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FALL 2013 MAGAZINE

Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

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Waynflete School fall 2013 magazine, including Annual Report.

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Page 1: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

FALL 2013

MAGAZINE

Page 2: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

Waynflete School 360 Spring Street Portland, ME 04102

2013–2014 BOARD OF TRUSTEESWilliam A. Torrey, PresidentAnne O. Jackson, Vice PresidentConan Deady, SecretaryVincent Veroneau, TreasurerWilliam Harwood, Member-At-LargeKrista AronsonJane BatzellCarolyn BraunTom Cronin ’78Greg HastingsHilary Holm ’82 Tasha IrvingKate Jeton Dale LewisGregg LiptonSue McMullanDenney MortonErica Schair-Cardona ’94 Susan SpagnolaAlexander H. SpauldingGeoffrey Wagg (Head of School)

TRUSTEES EMERITICharlton H. AmesThomas M. ArmstrongNancy M. Beebe ’63Roger BerleElizabeth P. CarrollMarylee DodgeMaria Tymoski GlaserSherry HuberPeter McPheeters Deborah ReedIneke SchairAlice SpencerMary Lou Sprague ’46Ann Staples Waldron

MAGAZINE

1 From the Head of School

2 Geoffrey Wagg Installed as Waynflete’s Head of School

3 Building Community

4 Talking About It All With a New Generation of Waynflete Women

6 Jim Millard Travels to Cambodia

7 Events

8 Collaborating With Technology

10 Spheres of Influence

12 Sustainable Ocean Studies

14 A Commitment to Crew

15 Alumni Profiles

16 Drake Award

17 Annual Giving Report

32 Ruth Cook Hyde 1910 Circle

CONTE NTS

This publication is printed on paper recycled without the use of chlorine.

Designed by Anne Anderson

Thank you to Winky Lewis for contributing photographs for the cover, back cover, this page, and many more throughout this issue.

Cover: Spheres of Influence exhibit This Page: Lower School Art Studio

FALL 2013

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1

Annual Giving 2013

Geoff Wagg

W!"# I $%&%'"( W)*#+,"'" %# '!" F),, -+ 2012, I spent almost an

hour observing the vertical classrooms of the Lower School.

I was fascinated by the structure of the classrooms, the way the children

were organized into home stations, and the two-year groupings. I had

certainly heard of this method of organizing a Lower School, but I had

never experienced it firsthand. I left my first visit with this sense that I was

watching something incredibly special, but I could not quite put my finger

on what it was.

Then it occurred to me; I was witnessing an example of true collaboration.

The Waynflete Lower School teachers work in the most collaborative

teaching environment I have ever seen. There are four teachers, each with their own home station,

always within ear or eyeshot of each other. They are always aware of what their colleagues are doing,

always learning new things, and always on display. Teaching has often been described as a lonely

profession because it often happens behind the closed door of a classroom. In the Lower School, there

are no doors separating one space from another, no barriers to collaboration, and a teaching culture

that needs significant planning time to deliver the quality program that is the Lower School.

As I have gotten to know Waynflete, I have witnessed this culture of collaboration in all divisions of

the school. The academic departments and advising teams meet regularly to discuss programs. Every

teacher belongs to a Critical Inquiry Team or Technology Learning Cohort. At Waynflete, there is a

strong ethic of working together to grow and develop both as individuals and as an institution. This

collaborative nature is part of the school’s DNA and our students are the beneficiaries.

I believe that one of the reasons the advising program

at Waynflete is so powerful is because advisors

see their mentoring of students as a collaborative

process. Advisors and students work together to

navigate the ups and downs of adolescence and going

to school in an academically demanding place. The

students know that their advisor is their advocate

and the bond that develops is often a defining part of

a child’s Waynflete experience.

At the heart of a truly collaborative experience is a culture of trust. I have experienced a number of

wonderful learning communities during my career, but there is something unusually strong about the

culture of trust at Waynflete. You see it in colleague-to-colleague interactions, in the mutual respect

shared between students and faculty, and in the trust placed in the School by parents. Trust is the glue

that allows the rest of Waynflete’s collaborative nature to thrive.

As you read this issue of Waynflete Magazine, you will learn about the wonderful opportunities that exist

as a result of the trusting and collaborative nature of the School.

Sincerely,

FROM THE HEAD OF SCHOOL

At Waynflete, there is a strong ethic of working together to grow and develop

both as individuals and as an institution. This collaborative nature is part of the school’s DNA and our students

are the beneficiaries.

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 20132

Geoffrey Wagg was installed as Waynflete’s twelfth Head of School on Sunday, September 22, in the Abromson Center at the University of Southern Maine in Portland.

More than 250 people attended the ceremony, which featured

music by the Waynflete Upper School Jazz Combo and the

Waynflete Chamber Ensemble. Speakers included Board of

Trustees President William A. Torrey, Dean of Faculty Nancy Tabb,

Student Government Co-President Kaya Williams ’14 and

Geoffrey Wagg.

Just before he was installed as Head of School, Geoff was

presented with a framed copy of the charter of Waynflete

School, dated March 8, 1935.

In his address to the audience, Geoff said he is thrilled to be

leading Waynflete forward and that “There is a level of trust,

congeniality and connection at Waynflete that surpasses

anything I have experienced elsewhere. There is an incredible

sense of ownership on the part of the entire community: faculty,

staff, students, parents and alumni.”

Bill Torrey described the Board’s goals in finding a new Head of

School and the enormous task Geoff has in guiding the School

into the future. “Leading an educational institution these days

requires the wisdom of Solomon, the patience of Job, and the

vision and fortitude of Abraham,” Bill said. “We will ask all of

these things of Geoff and we will call upon him to recognize and

polish the things we are very good at doing and to identify and

improve the areas in which we can do better.”

Geoffrey Wagg Installed as Waynflete’s Head of School

Welcome Geoff!

Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 20132

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3

Annual Giving 2013

Head of School Geoff Wagg has been busy this year getting to know Waynflete and the community. He and his wife, Alice, have hosted numerous parent potluck gatherings at their home, he went white water rafting with the senior class for Outdoor Experience, and he is a constant presence greeting students arriving to school each day.

Geoff has also been busy planning surprises for students as a way to engage them and build community.

In September, Geoff encouraged Upper School students to introduce themselves to him during a cookout in Waynhenge. Unbeknownst to the students, if they took Geoff up on his offer they received a ticket for a cupcake from a dessert truck he arranged to come to campus or a GoBerry frozen yogurt.

In recognition of the first-ever all-Middle School collaboration on the Gallery exhibit, Spheres of Influence, Geoff surprised the students by arranging a visit by a donut truck to hand out freshly made warm donuts. Waynflete parents John Frumer and Elizabeth Barrett brought their authentic cider press and made fresh apple cider.

BUILDING COMMUNITY

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 2013444

Talking About It All With a New Generation of Waynflete Women by Lydia Maier ’90 Upper School Dean of Students

W %'! %'& .--'& )& ) &/!--, +-. 0%.,& +-1#("(

2* 3-4"#, )#( )# ),14#% 2)&" '!)' %& -$". 60

5"./"#' +"4),", W)*#+,"'" /)# ,"0%'%4)'",* /,)%4

) ,"#0'!* !%&'-.* -+ /1,'%$)'%#0 &'.-#0 3-4"#

,")(".&. In recent Upper School assemblies, we heard

from an alumna who manages Google’s special logos,

one whose research restores stolen art to its rightful

owners and one who was awarded the Pulitzer Prize

in journalism for exposing unsafe labor conditions in

Asia. By my last count, girls are leaders in over half of the student activities

at Waynflete, and a female student council president spoke on behalf of the

students at the new Head of School’s installation. Yet two springs ago, when

a group of junior class girls began talking about how gender affects their

classroom discussions, I was taken aback by my own surprise at how rarely the

topic of girls’ particular experiences in Upper School pokes through the surface.

As a student at Waynflete in the late 80s, I was not aware that gender shaped my

experience, and I’m quite sure I never uttered the word “feminism” in those years.

I could wear anything I liked and read anything I liked, but I certainly don’t recall

noticing that the canon was written by white men. If I was disappointed that a revered

senior female role model who was easily favored to win the election for student

council president demurred her candidacy so that her boyfriend would win, I wasn’t

disturbed enough to say so. I do remember being encouraged and supported by teachers

who took a genuine interest in me (many of whom I work with now), so when my younger sister

recounted the story of a male teacher telling her she was “too pretty to stress about science,”

I considered it a full-on aberration. (For the record, my sister is nearing completion of an MD, PhD

in molecular biology.) While I remember discussing such worldly issues as the fall of the Berlin Wall,

I don’t recall personal conversations with teachers or peers based on my awareness of gender,

religion, economic status or any other differences.

I graduated from Waynflete with a strong sense of presumed equality and walked straight onto the

campus of Brown University, which was embroiled in national media attention about inadequate

sexual harassment policies on campus, against the backdrop of the Anita Hill/Clarence Thomas

controversy. I had to speed-learn both conversational and survival skills in this new realm of “isms.”

I dove headfirst into literature, sociology and law classes about gender issues in an effort to right any

wrongs the previous generation of women hadn’t yet fixed. I distinctly remember puzzling late one

night in the library over whether Arlie Hochschild’s book, The Second Shift, which was about balancing

careers and family life, would prove to be relevant to me. Alongside my female friends in our Gen

X cohort, I was excited about the message that we could now succeed in any field, but supportive

conversations with other women about just how we might help one another accomplish this were

distinctly absent.

In the summer of 2012 I experienced another wake up of sorts reading Anne-Marie Slaughter’s

article, “Why Women Still Can’t Have it All.” Women are fooling themselves, the author claims, if they

expect that balancing it all and staying sane are even possible. She points out that despite fewer glass

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5

Annual Giving 2013

ceilings, the American corporate workplace has yet to adopt critical, flexible, family-friendly

policies that would honor the complexity of demands facing women who juggle multiple

roles. This time, unlike my response twenty years earlier to Hochschild’s work, I resonated

deeply with the author’s experience of trending toward superhuman in an effort to do

it all at any cost. I sensed the urgency of her call to reexamine current realities lest an

untenable set of expectations leaves us and our daughters and students perpetually

striving for an elusive solution to the stress of “doing it all.” This matter-of-fact but

nonetheless lightning-rod article provoked in me (and apparently a spectacular

number of others) a burgeoning need–to which our then junior class girls also

gave expression–to talk about it all.

The following fall, as these students and I began to explore the scope of

the issues impacting them, we decided to host a screening of the film, Miss

Representation, which examines the pervasive media objectification of all

kinds of women — especially those in powerful roles. Impressed by the

girls’ autobiographical facilitation of the panel afterward, I realized how

each new generation must discover first-hand how to make sense of the

barriers that hold them back from full and equal participation. I could

see much to be gained by continuing these bold conversations within and

across generations of women, starting right here at Waynflete. True progress

requires dialogue, and real dialogue invites controversy, as it amounts to

finding a way to wrestle with the issues, not shy away from them.

Waynflete Girls Leadership Training (GLTR) formed as a powerful positive

reaction to Miss Representation by a group of students committed to keeping the

ensuing provocative conversations alive. Now, in the fall of 2013, with the core

founding members off in college, the group has become a safe place to identify

and discuss obstacles women and girls face as they strive for success almost

anywhere. Today Waynflete no longer has daily “uniform checks” as it did in the 60s

for its female students, but instead has rich conversations about the messages we want

to convey with our choice of dress to “check” on what is or isn’t empowering. The group

strives to be a place where girls can pursue their best selves while supporting others to do

the same through role modeling and mentoring. This fall, we hosted the groundbreaking

documentary Girl Rising which chronicles nine stories both harrowing and breathtaking about

the resilience, determination and spirit of girls seeking their freedom through education. The first

of over 2,000 worldwide screenings, the Waynflete event and accompanying discussion afterward

left no one’s worldview untouched. There were tears and applause as girls in GLTR spoke out about

the personal impact of the film and their motivation to fight for the rights of girls and to join a

growing global movement for change.

I won’t know for a few years what kind of a role model I’ve managed to be for my eight-year-old

daughter, but the GLTR group discussions have spurred me to examine my own leadership capacity

anew both for her sake as well as mine. Within a few months after establishing the group, I began a

Leadership Fellowship through the National Association of Independent Schools, a rich program that

has offered me the support of a diverse circle of professional women walking similar paths. The more

practice all of us have speaking about and prioritizing what we need to flourish as unique individuals,

the sooner we can live beyond persistent gender inequalities. As far-reaching as the issues still are,

I believe that a broad-based contemporary women’s movement–one that will benefit the collective

good–is rooted in individual empowerment, with women of every generation reflecting on their

own experiences and staying in conversation with each other about it all.

Lydia Maier, ’90, LCSW, MBA, is in her eleventh year as Upper School Dean of Students. Her work was recently

recognized by the Spagnola family, who created the Lydia Maier Endowment to express their gratitude for her

leadership in support of their family. She is currently leading an effort to create a summer workshop entitled

“Teachings in Mindful Education: Professional Development in Wellness and Renewal for Maine Educators,”

which is a collaboration between Bowdoin College, the Chewonki Foundation, and Waynflete School.

To read more about the Lydia Maier Endowment, see page 31.

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 20136

English faculty Jim Millard had been searching for just the right service learning opportunity for a number of years, so when the chance to travel to Cambodia last summer came up, he jumped at it. Months later, Jim is able to look back on his experience and says he was transformed. “It was magic,” he said.

Jim spent nine days and eight nights in the island village of Koh

Preah through the group Students Shoulder to Shoulder. He

served as the course instructor for a group of about ten students

from all over the world constructing concrete posts to support a

barbed wire fence to go around the local elementary school. “They

need the fence to keep water buffalos and local cows from coming

in and spoiling the fields,” Jim explained. “Now they have posts

that will last 50 to 60 years.”

The trips through Students Shoulder to Shoulder are developed

in cooperation with non-governmental organizations whose

particular missions have taken them to areas where they believe

they can effect sustainable change. All SStS projects are regionally

inspired, locally supported and aligned with basic principles of

sustainability, according to the group’s website. The program’s

curriculum core is shaped by the “Five Lenses of SStS”—economics,

culture, politics, ethics and geography.

While in Koh Preah, Jim lived with a local family of six people as

part of the homestay experience which is integral to the program.

The villagers spoke very little English and Jim’s group spoke very

little Khmer, but they managed to communicate with each other.

“Each day we got better and better at communicating, or we

communicated as people do with pointing and smiling,” he said.

“But you quickly realize there is a different kind of vitality there,

a different kind of forward-thinking. They are beautiful people.”

Jim and his group worked building the posts in the hot, humid

weather during the day, then would gather each evening to debrief

and put their experiences in an academic perspective using the

Five Lenses of SStS. “Some evenings it would be a quick debrief,

other evenings we would continue the discussion for an hour or

more to work with the issues, concepts and realities and mesh

them all together,” said Jim.

For Jim, the biggest lesson of his Cambodia experience was

realizing the reality of interdependence. “That is so huge, so

humbling,” he said. “There is no such thing as a self-made man.

To see the graciousness and hospitality of the Cambodian people

who take you in and feed you and laugh with you is humbling.”

Jim admits he’s hooked on this kind of service-learning trip.

“They needed a leader on this Cambodia trip so I went, but

honestly I would have gone anywhere,” he said. “I would love

to do this again and again. I want more of our students to have

the experience of the laborious nature of actually being in a

community and actually contributing to something and living

the lifestyle of the people there—the integration of human

interaction and real-world classroom.”

Waynflete English Faculty Jim Millard Travels to Cambodia

Top: Waynflete English faculty Jim Millard offers some of the dozens of prepared dishes to the monks in the temple. Each Sunday the local community brings a bounty of dishes for their spiritual leaders at the weekly worship service. Each dish is offered in a prescribed ceremony.

Bottom: Jim Millard (bottom left) with the Students Shoulder to Shoulder group.

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1

Donor recognition event at the Black Point Inn, September 19, 2012 1 (l–r) Trustee Erica Schair-Cardona ’94, Sara Crisp, Ivan Cardona, Trustee Jane Batzell, Trustee Gregg Lipton and Greg Boulos

2 (l–r) Kathleen Janick, Trustee Susan Spagnola, Herb Janick

Hands to Art, November 16, 2012 3 Bidders enjoy art and conversation at last year’s successful art auction.

4 (l-r) Kate Burnham, Trustee Sandy Spaulding and Jill Spaulding

Spring Fling, May 18, 2013 5 Charlie DiNapoli ’23 plays games at the carnival

6 Aidan Olney ’15 rides the mechanical bull

Lobster Bake, Reunion Weekend, May 18, 2013 7 Members of the Class of 1993 with Math faculty Drew Dubuque, (l-r) Molly Miller Sparling, Heather Kimball-Titus, Phoebe Hazard-Backler, Drew, Jessica Tighe

8 Sarah Grantham ’88

7

5

3 4

1

6

8

2

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 20138

The students in Grades 4-5 had an assignment for the fall harvest of Waynflete’s community garden this year—use an iPad to take photographs or videos of themselves with their K-1 buddies as they harvested vegetables.

Inspired by the assignment, one older student asked if they could

do more; he suggested documenting every time they meet with

their buddies to create an entire collection of buddy photos and

videos for the year.

“The thought never crossed my mind,” said the student’s teacher,

Tim Hebda, “but I thought it was fantastic and I told him, ‘Go do it!’”

Teachers learning from students is just one part of the collaboration

that exists among the Lower School students and faculty as they

integrate technology into the curriculum. “This is a collaborative

effort because the iPad is such a personal device and there are so

many ways to be creative,” said Tim. “There is no way for the adults

to know it all, and it’s natural for kids to push buttons and figure

out different ways to use things.”

The Lower School Technology Learning Cohort (TLC) has

spearheaded faculty exploration and experimentation as teaching

teams thoughtfully integrate technology within the curriculum.

When the Lower School TLC was formed two years ago, Apple iPads

were just beginning to make their way into the daily lives of many.

Lower School teachers saw tremendous possibility to promote

creativity, collaboration, and increased opportunities for students to

express understanding from Early Childhood through fifth grade.

”Since they are so easy for young children to use, they made an

impact in the classroom that we didn’t realize would happen,” said

Technology Director Page Lennig. “The iPads blended in with Early

Childhood’s Reggio Emilia storytelling method; kids were teaching

other kids in new and exciting ways.” Lower School faculty began

focusing more of their professional development opportunities

on becoming familiar with these emerging technologies, and

considering how they can enhance the student experience.

This year 4-5 introduced a one-to-one iPad program where each

student is assigned an iPad to use as an additional classroom tool.

“The process of experimenting and the conversations among

teachers have resulted in learning new and different teaching

tools,” said Lower School Director Ben Thrash. “As faculty have

increased their understanding and education, more possibilities

have emerged. We see each new technology as a potential tool for

meeting the needs of our students. I have tremendous respect

for the Lower School faculty and trust them to determine if and

when technology can support teaching objectives and the learning

plan. We constantly ask whether a given technology improves or

detracts from the learning experience. “

“We’re not jumping on the bandwagon,” said Tim. “We’re thinking

about how the tool can help students access information and share

their learning. We’re not replacing strategies and tools that have

worked in the past; we’re adding another tool to our toolbox.”

The Lower School faculty collaborates regularly to explore

new uses of the iPad, and to share what they have learned at

conferences and workshops. “The conversation and collaboration

are important,” said 4-5 faculty member Kai Bicknell. “We do a lot

of purposeful experimentation because you have to play with the

iPad to figure it out.”

Through it all, Waynflete’s mission continues to guide program

development, believes Ben Thrash. “Learning in the Lower

School begins with strong relationships and hands-on, direct

experience, and this premise hasn’t changed. We’re finding that

when used effectively, technology can create new tasks previously

inconceivable, and expand learning beyond the classroom,” he

says. “It’s both exciting and at times overwhelming, but it certainly

doesn’t replace the importance of direct person-to-person contact

and experience.”

COLLABORATING WITH TECHNOLOGY

Left: 4-5 Teacher Tim Hebda with Emma Vanamee ’21

Right: Laney Friedland ’21

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 201310

“This is a way of saying that we are engaged in a collective endeavor. It’s something each of us contributed to, made and shaped in our own unique way.”

Divya Muralidhara

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Annual Giving 2013

11

Each year as the summer winds down and students return to campus, the Middle School begins the year with LEAP Week, a time spent bonding as a community and easing back into the rhythms of school life.

This year, the entire Middle School spent part of LEAP (Learn-Explore-

Appreciate-Play) Week collaborating on an art exhibit for a Gallery installation

called Spheres of Influence. In past years the first Gallery show was created

by the Eighth Grade class alone as part of its LEAP Week and Studio Art

curriculum. This year the project gained meaning with the inclusion of every

voice in the Middle School.

“The installation is about the power of language whether spoken, heard,

written or read. It is about the power of a single voice as well as the strength

of the collective voice,” says Gallery Director and 6–12 Visual Arts Chair Judy

Novey. “The exhibit is also about being empowered; by being allowed to use

one’s voice, to be heard, to be influential, to spread influence. It is also about

listening and being receptive to the wisdom of others. Another theme that

permeates the exhibit is the power that language has to foster appreciation; to

make us stop and reflect upon all that is beautiful in the world.”

“This is a way of saying that we are engaged in a collective endeavor,” says

Middle School Director Divya Muralidhara. “It’s something each of us

contributed to, made and shaped in our own unique way.”

Every student made three different-sized spheres formed with strips of text.

The Middle School Advisors and Art teachers also contributed their own

spheres, making a total of more than 400. Each advising team designed their

own curriculum in such a way that their students could either research or

write language that reflected values, environments and people that they

admired and cherished.

“Each one of the spheres represents the students’ voices and perspectives,”

says Divya. “Something they were inspired by, an observation about their

life, a reflection on a person, place or value that is important to them, or

simply language that spoke to them when they read it.” The spheres contain

quotations from world leaders, local Maine writers, athletes, philosophers and

thinkers, scientists, inventors, mathematicians, poets, artists and many others.

The installation also contains an audio track of each student reading an

excerpt of his or her writing, making the idea of “voice” come alive. By looking

through the binders for each grade visitors can read both the prompts and the

work of each student.

Spheres of Influence runs through December 11.

SPHERES OF INFLUENCE

Page 14: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

They were strangers, really, who had come together from

places scattered across the country. Places like Rhode

Island, Washington, New Jersey and Maine. They gathered

at the Waynflete School campus in the torrential rain,

probably questioning why they had signed up for this adventure in

the first place. They looked around at kids they didn’t know, having

no idea that in three weeks they would have formed a deep bond

with each other and learned more than they ever expected.

The group of 13 students was gathered to participate in Sustainable

Ocean Studies, a technology-rich, field-based, community-

oriented program open to students entering grades 10, 11 and 12.

Sponsored jointly by Waynflete and Chewonki Semester School,

SOS uses the ocean as its classroom, blending adventure and hands-

on experiences in a variety of ecosystems with important dialogue

about the ecology, economics, policies and people of the ocean.

According to SOS Director David Vaughan, learning from the

people of the ocean is one of the most important elements of the

program. “The students are going to the people who live this to

learn,” he says. “Their teachers are the people who are most deeply

involved in the issues they are studying, and their interaction with

these people is what shapes the experience.”

This year, the “teachers” included people who all live the Gulf of

Maine in some way, including (among many others) University

of Maine School of Marine Sciences faculty at the Darling Marine

Center in Walpole; Roger Berle of Cliff Island, who toured his

island with the students and discussed the challenge of sustaining

year-round island communities; College of the Atlantic faculty

member John Anderson, from whom the students learned about

nesting bird research on their trip to Great Duck Island: longtime

Monhegan lobsterman Doug Boynton; Darrell Pardy of Bristol

Seafood, who explored the challenges of creating a sustainable

seafood industry; representatives of Ocean Approved, who looked

at innovative approaches to seaweed aquaculture; and members

of the Conservation Law Foundation, who invited the students to

participate in a roundtable discussion on the health of the ocean.

Viewing the ocean through the eyes of such people gives students

insight and understanding that no textbook ever could. “By

hearing from these people, the students are not only able to

understand the complexity of the issues involved, but also the

importance of bringing all of the stakeholders to the table,” says

David. “They learn to understand a person’s perspective based

on the role of the stakeholder, and they begin to understand

how complicated it is to manage an ecosystem based on the

stakeholders’ often competing interests.”

A Partnership Between People, Programs and the Environment

Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 201312

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Annual Giving 2013

year-round island communities and the lobster and ground

fishing industries, onshore and offshore wind power, and shellfish

and seaweed aquaculture.

After three fast-paced weeks of traveling and exploring the Maine

coast, the students are then asked to take what they learned and

form final presentations. Working together, the students need to

look through their “lens” to answer a particular question sparked

during the program by creating a multimedia presentation that

they share with their faculty, families and friends at Chewonki on

the last night of the program.

“In the last couple of days of the program the students worked

incredibly hard to pull together just a piece of what they delved

into over the three weeks,” says David. “They learned the trials

and tribulations of field science and talking to people who live in

unique and unusual environments. If they had known on the first

day the experiences that lay ahead of them, particularly with each

other, they would have been pretty surprised.”

“We had about two days to put a video together, but the process

really occurred through the entire experience,” says Kaya

Williams ’14, whose group used the cultural lens. “Every activity we

participated in and all the people we talked to, we did so through

the lens of culture and how culture was affected, so by the time

we were actually putting the video together we knew exactly what

needed to be talked about.”

“The process wasn’t stressful, it was fun and exciting because

we were being allowed to show how much we had learned in a

month,” says Kaya. “In comparison to everything else we did, the

final presentation was easier in some ways. It wasn’t the same as

digging through mud to find and identify organisms, but it was

equally challenging.”

For the students, collaborating with each other through SOS

provided not only a way to deepen their understanding of ocean

research and advocacy but also of their place in a small community

of people. “The biggest surprise for me was how easy it was for all of

us to get along and work together,” says Molly Brown of Bar Harbor.

Claire Brunner agrees. “I met some of the most passionate, caring

and inspiring people on my adventures through SOS,” she says.

“I learned more from my peers than I ever thought possible and

they have become some of my closest friends.”

Visit www.waynflete.org/summertime for SOS photo galleries, blogs

and program information.

Collaboration among the

students is key to the richness

of their experience, from

setting up a tent to cooking

to researching to reaching a

consensus on conclusions.

“The whole program is based

on collaboration,” recalls

Claire Brunner of Seattle,

Washington. “From group

projects to working together

during research and chatting over a campfire, there were

always new ideas being developed and explored.” The focus on

collaboration is intentional, according to David. “Collaboration

between stakeholders and decision-makers will be necessary if the

competing stakeholder interests are to be addressed.”

Sustainable Ocean Studies is founded on the idea that place based

education engages students in profoundly meaningful ways. While

traveling from Casco Bay to Frenchman’s Bay off Mount Desert

Island, students come to know and understand the Gulf of Maine

through personal experience. They work directly with researchers,

talk with people who depend on the Gulf for their livelihood,

and come to know these issues through their interactions with

the wide variety of stakeholders. By being immersed in the Gulf of

Maine during an introductory scuba dive, sea kayaking for three

days off of Stonington, and working with lobstermen, scientists

and staff from a number of different non-profit organizations, the

students develop a deepened understanding of the many faces of

the Gulf of Maine.

The students are organized into three groups at the beginning

of the program, and they select which sustainability “lens” they

will focus on throughout their experience— ecology, economy or

culture. Looking through one of these lenses, they investigate

key issues of the Gulf of Maine like the sustainability of

“The whole program is based on collaboration. From group projects to working together during research and chatting over a campfire, there were always new ideas being developed and explored.”

Page 16: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

14

It’s a short season for the Waynflete Crew team. It’s cold, windy and muddy when the season begins in April and it can be hard to stay motivated to get in a scull and out on the Fore River. In what seems like the blink of an eye June is here and the team races its last race—then school is over and everyone is gone for the summer.

When the first Waynflete Crew team originated 12 years ago there

was just a handful of kids signed up. They had no dock, no rack

and a borrowed scull. Last spring the team included three times

that number of students, a dock at the Fore River Fields and 12

shells with racks. The team continues to grow each year, thanks to

the commitment and enthusiasm of the students, the knowledge

and dedication of head coach CC Stockly, and the support of the

Waynflete administration.

Waynflete Athletic Director Ross Burdick credits CC’s passion

and knowledge for the growth of the Crew program at Waynflete.

“The athletes see her work ethic and enthusiasm and want to

match it,” he said.

“They have to be committed,” said CC. “The kids have to be there

to make it work. If you’re not here on an afternoon, your boat

can’t row.” Ross agrees. “All team members invest themselves

passionately in the sport and the season,” he said.

Crew, like the Capeflete girls hockey team, is one of the unique

teams at Waynflete that incorporates both Waynflete students

and students from other schools without a team in that sport like

Falmouth High School, Cape Elizabeth High School and Cheverus

High School, among others. The collaboration between the

students is one of the main reasons it works. “The students begin

working together and you can see them move from complete

befuddlement at the beginning to the point where everything

starts to click and you see their faces just light up,” CC says.

Waynflete’s girls and boys Crew teams row primarily in teams of

four, plus the coxswain—the person who steers, motivates, calls

the race plan and keeps everyone working hard. The season

runs from late April to June, with five racing dates and plenty

of practices, rain or shine. The team competes in races against

Yarmouth High School in Maine, as well as schools in New

Hampshire and Massachusetts.

Many Crew team members have continued rowing after

graduating, and they keep in touch with their Waynflete coach.

“I have to teach them to trust me and the knowledge that I’m

giving them,” CC said. “They’re going to take that knowledge

and go with it. The lessons they learn on the water are certainly

translatable to life—collaboration, flexibility, adaptability

and perseverance.”

While a rowing coach’s dream boat features a crew of big, strong

quadruplets, said CC, any boat can be limited by the weakest rower

in it. But she says the good ones are those that can combine the

individual strengths to “create a power greater than the sum

of its parts.”

“Crew is a unique combination of incredible technical knowledge

and sheer power,” explains CC. “You have to use that knowledge

and power in unison with everyone else on the boat to make it

work. It’s a sport that will grab you.”

A Commitment to Crew

“The lessons they learn on the water are certainly

translatable to life—collaboration, flexibility,

adaptability and perseverance.”

Page 17: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

Annual Giving 2013

Nellie Semmes ’12 was a force to be reckoned with as a member

of the Waynflete Model United Nations team. A consistent

award-winner at conferences, she was part of the team that

traveled to the Harvard Model UN conference in 2011.

Today Nellie is a sophomore at Tulane University on the pre-

med track. She is also a member of the school’s Model UN team,

which is currently ranked 20th in the nation.

When she arrived at Tulane in 2012 she sought out the Model UN

team because she loves the experience. She has participated in

conferences at Duke University and the University of California

at Berkeley, among others.

“The college Model UN circuit is a lot more competitive,”

explained Nellie, “but I’m pretty familiar with it. I do a lot of

preparation.” She said her experience on the Waynflete team

helped her make the jump to a bigger circuit because she learned

how to prepare, research and feel comfortable speaking in public.

Model UN programs help students build their oratory skills and

use creativity to compete in debates about international relations.

At the conferences teams compete in two forms of debate: Crisis

Committees involves fast-paced debate in which mock delegates

must confront scenarios like cross-border arms trafficking and

the uses and restrictions of the coca leaf; and General Assembly

which is a formal debate like those at the United Nations.

Spending about two nights each week in between her studies,

sorority activities and work with the Tulane Organization for

Global Affairs, Nellie prepares meticulously for Model UN

conferences by reading from sources like the CIA World Factbook

and websites including Al Jazeera and the Brookings Institute.

“I compile information about the country, then I learn about

the topic and let it all uncover itself,” she said.

Model UN is “reinforcing and character-building” explained

Nellie, but it’s not for the shy. “You do have to be a bit outgoing

to be successful, you have to be able to stand up in a room of 150

people and give a thirty-second talk.” And it’s an environment

in which Nellie thrives. “It’s extremely rewarding,” she said. “It’s

not only a great way to meet engaged students but it reinforces a

lot of what you’re learning in class.”

When she graduated from Waynflete in 1988 and headed for

Barnard College, Jessica Nowinski had every intention of

majoring in theater. Instead, Jessica would go on to earn a PhD

in cognitive psychology at Stanford. Twenty-five years later,

she is the deputy head of a $30-million research project for

NASA. Two elements of her Waynflete education were keys to

her success, she says: critical thinking and writing skills. “I was

prepared for anything.”

Jessica arrived at her current career through hard work and a

bit of serendipity. When one of her professors posted a position

in a psychology lab, she applied for the job. She wasn’t sure

whether she wanted to pursue experimental or clinical work

in psychology until she took a position managing a human

memory lab across the street at Columbia University. “There I

interacted with PhD students and developed a strong interest

in human learning and memory,” she says. That’s when she

decided to head to Stanford, to begin her PhD work in cognitive

psychology. She learned of a position in cognitive psychology

at the NASA Ames Research Center, just as she was completing

her dissertation.

Jessica spent her first five years at NASA researching issues

related to prospective memory, or remembering to perform

actions in the future. “It’s a critical issue for pilots and

astronauts,” she explains. Today she works under the Aviation

Safety Program at NASA headquarters as a Deputy Project

Manager. The Project employs more than 100 researchers at

four research centers throughout the United States. The work

focuses on a wide range of projects related to aviation safety,

including mining flight data, certification of flight critical

systems, vehicle health monitoring and, “near and dear to

my heart, human performance and human-automation

interaction,” Jessica says.

Jessica, who loves the fact that her work allows her to be a

“perpetual student,” says that the value Waynflete placed on

curiosity has been key. “I was not an avid science student at

Waynflete, but the tendency to ask ‘why’ was nurtured there

and was ready to blossom when I found the right discipline,” she

states. The School also promoted the development of confidence,

she adds, “a willingness to try even if the odds might be long.”

Nellie Semmes ’12

Jessica Nowinski ’88

15

A Commitment to Crew

Alumni Profiles

Page 18: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 2013 1716 Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 201316

Jan Macleod is the 2013 Drake Award recipient. Below is text from the presentation given by Board President William A. Torrey at Commencement.

“Jan has been engaged with

the School as a parent,

sending two children through

Waynflete, and also as an active

volunteer, serving on the Board

of Trustees. During her two

very busy terms on the Board,

she served on the Finance

Committee, the Investment

Sub-Committee, the Executive

Committee, and the Ad-Hoc

Strategic Planning Committee

while also taking on the

important role of Treasurer.

Her wealth of knowledge

about investments continually

benefited the School as she has steered us through challenging

economic times with a steadfast hand. Instrumental in the growth

and management of the School’s endowment, she also played a key

role in helping the School secure the financing that made possible

the simultaneous construction of the Arts Center and Franklin

Theater with the expansion of our endowment.

One of her greatest contributions has been her ability to educate

others about investment, providing invaluable knowledge to her

fellow Trustees, and guaranteeing that the Board is able to fulfill

one of its most important responsibilities: ensuring the financial

health and sustainability of the School. She is a powerful teacher,

bringing to her colleagues clarity and understanding about

complex matters.

Jan has a language all her own, as trustees and administrators

came to learn during her work on everything from tax-exempt

bond financing to endowment management to financial aid. Her

powerful analytic mind notwithstanding, she will refer to trend

data as ’lumpy’ and make the case for ’smoothing’ in fiscal decision-

making. She will use ’yin and yang’ together as a verb, anything to

help explain an issue or advocate for a course of action. She has

been a teacher for all of us who hold the School and its resources

in trust, and Waynflete’s strong financial health today is due in no

small part to her leadership.

Acting on her passion for Waynflete, her advocacy for the School

has gone beyond financial matters. She regularly engaged in long-

term visioning, helping to frame goals for the School as part of

Waynflete’s strategic planning. During that process, she could be

counted on for always using the mission of the School to shape our

future goals.

Supporting the School long after her daughters had graduated and

she had completed her term on the Board, she continued to work

for Waynflete. She currently serves as a member of the Investment

Committee providing essential fiduciary guidance and oversight.

Thanks to her deep understanding, the School today is wisely

invested and well managed. Her tireless efforts to ensure that a

Waynflete experience is available to students for generations to

come have been truly remarkable.

A diligent volunteer in support of the School, sitting on committees

isn’t the limit of her participation; she can be counted on to attend

all sorts of events, from lobster bakes to crew races, athletic events

to art shows; if there is an opportunity to demonstrate her love of

Waynflete, we can count on her to participate.

The energy and dedication shown by Jan has helped propel

Waynflete forward over the last decade, and continues to inspire

all those who love this School.”

Tom Cronin ’78 most recently served as CEO of Neighborhood Diabetes, a company providing diabetes products to clients throughout

the eastern United States. Prior to Neighborhood Diabetes, Tom owned and served as CEO of CranBarry, Inc., a sporting goods manufacturer. After selling CranBarry in 1999, Tom spent three years teaching high school math at Lowell High

School, and coaching soccer at the high school varsity level. Early in his career, Tom also worked at Bain & Company, a strategy consulting firm. Tom received his MBA from MIT and his BA in Economics from Amherst College. Tom lives in Winchester, Massachusetts with his wife Pat and has two adult children.

Dale MacLachlan Lewis is a graduate of the Loomis Chaffee School. She holds degrees from the University of New Hampshire (BA), the

University of Chicago (MA) and Maine College of Art (BFA). Her professional

experience includes art education

(through MECA), graphic design,

and personnel administration. Upon

graduating from MECA, Dale has worked

as a fine artist, with a studio in Yarmouth.

Dale and her husband, Rich, are parents

of alumnae Elizabeth (’11), and current

students Will (’16) and Cal (’16). Attendance

at Waynflete began for all children in

the School’s Early Childhood program.

Through the years, Dale has volunteered

as a class parent, offered class/grade

assistance, worked on various auctions,

the Book Fair, Spring Fling, and the Annual

Fund. Dale is a founder of Monday Books

and she chairs the program currently.

The Waynflete Board of Trustees has announced two new members:

Jan Macleod Receives 2013 Drake Award

Page 19: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

Annual Giving 2013

Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 2013 1716

Jan Macleod Receives 2013 Drake Award

Thank you to everyone in the Waynflete community and to our friends in the business community who have supported the School so generously this year. In compiling this

report, every effort has been made to ensure that it is accurate and complete. Please call the Alumni and Development Office at (207) 774-5721 ext. 1221 with any

omissions or corrections and accept our sincere apologies.

VISIONARIES $25,000+Anonymous (2)Mr. and Mrs. John BraitmayerRobert and Elizabeth CarrollLawrence N. Friedland, Alice Linker Friedland, Paul Friedland, K. Page Herrlinger

The William J.J. Gordon Family Foundation, Nathan H D Gordon, Shannon Gordon, Steve and Theo Hanson

John and Patricia Davis Klingenstein ’47

Craig and Libby OwensRichard G. RockefellerJoseph and Susan SpagnolaMrs. Helene Wilson

INVESTORS $10,000–24,999Anonymous (9)Acworth FoundationNancy Montgomery Beebe ’63 and Michael Beebe

Brooks Family FoundationJames Brooks and Cherie Wendelken

Davis Family FoundationConan Deady and Cynthia Berliner

The Evergreen FoundationCandace Plummer Gaudiani ’63Katherine Glaser Getchell ’88Maureen and Jim GormanHilary Holm ’82 and Kenneth D. Holm

The Hudson FoundationDick and Anne JacksonGregg Lipton and Sara CrispDiane Lukac and Steve SilinBruno Marino and Anne Henshaw

Oak Foundation USADebbie ReedSteven RosenblattThe Phineas W. Sprague Memorial Foundation

TD Charitable Foundation

William Torrey and Pamela Phillips Torrey

Paula Volent

BENEFACTORS $5,000–9,999Anonymous (9)Alex Agnew and Lisa Markushewski

The Anderson Family Foundation

Paul and Mary AndersonFrances Hollis Brain Foundation, Inc.

Bristol Seafood, Inc.Bob Cleaves and Jane BatzellMr. David Drake ’65 and Mrs. Kathleen Drake

Shane and Susan FlynnThe George L. & Clara S. Shinn Foundation, Inc.

Karl Norberg, Hillman Norberg and Pam Gleichman

William Harwood and Ellen Alderman

Sherry HuberKenneth and Tasha IrvingLaura JacksonStephen and Cinda JoyceAnthony and Cynthia Lamport, Henry and Sarah Laurence

Moser and Morgenstern FamiliesRobert and Stephanie RobinsonJeremy Sclar ’84 and Kerry Sclar

Deborah and Miranda ShinnPen and Dorothy StevensJoseph H. Thompson FundUnum Matching Gifts Program

FELLOWS $2,500–4,999Anonymous (4)Paula Bentinck-Smith ’70Roger K. BerleDeborah and Joseph BornsteinGregory W. BoulosThomas ClementsTyler Clements and Lily King

Josephine Hildreth Detmer ’47Marylee and Charles DodgeEdward H. Daveis Benevolent Fund

Lucy FlightRalph Good and Catherine Cloudman

Edward S. and Cornelia Greaves Fund

Debbie and Greg HastingsMaine Community FoundationFrederick and Avis MillerZareen Taj Mirza ’75Parker Hannifin FoundationRosa W. Scarcelli ’88 and Thomas Rhoads

Tim Soley and Maria GallaceSandy and Jill SpauldingNathaniel ThompsonWells Fargo Foundation

SUSTAINERS $1,000–2,499Anonymous (18)Peter and Katy AmeglioCharlton and Eleanor AmesJonathan A. Amory ’97 and Marisa Amory

Louisa G. AndersonRichard ArmstrongThe Bailey FoundationBaltimore Community Foundation

Wendel BrussPat and Patti ButlerCynthia Drummond Choate ’60David A. Cimino ’93 and Stacy Cimino

Santo and Elizabeth CiminoRichard and Deborah ConnorMadeleine Gatchell Corson ’55David and Triss CritchfieldDebba CurtisLaurie Marshall Cushman ’59Eliot, Melanie and Zachary Cutler

Alec and Andrea DiNapoliJonathan Drake ’73Jay and Lynne Espy

Charles and Holland FilliettazMr. and Mrs. Robert A. FoxJohn Frumer and Elizabeth Barrett

James Garland and Carol Andreae

Ross Greene and Melissa Tomback

Thomas and Susan HealyAlison Derby Hildreth ’51Eddie and Patricia HowellsMr. and Mrs. William D. HowellsMark and Darlene JarrellMarc and Kate JetonRobert Kaplus and Jennifer Slack

Hal and Brigitte KingsburyKeith and Elaine KnowltonEllen Libby Lawrence ’35Peter Lea and Linda OliverAdam and Diana LeeJonathan and Liela LinenPaul and Maureen ManettiCarter Manny and Elizabeth Chapman

Hilda McCollumSuzanne McMullanPeter and Eve-Susan McPheeters

Scott MeiklejohnGil and Carrie MezaGordon Millspaugh and Laura Lewis

Chris and Steve MitchellBob and Libby MooreMargaret and Mason MorfitJohn MorrillJames Mullen and Elise AnselWilliam and Pia NeilsonDavid and Sigrid OrdwayAnne Chadwick Parker ’61Lincoln Peirce and Jessica Gandolf

James and Jacqueline PierceElizabeth Decker Porteous ’48John and Sonia RobertsonWilliam Robinson and Lynn Reed

Robert Rowse and Colette Twigg

John Ryan and Jenny Scheu Cindy and Jim SanbornBenjamin Scoll and Emily Renschler

David and Beverly ShermanDavid Sherman and Martha Burchenal

Ann Lib Robinson Strout ’41Bob and Kari SuvaRichard and Barbara TraftonJeffrey Troiano and Abby Dubay-Troiano

Jonathan Valenti ’94Carol Kaulback Vaughn ’67Carol Wishcamper

STEWARDS $500–999Anonymous (9)Linda AlbertLynn and Richard AndersonThomas Armstrong ’76 and Liz Armstrong

James W. BabcockMr. and Mrs. Alfred BaginskiAnne and John BeldenJoe and Abby BlissCaroline Clifford Bond ’53Andrea Bopp Stark ’87Tom and Tina BourdeauxDee Dee Dana Bradford ’58Happy Langmaid Bradford ’54Rabbi Carolyn BraunJames and Jennifer BuchananLinda Noelle CabotEdward and Phyllis CampbellKim CaseAllan and Amy ChapmanPeter Chapman ’63 and Karen Chapman

Elinor Clark ’60Mary Murray ColemanBrian Daikh and Heidi WiermanJames ’63 and Jean ’63 Drummond

Robert and Wendy EpsteinBarry and Jane FanburgFinance Authority of MaineKathleen Flynn

THANK YOUTO OUR GENEROUS DONORS

Page 20: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 201318

The Forsley FamilyHalsey and Eva FrankDr. and Mrs. Roger FrerichsDavid and Maria GlaserStephen GoodrichJennifer GreavesHyman M. GulakMark and Jeanette HagenMaria Benoit Hanley ’39Laura Hannan and Carl SierakPeter Hamblin and Carol Titterton

William Harte ’06Whitney Neville HarveyRichard HenryJeff and Elizabeth HerrimanPeter Higgins and Payson Oberg-Higgins

Sara Holbrook ’62 and Foster Aborn

Bronwyn McCarthy Huffard ’88Mark Isaacson and Karen Herold

Herbert and Kathleen JanickHenk and Gigi JordaanJoan Kenyon and Peter MinerAnthony Kieffer and Susan Conley

Zona King*Charlotte Langmaid ’60Alan McIlhenny and Elizabeth Ackerson

Ms. Frances McKnightChris and Lauren MichalakesMargot and Roger MillikenCarolyn S. MitchellBetsy and Clifford MohrBenjamin and Anne NilesKyle and Diane NobleDenis O’Brien ’83 and Laura O’Brien

Jim Ohannes and Elizabeth McGrady

Bob Olney and Catherine Richards

Jim and Karyn PellowThe Poetry FoundationSally and John PriceKenneth Raffel and Claire Oppenheim

Mr. and Mrs. Jack RichardsPeter and Maura RodwayEdward Rowe and Catherine Bickford

Ovid Santoro and Lori TraikosTobey Scott and Amy Woodhouse

Mark Segar and Susan MettersBeth Sellers and Marc KefferJoe and Elonide SemmesJim and Lynn ShafferDeborah SniteAlice and Dick SpencerMichael and Nancy TarpinianRobert and Mary Lou ThallPhilip P. Thompson, Jr.Carol Titterton and Peter Hamblin

Louise Gulick Van Winkle ’60Vincent and Nancy VeroneauJessica P. Wannemacher ’89James and Patricia WassermanGeorge Weaver and Vicky Smith

Breda and David WhiteClint and Jennifer WillisAnne B. Zill ’59

ASSOCIATES $250–499Anonymous (7)Michael Abraha and Regat Mebrahtu

Drs. Francis and Carol AltmanThomas and Rachel ArmstrongDavid Aronson ’97 and Krista Aronson

Alison Beebe Arshad ’88Joanne G. Asherman ’60Margaret AustinMarilyn BickfordWilliam Bliss ’75 and Lucinda Bliss

Leigh Bonney ’76Tom Brady and Carrie McCusker

Norman and Frederika BrooksPolly Blake Burke ’62Christopher and Meg CampbellDavid Cummiskey and Vanessa Nesvig

Mary Soule Davidson ’58Scott Davis and Lynn-Eve DavisMichael Dedekian and Megan Selvitelli

Peter DonnellyDr. DandelionCooper DragonetteMrs. Julia E. EdelsteinPeter and Sheri FeeneyMichael Fiori and Dora Anne Mills

Robert FlightTracy Floyd and Bryson HopkinsLucy Fowler Klug ’52Jonathan and Dorothy FoxClaudette GamacheGertrude M. GoffPeter and Libby GordonJune GrayWinifred GreenAnne HagstromAlex and Meredy HamiltonPhilip and Susan HamiltonAmy Hannaford Mary Senter Hart ’55Robyn Smith Helmer ’54Bo and Kristina HeweyMichael and Elizabeth HighJohn Holdridge and Meg Springer

Claudia HughesJohn Hancock Matching Gifts Program

Konbit SanteJim Langford and Molly AldrichBenjamin Leahy ’91Elizabeth and Willy LeBihanMr. Willard LibbyLiz Prescott JewelryJeffrey and Beth LongcopeNancy Langmaid Loth ’62Mr. Mark LutzArnold Macdonald and Elizabeth Moore

Mr. and Mrs. Edward MasseyMark and Kimberly MayoneAndrew McCusker

Peter McKendryAnne McPheeters ’99David and Libby MillarHanae Miyake ’12Walden S. and David N. MortonDavid and Julia NelliganK. Dana NelsonJuanita and Arthur NicholsJodi NofsingerJudith NoveyMatthew Page ’97Elizabeth Cimino Pierce ’88 and Jeffrey Pierce ’88

Katherine Hildreth Pierce ’53Ingeborg PolacsekFrances Emerson Prinn ’60Elizabeth Silverman Reid ’82Mr. and Mrs. Joaquim RibeiroMrs. Sidney RichardsonLee Tyler Robbins ’55Cornelia Leighton Robinson ’52Michael Sargent and Patsy McSweeney

Kristine W. Saunders ’67Justin Schair ’01Jason and Kristy ScherDavid and Nisu SederMiranda Shinn ’13Glen Shivel and Julie AllenElizabeth Stickney Shortle ’63Deborah Weare Slavin ’62Christopher and Anne SmithSuzanne A. Spencer ’60Anne Rines Stanley ’61Mrs. Jill StevensKaren Stray-Gundersen and Jane Begert

Barbara SturgeonTexas Instruments FoundationChristian and Elizabeth ThomasBenjamin and Rachael ThrashLance and Gina VardisJoseph and Erika WannemacherHans and Lee WarnerDave WeinbergBarbara WhiteMr. and Mrs. Wayne WisbaumRoger F. Woodman ’72 and Carol DeTine

FRIENDS $1–249Anonymous (78)Thomas AbsherTimothy Aho and Susannah Corwin

Gerzher Alemayo and Hadas Girmay

Jennifer Hall Alfrey ’91Nancy Tyler Allyn ’47Roger Amory and Laura Mazikowski

Annie’s KitchenJoel Antolini and Meeghan McLain

Priscilla Sampson Armstrong ’66Stanley and Stacie ArmstrongAndrew Aronson and Cynthia Eyster

Jesse Aronson ’13Noah Aronson ’11Art House Picture FramesArtascopeJim and Rachel Austin

Dr. F. Lincoln AveryKimberly Ayers ’06Jill BackmanJane Hartglass Baker ’88Roxanne BakerBank of America Matching GiftsDana BarnardCameron Barner ’12Jefferson M. Bates ’04Christopher and Betsy BeavenLauren Wilkis Bedford ’96Sarah Begin Cameron ’01Elizabeth Woodman Begin ’70 and Jeffory Begin

Timothy BeidelKaren Belleau and Dean RidlonAlec Belman and Laura FleuryMiriam BemanMark and Catherine BennettJeff Benson and Michele Polacsek

Hope and Jay BentonBarbara A. BergerDr.and Mrs. Ben BergerChristian A. Berle ’99Daniel Berman ’87Richard and Linda BerthyTom BetheaJohn and Betty BibberKai BicknellBrett Bigbee and Ann BinderBill and Eliot BikalesBradley Bissell ’94Christopher Bixby ’03Daniel Black ’06Jean Gyger Black ’48James and Tessa BollingerAnnie Bonebakker Bonney ’91Alexander Bonnin ’07Benjamin Bornstein ’07Gabriel Bornstein ’10Ilana R. Bornstein ’04Gretchen C. Boulos ’01Pat BoureDesiree Bousquet ’84Jill and Gregory BowdenDavid and Carrie BransonJohn B. Branson ’65Elizabeth R. BrayleyLynne and Tim BreenWoody Brewer ’95Jay Bride ’87Alice Brock and Patricia PeardPope BrockTim and Fiona BrooksChristopher Brown ’67Gregory R. BrownLowell and Ella BrownLarry and Sandi BrownNelson Bruns ’06Michael Bull ’87Thomas D. Bull ’90Ross and Elizabeth BurdickTodd Burrowes and Andrea deLeon

Stephen Burt and Lisa FlanaganCaiola’sErica CalderBethany Campbell ’10Katherine Campbell ’07Thomas and Lori CampbellJonathan B. Cantwell ’86 and Elizabeth Dranitzke

Sebastian Cariddi ’93

James Carlisle and Jon PouporeJoan O’Donnell Carroll ’44Michelle CarrollPenelope Pachios Carson ’58Stuart and Abigail CarterCasco Bay Frames and GalleryDiane CaseyOlivia Chap ’11Gail Chapman Close ’72Mr. and Mrs. George ChaseMr. Robert CheckowayLi and Tai ChenMichael Chestnutt and Jennifer Christian

David Chidsey and Rachel Brown

Christmas Cove DesignsEric Clark and Maria Beaudoin-Clark

Nathan Clark and Kathryn Burnham

Corky and Carla ClarkeSamuel Cleaves ’10William R. Cleaves ’12Gerry Arzonico Clement ’47Coastal Studies For GirlsRay CoffinJonathan and Kristin CohenEllen Cole ’09Ann Martin Collins ’54Christine CollinsLily Collins ’13Color Me MineCullen ConcannonOwen Conly ’09Helen Jenness Connell ’60Joan and George ConnickKelly ConnorPatricia Bridge Connor ’84Andrew and Cathie ConnorsJudy CoonJohn Cooper and Janice MalayHerbert and Rue CorkJohn A. Corson ’55Amanda and Ryan CoteJefferson Cotton and Kamala Grohman

Heather Courtice Hart ’88 and Peter Hart

William and Laurie CoxHugh and Colleen CoxeKim CrabillLesley Perry Craig ’79Mark and Anne CresseyElizabeth H. Critchfield ’06Chip Crothers*Meghan Curci ’95Michael and Margaret CurtisWendy and Jason CurtisPeter and Joy CutroneDiane DahlkeMartha DaliganLaurel and Brian DalyMr. and Mrs. Edmund DamonPeter M. Davidson ’61Ana Davis ’03Owen Deady ’12William DeBeryPamela DeNutteReal Deprez ’96Jesse DeupreeJudge and Mrs. Bernard DevineMichael Devine ’03Mark Devoe ’95

Page 21: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

Annual Giving 2013

19

Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan DietzClaudia DillerMegan DionJane J. Doherty ’58Stephanie and James DolanEdward Donovan ’08W. Michael DonovanWilliam C. Donovan ’03Cathy and Matthew DouglasMartha Holbrook Douglas Pigeon ’55

Nyapeni DoulTraci and Michael DowdAngela Doxsey ’07Courtney Drake ’03Peter P. Drake ’66Richard and Susanna DuBoisDrew and Susan DubuqueMichael and Jennifer DuddyDiane Duncan ’62Thomas DupreeCaroline EarlsElizabeth EdwardsenLinden Ellis ’05Jeanne Gibbons Emmick ’62Aubrey Emory ’88Jonathan Fanburg and Stephanie Gartner-Fanburg

Paul Farrar and Andrea Zimble-Farrar

John and Carol FarrellAmy FawcettMark Fernandez and Anne Devine

Ivy FerrelliAmy Ferrer Rogers and Edward Tittmann

Jesse Field ’94John Field and Julianna Acheson

Pamela Fife ’74Morgan Finch ’04David Finkelhor and Christine Linnehan

Adrian Fiser ’06Diane FisherPaul and Mary FitzpatrickAidan Flaherty ’00Greta Flaherty ’04Arthur Fink and Ann FosterJohn and Kristen FoxThomas Frederick and Audrey Johnson

Jon and Jodi FreedmanSarah Freilinger ’91Hugh Freund ’06Rachel Fried ’02Jay and Lenore FriedlandShawna E. Friedman ’92Martha Chaplin Frink ’71Kelley Frumer ’17Louis Frumer ’14Tiki FuhroKatharine Fullam Harris ’85Jeremy and Sarah GabrielsonTimothy and Michelle GagnonRikki GallagherWyatt Garfield ’03Anne Whitehouse Gass ’48Amanda Gates-Elston ’97Vanessa Gates-Elston ’96Lynne Manson Gawtry ’87 and Michael Gawtry

Michael Gelsanliter

Pamela Malcolm Gemery ’53Frank and Susan GentileJoseph and Linda GervaisKatherine Benoit Gibbons ’41Ruth-Anne Hugo GibsonEric and Jennifer GiguereMs. Jane GilbertLinda GilmanCaitlin GilmetJoseph and Rosemary GittoRabbi Brenner Glickman ’89 and Rabbi Elaine Glickman

Thomas Godsoe ’09Kimberly Davidson Golden ’94Michaela Goldfine ’90 and Kirk Niese

Angel and Helen GonzalezJinxie Blake Gooch ’59*Lacey Goodrich and Ed LutjensMiriam J. Gough ’77Frank J. Governali and Terry Ann Scriven

Andrew and Stacey GrafEmily GrahamSarah Gratwick ’07John and Barbara GrausteinMary Gray and Karen BauerHelen Gray-Bauer ’15Rosalind Gray-Bauer ’12Mrs. Cynthia GreeneGreener Postures YogaJennifer GreggGrill RoomArne Gronningsater and Christina Sillari

David Gulak ’98Dalit Gulak Wolfe ’01Hamish Haddow ’08Mr. James Haddow and Ms. Michelle Ritchie-Haddow

Hilary Hall ’07Ronald and Susan HallThomas and Lynn HallettChase Hamilton ’08Sam HamiltonAnnie Hancock ’06Bill and Lindsay HancockHannaford Brothers Helps Schools Program

Abdul and Nusrat HannanKieran Hanrahan ’11Betsey Staples Harding ’62Edward and Katherine HardingMs. Ellyn HardyMeredith Harrell ’91Samuel Harris ’02Corrilla Decker Hastings ’53Daniel and Phyllis HayesDavid Heald and Sukie CurtisTim Hebda and Sarah Morrisseau

Alice Heminway ’92Anne and Buell HeminwayMerritt Heminway ’90 and Lydia Maier ’90

Amy Henderson ’87Anina Hewey ’05Timothy Hiebert ’75Lucas and Samantha HigginsGrace E. High ’10Madeline High ’11Wendy Dana Hines ’63Shelley G. Hodges ’00Jean Hoffman

Lily Hoffman ’06Eric HoffstenKevin and Katherine HoganDavid and Sara HoldridgeDavid and Kathleen HoopesScott HornneyOmar Hourdeh and Achaa IgalKristin Howe ’04Felicity Howlett ’62John Hoy and Mary SauerHugh and Elizabeth HumphreysCory Hutchinson ’91 and Kimberly Hutchinson

Abigail Ingalls ’98Mark Ireland and Lisa TesslerGlenn and Elizabeth IsraelJacobsen Ives ’02Dr. and Mrs. Ramanath IyerAmelia Wilson Jaffe ’93Molly Field James ’98Luke Jeton ’13Katie Hall Johns ’92George Johnson ’12Kristofer Johnson ’91Margaret H. Johnson ’13Nathaniel Johnson ’05Susan Palmer Jones ’58David Joyce ’96 and Jessica Joyce

Lissa Hall Juedemann ’94Jearranai Jujaroen ’07Sara Hyde Jurgeleit ’59KamasouptraE’nkul Kanakan and Bioneke Mpungu

Nancy Elena KarpTimothy Karu ’03Joanne KatzStephen KautzDr. Irvil M. KearDavid Keith and Stephen Simpson

Terri Holmes Kemp ’63Heidi KendrickPatricia KenistonSherman Kew ’99Ms. Julie KilmartinHeather Kimball-Titus ’93Sally Means Kirkpatrick ’42Justine E. Knizeski ’72Gretchen K. Knoth ’07Caroline Campbell Knott ’55Alexander Knowles ’67 and Linda Detmer Knowles ’68

Gretchen Koch ’06Lew and Maggie KraininErik and Lisa KramerJohanna Rosenfield Kremberg ’01

Mr. and Mrs. Francis LabuskiSamuel LaCasse ’03Jerry Swanson Landt ’62Betsy LangerSarah Lavigne ’93Cynthia LegereFrederick and Carol LennigPage Lennig and Laura SpectorDarene Holbrook Lennon ’58Carol Leonard ’84Michele LettiereCatherine Lewis ’84Elizabeth Lewis ’11Anna N. Libby ’09Lisa and Joseph Libby

Lowell and Melissa LibbySpencer L. Libby ’06John and Nancy LightbodyMs. Jean LincolnTyler Lincoln ’91Volkhard Lindner and Lucy LiawCameron and Erica LinenJim Linsky and Crystal CanneyFrederick and Kimberley LippHeather McKenny Lippert ’92Lisa LlorenteLocal 188Martin Lodish and Kristin Schardt

Lee Longnecker and Diana FishLoommoonJohn Lord ’73Lee Loring ’56Sabrina Loring and Dominic Zappone

Elise LoschiavoElizabeth Love ’03Abigail Randall Lumsden ’51Ms. Margarethe LutzAnn MachadoChristopher and Katharine MacLean

Lesley MacVane ’69Emily Mitchell Madero ’98Debbie and Wasin MahaphanitTed and Sue MaharJim and Liz MaierLydia Maier ’90 and Merritt Heminway ’90

Sarah Maier Peterson ’96Maine Rowing AssociationStephen Majercik and Faith Barnes

Solvejg MakaretzMarcella Makinen and Rodney Mashia

David Mallon and Rachelle Parise

Dr. Ellen Maltby-Askari ’60Carla Marcus and Lawrence Mohr

Maria Antonieta CoutureErika Marks ’88Erin MartinMolly MartinSuzanne McAllisterSidney Thaxter and Mary McCann

Joyce Gyger McCarthy ’46Joe and Suzanne McCarthyRobert McCarthy ’00Guy and Tatiana McChesneyClaire McClintock ’03Courtney McCollum and James Woodman

Pamela Drake McCormick ’68Constance Rogers McIntyre ’49Judith McManamy ’58Whitney McMullan ’01Charles and Michelle McNuttKirsten F. McWilliams ’91Joseph and Gloria MelnickSpencer Melnick ’90 and Shea Melnick

Serena Bliss Mercer ’73Greer Millard ’09James and Kristine MillardCharles Miller ’65Lauren Miller

Mark Miller ’98Stuart J. MillerRobert and Christine MillsWylie and Barbara MitchellKent and Ann MohnkernCourtney MongellKatharine Moody ’76Frances Kendall Moon ’40Albert Moore ’83Annie Cobb Moore ’56Christopher Moore ’80Janice Moore Coleman ’82Susannah Moore ’12Warren Moorhead and Mara Robinov-Moorhead

Adrian and Sarah MoranFlorence Walker Morrison ’55Catherine MacDonald Morrow ’62

Raymond MorrowTwig Mowatt ’75Michael L. Mudge ’83Rose Mary and Allan MuirSean and Elizabeth MurphySusan Lamb Murphy ’57Peggy MacVane Murray ’70Ted MusgraveAnando Naqui ’08Nondini A. Naqui ’98Cecilia Nardi ’07Jeff and Alison NathansonThe Nature ConservancyNedware PotteryMichael Neilson ’00Hannah Harwood Nelson ’99Dr. and Mrs. Robert V. NelsonSusan and Barry NelsonSarah Neuren ’12Anne-Marie Newton ’98Thomas Newton ’07Ceri Nichols ’04Katherine Nichols ’00Elicia NiemiecHilary Niles ’12Alain Manda wa Diese Nkulu and Mireille Nkulu

Nicki Noble Bean ’01Victoria Nolan Crolius ’70Hillman Norberg ’07Dr. and Mrs. Richard NordgrenNoshJoseph Nowak ’07Ruth Ann and Raymond NowakMichael and Anne O’BrienSaniya O’Brien ’91Keith and Cordelia OehmigDonna Hildreth O’Hara ’51Barak and Miriam OlinsMarcio and Daniela OliveiraStephen OliverClaire Olson ’12Hannah Rose Orcutt ’07John and Cynthia OrcuttNeil Orenstein and Gretchen Knowlton

Judith Jones Orlandi ’64Matthew O’Rourke ’05Sage Tyler Orr ’97Rev. Larney OtisMichael and Patricia PacilloJohn E. Palmer Jr. ’54Judith Dana Parker ’59Julia Parker ’88Kate Parker Muller ’87

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 201320

Stephen Parker ’84Elizabeth Barron Parran ’42Gerri PattisonGrace and Tony PayneGeorge Payson ’66Margo Chapman Pearson ’67Morgan Pendergast ’04Susan PenneyKatherine Peterson ’07Julia Emerson Pew ’57Jodi Phinney ’87Amanda Pilon Boger ’01David and Margaret PinchbeckAdam Pontius ’08Christina Poole Thomas ’74Victoria Simes Poole ’45Chris Pope and Jennifer FifeJed Porta ’99Elysse Porta-Barnet ’04Carol Copeland Pratt ’57Christopher Price and Wendy Poole

Stephen Pride ’01James and Jane PuiiaPatricia Benoit Quinlan ’42Shirley Cole Quinn ’42Damion Rallis and Courtney Cook

Matt and Kay RalstonAlice Hildreth Rand ’48Mrs. Priscilla Rand ’45David and Louise RansomStephen and Elizabeth RansomMichael Redman ’12Torie Reed ’92Katherine Reimann ’03Anne Reiner ’05Edward Reiner, Jr. and Susan Lakari

Sharon and Richard RenaultWilliam Renner ’00Caroline H. Renwick ’81Parker RepkoJanice RibeiroJona RiceLindsay Frye Richman ’96James Rines ’76Dana and Youn RiversMs. Diana RobergMarjorie Meyer Roberson ’55Cheryl Seymour Roberts ’67Caroline Robertson ’01Kelsey RobinovMesa Dayton Robinov ’13Elena Robinson ’82Mary Ellen RobinsonJames G. Rogers IIIJames Rohman ’89Dallas Rolnick ’97Deborah Rowe and Timothy Cole

Eliza Sprague Rowe ’87Leslie Tuttle Rowson ’64Charles Ruch ’93Susan and Frank RuchNorbert RunyamboJerome and Margery RussemJulie RussemNina Russem ’09Julie C. RyderSaeng Thai HouseThe Salt ExchangeBarry and Lori SaltzBrooke Samuelson ’63

William H. Sandberg ’87 and Diane Sandberg

Richard SandiferRalita SarapakGail Leslie Sargent ’61Jesse Q. Sargent ’87Mr. and Mrs. Art SaundersSaunders ElectronicsJohn and Kirsten ScarcelliGretchen SchaeferLeah Babcock Schaff ’91Annemieke Schair ’04Arthur Schnell and Michele Bednarz

Caroline Schnell ’06Jessica Scott ’03Robert and Katy ScottScripps Howard FoundationSeaweed StudiosSeeds StudioWilliam Seeley and Christine Donis-Keller

Ben Semmes ’12Eleanor Semmes ’12Stacey SevelowitzCarlie C. Seymour ’46Derek Shaffer ’93Ben Shambaugh and Shari Goddard Shambaugh

Dr. Thaddeus Shattuck and Dr. Elisabeth Sperry

Joan Ross Shepherd ’56Emilia Sibley ’02Andrew and Anna SidesLaura Siegle ’02David Silk and Lynne CrandallMrs. Jane P. SilkReed Silvers and Pauline BarryAlthea Simons ’03Tiffany Carter Skillings ’99Gary and Ania SmallAustin Smith and Amy CohanDr. and Mrs. Barry SmithElizabeth Smith and Jennifer Hoopes

Beth Smith Horton ’52Joan Brown Smith ’39Cynthia Sortwell and Jessie Cash

Benjamin Sosnaud ’04Margaret Sosnaud ’05Susan Bliss Soule ’72John Southall and Krista Nordgren Southall

John Sowles ’68Courtney Aronson Sparks ’95Molly Miller Sparling ’93Mr. and Mrs. Richard SperryMary Louise Thomas Sprague ’46 and Phineas Sprague

Susanna Sprague ’08Renee St. JeanKatrina St. JohnPeter Stein ’12Sue SteinAndrew SteinbergJennifer Steinkeler ’04George E. Stevens, Jr.Ms. Janet StinsonMarjorie StockfordBill and Mary StockmeyerMichael D. Stoddard ’82 and Barbara Stoddard

Noah Stone ’12

Ann McCahill Strahan ’44Rena M. Strand ’96Jean Philbrick Strout ’43Sunny and Tracy StutzmanHarry and Patricia SundikEdward J. Suslovic and Jennifer M. Southard

Sustainable Ocean StudiesJohn and Nancy TabbWilliam Talpey and Carla Burkley

Target Take Charge of Education

Raphael Taylor ’01Steven and Christine TenneyNancy TetraultSandra Thaxter ’61Steven and Jody ThaxtonMiranda Theodore ’04Jeri TheriaultAlison ThibaultJonathan Thomas ’74Richard Thompson ’94Daniel ThomsenGerard Tiernan ’91Nancy Drummond Tindal ’71 and Bruce Tindal

Torsak Tiparos and Katie Murray

Bonnie Marshall Tompkins ’60Emily Torrey ’10Katherine Torrey ’13Ann Tracy Cole ’01Emily G. Trafton ’12Aklilu Tsaedu and Rahel HagosLukas Tubby ’11Mike and Allison TurndorfAbigail Whiting Van Dam ’03David and Karen Van DykeMrs. Frances Van DykeDeborah Sampson Van Hoewyk ’60

Edith Van SyckleCal and Stephanie VaryDavid VaughanAndrew Veroneau ’07Joseph Veroneau ’11Margaret J. Veroneau ’08David J. Vickery and Tasha Worster-Vickery

Geoffrey and Alice WaggMargo Walsh ’82Chris and Pat WatsonJamie Watson ’07John Watson ’07Marjorie DeMotte Welch ’59Wellington Management Company, LLP

Jonathan Werner and Rebecca Stetson Werner

Elizabeth Maxwell Wheeler ’47Caitlin Whelan ’02Katherine Whitaker ’12Catherine White ’02Darrell and Karen WhitneyTimothy Whittemore ’00Alexandra Collins Wight ’00Wilbur’s of Maine Chocolate Confections

Ivy Wilkinson-Ryan ’00Desmond Williams and Marcia MacDonald

Roy and Lauren WilliamsLeonora Zilkha Williamson ’91

Gladstone WilsonKim WilsonVirginia Dana Windmuller ’57Don Wojchowski and Karen Miller

Jonathan Wolinsky ’06Kingson Woo and Domenica Vacca

Deborah Dodge Wood ’56Michael and Lucretia WoodruffMr. and Mrs. David WoodruffJohn J. Wordock ’87Richard WortleyErin Peck Yarema ’98 and David Yarema

Ralph and Clare YarnSemere Yehdego and Asmeret Teklu

Kimberly Warde Yoder ’02Jeff Young and Betsy MahoneyAlicia B. Zambelli ’88Michael Zambelli ’93Zapoteca RestaurantDiane Warren Zglobicki ’62Ralph ZieffDr. and Mrs. Alan ZimbleTanya Zivkovic

GIVING BY CONSTITUENT

TRUSTEES, FORMER TRUSTEES, TRUSTEES EMERITIAnonymous (4)Carol AltmanCharlton AmesNicholas Armentrout ’88 Betts ArmstrongThomas ArmstrongKrista AronsonChristopher BeavenNancy Montgomery Beebe ’63 Elizabeth Woodman Begin ’70 Roger K. BerleDeborah BornsteinCheryl BoulosGregory W. BoulosNancy Brain Rabbi Carolyn BraunAlice BrockPolly Blake Burke ’62Elizabeth CarrollPenelope Pachios Carson ’58Santo CiminoJane BatzellJoan ConnickDebba CurtisConan DeadyJosephine Hildreth Detmer ’47Jesse DeupreeMarylee DodgeJane J. Doherty ’58David Drake ’65 Taffy FieldJim FreilingerPaul FriedlandJames GarlandKatherine Glaser Getchell ’88Katherine Benoit Gibbons ’41Maria GlaserPam GleichmanMary GrayHyman M. Gulak

Christopher HarteWilliam HarwoodGreg HastingsMichael HighHilary Holm ’82Luke D. Huber ’81Sherry HuberTasha IrvingAnne JacksonMark JarrellKate JetonSusan Palmer Jones ’58E’nkul KanakanSally Means Kirkpatrick ’42Nancy LightbodyGregg LiptonJohn Lord ’73Diane LukacJan MacleodBruno MarinoAlan McIlhennySuzanne McMullanPeter McPheetersScott MeiklejohnJames MillardCarolyn S. MitchellWylie MitchellMargaret MorfitDenney MortonPeggy MacVane Murray ’70Cynthia OrcuttRev. Larney OtisCraig OwensAnne Chadwick Parker ’61Stephen Parker ’84Katherine Hildreth Pierce ’53Victoria Simes Poole ’45Alice Hildreth Rand ’48Debbie ReedCaroline H. Renwick ’81Susan RuchRosa W. Scarcelli ’88 Ineke SchairErica Schair-Cardona ’94Jeremy Sclar ’84Maxine SclarMark Segar Lynn ShafferMohammed Shir ’90Deborah Weare Slavin ’62Susan Bliss Soule ’72Susan SpagnolaSandy SpauldingAlice SpencerMary Louise Thomas Sprague ’46Ayres Stockly ’82Holmes StocklyMary StockmeyerAnn McCahill Strahan ’44Karen Stray-Gundersen Ann Lib Robinson Strout ’41Philip P. Thompson, Jr.William TorreyLouise Gulick Van Winkle ’60Vincent VeroneauAnn Staples WaldronBreda WhiteCarol Wishcamper

PARENTSAnonymous (25)Michael Abraha and Regat Mebrahtu

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Annual Giving 2013

21

Alex Agnew and Lisa Markushewski

Timothy Aho and Susannah Corwin

Gerzher Alemayo and Hadas Girmay

Peter and Katy AmeglioRoger Amory and Laura Mazikowski

Joel Antolini and Meeghan McLain

Nicholas Armentrout ’88 and Sarah Chappell Armentrout ’88

Stanley and Stacie ArmstrongTed Armstrong and Sally MorrisThomas Armstrong ’76 and Liz Armstrong

Andrew Aronson and Cynthia Eyster

David Aronson ’97 and Krista Aronson

Jim and Rachel AustinLinc AveryJill BackmanRoxanne BakerTimothy BeidelAnne and John BeldenMichael Belleau and Molly Sneden

Alec Belman and Laura FleuryJeff Benson and Michele Polacsek

Rick Bertaska and Gail SpaienRichard and Linda BerthyBrett Bigbee and Ann BinderBill and Eliot BikalesJoe and Abby BlissJames and Tessa BollingerGregory W. BoulosTom Brady and Carrie McCusker

David and Carrie BransonElizabeth R. BrayleyPope BrockJames Brooks and Cherie Wendelken

Tim and Fiona BrooksLarry and Sandi BrownJames and Jennifer BuchananLaura BurdenRoss and Elizabeth BurdickTodd Burrowes and Andrea deLeon

Stephen Burt and Lisa FlanaganPat and Patti ButlerErica CalderChristopher and Meg CampbellKeith and Maria CanningMichelle CarrollStuart and Abigail CarterSamrith and Nora ChapLi and Tai ChenDavid Chidsey and Rachel Brown

Eric Clark and Maria Beaudoin-Clark

Nathan Clark and Kathryn Burnham

Corky and Carla ClarkeBob Cleaves and Jane BatzellTyler Clements and Lily KingJonathan and Kristin CohenCraig and Kristin ColemanChristine CollinsJulia Colvin

Thomas Connolly and Pam Richards

Richard and Deborah ConnorAndrew and Cathie ConnorsJohn Cooper and Janice MalayJefferson Cotton and Kamala Grohman

Heather Courtice Hart ’88 and Peter Hart

William and Laurie CoxLesley Perry Craig ’79Mark and Anne CresseyChip Crothers*Michael and Margaret CurtisWendy and Jason CurtisDr. and Mrs. D. Joshua CutlerPeter and Joy CutroneBrian Daikh and Heidi WiermanLaurel and Brian DalyScott and Lynn-Eve DavisConan Deady and Cynthia Berliner

William DeBeryMichael Dedekian and Megan Selvitelli

Pamela DeNutteNatalie DiBenedettoAlec and Andrea DiNapoliStephanie and James DolanPeter DonnellyCathy and Matthew DouglasNyapeni DoulRichard and Susanna DuBoisThomas DupreeCaroline EarlsJames Ecker and Jane Nichols-Ecker

Elizabeth EdwardsenRobert and Wendy EpsteinJay and Lynne EspyJonathan Fanburg and Stephanie Gartner-Fanburg

Paul Farrar and Andrea Zimble-Farrar

Peter and Sheri FeeneyMark Fernandez and Anne Devine

Amy Ferrer Rogers and Edward Tittmann

Jesse Field ’94John Field and Julianna Acheson

Charles and Holland FilliettazDavid Finkelhor and Christine Linnehan

Michael Fiori and Dora Anne Mills

Diane FisherLaurie FisherPaul and Mary FitzpatrickLucy FlightRobert FlightTracy Floyd and Bryson HopkinsShane and Susan FlynnJohn and Kristen FoxHalsey and Eva FrankThomas Frederick and Audrey Johnson

Jon and Jodi FreedmanPaul Friedland and K. Page Herrlinger

John Frumer and Elizabeth Barrett

Jeremy and Sarah GabrielsonTimothy and Michelle Gagnon

Joseph and Linda GervaisEric and Jennifer GiguereMichaela Goldfine ’90 and Kirk Niese

Angel and Helen GonzalezRalph Good and Catherine Cloudman

Lacey Goodrich and Ed LutjensStephen GoodrichNathan GordonShannon GordonAndrew and Stacey GrafMary Gray and Karen BauerJennifer GreavesRoss Greene and Melissa Tomback

Arne Gronningsater and Christina Sillari

Peter Hamblin and Carol Titterton

Alex and Meredy HamiltonAmy Hannaford Abdul and Nusrat HannanLaura Hannan and Carl SierakMoritz Hansen and Suzanne Fox

Steve and Theo HansonWilliam Harwood and Ellen Alderman

Debbie and Greg HastingsDavid and Kelley HeathTim Hebda and Sarah Morrisseau

Lydia Maier ’90 and Merritt Heminway ’90

Lucas and Samantha HigginsPeter Higgins and Payson Oberg-Higgins

Jean HoffmanEric HoffstenKevin and Katherine HoganJohn Holdridge and Meg Springer

Omar Hourdeh and Achaa IgalEddie and Patricia HowellsNathaniel Huber ’83Cory Hutchinson ’91 and Kimberly Hutchinson

Mark Ireland and Lisa TesslerKenneth and Tasha IrvingGlenn and Elizabeth IsraelHerbert and Kathleen JanickMark and Darlene JarrellMarc and Kate JetonDavid Johnson and Charrisse Kaplan

Henk and Gigi JordaanGeorges Kabongo Mubalamate and Antoinette Kabongo

E’nkul Kanakan and Bioneke Mpungu

Robert Kaplus and Jennifer Slack

Joan Kenyon and Peter Miner

Peg KeyserAnthony Kieffer and Susan Conley

Hal and Brigitte KingsburyErik and Lisa KramerJim Langford and Molly AldrichHenry and Sarah LaurencePeter Lea and Linda OliverElizabeth and Willy LeBihanAdam and Diana Lee

Page Lennig and Laura Spector

Volkhard Lindner and Lucy Liaw

Cameron and Erica LinenJim Linsky and Crystal CanneyFrederick and Kimberley LippGregg Lipton and Sara CrispMartin Lodish and Kristin Schardt

Jeffrey and Beth LongcopeLee Longnecker and Diana FishSabrina Loring and Dominic Zappone

Diane Lukac and Steve SilinArnold Macdonald and Elizabeth Moore

Christopher and Katharine MacLean

Debbie and Wasin MahaphanitTed and Sue MaharLydia Maier ’90 and Merritt Heminway ’90

Stephen Majercik and Faith Barnes

Marcella Makinen and Rodney Mashia

David Mallon and Rachelle Parise

Paul and Maureen ManettiCarter Manny and Elizabeth Chapman

Bruno Marino and Anne Henshaw

Chuck and Peggy MarstonErin MartinMark and Kimberly MayoneGuy and Tatiana McChesneyCourtney McCollumCharles and Michelle McNuttSpencer Melnick ’90 and Shea Melnick

Gil and Carrie MezaChris and Lauren MichalakesDavid and Libby MillarJames and Kristine MillardRobert and Christine MillsGordon Millspaugh and Laura Lewis

Chris and Steve MitchellBob and Libby MooreWarren Moorhead and Mara Robinov-Moorhead

Adrian and Sarah MoranJohn MorrillJames Mullen and Elise Ansel

Sean and Elizabeth MurphyTed MusgraveWilliam and Pia NeilsonDavid and Julia NelliganAlain Manda wa Diese Nkulu and Mireille Nkulu

Jodi Nofsinger and Amy Hannaford

Denis O’Brien ’83 and Laura O’Brien

Keith and Cordelia OehmigJim Ohannes and Elizabeth McGrady

Barak and Miriam OlinsMarcio and Daniela OliveiraBob Olney and Catherine Richards

David and Sigrid Ordway

Neil Orenstein and Gretchen Knowlton

Michael and Patricia PacilloLincoln Peirce and Jessica Gandolf

Jim and Karyn PellowDavid and Margaret PinchbeckChris Pope and Jennifer FifeChristopher Price and Wendy Poole

James and Jane PuiiaKenneth Raffel and Claire Oppenheim

Damion Rallis and Courtney Cook

Matt and Kay RalstonStephen and Elizabeth RansomEdward Reiner, Jr. and Susan Lakari

Janice RibeiroJonathan Riggleman and Robin Brooks

Dana and Youn RiversHeather Robertson Isherwood ’89 and Mark Isherwood

Kelsey RobinovRobert and Stephanie RobinsonWilliam Robinson and Lynn Reed

Peter and Maura RodwaySteven RosenblattDeborah Rowe and Timothy Cole

Edward Rowe and Catherine Bickford

Robert Rowse and Colette Twigg

Norbert RunyamboBarry and Lori SaltzWilliam H. Sandberg ’87 and Diane Sandberg

Ovid Santoro and Lori TraikosRalita SarapakMichael Sargent and Patsy McSweeney

Rosa W. Scarcelli ’88 and Thomas Rhoads

Gillian Schair ’90 and Seth Rigoletti

Erica Schair-Cardona ’94 and Ivan Cardona

Jason and Kristy ScherBenjamin Scoll and Emily Renschler

David and Nisu SederWilliam Seeley and Christine Donis-Keller

Beth Sellers and Marc KefferDr. Thaddeus Shattuck and Dr. Elisabeth Sperry

David Sherman and Martha Burchenal

Deborah ShinnGlen Shivel and Julie AllenDavid Silk and Lynne CrandallGary and Ania SmallAustin Smith and Amy CohanChristopher and Anne SmithElizabeth Smith and Jennifer Hoopes

Ian Smith and Carol Wilson-Smith

Tim Soley and Maria GallaceCynthia Sortwell and Jessie Cash

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 201322

John Southall and Krista Nordgren Southall

Joseph and Susan Spagnola

Sandy and Jill SpauldingRenee St. JeanGeorge E. Stevens, Jr.Marjorie StockfordAyres Stockly ’82 and C.C. Stockly

Michael D. Stoddard ’82 and Barbara Stoddard

David and Valerie StoneSunny and Tracy StutzmanJoe and Mary Jo SurgesBob and Kari SuvaJohn and Nancy TabbWilliam Talpey and Carla Burkley

Tsai Tao and Li Chuan Ying

Steven and Christine Tenney

Christian and Elizabeth Thomas

Nathaniel ThompsonBenjamin and Rachael Thrash

Torsak Tiparos and Katie Murray

Carol Titterton and Peter Hamblin

William Torrey and Pamela Phillips Torrey

Michael Trautman and Judy Gailen

Jeffrey Troiano and Abby Dubay-Troiano

Aklilu Tsaedu and Rahel Hagos

Mike and Allison TurndorfDavid and Karen Van DykeLance and Gina VardisCal and Stephanie VaryVincent and Nancy Veroneau

David Vickery and Tasha Worster-Vickery

Paula VolentHans and Lee WarnerJames and Patricia Wasserman

George Weaver and Vicky Smith

Dave WeinbergDoug Welch and Caitlin Gutheil

Jonathan Werner and Rebecca Stetson Werner

Desmond Williams and Marcia MacDonald

Roy and Lauren WilliamsKim WilsonDon Wojchowski and Karen Miller

Kingson Woo and Domenica Vacca

Michael and Lucretia Woodruff

Ralph and Clare YarnSemere Yehdego and Asmeret Teklu

Jeff Young and Betsy Mahoney

CURRENT GRANDPARENTSAnonymous (7)Linda AlbertThe Anderson Family Foundation

Paul and Mary AndersonLynn and Richard Anderson

Thomas and Rachel Armstrong

James W. BabcockMr. and Mrs. Alfred Baginski

Karen Belleau and Dean Ridlon

Miriam BemanHope and Jay BentonMarilyn BickfordNorman and Frederika Brooks

Wendel BrussAllan and Amy ChapmanMr. and Mrs. George Chase

Thomas ClementsJoan and George ConnickHerbert and Rue CorkMr. and Mrs. Edmund Damon

John and Mary Ann Deady

Judge and Mrs. Bernard Devine

Mrs. Julia E. EdelsteinBarry and Jane FanburgTaffy and Eliot FieldJonathan and Dorothy Fox

Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. FoxDr. and Mrs. Roger Frerichs

Jay and Lenore FriedlandLawrence N. Friedland and Alice Linker Friedland

Ms. Jane GilbertHelen and David GinderJoseph and Rosemary Gitto

Karl Norberg and Pam Gleichman

Barbara GoodrichEdward S. and Cornelia Greaves Fund

Winifred GreenMrs. Cynthia GreeneEdward and Katherine Harding

Corrilla Decker Hastings ’53 and James Hastings

Hugh and Poppy HawkinsThomas and Susan HealyBuell and Anne Heminway

David and Sara HoldridgeDavid and Kathleen Hoopes

Mr. and Mrs. William D. Howells

Mr. and Mrs. Gene Howland

Hugh and Elizabeth Humphreys

Dick and Anne JacksonJoanne KatzDianne and Ed KeenanKeith and Elaine Knowlton

Mr. and Mrs. Francis Labuski

Anthony and Cynthia Lamport

Frederick and Carol Lennig

Ms. Jean LincolnJonathan and Liela LinenMs. Margarethe LutzMr. Mark LutzJim and Liz MaierCarla Marcus and Lawrence Mohr

Molly MartinMr. and Mrs. Edward Massey

Suzanne McAllisterHilda McCollumJoseph and Gloria Melnick

Betsy and Clifford MohrDr. and Mrs. Richard Nordgren

Raul and Nancy OrtizIngeborg PolacsekDavid and Louise RansomMr. and Mrs. Joaquim Ribeiro

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Richards

Mrs. Sidney RichardsonMs. Diana RobergMary Ellen RobinsonJames G. Rogers IIIMr. and Mrs. Art SaundersJohn and Kirsten ScarcelliDavid and Beverly Sherman

Andrew and Anna SidesMrs. Jane P. SilkDr. and Mrs. Barry SmithMr. and Mrs. Richard Sperry

Mrs. Jill StevensMs. Janet StinsonHolmes and Didi StocklyHarry and Patricia SundikRobert and Mary Lou ThallPhilip P. Thompson, Jr.Joan P. TilneyMrs. Frances Van DykeEdith Van SyckleMrs. Helene WilsonMr. and Mrs. Wayne Wisbaum

Mr. and Mrs. David Woodruff

Dr. and Mrs. Alan Zimble

ALUMNI

1935Ellen Libby Lawrence

1939Maria Benoit HanleyJoan Brown Smith

1940Frances Kendall Moon

1941Katherine Benoit GibbonsAnn Lib Robinson Strout

1942Sally Means Kirkpatrick Elizabeth Barron Parran Patricia Benoit Quinlan Shirley Cole Quinn

1943Constance Verrill Reich Jean Philbrick Strout

1944Joan O’Donnell CarrollAnn McCahill Strahan

1945Victoria Simes Poole Priscilla Whitehouse Rand

1946AnonymousJoyce Gyger McCarthyCarlie C. Seymour Mary Louise Thomas Sprague

Pamelia Deering Strayer

1947Nancy Tyler AllynGerry Arzonico ClementJosephine Hildreth Detmer

Patricia Davis Klingenstein

Elizabeth Maxwell Wheeler

1948Jean Gyger Black Anne Whitehouse GassElizabeth Decker Porteous

Alice Hildreth Rand

1949AnonymousAlice Palmer HunnemanConstance Rogers McIntyre

Barbara Boyd Soule

1951Alison Derby Hildreth Abigail Randall Lumsden Donna Hildreth O’Hara

1952Lucy Fowler Klug Cornelia Leighton Robinson

Beth Smith Horton

1953Caroline Clifford Bond Pamela Malcolm Gemery Corrilla Decker Hastings Katherine Hildreth Pierce

1954Happy Langmaid Bradford

Ann Martin Collins Sally Howes Hansen Robyn Smith Helmer John E. Palmer Jr.

1955AnonymousJohn A. CorsonMadeleine Gatchell Corson

Martha Holbrook Douglas Pigeon

Mary Senter Hart Caroline Campbell Knott Florence Walker Morrison Lee Tyler Robbins Marjorie Meyer Roberson

1956Lee Loring Anne Cobb Moore Joan Ross ShepherdDeborah Dodge Wood

1957Susan Lamb MurphyJulia Emerson Pew Carol Copeland Pratt Betsey Loveland Wheeler Virginia Dana Windmuller

1958Dee Dee Dana BradfordPenelope Pachios Carson Mary Soule DavidsonJane J. Doherty Susan Palmer Jones Darene Holbrook LennonJudith McManamy

1959Laurie Marshall Cushman Jinxie Blake Gooch*Sara Hyde Jurgeleit Judith Dana Parker Brenda Russell PrusakMarjorie DeMotte Welch

1960Joanne G. Asherman Frederica Chapman Cynthia Drummond Choate Elinor Clark Helen Jenness Connell Charlotte Langmaid Dr. Ellen Maltby-Askari Mary Howes Merrick Frances Emerson PrinnSuzanne A. Spencer Bonnie Marshall Tompkins Deborah Sampson Van Hoewyk

Louise Gulick Van Winkle

1961Peter M. Davidson Anne Chadwick Parker Gail Leslie Sargent Anne Rines Stanley Sandra Thaxter

1962Polly Blake Burke Diane Duncan Jeanne Gibbons Emmick Betsey Staples Harding Sara HolbrookFelicity Howlett Jerry Swanson Landt Nancy Langmaid Loth Catherine MacDonald Morrow

Deborah Weare Slavin Diane Warren Zglobicki

1963Nancy Montgomery Beebe

Peter ChapmanJames DrummondJean Southern DrummondCandace Plummer Gaudiani

Wendy Dana Hines Terri Holmes Kemp Brooke Samuelson Elizabeth Stickney Shortle

1964Judith Jones OrlandiLeslie Tuttle Rowson

1965AnonymousJohn B. Branson David DrakeCharles Miller

1966Priscilla Sampson Armstrong

Peter P. Drake George Payson

1967Christopher Brown Alexander KnowlesLinda Detmer KnowlesMargo Chapman PearsonCheryl Seymour Roberts Kristine W. Saunders Carol Kaulback Vaughn

1968Pamela Drake McCormick John Sowles

1969Lesley MacVane

1970Elizabeth Woodman BeginPaula Bentinck-SmithPeggy MacVane MurrayVictoria Nolan Crolius

1971Nancy Drummond Tindal

1972Gail Chapman CloseJustine E. KnizeskiSusan Bliss SouleRoger F. Woodman

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1973C.D. ArmstrongJonathan DrakeJohn LordSerena Bliss Mercer

1974Pamela Fife Christina Poole Thomas Jonathan Thomas

1975William BlissTimothy Hiebert Zareen Taj Mirza Twig Mowatt

1976Thomas ArmstrongLeigh Bonney Katharine Moody James Rines

1977Miriam J. GoughTodd I. Prawer

1978Thomas Cronin

1979Lesley Perry Craig Megan Huber

1980Christopher Moore

1981Gail Dodge Luke D. Huber Caroline H. Renwick

1982Hilary Huber Holm Janice Moore Coleman Elizabeth Silverman Reid Elena Robinson Ayres Stockly Michael D. Stoddard Margo Walsh

1983Nathaniel Huber Albert Moore Michael L. Mudge Denis O’Brien

1984Desiree Bousquet Patricia Bridge Connor Carol Leonard Catherine Lewis Stephen Parker Jeremy Sclar

1985Katharine Fullam Harris

1986Jonathan B. Cantwell

1987AnonymousDaniel Berman

Andrea Bopp Stark Jay Bride Michael Bull Lynne Manson Gawtry Amy Henderson Kate Parker Muller Jodi Phinney Eliza Sprague Rowe William H. Sandberg Jesse Q. Sargent John J. Wordock

1988Nicholas Armentrout Sarah Chappell Armentrout

Alison Beebe ArshadJane Hartglass Baker Heather Courtice HartAubrey EmoryKatherine Glaser GetchellBronwyn McCarthy Huffard

Erika Marks Jessica Lang Nowinski Julia Parker Elizabeth Cimino Pierce Jeffrey PierceRosa W. Scarcelli Alicia B. Zambelli

1989Brenner GlickmanMargaret Christie KeohanHeather Robertson Isherwood

James RohmanJessica Wannemacher

1990Thomas D. Bull Michaela GoldfineMerritt HeminwayLydia MaierSpencer MelnickGillian Schair Mohammed Shir

1991AnonymousJennifer Hall Alfrey Annie Bonebakker Bonney

Sarah Freilinger Meredith Harrell Cory HutchinsonKristofer Johnson Benjamin Leahy Tyler Lincoln Kirsten F. McWilliams Saniya O’Brien Leah Babcock Schaff Gerard Tiernan Leonora Zilkha Williamson

1992Shawna E. Friedman Alexis Gilman Alice Heminway Katie Hall Johns Heather McKenny Lippert Torie Reed

1993Sebastian Cariddi David A. CiminoAmelia Wilson Jaffe Aaron Kadoch Heather Kimball-Titus Sarah Lavigne Jessica Stillman Lenci Charles Ruch Derek Shaffer Molly Miller Sparling Michael Zambelli

1994Bradley Bissell Daniella Nichols Cameron Jesse Field Kimberly Davidson Golden Lissa Hall Juedemann Erica Schair-Cardona Richard Thompson Jonathan Valenti

1995Woody Brewer Meghan Curci Mark Devoe Courtney Aronson Sparks

1996AnonymousLauren Wilkis Bedford Real Deprez Vanessa Gates-Elston David JoyceSarah Maier Peterson ’96Lindsay Frye Richman Rena M. Strand

1997Jonathan A. Amory David AronsonBenjamin Birney Amanda Gates-Elston Sage Tyler Orr Matthew Page Clayton A. Rockefeller Dallas Rolnick

1998AnonymousDavid Gulak Abigail Ingalls Molly Field James Emily Mitchell Madero Mark Miller Nondini A. Naqui Anne-Marie Newton Erin Peck Yarema

1999AnonymousChristian A. Berle Sherman Kew Anne McPheeters Hannah Harwood NelsonJed PortaTiffany Carter Skillings

2000Keith Case

Aidan FlahertyShelley G. Hodges Robert McCarthy

Michael Neilson Katherine Nichols William Renner Timothy Whittemore Alexandra Collins Wight Ivy Wilkinson-Ryan

2001AnonymousSarah Begin CameronGretchen C. Boulos Dalit Gulak Wolfe Johanna Rosenfield Kremberg

Catharine Keith LaPuma Whitney McMullan Nicki Noble Bean Amanda Pilon Boger Stephen Pride Caroline Robertson Justin Schair Raphael Taylor Ann Tracy Cole

2002AnonymousRachel Fried Samuel Harris Jacobsen Ives Emilia Sibley Laura Siegle Caitlin Whelan Catherine White Kimberly Warde Yoder

2003Christopher Bixby Ana Davis Michael Devine William C. Donovan Courtney DrakeWyatt Garfield Timothy KaruSamuel LaCasse Elizabeth Love Claire McClintock Katherine Reimann Jessica Scott Althea Simons Abigail Whiting Van Dam

2004Jefferson M. Bates Ilana R. Bornstein Morgan Finch Greta Flaherty Kristin Howe Ceri Nichols Morgan Pendergast Elysse Porta-Barnet Annemieke Schair Benjamin Sosnaud Jennifer SteinkelerMiranda Theodore

2005Linden Ellis Anina Hewey Nathaniel Johnson Matthew O’Rourke Anne Reiner Margaret Sosnaud

2006Kimberly Ayers

Daniel Black Nelson Bruns Elizabeth H. Critchfield Adrian Fiser Hugh Freund Annie Hancock William Harte Lily Hoffman Gretchen Koch Spencer L. Libby Caroline Schnell Jonathan Wolinsky

2007Alexander Bonnin Benjamin Bornstein Katherine Campbell Angela Doxsey Sarah Gratwick Hilary Hall Jearranai Jujaroen Gretchen K. Knoth Cecilia Nardi Thomas Newton Hillman Norberg Joseph Nowak Hannah Rose Orcutt Katherine Peterson Andrew Veroneau John Watson Jamie Watson

2008Edward Donovan Hamish Haddow Chase Hamilton Anando Naqui Adam PontiusSusanna Sprague Margaret J. Veroneau

2009Joshua Bloom Ellen Cole Owen Conly Thomas Godsoe Anna N. Libby Greer Millard Nina Russem

2010Gabriel Bornstein Bethany Campbell Samuel Cleaves Grace E. High Emily Torrey

2011Noah Aronson Olivia Chap Kieran Hanrahan Madeline High Elizabeth Lewis Lukas Tubby Joseph Veroneau

2012Cameron Barner William R. Cleaves Owen Deady Rosalind Gray-Bauer George JohnsonHanae Miyake Susannah Moore Sarah Neuren

Hilary Niles Claire Olson Michael Redman Ben Semmes Eleanor Semmes Peter Stein Noah Stone Emily Trafton Katherine Whitaker

2013Luke Jeton Mesa Robinov Miranda ShinnKatherine Torrey

PARENTS ANDGRANDPARENTSOF ALUMNIAnonymous (10)Drs. Francis and Carol Altman

Charlton and Eleanor Ames

Daniel and Joan AmoryC.D. Armstrong ’73 and Betts Armstrong

Thomas and Rachel Armstrong

The Bailey FoundationChristopher and Betsy Beaven

Nancy Montgomery Beebe ’63 and Michael Beebe

Elizabeth Woodman Begin ’70 and Jeffory Begin

Barbara A. BergerDr. and Mrs. Ben BergerRoger K. BerleTom BetheaWilliam Bliss ’75 and Lucinda Bliss

Deborah and Joseph Bornstein

Cheryl and Joseph BoulosTom and Tina BourdeauxDesiree Bousquet ’84Jill and Gregory BowdenNancy Brain and John Watson

Mr. and Mrs. John Braitmayer

Polly Blake Burke ’62Edward and Phyllis Campbell

Thomas and Lori Campbell

Robert and Elizabeth Carroll

Penelope Pachios Carson ’58

Diane CaseyFrederica Chapman ’60Michael Chestnutt and Jennifer Christian

Santo and Elizabeth Cimino

Ray CoffinJoan and George ConnickDavid and Triss CritchfieldDavid Cummiskey and Vanessa Nesvig

Page 26: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 201324

Debba CurtisEliot and Melanie CutlerPeter M. Davidson ’61Josephine Hildreth Detmer ’47

Jesse DeupreeMarylee and Charles Dodge

Jane J. Doherty ’58W. Michael DonovanMr. David Drake ’65 and Mrs. Kathleen Drake

Drew and Susan DubuqueJohn and Carol FarrellTaffy and Eliot FieldMr. Everett FisherThe Forsley FamilyArthur Fink and Ann Foster

Jim and Katie FreilingerJames Garland and Carol Andreae

Frank and Susan GentileKatherine Benoit Gibbons ’41

David and Maria GlaserKarl Norberg and Pam Gleichman

Gertrude M. GoffPeter and Libby GordonMaureen and Jim GormanJohn and Barbara Graustein

Hyman M. GulakMr. James Haddow and Ms. Michelle Ritchie-Haddow

Mark and Jeanette HagenRonald and Susan HallThomas and Lynn HallettPhilip and Susan HamiltonLin Peyton and Morris Hancock

Bill and Lindsay HancockMaria Benoit Hanley ’39Edward and Katherine Harding

Katherine Pope and Christopher Harte

Whitney Neville HarveyDaniel and Phyllis HayesDavid Heald and Sukie Curtis

Buell and Anne Heminway

Jeff and Elizabeth Herriman

Bo and Kristina HeweyMichael and Elizabeth High

Alison Derby Hildreth ’51Hilary Holm ’82 and Kenneth D. Holm

Sherry HuberAlice Palmer Hunneman ’49

Mark Isaacson and Karen Herold

Dr. and Mrs. Ramanath Iyer

Laura JacksonSusan Palmer Jones ’58Stephen and Cinda Joyce

David Keith and Stephen Simpson

Sally Means Kirkpatrick ’42

Lew and Maggie KraininLowell and Melissa LibbyMr. Willard LibbyJohn and Nancy Lightbody

Abigail Randall Lumsden ’51

Ann MachadoCathel and Jan MacleodJim and Liz MaierSidney Thaxter and Mary McCann

Joe and Suzanne McCarthy

Alan McIlhenny and Elizabeth Ackerson

Peter McKendrySuzanne McMullanPeter and Eve-Susan McPheeters

Joseph and Gloria Melnick

Frederick and Avis MillerPeter Milliken and Linzee Weld

Margot and Roger Milliken

Carolyn S. MitchellKent and Ann MohnkernFrances Kendall Moon ’40Margaret and Mason Morfit

Dan Morgenstern and Moriah Moser

Walden S. and David N. Morton

Moser and Morgenstern Families

Rose Mary and Allan MuirJeff and Alison NathansonSusan and Barry NelsonJuanita and Arthur NicholsBenjamin and Anne NilesKyle and Diane NobleJudith NoveyRuth Ann and Raymond Nowak

John and Cynthia OrcuttRev. Larney OtisCraig and Libby OwensAnne Chadwick Parker ’61

Judith Dana Parker ’59Gerri PattisonGrace and Tony PayneJames and Jacqueline Pierce

Katherine Hildreth Pierce ’53

Victoria Simes Poole ’45Elizabeth Decker Porteous ’48

Todd I. Prawer ’77 and Alison Prawer

Debbie ReedSharon and Richard Renault

John and Sonia Robertson

Richard G. Rockefeller

Susan and Frank RuchJerome and Margery Russem

Julie RussemJohn Ryan and Jenny Scheu

Cindy and Jim SanbornJoe and Susie SaundersKristine W. Saunders ’67John and Kirsten ScarcelliIneke SchairArthur Schnell and Michele Bednarz

Maxine SclarTobey Scott and Amy Woodhouse

Robert and Katy ScottMark Segar and Susan Metters

Joe and Elonide SemmesJim and Lynn ShafferBen Shambaugh and Shari Goddard Shambaugh

Mohammed Shir ’90 and Nazia Shir

Reed Silvers and Pauline Barry

Joan Brown Smith ’39Deborah SniteAlice and Dick SpencerMary Louise Thomas Sprague ’46 and Phineas Sprague

Craig SproulSue SteinPen and Dorothy StevensNeal and Lorry StillmanHolmes and Didi StocklyBill and Mary StockmeyerAnn McCahill Strahan ’44Pamelia Deering Strayer ’46

Karen Stray-Gundersen and Jane Begert

Ann Lib Robinson Strout ’41

Chip Martin and Heather Tanguay

Steven and Jody ThaxtonPhilip P. Thompson, Jr.Nancy Drummond Tindal ’71 and Bruce Tindal

Richard and Barbara Trafton

Louise Gulick Van Winkle ’60

Margo Walsh ’82Joseph and Erika Wannemacher

Chris and Pat WatsonBarbara WhiteBreda and David WhiteDarrell and Karen WhitneyClint and Jennifer WillisCarol WishcamperNick and Annie WitteRoger F. Woodman ’72 and Carol DeTine

Richard WortleyDiane Warren Zglobicki ’62

Ralph Zieff

CURRENT AND FORMER FACULTY AND STAFFJennifer Hall Alfrey ’91Katy AmeglioLouisa G. AndersonMargaret AustinPauline BarryChristopher BeavenAnonymousMark BennettKai BicknellPat BoureJill BowdenCarrie BransonLynne BreenAlice BrockElizabeth BurdickRoss BurdickThomas CampbellJames CarlisleRay CoffinKelly ConnorCathie ConnorsJudy CoonAmanda CoteHeather Courtice Hart ’88Debba CurtisWendy CurtisLaurel DalyDonna DesjardinsStephanie DolanCathy DouglasTraci DowdDrew DubuqueCaroline EarlsAmy FawcettTaffy FieldTiki FuhroRikki GallagherMichael GelsanliterLinda GilmanCaitlin GilmetMichaela Goldfine ’90Emily GrahamAnne HagstromLynn HallettPeter HamblinTim HebdaMerritt Heminway ’90Richard HenryShelley G. Hodges ’00John HoyCinda JoyceStephen KautzDianne KeenanPatricia KenistonJoan Kenyon Lisa KramerBetsy LangerPage LennigMichele LettiereLisa LibbyLowell LibbyLydia Maier ’90Mary McCannJames MillardRobert MillsWylie MitchellCourtney MongellRaymond MorrowSusan NelsonJuanita NicholsElicia Niemiec

Alain Manda wa Diese Nkulu

Judith NoveyMiriam OlinsBob OlneyGrace PayneSusan PenneySally PriceSharon RenaultParker RepkoJanice RibeiroJona RiceSeth RigolettiKelsey RobinovDeborah RoweJulie C. RyderCindy SanbornGretchen SchaeferMark Segar Stacey SevelowitzReed SilversKatrina St. JohnLaura SpectorSue SteinLorry StillmanMary StockmeyerNancy TabbHeather TanguayNancy TarpinianNancy TetraultJeri TheriaultDaniel ThomsenBenjamin ThrashRachael ThrashCarol TittertonDavid VaughanBreda WhiteDavid WhiteGladstone Wilson

GIFTS-IN-KINDThe following donors generously donated goods or services to the School.AnonymousAkariAlford Lake CampJames and Melissa AllenAsmaraAurora ProvisionsAV TechnicAzure CafeBonoboBrowne Trading CompanyCamden National BankKeith and Maria CanningCheri Bryant Design, LCCCity TheaterEl Rayo TaqueriaThe Forsley FamilyWendy FranklinFreshGatherDavid and Maria GlaserGoBerryThe Good TableLacey Goodrich and Ed Lutjens

Gorgeous GelatoHigh OutputHot SuppaMesa VerdeMigis Lodge

Morrison’s Maine CourseRuth Ann and Raymond Nowak

Pai Men MiyakePapier GourmetPom’s Thai TasteThe Porta FamilyPortland Harbor HotelPortland MagazinePortland Museum of ArtPortland PieJohn and Sonia RobertsonMesa Robinov ’13Henry and Cathy SaniukSkyline Farm and Carriage Museum

Solo BistroStreet & CompanySysco Food Services of Northern New England

TandoorTwistYosaku

EVENTS

HANDS TO ART November 16–17, 2012

THANK YOU TO OUR DONORSWe are extremely grateful for the generous support of the following local businesses and individuals in our community. Their support was shown in the form of cash or in-kind donations of products, services, and media presence, and was essential to the success of Hands to Art. We encourage you to support them in-kind.

BenefactorsMigis Lodge and the Porta family

Patrons Azure CaféCheri Bryant DesignSysco

Donations of FoodAsmaraAurora ProvisionsBonobo Wood Fire PizzaBrowne Trading CompanyEl Rayo TaqueriaGatherThe Good TableHot SuppaMesa VerdeMiyakePom’s Thai TastePortland Pie CompanySolo BistroTandoor RestaurantTrader Joe’sYosaku Japanese Restaurant

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Annual Giving 2013

25

Artists & DonorsJulianna AchesonElise AnselArt House Picture FramesChris BeavenCatherine BickfordMarilyn BickfordWoodfin Brewer ’95 Robin Brooks Nelson Bruns Jennifer Buchanan Caiola’s, Sebastian Cariddi ’93

Casco Bay Frames & Gallery

Kim CaseDiane CaseySamrith ChapElizabeth ChapmanJennifer ChristianThomas ConnollySara CrispSukie CurtisDiane DahlkeNatalie DiBenedettoCooper DragonetteArthur FinkJulie FreundGaleyrie Maps & Custom Framers

Rikki GallagherClaudette GamacheKatie Glaser Getchell ’88Lacey GoodrichGreener Postures YogaJennifer GreggThe Grill RoomMark HagenLindsay HancockDorothy B. Hayes ’42Eddie HowellsPatty Howells

Claudia HughesKamasouptraKaplus FamilyNancy Elena KarpSarah LaurenceDale LewisWinky LewisLocal 188Angus MacPhailLesley MacVane ’69Michael Maltby ’65Nancy Manter ’70Rob McCarthy ’00Guy and Tatiana McChesney

Kimberly MayoneSusan MettersMasahiko and Chieko Miyake

James MullenTed MusgraveWill and Pia NeilsonK. Dana NelsonVanessa NesvigArthur NicholsJuanita NicholsDiane NobleNoshJudy NoveyBarak OlinsTony and Grace PayneLincoln PeirceEllie Porta-Barnet’04Deborah ReedJan Roberson’55The Salt ExchangeRichard SandiferMiranda Wu ShinnDylan StarkAyres Stockly ’82Barbara Y. SturgeonPatricia Sundik

Alison ThibaultLori TraikosWaynflete Summertime Arts

Dave WeinbergHelene and Kim WilsonAnnie Lloyd WitteMichael and Lucretia Woodruff

Jane Wray’56Wade ZaharesZapoteca

Artisan Fair ParticipantsArtascope StudiosDavid BerrangKatie ClarkCullen ConcannonAngela CookJefferson Cotton and Kamala Grohman

Martha DaliganClaudia DillerIvy FerrelliColleen FordRoy GuzmanKamasouptraEd KeenanHeidi KendrickCynthia LegereCarol LeonardElise LoschivoMarcia MacDonaldSolviejg MakaretzAnn MannKimberly MayoneAngus McPhailNed MotleyStephen OliverPizza by FireLiz Prescott

Deb RobbinsMaria RootesGretchen SchaeferShari ShambaughKaren SuvaTorsak Tipparos and Kate Murray

Waynflete StudentsWilburs ChocolatesClaire Winston-WadeTanya Zivkovic

Host CommitteeLisa and Alex AgnewMolly Aldrich and Jim Langford

Jill BackmanElizabeth Barrett and John Frumer

Jane Batzell and Bob Cleaves

Catherine Bickford and Ed Rowe

Greg BoulosEmily and Michael Bukowski-Thall

Karen and Bill BurkeKate Burnham and Nate Clark

Patti and Pat ButlerMeg and Christopher Campbell

Susan Conley and Tony Kieffer

Deborah and Richard Connor

Lucy and Bob FlightShane and Susan Flynn

Eva and Halsey FrankJodi and Jonathan Freedman

Maria Gallace and Tim Soley

Shannon and Nathan Gordon

Lynn and Tom HallettBryson Hopkins and Tracy Floyd

Kathleen and Herb JanickKate and Marc JetonDale and Rich LewisDiane Lukac and Steven Silin

Elizabeth McGrady and Jim Ohannes

Michele Polascek and Jeff Benson

Catherine Richards and Bob Olney

Deborah ShinnJennifer Slack and Robert Kaplus

Susan and Joe SpagnolaJill and Sandy SpauldingValerie and David StoneKari and Bob SuvaLori Traikos and Ovid Santoro

Jeffrey Troiano and Abby Dubay-Troiano

Lee and Hans WarnerTricia and Jim Wasserman

SPRING FLING May 18, 2013We would like to thank the Porta family and Migis Lodge for donating the delicious barbecue. Thank you also to Twist and Gorgeous Gelato for their donations.

CommitteeAbigail Bliss, ChairMelissa Tomback, Co-Chair

Sheri Feeney, Event Day Coordinator

Individual Coordinators:Julianna AchesonAnnie Anderson Laura BelmanKate BurnhamFiggy DiBenedettoJeremy GabrielsonMaria GallaceShannon Gordon Deb Hastings Mesa Robinov Cynthia WheelockLee Warner

LOBSTER BAKE AND RAFFLE May 18, 2013

Beverage DonationsShipyard Brewing Co. and Fred Forsley

Pine State Trading and Keith & Maria Canning

Raffle Item DonationsMigis Lodge and Inn at Ocean’s Edge and the Porta Family

Alford Lake CampPortland Harbor HotelAurora ProvisionsAkariPortland Museum of ArtPortland Monthly Magazine

Street & Co.

FOUNDATIONS, CORPORATIONS, AND BUSINESSESThe following organizations helped support Waynflete this year through grants, matching gifts, and other charitable giving programs.

Acworth FoundationThe Anderson Family FoundationAustin Community FoundationThe Bailey FoundationBaltimore Community FoundationBank of America Matching GiftsFrances Hollis Brain Foundation, Inc.Bristol Seafood, Inc.Brooks Family FoundationCara Charitable Foundation, Inc.Clements Family Charitable TrustCoastal Studies For Girls

Davis Family FoundationDiversified CommunicationsEdward H. Daveis Benevolent FundThe Evergreen FoundationFidelity Charitable Gift FundFinance Authority of MaineThe George L. & Clara S. Shinn Foundation, Inc.The William J.J. Gordon Family FoundationHannaford Brothers Helps Schools ProgramHillman Charitable FoundationJ.M. Huber CorporationThe Hudson FoundationThe Jebediah FoundationJohn Hancock Matching Gifts ProgramJohn and Patricia Klingenstein FundThe Lamport Foundation, Inc.Maine Community FoundationThe Nature Conservancy

Oak Foundation USAParker Hannifin FoundationThe Poetry FoundationSaunders ElectronicsScripps Howard FoundationSherman Family FoundationThe Phineas W. Sprague Memorial FoundationTarget Take Charge of EducationTD Charitable FoundationTexas Instruments FoundationJoseph H. Thompson FundUnum Matching Gifts ProgramWellington Management Company, LLPWells Fargo FoundationUnum Matching Gifts ProgramWellington Management Company, LLPWells Fargo Foundation

FOUNDATIONS AND PROGRAM SUPPORTED Acworth Foundation Acworth Scholars

Frances Hollis Brain Foundation Global Community Scholars

Davis Family Foundation Sustainable Ocean Studies

Edward H. Daveis Benevolent Fund West End/Parkside Mentoring Project

The Evergreen Foundation Sustainable Ocean Studies

The Hudson Foundation Financial Aid for Lower School Students of Diversity

Maine Community Foundation West End/Parkside Mentoring Project

Oak Foundation USA Curricular Integration and Sustainable Ocean Studies

The Phineas W. Sprague Memorial Foundation Annual Fund 2012-2013

TD Charitable Foundation West End/Parkside Mentoring Project

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PRESIDENT Elizabeth Barrett

VICE PRESIDENT Abby Dubay-Troiano

SECRETARY/TREASURER Laura Burden

MEMBER-AT-LARGE Patti Butler

CLASS PARENT COORDINATORS

LOWER SCHOOL Emily Bukowski-Thall Patty Howells

MIDDLE SCHOOL Catherine Richards

UPPER SCHOOL Jodi Freedman Peggy Marston

CLASS PARENTS

EARLY CHILDHOOD Jeremy Gabrielson Shannon Gordon Katie Hogan Rachael Thrash Kindergarten Beth Sperry Gina Vardis

GRADE 1 Figgy DiBenedetto Ralph Good

GRADE 2 Kathy Dion Carolyn Noyes-Blyth

GRADE 3 Sarah Moran Gerry Pickus

GRADE 4 Annie Anderson Winky Lewis

GRADE 5 Ari Fischer Alli Turndorf

GRADE 6 Sarah Armentrout ’88 Gillian Schair ’90 and Seth Rigoletti Lori Traikos

GRADE 7 Susanna DuBois Caitlin Gutheil

GRADE 8 Susan Flynn Dora Anne Mills

GRADE 9 Faith Barnes Tessa Bollinger Ian Smith and Carol Wilson-Smith

GRADE 10 Karyn Pellow Monique Roy-Nuki

GRADE 11 Maria Canning Vilean Taggersell

GRADE 12 Jill Backman Pia Neilson Deborah Shinn

COMMITTEE CHAIRS

ARTS Alex Agnew Catherine Bickford

ATHLETICS Nancy Veroneau

DIVERSITY John Frumer

EVENTS Kate Burnham

FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY Maria Gallace

GEAR Chris Mitchell

VOLUNTEER COORDINATORS Deb Hastings Lee Warner

WAYNFLETE PARENTS ASSOCIATION 2012–13 LEADERSHIP SLATE Voted in May 22, 2012

Jill Arnold ’61 Ms. Julie Kilmartin

George Brett Mary Louise Thomas Sprague ’46 and Phineas Sprague

L. Morrill Burke, Jr., PhD Deborah Weare Slavin ’62

Sloan Critchfield ’03 Abigail Whiting Van Dam ’03

Chip Crothers Marjorie Stockford

Dan Densch Timothy Aho and Susannah Corwin

Rev. Michael Dwinell Ralph Zieff

Susan Donovan Adrian Fiser ’06

Betty Gamble Charles and Holland Filliettaz

Martha Holt Giles ’47 Zareen Taj Mirza ’75

Carol Congdon Haynes ’47 Nancy Tyler Allyn ’47

Nancy Hiatt Barbara A. Berger

Maine Rose Anonymous

Zona King John and Betty Bibber Megan Dion Stephen and Cinda Joyce Lisa Llorente Lauren Miller Nancy Tetrault

Donald Knoth Gretchen K. Knoth ’07

Michael Macklin Louisa G. Anderson Elizabeth Lewis ’11

Sam Maier ’92 Anonymous

Margo Norberg Hillman Norberg ’07

Pamela Paul Sarah Lavigne ’93 Nondini A. Naqui ’98 Clayton A. Rockefeller ’97

Alice Mary Pierce ’42 James and Jacqueline Pierce

Ruth D. Pillsbury Judith McManamy ’58

Ethan Remmel ’87 Michael Bull ’87

Lucia Pierce Smith ’47 Deborah Weare Slavin ’62 Victoria Smith and George Weaver

Eleanor Tessler Mark Ireland and Lisa Tessler

Wayne Van Dyke Mrs. Frances Van Dyke

Brook Willing ’66 George Payson ’66

Alice Brock Jonathan Valenti ’94

Polly Blake Burke ’62 Catherine MacDonald Morrow ’62

Eleanor Brown Chidsey ’17 David Chidsey and Rachel Brown

Jessica Connors ’22 Dianne and Ed Keenan

Joseph Connors ’15 Dianne and Ed Keenan

Triss Critchfield Caitlin Whelan ’02

Debba Curtis Matthew Page ’97

Josephine “Dodie” Detmer ’47 Zareen Taj Mirza ’75

Morgan Earls ’24 Betsy and Clifford Mohr

Taffy Field Molly Field James ’98

Kingsley Floyd ’12 Tracy Floyd and Bryson Hopkins

Karlina Gonzalez ’15 Corky and Carla Clarke

Ada Knoth Gretchen K. Knoth ’07

Ben Mini Owen Conly ’09

Humayun Mirza Zareen Taj Mirza ’75

Nami Chace-Ortiz ’18 Raul and Nancy Ortiz

Sadie Pacillo ’12 Michael and Patricia Pacillo

Harrison and Alicia Rowe Edward Rowe and Catherine Bickford

Deborah Shinn Barbara Sturgeon

Sue Stein Caitlin Whelan ’02

Emily Tabb ’17 Suzanne McAllister

Nancy Tabb Suzanne McAllister

John C. Van Dyke ’17 Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wisbaum

Catherine White ’02 Barbara White

Thomas White ’05 Barbara White

/IN MEMORY OF

IN HONOR OF

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Annual Giving 2013

Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 2013 2726

ANNUAL OPERATING BUDGET FOR FY 2013

Budgeted Expenses FY 2013

PERSONNEL $ 8,405,270

FINANCIAL AID 3,302,772

AUXILIARY 1,004,000 PROGRAMS

PLANT 925,200

DEBT SERVICE 758,000

INSTRUCTION 585,697

ADMINISTRATION 400,240

TECHNOLOGY 139,000

OTHER 101,895

PROFESSIONAL 36,000 DEVELOPMENT

TOTAL $ 15,658,074

Annual Fund Gifts by Giving Level

AMOUNT RAISED

NUMBER OF DONORS

Budgeted Revenue FY 2013

TUITION $ 13,082,993

ENDOWMENT/ 1,113,881 BOARD TRANSFERS

AUXILIARY 825,000 PROGRAMS

ANNUAL FUND 575,000

OTHER INCOME 61,200

TOTAL $ 15,658,074

GIFT SIZE $1–$999 $1,000–$2,499 $2,500–$4,999 $5,000–$9,999 $10,000–$24,999 $25,000 +

$11

2,51

9

$11

3,91

2

$12

1,97

6

$76

,340

$71

,916

$50

,295

866 d

onor

s

21 do

nors

9 don

ors

61 do

nors

23 do

nors

2 don

ors

The above gifts plus income from events equal $589,010 total Annual Fund giving.

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 2013 2928

ALL GIVING 2012–2013 HIERARCHICAL ( Includes Cash Gifts, Pledges, and Pledge Payments)

CONSTITUENCY(hierarchical)

ANNUAL GIVING CAPITAL GIVING TOTAL

Annual FundUnrestricted Restricted Endowment

FutureCapital Gifts

Past Campaign Bequests

TRUSTEES $ 85,060 $ 550 $ 75,925 $ 100,000 $ 1,667 $ 263,202

PARENTS $ 191,022 $ 36,262 $ 67,257 $ 7,500 $ 3,835 $ 305,876

ALUMNI $ 95,255 $ 2,185 $ 69,252 $ 50,000 $ 2,775 $ 10,723 $ 230,190

GRANDPARENTS $ 77,895 $ 1,350 $ 16,457 $ 7,500 $ 5,000 $ 108,202

FORMER PARENTS & GRANDPARENTS $ 62,891 $ 16,565 $ 225,985 $ 10,000 $ 3,875 $ 577 $ 319,893

FOUNDATIONS $ 10,000 $ 65,000 $ 10,000 $ $ 85,000

OTHER FRIENDS $ 24,991 $ 7,499 $ 20,319 $ 725 $ 53,534

EVENT INCOME $ 41,896 $ 41,896

TOTAL $ 589,010 $ 129,411 $ 485,195 $ 175,000 $ 17,877 $ 11,300 $ 1,407,793

Board Development CommitteeWilliam Harwood, ChairJane BatzellDiane LukacWalden (Denney) MortonErica Schair-Cardona ’94Mark SegarSusan SpagnolaWilliam A. Torrey

Annual Fund CommitteeAlex Agnew, Co-ChairWilliam Harwood, Co-Chair

Parent Class AgentsFaith BarnesEmily Bukowski-ThallLaura BurdenJohn FrumerJen Giguere

Shannon GordonKaryn PellowTim SoleyLee Warner

Senior Gift CommitteeJill BackmanAnne BeldenMichael Belleau and Molly SnedenPatti ButlerJosh Espy ’13Laura HannanRegat MebrahtuPia NeilsonPam Phillips TorreyMesa Robinov ’13Phoebe Suva ’13Jonathan Tao ’13Katherine Torrey ’13

Alumni Class AgentsAnne Chadwick Parker ’61, Co-Chair Betsy Critchfiled ’06, Co-ChairNellie Semmes ’12Noah Stone ’12Ben Bornstein ’07 Katie Campbell ’07Gretchen Koch ’06Morgan Finch ’04Miranda Theodore ’04Courtney Drake ’03*Katie Reimann ’03*Jessica Scott ’03*Laura Siegle ’02Gretchen Boulos ’01Rob McCarthy ’00 Hannah Harwood Nelson ’99Erin Peck Yarema ’98*Tatiana Gelardi Whitlock ’98*Matthew Page ’97

Vanessa Gates-Elston ’96Woody Brewer ’95Molly Miller Sparling ’93*Lynne Manson Gawtry ’87Jonathan Cantwell ’86Hilary Huber Holm ’82Luke Huber ’81Mimi Gough ’77Tim Hiebert ’75Paula Bentinck-Smith ’70Nancy Montgomery Beebe ’63*Candace Plummer Gaudiani ’63*Polly Blake Burke ’62Anne Chadwick Parker ’61 Judy Dana Parker ’59Lee Tyler Robbins ’55Happy Langmaid Bradford ’54Dodie Detmer ’47Shirley Cole Quinn ’42

*Reunion Class

THANK YOU TO ANNUAL FUND VOLUNTEERS

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THANK YOU TO ANNUAL FUND VOLUNTEERS

Waynflete has three general endowments that support operations, financial aid and teaching, totaling $1,562,285.

The following is a list of named endowments:

THE CLASS OF 2012 ENDOWMENT IN SUPPORT OF UPPER SCHOOL ACTIVITIES Established: 2012 Purpose: To provide support for Upper School activities such as the Outdoor Experience program. This fund was established by the seniors and families of the Class of 2012.

THE WAYNFLETE FACULTY AND STAFF ENDOWMENT Established: 2012 Purpose: To support annual faculty and staff compensation costs. This endowment was funded by an anonymous contribution from a Waynflete family to honor the substantial contributions of past and present faculty and staff to the Waynflete community

THE MALONE FAMILY FOUNDATION ENDOWMENT Established: 2011 Purpose: To provide optimal opportunities for deserving gifted students of limited financial means to reach their potential. This fund was established by a gift from the Malone Family Foundation to support “ education in exceptional independent secondary schools [which] enables, for highly capable and motivated students, the impetus to excel; permission to be smart and to engage in intellectual conversation; a solid preparation for higher education in the world’s best colleges and universitites; and–most importantly–self-actualization.”

CINDA BAILEY JOYCE ENDOWMENT: A FINANCIAL AID FUND TO ENHANCE LOWER SCHOOL DIVERSITY Established: 2010 Purpose: To help support students from all economic backgrounds whose families seek

for them the opportunity to participate in the extraordinary early childhood and elementary programs that Cinda and her colleagues developed over twenty years. The endowment was established by the School and funded by generous gifts from members of the Waynflete community. Cinda Joyce was a teacher and team leader at Waynflete and then Lower School Director for fifteen years.

MARGARET W. SOULE, CLASS OF 1959 ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARCHIVES Established: 2009 Purpose: To provide funds to maintain the Archives Department at Waynflete. This fund was established by the Class of 1959 after their 50th reunion to honor the work of their classmate, Margaret Soule. Maggie worked as a volunteer staff person for decades protecting the history of the School and providing research for the community. The Class of 1960 added to the endowment for their 50th reunion. Maggie passed away in November, 2010.

CLASS OF 2009 GRADUATION GIFT ENDOWMENT FOR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Established: 2009 Purpose: To support faculty development above and beyond that which is supported by the annual operating budget. The fund was established by the seniors and families of the Class of 2009. In their appreciation statement, the students expressed “the faculty are the most important aspect of their experience at Waynflete. It is their availability, accessibility, caring and willingness to help that is most appreciated by the students.”

CLASS OF 2006 GRADUATION GIFT ENDOWMENT FOR FINANCIAL AID Established: 2006 Purpose: To fund financial aid over and above that which is supported by the annual operating budget. This fund was established by a gift from the seniors and families of the Class of 2006.

CLASS OF 2005 ENDOWMENT FOR NON-TUITION RELATED STUDENT SERVICES Established: 2005 Purpose: To enable students with financial need to participate in the full range of activities by providing support for items not covered by tuition such as academic support, musical instruments, athletic equipment, etc. This fund was established by the seniors and families of the Class of 2005.

THE PATRICIA DAVIS KLINGENSTEIN, CLASS OF 1947 ENDOWMENT FOR THE WAYNFLETE LIBRARY Established: 2004 Purpose: To support the Waynflete library. This fund was established by Patricia and John Klingenstein and other members of their family in honor of Mrs. Klingenstein’s 75th birthday.

WAYNFLETE’S TOTAL ENDOWMENT: $21,459,112

ENDOWMENT FUNDS

ESTABLISHED JULY 1, 2013 BY JOSEPH AND SUSAN SPAGNOLA AND THEIR FAMILY

The Lydia Maier Endowment has been established in grateful recognition of Lydia Maier, Upper School Dean of Students at Waynflete School. This $100,000 endowed fund is intended to provide ongoing support, at the discretion of the Head of School in concert with the Dean of Students, to the professionals and programs that promote the emotional and social wellness of Waynflete Upper School students.

It is the desire of the Spagnola family that this funding supports programs that help students to cultivate a strong sense of self, to develop coping skills to manage challenges and disappointments, to find value and purpose in life, and to connect with others. Others are invited to add to the fund.

The Lydia Maier Endowment

Waynflete’s endowment has increased significantly over the past ten years and its growth

becomes increasingly important when the School’s sustainability is considered.

An endowment is a “fund which is kept in perpetuity to provide interest and dividend earnings

for the benefit of a charitable cause,” in this case, Waynflete School. In examining Waynflete’s

annual operating budget, it becomes clear how the endowment can reduce pressure on tuition.

At Waynflete, the endowment is the result of contributions made over the course of many years

by scores of generous donors. Two new endowment funds were established this year: the Mark

Segar Endowment For Financial Aid, and the Lydia Maier Endowment.

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 2013 3130

PAM PAUL ENDOWMENT FOR PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Established: 2003 Purpose: To provide support for Waynflete faculty and staff to enhance their skills and bring new ideas to the School. Pam Paul, former Dean of Studies, had a particular interest in health and wellness, and the hope in forming this fund was that by providing additional education opportunities for professional growth and personal renewal, the endowment would promote wellness throughout the entire Waynflete community. This fund was established by the seniors and families of the Class of 2003 and was increased by the Class of 2004 graduation gift.

CLASS OF 2002 ENDOWMENT FOR HEALTH SERVICES Established: 2002 Purpose: To help provide the services of a health professional and to provide educational programs about health. This fund was established by the seniors and families of the Class of 2002.

THE KAREN WHITNEY FUND FOR MODERN U.S. HISTORY, GOVERNMENT AND CURRENT AFFAIRS Established: 2002 Purpose: To support faculty efforts to strengthen understanding of American politics and current affairs. Funds may be used for faculty professional development activities, both to enrich teachers’ own knowledge and awareness and to provide a strong base for classroom activities that address issues of civic participation, political history, and American government. The fund was established by a gift from an anonymous alumnus and is named for Karen Whitney, former History faculty, who taught at Waynflete from 1984–2002.

ENDOWMENT FOR ACADEMIC SUPPORT Established: 1999 Purpose: To provide academic support for students with learning challenges. This fund was established by the Phineas W. Sprague Memorial Foundation.

STUDENT FOREIGN TRAVEL ENDOWMENT Established: 1999 Purpose: To help provide access to Waynflete students to make foreign travel trips arranged by various departments of the school.

FINANCIAL AID CHALLENGE ENDOWMENT Established: 1998 Purpose: To fund financial aid over and above that which is supported by the annual operating budget. This fund was established at the beginning of the Campaign for Waynflete when the School accepted a matching gift of $250,000 from an anonymous donor to the Financial Aid Challenge Endowment with the restriction that funds generated by the endowment be used to supplement existing Waynflete financial aid. The seniors and families of the Class of 2008 added to this endowment as their graduation gift.

ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS Established: 1998 Purpose: To provide support for Waynflete’s Arts program. This fund was established by a gift from an anonymous donor.

ENDOWMENT FOR MINORITY STUDENTS AND FACULTY Established: 1998 Purpose: To provide scholarships for minority students and/or to supplement salaries and benefits for minority faculty. This fund was established though a generous gift from a Waynflete family.

EXEMPLARY TEACHING AWARD ENDOWED FUND Established: 1998 Purpose: To provide an annual stipend to a faculty member for professional development of their choosing that has been approved by the Head of School. This endowment was funded by an anonymous donor and gifts from the Waynflete community.

RUTH BAILEY BLINN DAVIS ENDOWED FUND Established: 1996 Purpose: To provide an annual stipend award in recognition of a deserving teacher. Ruth Bailey Blinn Davis was a teacher at Waynflete from 1942 to 1944 and 1947 to 1970. During most of these years she was a second grade teacher and she also served as Head of School. This fund was established by her husband, Euan Davis.

ZO KING ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP FUND FOR THE ARTS Established: 1996 Purpose: To provide money for student scholarship in the area of the arts. This fund was established by the Parents Committee on the Arts as part of the Waynflete Parents Association, and is in honor of Zona King, former arts faculty.

E.E. FORD FOUNDATION CHALLENGE FOR FACULTY DEVELOPMENT Established:1993 Purpose: To support professional development of faculty in the Upper School (grades 9-12) and to encourage and support innovative curricular initiatives from Upper School faculty. This fund

was established by the E.E. Ford Foundation with support from many generous donors in the community.

FUND FOR GLOBAL UNDERSTANDING Established: 1989 Purpose: To provide program resources to encourage students to develop their understanding of and appreciation for the rich diversity of the global community. It enables them to step beyond the confines of the familiar to experience the challenge and stimulation of different ideas and traditions and to share their knowledge with the Waynflete community. Thus equipped with heightened perspective and receptivity, students become better advocates for global understanding. This fund was established by a gift from an anonymous donor.

LOUISE DODGE STODDARD FUND FOR THE STUDY OF FOREIGN LANGUAGES AND CULTURE Established: 1988 Purpose: To enhance the study of foreign language and culture at Waynflete School by enabling Waynflete students to have actual experience in foreign countries through host-family or other study-abroad programs. This fund was established by the Stoddard Family in memory of Louise Dodge Stoddard, former teacher and chair of the Foreign Language Department at Waynflete.

PAYSON TRUST ENDOWMENT AWARD FOR FACULTY Established: 1988 Purpose: To award grants to faculty for further education, travel, research, or combinations of these areas of faculty enrichment. This fund was established by a gift from the Margaret Payson Trust for her appreciation of the educational contributions that Waynflete made to members of her family and the community.

If you have any questions or are interested in learning more about Waynflete’s endowment funds, please contact Sally Price in Waynflete’s Alumni and Development Office at (207) 774-5721 ext. 1228 or at [email protected]. (Note: There is a minimum required for establishing a new fund.)

Last year more than 240 alumni, parents of alumni, current parents, grandparents, trustees, students, faculty and staff gave over $1 million to The Mark W. Segar Endowment for Financial Aid, honoring the former Head of School’s 19 years of service to Waynflete. Gifts ranged from $20 to $200,000, and the Class of 2013 even voted to have their Senior Gift honor Mark. The Mark W. Segar Endowment for Financial Aid will support Waynflete’s financial aid program in perpetuity.

The Mark W. Segar Endowment for Financial Aid

Page 33: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

Annual Giving 2013

Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 2013 3130

The following is a listing of everyone who gave in honor of Mark:AnonymousMichael Abraha and Regat MebrahtuAlex Agnew and Lisa MarkushewskiNancy Tyler Allyn ’47Drs. Francis and Carol AltmanCharlton and Eleanor AmesRoger Amory and Laura MazikowskiLouisa G. AndersonPaul and Mary AndersonLynn and Richard AndersonJoel Antolini and Meeghan McLainNicholas Armentrout ’88 and Sarah Chappell Armentrout ’88

C.D. Armstrong ’73 and Betts ArmstrongEdmund F. Armstrong, Jr. and Sally MorrisThomas and Rachel ArmstrongAlison Beebe Arshad ’88Margaret AustinJames W. BabcockJill BackmanThe Bailey FoundationJane Hartglass Baker ’88Dana BarnardNancy Montgomery Beebe ’63 and Michael Beebe

Timothy BeidelAnne and John BeldenKaren Belleau and Dean RidlonMichael Belleau and Molly SnedenBarbara A. BergerChristian A. Berle ’99Roger K. BerleAnonymousChristopher Bixby ’03Deborah and Joseph BornsteinCheryl and Joseph BoulosDesiree Bousquet ’84Jill and Gregory BowdenHappy Langmaid Bradford ’54Nancy Brain and John WatsonMr. and Mrs. John BraitmayerRabbi Carolyn BraunAlice Brock and Patricia PeardBrooks Family FoundationJames Brooks and Cherie WendelkenTim and Fiona BrooksJames and Jennifer BuchananAnonymousPat and Patti ButlerEdward and Phyllis CampbellAnonymousRobert and Elizabeth CarrollKeith Case ’00Samrith and Nora ChapPeter Chapman ’63 and Karen ChapmanMr. and Mrs. George ChaseLi and Tai ChenBob Cleaves and Jane BatzellGerry Arzonico Clement ’47Mary Murray ColemanChristine CollinsJulia Colvin

Joan and George ConnickThomas Connolly, Pam Richards and Sophia Richards-Connolly ’13

Judy CoonJohn A. Corson ’55Amanda and Ryan CoteDavid and Triss CritchfieldDebba CurtisLaurie Marshall Cushman ’59Dr. and Mrs. D. Joshua CutlerEliot, Melanie and Zachary CutlerLaurel and Brian DalyConan Deady and Cynthia BerlinerDonna DesjardinsJosephine Hildreth Detmer ’47Jesse DeupreeMarylee and Charles DodgeW. Michael DonovanNyapeni DoulTraci and Michael DowdMr. David Drake ’65 and Mrs. Kathleen Drake

AnonymousJames ’63 and Jean ’63 DrummondDrew and Susan DubuqueElizabeth EdwardsenAnonymousJay and Lynne EspyBarry and Jane FanburgPeter and Sheri FeeneyTaffy and Eliot FieldMr. Everett FisherAnonymousShawna E. Friedman ’92Martha Chaplin Frink ’71John Frumer and Elizabeth BarrettKelley Frumer ’17Louis Frumer ’14James Garland and Carol AndreaeCandace Plummer Gaudiani ’63Lynne Manson Gawtry ’87 and Michael Gawtry

AnonymousKatherine Glaser Getchell ’88Linda GilmanHelen and David GinderAnonymousDavid and Maria GlaserGertrude M. GoffBarbara GoodrichJohn and Barbara GrausteinWinifred GreenHyman M. GulakDalit Gulak Wolfe ’01Mr. James Haddow and Ms. Michelle Ritchie-Haddow

Anne HagstromRonald and Susan Hall Alex and Meredy HamiltonMorris Hancock and Lin Peyton HancockMaria Benoit Hanley ’39Laura Hannan and Carl SierakMoritz Hansen and Suzanne FoxSally Howes Hansen ’54Whitney Neville HarveyWilliam Harwood and Ellen AldermanDebbie and Greg HastingsDaniel and Phyllis HayesRobyn Smith Helmer ’54Buell and Anne HeminwayWendy Dana Hines ’63John Holdridge and Meg SpringerHilary Holm ’82 and Kenneth D. HolmEddie and Patricia HowellsMr. and Mrs. William D. Howells

Mr. and Mrs. Gene HowlandFelicity Howlett ’62Luke D. Huber ’81Megan Huber ’79Sherry HuberHugh and Elizabeth HumphreysAlice Palmer Hunneman ’49Mark Ireland and Lisa TesslerDick and Anne JacksonMolly Field James ’98AnonymousMarc and Kate JetonDavid Johnson and Charrisse KaplanStephen and Cinda Joyce Stephen KautzTerri Holmes Kemp ’63Patricia KenistonHal and Brigitte KingsburyJohn and Patricia Davis Klingenstein ’47Lew and Maggie KraininMr. and Mrs. Francis LabuskiBetsy LangerPeter Lea and Linda OliverAnonymousCameron and Erica LinenGregg Lipton and Sara CrispJeffrey and Beth LongcopeNancy Langmaid Loth ’62Elizabeth Love ’03Diane Lukac and Steve SilinArnold Macdonald and Elizabeth MooreAnn MachadoChristopher and Katharine MacLeanCathel and Jan MacleodSarah Maier Peterson ’96Paul and Maureen ManettiCarter Manny and Elizabeth ChapmanMolly MartinMark and Kimberly MayoneMary McCann and Sidney ThaxterAlan McIlhenny and Elizabeth AckersonSuzanne McMullanAnne McPheeters ’99Peter and Eve-Susan McPheetersScott MeiklejohnMary Howes Merrick ’60Mark Miller ’98Zareen Taj Mirza ’75Carolyn S. MitchellCourtney MongellFrances Kendall Moon ’40Bob and Libby MooreMargaret and Mason MorfitAnonymousWalden S. and David N. MortonMoser and Morgenstern FamiliesRose Mary and Allan MuirPeggy MacVane Murray ’70Cecilia Nardi ’07AnonymousWilliam and Pia NeilsonJuanita and Arthur NicholsBenjamin and Anne NilesDr. and Mrs. Richard NordgrenJoseph Nowak ’07Barak and Miriam OlinsBob Olney and Catherine RichardsHannah Rose Orcutt ’07John and Cynthia OrcuttDavid and Sigrid OrdwayMatthew O’Rourke ’05Craig and Libby OwensAnne Chadwick Parker ’61Gerri PattisonLincoln Peirce and Jessica Gandolf

Katherine Peterson ’07Elizabeth Cimino Pierce ’88 and Jeffrey Pierce ’88

Ingeborg PolacsekChristopher Price and Wendy PooleSally and John PriceFrances Emerson Prinn ’60Shirley Cole Quinn ’42Kenneth Raffel and Claire OppenheimDavid and Louise RansomDebbie ReedSharon and Richard RenaultMrs. Sidney RichardsonLee Tyler Robbins ’55John and Sonia RobertsonKelsey RobinovRichard G. RockefellerSteven RosenblattDeborah Rowe and Timothy ColeSusan and Frank RuchJohn Ryan and Jenny ScheuCindy and Jim SanbornRosa W. Scarcelli ’88 and Thomas Rhoads

Ineke SchairErica Schair-Cardona ’94 and Ivan Cardona

Maxine SclarTobey Scott and Amy WoodhouseJim and Lynn ShafferAnonymousDeborah and Miranda ShinnMohammed Shir ’90 and Nazia ShirElizabeth Stickney Shortle ’63Althea Simons ’03Deborah Weare Slavin ’62AnonymousBeth Smith Horton ’52Deborah SniteTim Soley and Maria GallaceJoseph and Susan SpagnolaSandy and Jill SpauldingAlice and Dick SpencerCraig SproulKatrina St. JohnSue SteinMrs. Jill StevensPen and Dorothy StevensNeal and Lorry StillmanMs. Janet StinsonMarjorie StockfordKaren Stray-Gundersen and Jane BegertAnn Lib Robinson Strout ’41Barbara SturgeonJoe and Mary Jo SurgesBob and Kari SuvaTsai Tao and Li Chuan YingMichael and Nancy TarpinianNancy TetraultJoan P. TilneyCarol Titterton and Peter HamblinBonnie Marshall Tompkins ’60William Torrey and Pamela Phillips TorreyRichard and Barbara TraftonMichael Trautman and Judy GailenJeffrey Troiano and Abby Dubay-TroianoLukas Tubby ’11Vincent and Nancy VeroneauPaula VolentAnn Staples WaldronBreda and David WhiteDarrell and Karen WhitneyTimothy Whittemore ’00Clint and Jennifer WillisCarol Wishcamper

THANK YOU MARK W. SEGARThank you, Mark, for your leadership and dedication to this School. Your work has inspired many of us to give to this fund, which will benefit Waynflete forever.

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Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 201332

* Deceased

Anonymous (2)

Ellen Alderman and William Harwood

Maureen Anthoine-Orlandini

Betts Armstrong and C.D. Armstrong ’73

Jane Batzell and Robert Cleaves

Nancy Montgomery Beebe ’63

John and Anne Belden

Christian Berle ’99

Roger K. Berle

Harriet Langmaid Bradford ’54

Deborah Lombard Brett ’42* and George Brett*

Alice Brock and Patricia Peard

Margaret Burnham ’21*

Michael Cohen and Terry Cohen

Annie V. Crader*

Deborah Curtis

Laurie Marshall Cushman ’59

Barbara Davis ’36*

Nancy (Ping) Drake*

David Elliott and Elaine Elliott

Helen Emerson ’26*

Joan Sayward Franklin ’46*

James E. Freilinger and Katie Freilinger

Lynne Manson Gawtry ’87

David S. Glaser and Maria Glaser

Joseph Gray, Jr. and Marie Gray

Robyn Smith Helmer ’54

Nancy Keith Holland ’38*

Ruth Cook Hyde 1910*

Anne and Dick Jackson

Anne Davis Johnson ’32*

Ellen Libby Lawrence ’35

Diane Lukac and Steven Silin

Ellen Maltby-Askari ’60

Robert C. Monks and Bonnie Porta

Robert A.G. Monks and Millicent Monks

Destry Oldham-Sibley

John and Cynthia Orcutt

Anne Chadwick Parker ’61

Alice Mary Pierce ’42*

Shirley Cole Quinn ’42

Deborah Reed

Helen-Mae Reisner ’69

Richard Rockefeller

Ineke Schair

Deborah Weare Slavin ’62

Margaret Soule ’59*

Kenneth Spirer and Dr. Joan Leitzer

Mary Ann Strahan ’44

Karen Stray-Gundersen and Jane Begert

Jeffrey Thaler and Karen Massey

Widgery Thomas, Jr.

Patricia Hale Tyson ’43*

Eleanor Van Aken Wolcott ’57

Mary Van Etten ’30*

Clint and Jennifer Willis

Beyond the satisfaction of making a special

gift to the School that also is of benefit to

you, just take a look at the interest rates.

A charitable gift annuity is an easy

to understand contract between

you and Waynflete School, through

which, in exchange for a gift of cash

or securities, the School agrees to pay

you a fixed, secure payment for life.

New interest rates went into effect on

January 1, 2012 and are listed in the table

at right. The new rates are slightly lower

for single life annuities for ages 69 and

younger and slightly higher for single

life annuities for ages 75 and older.

There is a $10,000 minimum to establish

an annuity fund.

Creating a charitable gift annuity with

Waynflete is a simple thing to do. For more

information please contact Sally Price,

Director of Development, at 207-774-5721

ext. 1228 or [email protected].

Why is Waynflete’s charitable gift annuity such a good idea? Age Rate

60 4.4%

65 4.7%

70 5.1%

75 5.8%

80 6.8%

85 7.8%

90 9.0%

New Charitable Gift Annuity Rates

Waynflete MAGAZINE FALL 201332

Page 35: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

33

Annual Giving 2013

Leaving a lasting impact!“After careful consideration, we have included Waynflete in

our estate plans because of the important role the School has

played in our lives. For the last 20 years, we have watched

three of our children grow into smart, thoughtful and caring

people as a result of attending Waynflete. While our children

have certainly benefitted from a strong Waynflete education,

we have too. We have learned much about our children, child

development and education and also enjoyed being part of a

caring and supportive community. We hope that by sharing

some of our wealth with Waynflete, we will give other deserving

families the opportunity to experience what we have been so

privileged to enjoy.”

Bill Harwood and Ellen Alderman are parents of Julianna Harwood ’15,

Katherine Harwood ’13 and Hannah Harwood Nelson ’99. Bill and Ellen

have joined the Ruth Cook Hyde 1910 Circle.

For information, please send this to Waynflete School,

360 Spring Street, Portland, ME, 04102, Attention: Sally Price.

Name

Address

Telephone

email

Page 36: Waynflete Magazine fall 2013

34

360 Spring Street Portland, ME 04102

NONPROFIT ORG

US POSTAGE

PAIDPRESORT EXPRESS

UPCOMING EVENTSDecember 11Come Dance With Us Dance Concert

December 17An Evening at the Portland Museum of Art

December 18Lower School Music Concert

January 9–February 12, 2014Hands & Minds At Work Gallery Show

January 13, 2014Monday BooksDessert & DiscussionDiscussion Leader: Jim Millard, English FacultyThe Wild Braid: A Poet Reflects On A Century In The Garden by Stanley Kunitz

January 15, 2014Upper School Music Concert