year faculty member Edward “Ted” Peach.

Tom ’48 and Jo Dodge.nd JoAnn Dodge.

Lou ’47 and Ann Tobia clearly enjoying the Founders’ Pride festivities.

Elizabeth and Doug McLean ’55.

Mentor–mentee! Opening year faculty member Ted Peach chats on camera with his former student Lou Tobia ’47.

@cmscougars@cmssports

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82 / Cardigan Chronicle

Founders’ Pride

Ted Goddard ’51.

Dr. Richard Morrison ’50 enjoys the nostalgic photo display at the hospitality tent.

Philip Sharp ’55 with friend Janet Fatherly.

Ann Tobia views Cardigan memorabilia with her husband’s Cardigan classmate Stuart “Ronnie” Kaplan ’47.

Gala dinner at The Lodge on Canaan Street.

Cardigan Mountain School circa 1947.

Former Headmaster Norman Wakely chats with Bruce Murray ’54.

John Oddy ’49 and Ted Goddard ’51 enjoy a moment with their fellow alum and current Head of School Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10. Gwen and Roger ’60 Rice visit with Chuck Margeson ’51 and Ted Goddard ’51.

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Cardigan Chronicle / 83

Brian Tierney ’99.

Homecoming 2012

Joe

Car

diga

n

Dave McCusker ’80, Leif Fosse-Greiner ’14, Noah Fosse-Greiner ’12, and Steff McCusker P’09,’10.

Schuyler Peck ’63 and Ed Krayer ’82.

Stew Dixon ’80 and Sam Hamilton ’01.

Peter Weeks ’62 and Richard Clancy ’67.

Cougar football action.

LEFT: Ned Gibbons Sr. P’78, GP’12,’15.

Classmates Graham Boyle ’80 and Patrick Gilligan ’80.

Jeremy Crigler ’79, Schuyler Peck ’63, Michael Garrison ’67, Craig Johnson ’78, and Penny.

Honorary Alumnus J. Dudley Clark and Sam Hamilton ’01.

Former faculty member Ruth Conwell with

Kitten and Ken Klaus ’73.

Head of School Dave McCusker ’80, Craig Johnson ’78, and Steve August ’69.

Sam Hamilton ’01, Robert Chartener ’73 and Dr. Richard Morrison ’50 tour the construction of the Cardigan Commons.

Paul Fay ’65.

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84 / Cardigan Chronicle

Alumni NotesSky Schrode—Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67 paid a visit to Sky (classmates would remember him as Sky Rains) in March at his home in Deerfield Beach, Fla. Sky is semi-retired from a life in music. A gifted drummer, Sky began his career in rock bands playing in and around Ithaca, N.Y., but eventually gave up the chilly north, preferring the warmth of southern Florida.

Richard Clancy ’67 with Sky (Rains) Schrode ’67.

1968Geoff Blair sends word to the Alumni Office that he has retired. Formerly a long-haul trucker, Geoff is happy to spend more time with his wife, Fran, traveling in their RV from their home base in Apache Junction, Ariz. Retirement also gives Geoff extra time to spend visiting granddaughter Blake Eaton, born in early 2012.

Geoff Blair ’68 with granddaughter Blake Eaton.

Class of ’67 continued. 1970Tim Fleming was on campus in October for his final meeting as a member of Cardigan’s Board of Trustees. Our school owes Tim a tremendous debt of gratitude for his 20 years of service to Cardigan. Tim brought along his new best friend, Tibby, for her first visit to “The Land of Milk and Honey.”

Tim Fleming ’70 with Tibby.

1971Morgan Dickerman and his wife, Rosa, are pleased to announce the arrival of their daughter, Troy Gold Dickerman, born on August 22, 2012.

Troy Gold Dickerman.

1973Brian Kenning wrote to the Alumni Office in July to alert us to the passing of his longtime friend Doug Pennington ’75. Brian and Doug both hailed from Pittsford, N.Y., but only met after they had left Cardigan. They became avid ski racers and shared a love of skiing throughout their adult lives. Brian is certain that students and faculty alike from the mid-1970s will remember Doug, with his boundless enthusiasm for life, as well as his passion and intensity. Doug’s obituary may be found elsewhere in this issue.

1978Kirk Franklin returned to campus this summer for the inaugural Alumni Lacrosse Game. Kirk captained the white team and, in leading his team to victory, earned the MVP award. Kirk’s two sons Cole ’10 and Austin ’13 played alongside their father.

Cole ’10, Austin ’13, and Kirk Franklin ’78 at a Cardigan sports event in April.

Doug Pennington ’75 and Brian Kenning ’73 in the mid-1990s at Jackson Hole, Wyo.

Scott Poole—While traveling through New England from his home state of Iowa back in August, Scott recognized his surroundings in the nick of time to take a detour and visit campus for the first time since 1973. A chef by trade, Scott is now retired from many years in the hospitality industry.

Scott Poole ’74 and RichardClancy ’67.

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Alumni / 85

1979Petch Wanglee—After Cardigan, Petch went on to Loomis Chaffee, spent his undergrad years at University of Hartford, and received his MBA from Babson College. He is now working for a soybean crusher in Thailand. He has been married for 10 years, and he has a nine-year-old boy and a four-year-old girl. Petch is doing well and enjoys reading about Cardigan’s recent upgrades while reminiscing about his time on The Point almost 35 years ago.

1980Tim Frost’s company, Peregrine Design/Build, is receiving national attention, having several projects featured in industry magazines and idea books, along with being recognized for its work with eco-friendly materials and green building practices.

Piers Mathieson was featured in a Wall Street Journal article regarding a new job he has taken with an online technology company called WorldNow. Piers received praise for his success in brand strategy and building and managing communities within the music and entertainment industry. He launched his own management company and successfully secured publishing deals while negotiating contracts for recording artists, music producers, and song writers. His music credits include the motion picture soundtracks for both Juice and The Bodyguard, the latter of which is still one of the top selling albums of all time. Four years ago, he started his own marketing company, focusing on

1985Nelson Lemmond seized the opportunity to attend back-to-back events at Brewster Academy and Cardigan in late May. His timing was perfect to attend the Alumni Tie Ceremony and shake hands with each of the graduating seniors at Commencement. It was his first time back on The Point in 20 years, and he later wrote to a classmate that he was “very impressed with how things are going on campus.”

Nelson Lemmond ’85 at a Commencement weekend reception with Richard Clancy ’67.

1987George Needham—Former  CMS faculty member Bob Low spotted George at a hockey game in February at Groton School. The two stopped long enough to trade Cardigan memories and snap a quick picture.

George Needham ’87 and Groton Director of Athletics Bob Low.

@cmscougars@cmssports

social media. Over the last two years, he has created more than 800 million impressions for his clients on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. WSJ describes his knowledge of the various social media platforms and ability to leverage them by industry as “unparalleled.”

1989Alexander Robinson has been enjoying life in Austin, Tex., for the last eight years with his wife, two sons, and their dog. The family has temporarily relocated to Cambridge, Mass., just in time for the beginning of the New England winter. Despite being softened by the Texas climate, Alex is excited to reconnect with Cardigan friends in the Northeast.

1990Malcolm McLeod—The Alumni Office recently received word of an addition to Malcolm’s family. Lincoln McLeod was born to Malcolm and his wife, An, on September 5, 2013, joining brother Cameron, who is now three years old. Malcolm works for a technology start-up company in the Philadelphia Metro area and lives in South Orange, N.J.

Visibly happy, Lincoln McLeod!

1984

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86 / Cardigan Chronicle

Shannon Purcell—Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67 spotted Shannon while attending a hockey game at Dartmouth College. Shannon reports that he remains very busy with his property management business in nearby Lebanon, N.H.

Shannon Purcell ’91 and Richard Clancy ’67.

1991

Eduardo Gonzalez visited Cardigan in July with his family while traveling in New England. Eduardo has enjoyed a career in architecture, during which he has designed some very notable municipal and government buildings throughout Mexico. He was proud to bring along his parents who had enjoyed many visits to campus during not only Eduardo’s Cardigan days, but also those of his younger brother, Jose ’93. Director of International Relations Rick Exton P’11 with the Gonzalez family.

Mike Creed wrote to say that he had a great time last year at Cardigan’s alumni ski event at Mount Sunapee Resort. He is looking forward to hitting the slopes with his classmates again soon.

1993

1994Brad Pitassi and his wife, Christina, are proud to introduce their first child, Ava Katherine Pitassi, born on March 23, 2013. Brad reports that she is a happy, healthy bundle of joy. Brad and his family are living in Arizona, where Brad is a member of an elite group of firefighters, a division of the Southwest Area Type I Incident Management Team, working to contain and control wildfires throughout the Southwest.

Ava Katherine Pitassi.

Curtis Singmaster and his wife recently moved to Ojai, Calif., where he is the chair of the fine arts department at a small boarding school. Curtis says, “It makes me extremely happy to see that Cardigan is still providing a lively and vibrant environment for young boys.”

Tom Buller sends word that he has gotten married to Susann Nagel on September 17, 2013. Tom is working as a mechanical engineer at Siemens Energy in Orlando, and his wife is a nurse in the Cardiac Progressive Care unit at Florida Hospital.

Philippe Cousteau—The Hale family, Tom ’60 and Nancy P’95, would like to extend their congratulations to Philippe for his recent wedding to Ashlan Gorse. The Hales write, “We wish you decades of happiness, and we hope to meet Ashlan in the near future!”

Pablo E. Machado was disappointed to be unable to attend the Cardigan reception in Florida back in March. He reports that he is working for Santender Bank in their private banking division. He sends his regards to his classmates from the Class of 1996.

Will Holland has been living in Perth, Australia, for eight years. After playing college lacrosse in the States, he was invited to play and coach in an Australian league and fell in love with the place. Will now owns a consulting business and is the venue manager of a new bar. Most recently, Will is using his athletic talents to start an ice hockey charity event in Melbourne, in which he will coach and play for the Western Division.

Ryan Welts—Moving in a different direction from his soccer and skiing days at Cardigan, Ryan has taken up trail running. He trains and regularly competes in marathons and ultramarathons. Ryan keeps a blog he calls “Ramblings of a Rockhopper” (ryanwelts.blogspot.com) detailing his workouts, race

Alumni Notes Anthony “Trey” Ragno and his wife, Ashley, are happy to announce the birth of their second child, a baby girl named Ariana Elise on March 14, 2013.

Ashley and Trey Ragno ’95 with daughter Ariana Elise Ragno.

1995

1996

Class of ’90 continued.

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1998Tyson Bolduc is working for the HEAD Ski Corporation in Kennelbach, Austria, and living in Bregenz, Austria, on the lake of Constance. Tyson is in charge of HEAD’s Freeskiing related products, and his personal project has been a group of five Big Mountain inspired ski designs known as the “Flight Series.” The series hit the market this past fall, and are receiving very good reviews within the ski industry. Tyson reports that his move to Austria posed language and culture challenges, but that after two years he is doing well, and his German is improving daily.

Juan Gavito’s mother, Carlota, is happy to announce that Juan was married last fall in Mexico. She reports that the couple is happy and very much in love. After spending a few days on the Mexican beaches, the couple headed to Asia to enjoy their honeymoon.

David Madeira was recently named to Brown University’s Lacrosse Team of the Decade: 2000-2009 as an attackman.

1999

Jeremiah Shipman was married to Nicole Santos on October 5, 2013, in Wiscasset, Maine. Jeremiah, whose passion for woodworking was sparked by Mr. Andrews in seventh-grade woodshop, has continued making furniture and was recently featured in the magazine Upper Valley Life for his work, which earned him a spot as a juried member of the League of New Hampshire Craftsmen. In the summer of 2013, Jer returned to Cardigan as a member of the Alumni Office. He enjoys being back on The Point and is happy with his new position as assistant director of alumni programs.

Jeremiah ’00 and Nicole Shipman.

2000

results, and reflections on his life. Ryan is currently living in Goffstown, N.H.

Ryan Welts ’96.

Julian Kehaya is happy to report the recent launch of a website on which he lent his expertise (www.southendsurf.com). As the shop’s online manager, he will be handling all orders, promotions, shipping, customer service, marketing, vendor relations, inventory management, and overall maintenance of the website.

Bryan Crabtree shared happy news about his marriage last September to his wife, Margaux.

Brian ’98 and Margaux Crabtree.

Nick Foster—Members of the Cardigan Alpine Ski Team caught up with Nick at Beaver Creek Resort in Colorado while they were training and viewing the Men’s World Cup Downhill event in November of 2012. Nick was working at the resort at the time. Recently, however, Nick’s dad, John Foster ’65, sent word that Nick is back east, working for Surefoot, and living in Rutland, Vt. Surefoot manufactures orthotics for athletics, and Nick is representing their line of ski boot inserts.

Richard Clancy ’67 with Nick Foster ’98 at Beaver Creek Resort.

Ben Lovejoy—After five seasons playing for the Pittsburgh Penguins, Ben was traded on February 6, 2013, to the Anaheim Ducks, where he continues to be a productive defenseman, logging about 20 minutes per game and leading the team in hits. Ben and his wife Avery are the proud new parents of Lila, born December 31, 2013. Congratulations go out to the entire Lovejoy family.

Lila Lovejoy

youtube.com/Cardigan2ThePoint

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Justin Simon was named USA Lacrosse Coach of the Year for Northern New England. Justin is currently coaching at the New Hampton School, but he still finds time to return to Cardigan for the summer lacrosse camp. Justin also played in the inaugural Alumni Lacrosse Game at Cardigan in August.

Al Stevenson finished his first IRONMAN triathlon in Louisville, Ky., on August 25. He is currently living in Boston and working in Waltham, Mass.

“IRONMAN” Al Stevenson ’00.

Alex Hartmann is currently a sergeant in the U.S. Marine Corps. Since joining the Marines, Alex has completed three combat tours—one in Iraq and two in Afghanistan, where he served as the chief scout/sniper for his battalion. For his valor, Alex received several awards, including a Purple Heart, pinned on him by the Commandant of the USMC on Christmas Day, 2010, in Afghanistan. Alex and his wife, Kristen, are currently stationed

Alumni Notesin Quantico, Va., and they are expecting their first child in January.

James Tautkus recently moved from Utah to Vermont, where he will be working and coaching skiing at the Green Mountain Valley School. James also played in the Alumni Lacrosse Game alongside his friend and fellow alumnus of Cardigan, Proctor, and UNH, Tim Frazier.

James Tautkus ’00 receives the award for traveling the farthest distance to attend the first-ever Cardigan Alumni Lacrosse Game; James drove out from Utah.

Jake Ridinger—In a great coincidence, Cyndy Borghi, mother of Matt Borghi ’10, bumped into Jake and his mother on a cruise ship. Jake operates his family’s jade mine in the Motagua Valley in Zacapa Province, Guatemala, an ancient Mayan jade source rediscovered by Jake’s parents, Mary Louise and Jay, almost 50 years ago.

Vicente Ariztegui was married to Maria Jose Molina on May 19, 2012, in Mexico City, Mexico. He reports that he is now in the second year of an MBA program at Harvard University and hopes to make it up to Cardigan while he is back in New England.

Vicente Ariztegui ’01 and Maria Jose Molina on their wedding day.

Sam Hamilton recently completed the adventure of a lifetime by climbing to the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro in the Kilimanjaro Region of Tanzania. Composed of three volcanic cones, Kilimanjaro is the highest mountain in Africa and the highest freestanding mountain in the world, at 5,895 meters above sea level.

Continued on page 92.

2001

Cale Quasha is doing well, working in San Francisco for a tech company that has grown from 10 to 200 people in the last year. Cale writes that he is frequently in touch with classmates Fred Dirkes and Andres Ochoa.

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Alumni / 89 Continued on page 92.

TOP ABOVE: Mike McLean ’77, Richard Clancy ’67, and Peter Albee ’58.

CENTER ABOVE: Alumni Association President Steve August ’69 with Jack Costello ’11 and Development Officer Marshall Wallach.

ABOVE: Niko Langlois ’07, Richard Clancy ’67, and Peter Langlois P’07,’08,’11. Niko and Peter handled refreshments for the reception, all the way from Greenfield, Mass.!

ABOVE: Paul Leahy ’76 and Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67.

LEFT CENTER Top: Cardigan faculty member and hockey coach Owen Carpino with his mother Maria and brother Andrew.

MIDDLE: Jeff Holden ’71 and Robert Chartener ’73.

LEFT: Director of Advancement Commu-nications Joy Michelson P ’17 with former Admissions Office staffer Brian Beale and his fiancée, Shannon.

ABOVE: The Nearis Family came to cheer on Will Nearis ’13 in the tournament.

Belmont Hill Hockey Tournament Reception

December 2012—Belmont, Massachusetts

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ABOVE: Brothers, Brodie ’09 and Colin McCusker ’10.

Alumni Winter Weekend 201326th Annual Alumni Hockey Game, Turner Arena at CMS–March 3, 2013

The white team had an 8-5 win over the green.

Past Alumni Association President

Ken Klaus ’73 sang the National

Anthem.

Action on the ice.

Bruce Marshard ’64, Pat Gilligan ’80, Alumni President Steve August ’69, Kirk Franklin ’78, Richard Clancy ’67, John Emery ’78, Ken Klaus ’73, Ned Gibbons ’78, Mike McLean ’77 and Dave McCusker ’80.

Kirk Franklin ’78 with son, Cole ’10, and Head of School Dave McCusker, Jr. ’80.

BELOW: Alumnus Richie Cardillo ’12 with Director of Development David Perfield.

ABOVE: Ned Gibbons ’78, Pat Gilligan ’80, Honorary Alumna Bev Wakely, and Kirk Franklin ’78.

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Alumni Winter Weekend 2013Alumni Ski/Snowboard Day, Mount Sunapee ResortMarch 2, 2013

FRONT: Ryan ’90 and Brandy Coulter, Jessica Longley, Linda French, Alli Gilligan, Peter Michelson ’17, Hunter Emery, Zak Largus, Joy Michelson P’17. BACK ROW: Pat Gilligan ’80, Penn Strawbridge, Schuyler Strawbridge, Ken Lary ’71, Kitten Klaus, Ken Klaus ’73, Richard Clancy ’67, Mike Creed ’93, John Emery ’78, Mary Ledoux, Barb and Joe Frazier P’88,’95,’00,Tim Frazier ’00, and Adam Cushing.

Peter Michelson ’17 hit the slopes.

BELOW: Patrick Gilligan ’80 shares his gold medal with daughter, Alli.

ABOVE: Brandy and Ryan Coulter ’90 take their turn in NASTAR run.

Medal winners Tim Frazier ’00 and Pat

Gilligan ’80 .

Richard Clancy ’67 and Patrick Gilligan ’80 at the finish line.

Mike Creed ’93.

John ’78 and Hunter Emery with Alli and Patrick Gilligan ’80.

Mary Ledoux and Barb Frazier P’88,’95,’00 with

Tim Frazier ’00 and Adam Cushing.

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Alumni NotesClass of ’01 continued.

Ryan Carney recently completed his MS degree in aerospace engineering from the University of Florida while continuing to work full time. Ryan has also completed a two-year “Emerging Leaders” program within the Boeing Company, where he is a guidance, navigation, and control flight engineer on CTS-100, a commercial crew spacecraft development program. Ryan has actively been engaged in S.T.E.M. (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) educational outreach and would like to thank all of his science and math teachers at CMS for encouraging him to pursue this course of study. Ryan now lives in Texas.

Roberto Henriquez is living in Boston and working on his MBA at Babson College. Roberto got married last spring and is hoping to visit Cardigan with his wife this winter.

Dan Barton and Cody Rodman teamed up for a visit back to campus back in December 2012. Dan lives in Denver, Colo., where he works as a day trader and is pursuing outdoor education credentials. Cody is on active duty in the U.S. Army and has served in Iraq and Afghanistan as a combat medic.

Dan Barton ’01 and Cody Rodman ’01 with Cardigan’s director of annual giving, Marshall Wallach.

2002

Jeff Vogel recently graduated from helicopter pilot school. He is living in Utah and is engaged to be married.

2003

Kevin Kessler is happy to announce the arrival of his son, Kipp Brennan Kessler, born May 24, 2013.

Humberto Garza spent three years working for a Texas company called Wood Crafters, and he is currently studying to get his MBA at the University of Texas. Humberto also got married, and he and his wife are doing very well.

Kory Falite—After graduating from the University of Massachusetts at Lowell, Kory played professional hockey for three years in the U.S. and Europe before he turned his love of the game to coaching. He is now the head coach and in charge of player development for the Hong Kong Typhoons. The Typhoon hockey program has more than 500 players at various levels of development. So far, Kory has found the experience interesting and very exciting.

Jared Garceau joined the Powder Springs, Ga., Police Department after graduating from the North Central Law Enforcement Academy on September 14, 2012. Jared is also coaching lacrosse at Whitefield Academy.

Jared Garceau ’04.

2004

Tin Kin “T.K.” Wong attended Boston University, where he majored in biochemistry and molecular biology with a minor in business management. After graduation, T.K. returned to Hong Kong to work in the health care communications field at Weber Shandwick.

2005

Joe Lisicky is in the master’s program at the McIntire School of Commerce at UVA. Joe is also hoping to play lacrosse for the Cavaliers in the spring.

Patrico Peralta is studying business administration at the Universidad Anahuac, and he will graduate in December. He had spent two years working for a Mexican investment bank but recently left to work for a construction firm owned by his father.

C.J. Chartrain—After graduating from Niagara University, where he was a standout defenseman for the Purple Eagles, C.J. has continued his hockey career. He’s now playing in the ECHL and wearing #3 for the Toledo Walleye.

Jonathan Castillo returned to campus over Homecoming Weekend and was amazed to see the improvements Cardigan has made since his time here as a student. He was happy to be able to, once again, climb Mount Cardigan, and he is already anticipating his next chance to visit The Point.

Jonathan Castillo ’06 atop Mount Cardigan.

2006

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Drew Philie—After graduating from UVM, Drew has returned to Deerfield Academy and taken a position in the admissions office there. Drew is also acting as the school’s assistant athletic director. We were happy to see both Drew and his brother Adam Philie ’10 at this summer’s Alumni Lacrosse Game.

Robbie Bourdon recorded an excellent senior year playing hockey for Colgate. He tallied his first career hat trick against Dartmouth and earned the ECAC Player of the Week award for his performance.

Will Rosen is attending Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., though he is looking forward to spending a semester abroad in Sydney, Australia.

Will Schoder has been doing some traveling around Europe, making stops in Paris, Berlin, Florence, Barcelona, Dublin, and Copenhagen, while studying at the University of Edinburgh, though he hasn’t forgotten about Canaan, N.H. He’s hoping to return to The Point soon.

Will Schoder ’07 at the Louvre in Paris, France.

Franklin Boswell-Taylor and Cullen Boyle found themselves on opposite sides of the field at a recent lacrosse game between Curry College and Norwich University. Fellow Cardigan alumnus Tim McNair ’08 from Curry College also joined in on the Cougar reunion.

2007

Franklin Boswell-Taylor’07, Cullen Boyle ’07, and TimMcNair ’08.

Sam Funnell is continuing his studies at Trinity College. However, he and younger brother Nick ’09 were spotted at the Sandwich (N.H.) Fair this fall by Director of Alumni Programs Richard Clancy ’67 and honorary alumnus Wim Hart H’08. Spending Columbus Day at this New Hampshire country fair has been a long tradition for Cardigan boys, and the Funnell family keeps that tradition alive.

Nick Funnell ’09, Richard Clancy ’67, Wim Hart H’08, and Sam Funnell ’07 at the Sandwich Fair.

Chris Galluzzo—After an out-standing freshman season in goal with Wells College, where he earned all-conference honors, Chris is now playing lacrosse for the New England College Pilgrims.

2008

Jose Garza is studying law at the Escuela Libre de Derecho in Monterrey, Mexico. He is doing well and enjoying his studies.

Reed Spearman recently completed an 89-day wilderness expedition in the Rocky Mountains with the National Outdoor Leadership School. The excursion consisted of hiking, canoeing, and rock climbing, all the while emphasizing

2009

independent student travel and good camping skills, as well as natural and human history.

Nick Funnell currently attends Bowdoin College where he is studying marine biology. Nick, pictured here in a Groton uniform with last spring’s lacrosse teammates Ace Cowans ’12 and Matt Borghi ’10, played against fellow CMS alums Cam McCusker ’10 and Chad Morse ’12 last spring.

Ace Cowans ’12, Matt Borghi ’10,CamMcCusker ’10, Nick Funnell ’09,and ChadMorse ’12.

Tyler Wilmot and Nik Nugnes—The Alumni Office received word that Tyler and Nik were reunited by hockey while they both played for the Connecticut Junior Oilers during the 2012-13 season. According to our source, they had some good wins and some tough losses, and we received a picture of them celebrating a win over the Junior Bruins last October. Tyler is now studying at the University of Connecticut, while Nik just began his college career in late December at the University of Maine.

Tyler Wilmot ’09 and Nik Nugnes ’09.

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Alumni Notes

Jun Woo “Justin” Choi is doing well at Choate. He is on the wrestling team and received the Student Athlete of the Week honor last January.

Ansel Dickey—After Cardigan, Ansel trained as a ski racer at Killington Mountain School. Two years later, he gave up skiing to focus on cycling, and he has had great success. He is currently riding for the U.S. National Team (Team USA) and spends much of his time training in Europe. Ansel plans to defer from Lindsey Wilson, a DI cycling school in Kentucky, and continue racing at the professional level for the 2014 season.

Charlie Parry is happy to report that he is now officially a cadet at Massachusetts Maritime Academy. He will be shipping out for three months in the winter.

Matt Borghi is proving to be a leader on and off the football field at Groton. He brings a physical presence to games as well as an energy that motivates everyone around him. He is praised by his coaches and admired by peers and teammates for his consistency, his constant positive attitude, and his

2010

understanding of what it means to be a teammate. Matt was recognized in the Groton newspaper, The Circle Voice, as the “Athlete of the Issue” in September 2013 for his leadership during football season—on and off the field.

Arick Escamilla had a great lacrosse season in his senior year at NMH. He was a three-year varsity player and a key member of the defense. Arick is currently enrolled at the Universidad de Monterrey.

Hayden Jenkins captained the lacrosse team at NMH and led the team in goals his senior year. He played three years of varsity lacrosse and was also a member of the varsity football team. He is now attending UVM and playing lacrosse for the Catamounts.

Connor Van Arnam made the varsity hockey and varsity lacrosse teams at NMH but opted to act as team manager for his final season of lacrosse. He shared his skills and knowledge, worked the goalies, and was an expert behind the camera, filming all the games. Connor is now attending Skidmore College where he is on the hockey team.

Andrew Herron had a great 2012 football season at Christ School in Arden, North Carolina, where his team was runner-up for the state championship.

Andrew Herron ’10.

Jack Wilson was captain of the lacrosse team at Cushing. He reunited with Cardigan classmate Hayden Jenkins at a game against NMH last spring.

Classmates Jack Wilson ’10 and Hayden Jenkins ’10 captained the Cushing and NMH teams, respectively.

Peter Siegel—Cardigan baseball coach Austen Hannis met up with Peter at a Cardigan vs. Avon Old Farms baseball game last spring. It was Peter’s final year, and now he’s off to American University in Washington, D.C.

Peter Siegel ’10 with fellow cougar alum Ben Johnston ’12.

Adam Philie, now at Dartmouth, is pictured here with Cardigan classmate Hayden Jenkins, now at UVM. They had squared off in a Deerfield vs. NMH lacrosse game last spring.

Adam Philie ’10

and Hayden Jenkins ’10.

Garrett Phillips recently reached out to Head of School Dave McCusker, commending him on his hard work at Cardigan. Garrett is thankful for his time on The Point and the way it prepared him for Holderness, where he is now a senior.

2011

Eun Youb “Josh” Lee spent the summer traveling through Hong Kong, France, and Switzerland, enjoying a few Premier League soccer games along the way. Josh had plans to return to Tufts this fall to continue his pre-med studies.

Class of ’09 continued.

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Alumni / 95

Continued on page 100.

Tom Caron, Jacob Kim, and Zach Harris reunited at the New England Wrestling Tournament. Tom is now at Brooks, Jacob at Choate, and Zach at Loomis Chaffee.

Sebastian LaPointe—The former Cardigan school leader was praised for his performance as Inspector Javert in Taft’s production of Les Miserables. More recently, Sebastian took on the role of Sky Masterson from Guys and Dolls. About the latter role, Sebastian said, “I’ve always been quite fascinated by the role of Sky. I like [the role], of course, because of the great, stand-out numbers that I get to sing. Furthermore, I love the dynamic of the character’s persona. He’s not at all one dimensional—he has several motivations, some of which are revealed through song and dialogue, and some of which remain implied. Coming out of [last year’s] considerably heavier musical, Les Miserables, it was quite refreshing to make a return to musical comedy. That said, though, the play ranges all the way from solemn to downright goofy.”

Spencer Hukill writes to us from The Derryfield School (Manchester, N.H.) that he has been sharing his music with the public via broadcasting on 91.3 WUNH.

Zack Langlois—Last spring saw Zack (white uniform) facing Arick Escamilla ’10, Hayden Jenkins ’10, and Josh Jordan ’12 in a Salisbury vs. NMH lacrosse matchup.

Nolan Callahan, who only began playing lacrosse as an eighth grader at Cardigan, is now the starting lacrosse goalie at Avon Old Farms and has committed to play for perennial DI lacrosse powerhouse Syracuse University. Nolan was featured in New England Lacrosse Journal; the article described his hard work and quick improvement to become a confident and dominating force in net.

Nolan Callahan ’11 and Hayden Jenkins ’10 captained the Avon and NMH teams, respectively.

Neil McCalmont paid a visit to campus in July at the height of Cardigan’s Summer Session. His late summer plans included a trip to Munich, Germany, to enjoy some opera, after which he would begin his senior year at The Derryfield School and begin to make plans for college.

Marty Wennik P’15,’16, Neil McCalmont ’11, and Richard Clancy ’67.

Carter Cockrell recently won the Groton School “Triple Speak” competition, an informal public speaking challenge open to the whole school. Contestants are given a random word (by the crowd) about which they have to speak. After a minute, they are given a second random word, which they have to weave into their speech. Then a third random word is tossed out by

the audience, and the speaker has to include that in the speech as well, so that all three words are blended into the talk. Carter’s words were endure, jumpy, and siren. He received a huge ovation in the school’s morning meeting when it was announced he had won. Congratulations from The Point, Carter!

Groton “Triple Speak” Champion

Carter Cockrell ’11.

Charles “CJ” Moore is currently a senior at Suffield Academy, where he plays varsity football and baseball. He is a star wide receiver and defensive back and was named First Team All New England. As a baseball player, he averages well over .400 and, last year, led his team in home runs, extra base hits, and RBIs—and again was named First Team All New England. In a recent interview with Massachusetts Prep Star Athletes, CJ said, “Balancing both sports right now is tough…I am planning on playing both sports in college. I do not think I’m ready to give up either sport yet.” CJ has seen recruiting from DI schools for both sports, as well as some interest from MLB teams for baseball.

Cardigan faculty members Austen Hannis and Corey Lawson catch up with CJ Moore ’11.

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Dedication of Pearson HouseOn May 3, 2013, the former Williams Wood Shop (which moved to the Charles C. Gates I.D.E.A. Shop in the fall of 2012) was rededicated after extensive renovation as a two-unit faculty residence. Pearson House honors John “Jock” Pearson, Jr. ’65 for his three decades of service as a trustee and supporter of Cardigan Mountain School.

TOP LEFT: Pearson House, former home of the Williams Wood Shop.

SECOND ROW Left: Kim Kenly ’68 with Barbara and Jock ’65 Pearson P’98.

THIRD ROW Left: Sixties alums Paul Fay ’65, Jock Pearson ’65, Kim Kenly ’68, and Richard Clancy ’67 Center: Ed Krayer ’82 shares the toast with Pamela Crigler. Right: Mani Alexiou P’98.

FOURTH ROW Left: Karl Hutter ’92 and Larry Prescott P’88 join the dedication toast.

ABOVE: Chip Haskell ’80.

TOP RIGHT: Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10 unveils the Pearson House sign, as Barbara Pearson P’98 looks on.

LEFT: Barbara O’Connell P’03, Joy Michelson P’17, and Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10.

96 / Cardigan Chronicle

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Cardigan CommonsJust prior to the Grand Opening ceremony, outgoing board president and longtime Cardigan board member F. Corning “Kim” Kenly III ’68 was officially surprised by the announcement that the main Cardigan Commons dining area would bear the name “Kenly Dining Hall” in his honor. Stepping down after 10 years as board president, Kim will continue serving on the Cardigan Board of Trustees (as he has since 1986) and will enjoy many community meals in the new space.

Continued from page 19.

ABOVE LEFT: Head of School Dave McCusker ’80, P’09,’10 raises his glass for the dedication toast.

ABOVE: Burt McGillivray P’07,’09,’09 remarks on Kim’s outstanding 10-year leadership of the Cardigan Board.

LEFT: Evidence of a joyous celebration and heartfelt gratitude.

ABOVE: Lorna Kenly (holding a grandson) and Trustee Hank Holland P’12,’15 share the toast to Kim.

BELOW: Trustee Robert Chartener ’73 delivers remarks—and an honorary Cardigan diploma—to Kim (who left CMS to start secondary school after eighth grade in 1967).

BELOW: Honoree Kim Kenly ’68

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1991 Mr. Norman C. Wakely1992 Mr. Joseph M. Collins †1993 Mr. Robert S. Gillette †1994 Dr. Crawford H. Hinman †1996 Mr. Savage C. Frieze, Jr. †2000 Ms. Carol M. Shelton2000 Mr. David F. Shelton2001 Mrs. Beverly Wakely2001 Rev. Harry R. Mahoney 2002 Mrs. Ruth H. Talbert †2002 Rev. Harold Finkbeiner, Jr. †2002 Dr. Cameron K. Dewar 2003 Mr. James N. “Coach” Marrion2004 Mrs. Jacqueline A. Lary †2004 Dr. Robert F. Kenerson

2005 Mr. J. Dudley Clark2005 Mrs. Shirley Lester2006 Mr. Edilberto Ramos2006 Mrs. Mary Mendelsohn2007 Mr. William Hart2007 Mrs. Virginia Collins2009 Mr. James H. Funnell2009 Ms. Susan Rives2011 Mr. William X. Barron2011 Mr. Neil Brier2012 Mr. Alexander L. Gray

2013 Mr. Nicholas S. Lynch2013 Mr. David H. Bradley

†=deceased

The Honorary Alumnus Award is presented each year to a member of the Cardigan Family who is not an alumnus, but who—in the eyes of Cardigan’s Nominating Committee, and on behalf of a grateful Alumni Association—has exhibited extraordinary service to the students of Cardigan Mountain School, in one capacity or another.

Participation in the Heritage Society is an easy, natural gesture to make in appreciation of the formative experiences provided at Cardigan Mountain School. Cardigan still looms large in my heart. Like the mountain itself, the School is a rock solid foundation in the lives of boys who come through the stone gates to study, play, and grow at an important time in their middle school years. So it was for me. The life lessons I learned at Cardigan continue to endure in all that I do. It is important to leave something behind so that Cardigan will also endure and provide a foundation to those young boys whose hearts and minds will embrace the vistas of the mountain and the lake while they, too, study, play, and grow; build meaningful relationships; and serve the generations that will follow them.

Steven W. August ’69 Alumni Association President

Heritage Society Spotlight

A Cardigan Tradition—The Honorary Alumnus Award

A Heritage Society gift can be the most meaningful gift made during one’s lifetime . . .

Honorary Alumnus Award Recipients

(pictured right)

(pictured above)

2013 Awardees

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Alumni / 99

Alumni In Service to Their Country

Jeremiah: What were some of your memories from CMS?

Cullen: I remember my friends there—the relationships I had built. I remember friends who came from all over the world, and learning cultural differences from other students. I also remember skating on that fresh sheet of ice at the rink. I remember Jim Marrion coming into the locker room and looking right at me and saying “Come on Tiger!” I remember the snow ball fights on the quad in the first days of winter snow. I remember my teachers, and still remember the lessons they taught me. And I will never forget the challenges we faced at Cardigan, both academically and athletically. It was just a fantastic place to have gone to school, and one that I know I will continue to cherish in my heart.

What were your interests at Cardigan (academic, athletic, clubs, other activities)?

I was big into athletics, and CMS really gave me an opportunity to play sports in all three seasons. I remember being the only freshman on the Varsity Tennis team. I also remember scoring a goal against the Eaglebrook School in soccer (from a long distance, when I saw the goalie cheating off of his goal line). I also loved the hike up Mount Cardigan every fall. Waking up early on that morning, and feeling the cold while hiking in the dark—then reaching the summit and seeing the beautiful sunrise over the New Hampshire peaks—those were truly my best days at CMS.

As a student at Cardigan, did you ever think you would join the Army? If not, what were you planning to do?

No. Absolutely not. I honestly wanted to be a hockey player. CMS has such a strong athletic program. Looking back on those days, I see that playing tennis, soccer, and ice hockey really helped my understanding of teamwork and selfless service. The ability to play as hard as you can for your team is something critical to learn at an early age.

Why did you join the Army?

My father was in the military. He is from Switzerland, where military service is mandatory. To be quite honest, much of what I have done in my life was inspired by my father, but also by the values I have picked up along the way. After Cardigan and prep school, I had a sense that I wanted to experience travel and adventure. I decided to enlist in the United States Army. I later went on to the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) at Providence College, and was commissioned as a Second

Lieutenant. This was one of the best decisions I have made in my life, and I will never regret having answered the call to serve my country when it needed me.

In what ways did CMS prepare you for military?

CMS was a terrific experience for me personally. At a young age, Cardigan teaches values such as honor, integrity, and personal courage. Every student at CMS had to persevere through the challenges that we all faced, from academics, athletics, to just being away from home. At Cardigan, I was groomed for leadership at an early age, and this truly has set the precedent for my own personal development and strength of character.

Were there similarities between the Cardigan lifestyle and what you experienced in the Army?

Absolutely. Even in the early enlisted days in the military you are far far from home, and—just like at Cardigan—you’re on your own. You are challenged almost to the breaking point on a daily basis, but you always find a way to look deep inside yourself and pull through it. I had the advantage of already having learned, at CMS, that I could do this. Of course, checking uniforms and belts at the dining facility was also familiar to me from my experiences at CMS!

Cardigan has six Core Values: Compassion, Honesty, Respect, Integrity, Scholarship, and Fairness. These weren’t as clearly defined while you were a student in the 90s, but the School’s mission was very much the same. Do you feel that understanding and living these values set you apart from your peers? Was your understanding of the Cardigan Way an asset to you?

These [Cardigan] values are similar to the values embraced by the United States Army, which are: Loyalty, Duty, Respect, Selfless Service, Honor, Integrity and Personal Courage. We must uphold these values as soldiers and leaders in the United States Army. These values help define who we are as soldiers, and help citizens from all over the country to come together and become part of a large team Though these values may not have been defined [as clearly] when I was a student at CMS [as they are now], they were nonetheless a daily aspect of our lives as students. These values, taught at an early age, helped strengthen and define our character as we moved forward from Cardigan—and these values will help shape the future leaders of America.

Interview with Cullen de Bourgknecht ’99

Cardigan Alumni Military Service Honor Roll

Frederick G. Lippert 1949Walter D. Alexander 1950Harry Metz 1950Warren D. Huse 1952Jack G. Woods 1958Charles H. Hall II 1960Les Tibbetts 1962David van Esselstyn 1962Hubert Caldwell O'Keefe 1964Alfred M. Johnston 1966James S. Mainzer 1966Mark E. Davis 1967Clayton G. Gallagher 1967Richard W. Whiting, Jr. 1971Richard W. Kaiser 1973Matthew K. White 1973Ned Gibbons Jr. 1978Gregg Heidenreich 1979Daniel A. Babcock 1980Patrick J. Gilligan 1980David Wargin 1982Adam M. Kordish 1984Daren K. Purcell 1984Charles M. Williams 1984Christopher R. Small 1985Robert C. Hunter 1989Errol M. Laumann 1991Ryan D. Leonard 1992Matthew M. Dodge 1993Joshua D. Pellegrino 1993Sean Donahue 1995Wrenn E. Landers 1995Kevin R. Burke 1997Jake Rugge-Price 1997W. Cary Laird 1998Cullen de Bourgknecht 1999William S. MacVitti 1999Brian J. Tierney 1999Alexander K. Hartmann 2000Pack S. Janes 2000Patrick B. Quealy 2000Zachary Zimmerman 2003Eddie Dix 2007

Should your name be on this list?www.cardigan.org/service

ALUMNUS CLASS OF

By Jeremiah Shipman ’00Assistant Director of Alumni Programs

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Alumni NotesClass ’11 of continued.

2012Zach Harris received high praise in a recent article in the Loomis Chaffee magazine. The article mentioned Zach’s dominance on the wrestling mat; last season he captained the team, posted a record of 16–1, and won the New England 170-pound weight class. Most notable about the title match was that Zach defeated an opponent who had beaten him earlier in the season. Zach won convincingly, outscoring the opponent 15-1. The article went on to describe Zach’s leadership beyond athletics, as a volunteer in the community who is often seen sacrificing his own time for the good of others. His selfless service has been noticed and appreciated by everyone in the Loomis community. Still driven to do more, Zach has taken an interest in the arts, specifically ceramics, and his work was selected to be displayed at the National K12 Ceramics Exhibition Foundation.

Sam Floyd is enjoying his year at Gould Academy, where he’s happy to cross paths with fellow Cougars Hunter Whiting ’12 and Chris Jones ’12.

Sam Floyd ’11, Hunter Whiting ’12, and Chris Jones ’12 team up at Gould. Love seeing those ties, guys!

Ace Cowans recently stopped by campus to cheer on the Cougars. He is currently doing well at the Groton School.

Ace Cowans ’12.

Bobby Dray was drafted into the Canadian Hockey League by the Blainville-Boisbriand Armada. Bobby describes this as a milestone in his career. His main focus is on playing DI U.S. college hockey, but this is a step in the right direction and will help him achieve that goal. Bobby is grateful to all those who have helped him along the way and sends along his thanks for the support of many from Cardigan.

Jamal Lucas stopped by campus in late August while back in the area to view Dartmouth College. He was looking forward to his upcoming basketball season at Kent School, where he is attracting serious interest from a number of college programs. Way to go, Jamal!

Assistant Director of Alumni Programs Jeremiah Shipman ’00 with Jamal Lucas ’12 and Director of Annual Giving Marshall Wallach.

Marcus Mitchell made a visit to campus over the summer and reunited with former classmates and faculty. He is doing well at Vermont

Academy and looking forward to the hockey season, where he will take the net as a member of the varsity squad.

Assistant Director of Alumni Programs Jeremiah Shipman ’00 with Marcus Mitchell ’12.

Auden Menke, Hayden Berry, and Ryder Arsenault ’10, former day student/carpool mates at Cardigan, met up with Head of School Dave McCusker, Jr. ’80, Associate Director of Admissions John Bayreuther, Director of Development David Perfield, and honorary alumnus Dudley Clark last winter at a New Hampton vs. Cardigan hockey game. Here the group is pictured with their shared

“CRDGNBZ” license plate. Auden Menke ’12, Hayden Berry ’12, and Ryder Arsenault ’10, with Dave ’80 and Steff McCusker.

August von Ungern-Sternberg has committed to play hockey for Brown for the 2016-2017 season. August was selected by the Lincoln Stars (USHL) in the league’s Phase 1 Futures Draft, and he impressed everyone at the first summer tryout camp as one of the most talented players on the ice, despite being younger than most selected in the draft.

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Alumni / 101

Hayden Holland writes that he is enjoying high school at Marin Catholic in Kentfield, Calif. He credits the study skills and work ethic that he gained at Cardigan with preparing him for Marin. In addition, Mr. Barker and time in the weight room at Cardigan prepared him for Marin’s top-notch strength and conditioning program, in which he has excelled.

Ben Johnston—Cardigan baseball coach Austen Hannis was delighted to catch up with Ben at a Cardigan vs. Avon Old Farms baseball game last spring.

Austen Hannis andBen Johnston ’12.

Sean McCarthy—Cardigan Dir-ector of Athletics Ryan Frost was happy to catch up with Sean while at Salisbury School for a lacrosse match last April. Zack Langlois ’11, also at Salisbury, stopped to say hello as well.

Zack Langlois ’11 and Sean McCarthy ’12.

George Hewitt is playing baseball at Salisbury School, but he took time out from his busy schedule to visit with some of his former schoolmates when Cardigan came to town.

Henry Day ’13, George Hewitt

’12, Ward Betts ’13, and Paul Capozzi ’13.

2013Henry Day and his brother, Charlie ’12, took a break from their week at Holderness to visit The Point and cheer for the Cougars on Eaglebrook Day in early October.

Henry ’13 and Charlie Day ’12 flank former faculty member and current Groton School Athletic Director Bob Low.

Ward Betts has had a considerable impact on the Groton soccer program. He was recognized as Player of the Week after a game tying goal and game-winning assist against Brooks earlier in the fall. His coaches have taken note not just of his excellent play, but also of his positive attitude and the high standards to which he holds himself in both practice and games.

Philip Parry is doing well at Governor’s and made their varsity cross-country squad this fall. He is excelling in the classroom as well, having one of his English papers printed in the school newspaper for the Parents’ Weekend edition.

Heon “Sam” Koh reports that he is doing well at Northfield Mount Hermon, and he is enjoying a spot on the JV soccer team.

Charles “Z” Ikeda, along with former Cardigan schoolmate Nick Sutton ’12, recently caught up with the McCuskers and Bayreuthers, who were watching a field hockey game at KUA. Z had also been back on the Cardigan campus during the summer, playing in the inaugural Alumni Lacrosse Game.

Former FacultyBrad Babcock (1963-65) and his wife, Mary, stopped by campus while vacationing in New England. Cardigan was the place of Brad’s first teaching job in 1963, having just finished his studies at Madison College. After his time at Cardigan, he moved on to Fountain Valley School in Colorado. Coaching eventually brought him back to Madison (now James Madison University), where he coached baseball and served as director of athletics for more than 30 years. Brad has fond memories of his short time at Cardigan, particularly of time spent on the small hill behind Clark-Morgan learning to ski, a sport that he enjoyed during his time in Colorado. While back on The Point, Brad was delighted to meet the legendary “Coach” Marrion, who had first come to Cardigan shortly after Brad’s departure.

Brad Babcock, Jim “Coach” Marrion P’88,GP’03,’05,’14 and Richard Clancy ’67.

Cameron Benson is at Tabor Academy, where he played hockey last winter and at one point squared off against his brother, Brandon ’13, during a game back in January 2013.

Cam ’12 and Brandon

Benson ’13.

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In Memoriam

Cardigan Community

Dorothy F. Kendall, age 80, of Enfield, N.H., died May 20, 2013, at Lebanon Center Genesis in Lebanon, N.H. “Dot” was born in Canaan, N.H., where she grew up and attended school before going on to Keene Teachers College. She later worked for H.W. Carter and Sons as a stitcher, and had most recently worked in the Housekeeping Department at Cardigan. She enjoyed camping, crafts, and, most of all, spending time with her family—especially her grandchildren. She was predeceased by two children, a brother, and two sisters. She is survived by, among others, a sister, a son, four stepchildren, seven grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren.

Eleanor L. Weller, age 74, died at her home in Grafton, N.H., on March 20, 2013. Eleanor was a longtime member of Cardigan’s Housekeeping Department. She was born in Milford, Mass., a daughter of Edward and Alma Cram, and she married David Weller in 1959; the two then made their home in Dedham, Mass., and started a family. Eleanor and her family moved from Bellingham, Mass., to Grafton, N.H., in 1978, at which point she began working at Cardigan in the Housekeeping Department, retiring as the head of that department in 2006. Bird watching and audio books were just a few of Eleanor’s hobbies, but the main focus of her life was family and friends. She was predeceased by her husband in January of this year. She is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, two sons and a daughter-in-law, five grandchildren, four great-grandchildren, a brother, a sister, and an aunt.

James Crowell, age 88, was born in Jamaica Plain, Mass. on September 1, 1925. He died on Saturday, Jan. 11, 2014. James went to the Putney School in Vermont and received a physics degree at Yale University in the ROTC program. After his service in the Navy, he was instrumental in the start-up of an electrical company that made heaters for a in-flight meal service.Following 17 years teaching science at Cardigan Mountain School in Canaan, N.H. he retired to Canaan Street where he enjoyed playing tennis, renovating a house built in the 1840’s, rowing, ice boating on Canaan Street Lake, and being a good neighbor. He navigated a sailboat from the icebergs of Labrador to the beaches of Venezuela, skied the 10th mountain hut system in Colorado, canoed the boundary waters of Minnesota, and summited the 14,505 foot Mount Whitney in California. Known as a true gentleman to all who knew him, he will be deeply missed by his wife Debby, his daughter Debbie, and his son Tom.

among alumni

Allan Ellis ’54, of Tiverton, R.I., died February 6, 2013, in Fall River, Mass. He was the husband of Nancy A. (Holt) Ellis and lived all of his life in Tiverton. For many years he owned and operated the former City Brass Foundry of Fall River and later of Tiverton. He was a member of the First Baptist Church, Fall River, and a member of the St. John’s Lodge No. 1, A.F. & A.M., Portsmouth, R.I. He will also be remembered for his love of boating, sailing, and camping. He is survived by his wife, as well as two sons, a daughter, a sister, and six grandchildren.

William F. Cousens ’58, of South Portland, Maine, passed away on January 4, 2013. Hugh Armor Ward ’58, age 69, passed away on August 27, 2012. Born in Oakland, California, he resided in Glencoe and Northfield, Ill., for most of his life. In addition to Cardigan, Hugh was educated at Wayland Academy and Parsons College. He retired after 40 years with the Daniel Woodhead Company and in his free time enjoyed stamp collecting, reading and writing science fiction, all kinds of puzzles, bear jokes, Chicago Cubs, golf, bowling, curling, and extensive world travel. The joy of his life was his family. He was predeceased by his brother and is survived by his sister, sister-in-law, cherished nieces and nephew, and 17 great nieces and nephews.

Hudson “Eliot” Bridge ’63, age 66, died November 28, 2012 at the Marquis of Forest Grove Care and Rehabilitation Home in Forest Grove, Oregon. Eliot was married to Bonnie and had been a resident of the Forest Grove community. Two of his cousins, Richard Weeks ’59 and Peter Weeks ’62, also attended Cardigan; Peter alerted the School to Eliot’s passing.

Frederic “Ricky” Paine Worthen, Jr. ’63, age 66, of Newnan, Ga., died January 3, 2013. He was born in Hartford, Conn. The occupation of Ricky’s father, Fred, made for a peripatetic lifestyle for the family during their South American years in Santiago, Chile, and Buenos Aries, Argentina. In the mid-1950s, the family moved to Andover, Mass., when his father purchased Farnsworth Industries. This marked the beginning of Worthen Industries, which now includes 14 business units. Ricky attended The Pike School in Andover, Mass., until seventh

Please note that the obituaries below are all paraphrased passages or sometimes shortened summaries of notifications found in various newspapers or that we received from family members of the deceased.

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In Memoriam / 103

grade, then transferred to and graduated from Cardigan. Following his years here, he enrolled at Kimball Union Academy, where he played varsity football and was a member of the swim and lacrosse teams. The University of South Carolina awarded Ricky a swimming scholarship as well as an offer to play football under Paul Dietzel. Around this time, he met and later married a former Pike classmate, Nancy Schofield McArdle. Since Ricky was in the Naval Reserves, he and Nancy moved to Virginia Beach where he completed his service in 1970 and enrolled at the University of Hartford. They moved back to Andover in 1972, and Ricky began working for Worthen Industries, shortly after which his son and daughter were born. The family later relocated to Georgia to manage a new Worthen Industries plant. After Ricky’s retirement, his greatest joy came in enjoying his grandchildren. Ricky is predeceased by his parents and a brother. He is survived by his wife, his son, his daughter, his son-in-law, and two grandchildren, as well as his housekeeper (and very good friend of 30 years), his beloved dog, two brothers and a sister and their spouses, another sister-in-law, and a number of nieces and nephews.

David Morgan Firestone Jr. ’74, age 55, of Houston, Tex., passed away on September 8, 2013, after a brief illness. Prior to Cardigan, David had attended St. John’s School in Houston, and following Cardigan, he went on to Deerfield Academy in Deerfield, Mass., and The University of Texas at Austin. David will be remembered by all those who knew him for his gentle nature, remarkable athletic gifts, and boundless energy and passions in his youth. He loved spending summers with his family at the Iron City Fishing Club in Ontario, Canada. David was predeceased by his wife, Megan Acree Firestone, and his father, David Morgan Firestone. He is survived by his mother, Nancy Runnells,

and his stepfather, Clive Runnells, as well as four brothers, three sisters, and six of those siblings’ spouses. In addition, he leaves behind numerous nieces and nephews.

Douglas J. Pennington ’75, age 54, of Canandaigua, N.Y., died unexpectedly on July 25, 2013. He was predeceased by his parents and brother Thomas. He is survived by his wife, Sarah Jane (Hodgson) Pennington, stepdaughter Hannah E. Swartz, brother Gregory, mother-in-law, niece and nephew, brother-in-law, and his beloved dog (Bogart “The Yee”).

A. Dean Antonucci ’77, age 50, of North Reading, Mass., died Monday, November 11, 2012, at Lawrence General Hospital. Born and raised in Melrose, Mass., Dean graduated from Cardigan and then went on to Melrose High School, graduating in 1980 and then attending Norwich University. Most recently, Dean was the founder and owner of New England Beverage for 22 years, and he was the former owner of Pro Lanes Bowling, both in North Reading. Dean is survived by his wife, Marcy (Vieno); a daughter, Nicole; four sons: Joseph, Corin, Michael, and AJ; his mother; a sister; and many cousins, nieces, nephews, and other family.

Michael D. McCarron ’05, age 23, of Hillsborough, N.H., died on May 11, 2013. He was the beloved son of the late Michelle McCarron and grandson of the late Charles “Big Guy” McCarron and the late Mary McCarron.Prior to Cardigan, Michael had attended grade school in Hillsboro-Deering, and he also attended Bishop Brady and St. John’s, and later he graduated from Trinity-Pawling High School in Pawling, N.Y. He was recently a student at Niagara University, having just completed his

first semester. At the age of five, Michael was introduced to, and fell in love with, sports—especially baseball and hockey. His name appeared in the Babe Ruth Hall of Fame book several time, and he traveled to Australia and New Zealand as one of the stars of his amateur baseball team. Beginning youth hockey as a five-year-old in Henniker, N.H., Michael continued to play until the ninth grade. Michael was working toward a degree in sports psychology so that he could help others achieve their dreams. He was a true friend to all he knew; whether you were family, a classmate, or a teammate, Michael was on your side. Michael’s friendship was always evidenced by his smile and easygoing spirit. He leaves behind the Caron family of Andover, Mass., who gave him love and support when he needed it most, and is survived by his godmother and aunt, Mary McCarron; his Aunt Linda McCarron; his Uncle Ed and Aunt Kathy McCarron; his Uncle Charles and Aunt Donna; as well as his aunts Marion and Nadine, and Marcus and Scott. He will be missed by many cousins in Hillsborough and surrounding towns, including Keene, where his cousin Allie (Dillon)—with whom he grew up and whom he thought of as a sister—resides.

For obituary submissions to the next issue of the Chronicle, please contact:

Richard Clancy ’67 Director of Alumni Programs 62 Alumni Drive Canaan, NH 03741 [email protected]

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104 / Cardigan Chronicle

In Memoriam

n a brisk February morning, shortly after Mr. McCusker learned of Savage Frieze Jr.’s passing, he took a few minutes at the end of breakfast to inform the community about his death—and,

of course, to explain who Savage Frieze was and what he meant to our school. Mr. McCusker wished to provide us with as much as he knew about this inspirational man—an important figure in the life of Cardigan.

Savage Frieze, Jr. P’70Savage Crowell Frieze, Jr., P’70, age 89, of Canaan, Conn., and Norfolk, Conn., passed away on February 18, 2013, at Geer Retirement Community. “Sav” grew up in Colebrook, Conn., attended the Malcolm Gordon School in Garrison, N.Y., The Salisbury School in Salisbury, Conn., and Fairleigh Dickinson University in Teaneck, N.J. His wife, Patricia Lowe Frieze, predeceased him in 2004.

Mr. Frieze worked as a mechanic, with Igor Sikorsky, on the first helicopter—in Hartford, Conn. He served as a mechanic in the U.S. Army Air Corps in the Mediterranean and Russian theaters during World War II. When he

returned from the War, he worked for Lowe Paper Company from 1946 until 1984. He loved to tell people he started as a sweeper in the paper mill and retired as chairman of the board. Sav served as a councilman, president of the City Council, and council supervisor to the Fire Department for the City of Englewood, N.J. He was a volunteer for the Red Cross and Community Chest Organizations, as well as a volunteer fireman for two towns.

From 1970, he was a member of the Board of Trustees (and subsequently chairman of the board) for Cardigan, where his son attended and where the

headmaster’s house has been named in Sav’s honor. He actively supported the School until his passing. Sav is survived by his three children: Wendy Frieze, Charlotte Frieze Jones, and the Reverend Savage C. Frieze III ’70; three grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.

Mr. Savage Frieze, Jr., and his family resided in New Jersey when “Sav” first sent his son (Savage Frieze III) to Cardigan as a student. (He also had a nephew who attended the School.) It didn’t take long for Sav to become involved with the School in meaningful ways as a parent. Even after his son graduated in the early 1970s, he wished to give back to Cardigan in whatever way he could and soon became a trustee—and ultimately chaired the Board of Trustees for a significant period. Later he became chairman of the Corporation and, as such, continued to serve the School well into the 1990s.

Mr. McCusker recalled how “Mr. Frieze” had made him feel when Mr. McCusker was a student at Cardigan in the late 70s. “Any time he was on campus and spoke to us [students], I felt this great sense of security—no doubt due to the generous leadership he was clearly providing, but also because of his obvious kindness.” When Mr. McCusker returned to teach at Cardigan just after graduating from college, Sav’s unfailing kindness continued to reveal itself: “He was patient with me, as a brand-new faculty member—and with all others as well.”

Reverend Harry Mahoney, the School’s chaplain for many of those years, remembers Sav fondly for these reasons as well. In the email he sent to some Cardigan folks to inform us of Sav’s passing, he wrote: “Whether he was greeting you somewhere on the Cardigan campus, or handing out diplomas in the chapel, he was always ready with a smile and warm handshake to make you feel welcome, or proud of your accomplishments.”

It’s no coincidence that the headmaster’s home is named “Frieze House”; the residence was given this name in recognition of Sav’s incredible service to the School—for so many years. He was a man who believed in our mission, and he epitomized what it meant to support an organization and the people therein; he was a loyal “servant leader” for Cardigan Mountain School.

In honor of this man of great kindness and tremendous support and service, Mr. McCusker asked that we share a moment of silence and then encouraged the community to go about our day while keeping in mind the shining example of Mr. Savage Frieze, Jr.

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the Annual Fund for Cardigan

Make your gift online at www.cardigan.org/mygift or contact the director of annual giving at 603.523.3516

What do you see in their future?

Page 108: Chronicle Fall-Winter 13-14

Cardigan Mountain School 62 Alumni Drive Canaan, New Hampshire 03741

Read the Chronicle ONLINE at cardigan.org/chronicle

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