WINTER SPORTS: EXCELLENCE ACROSS THE SPECTRUM
ON BAKER’S STAGE: A SURE-SHOT MUSICAL JEWEL
FOR ALUMNI: FRIENDLY RALLIES, BUST & AN OSCAR!
Spring 2016
HOW THE TOOLS OF EXPERIENCE WORK TO CRAFT LASTING STRENGTHS
BOARD OF TRUSTEES 2015–2016
Gregory B. Hartch ’88, P ’19 Chairman Richard A. Axilrod, P ’14, ’19 Nisha Kumar Behringer, P ’26, ’28 James F. Bell IV, P ’14, ’16, ’17, ’21 W. Robert Berkley Jr. ’91, P ’21, ’23 Nancy M. Better, P ’11, ’13 Michael J. Bingle, P ’20, ’25 Todd L. Boehly, P ’20, ’22, ’24 Mark H. Camel, P ’12, ’18, ’18 Robert F. Carangelo, P ’17, ’21 Frank J. Carroll, P ’22 Christine J. Chao, P ’18 Mark F. Dzialga, P ’19 Philip A. Hadley, P ’18, ’20 Carlos M. Hernandez, P ’18 Anthony E. Mann, P ’17 D. Ian McKinnon, P ’18 Robert E. Michalik, P ’19, ’21, ’23, ’28 Thomas D. O’Malley Jr. ’85, P ’12, ’15, ’21 Douglas I. Ostrover, P ’20 Suzanne P. Peisch P ’12, ’14, ’16, ’18 Philip F. P. Pierce, P ’10, ’13, ’18 Stephen R. Pierce, P ’15, ’19 Jean W. Rose, P ’16 David R. Salomon, P ’16 William A. Schneider ’72, P ’12, ’16 Scott M. Stuart, P ’12, ’16 Michael A. Troy, P ’12, ’14 Kerry A. Tyler, P ’15, ’18 Tyler J. Wolfram P ’18, ’22
Ex Officio Thomas W. Philip, P ’08, ’10 Headmaster Kathleen Harrington CFO/Business Manager Thomas G. Murray, P ’25, ’27 Executive Director of Development Daniel J. Griffin Director of Institutional Communications Binney Huffman, P ’17, ’21 President, BPA Paul Gojkovich III ’01 President, Brunswick Alumni Association
ON THE COVER Chess Throughout masters the(left to right) academic Henry Graham year, Brunswick ’26, Vincentboys Zhuof’28, and all Robert agesUlmer have been ’24 were doingamong the heavy 10 young lifting Bruinson competing their wayattothe theNational buildingScholastic of Grade strong Level character Chess Championships — ice climbing in in subzero Orlando,temperatures Fla., in December. at Camp HowDudley; did they reconstructing fare? To find out, broken turn to homes page in 56.New Orleans and the local community; and facing new challenges in the classroom to enhance their character-based education. For more on their service, adventure, and learning, see page 6.
Experience in Serving Others One of many components of Brunswick’s character-building initiative is Community Service Day, held this year on April 29. More than 150 Upper Schoolers traveled to Yonkers, N.Y., to help construct homes for Habitat for Humanity. Teams of faculty and students fanned out across Fairfield and Westchester counties to contribute their strengths and talents to charities and nonprofit organizations of all sorts.
MESSAGE FROM THE
HEADMASTER Power in the Handwritten Word
I
N MOST ordinary high school classrooms,
At the younger ages, we’ve
you see one student with his laptop open, furi-
found that directed and focused
ously taking notes by typing away. You scan to
technological applications can be
the seat next to him and see another with his
very effective. But we’ve also found
notebook on his desk, intently writing down the
that unstructured and unsuper-
words spoken by the teacher.
vised access to technology can be
What’s the difference — if any, you ask? Recent studies shed light on the answer.
distracting and confusing. Even in a student’s 9th-grade
Psychologists Pam Mueller and Daniel
year — when we do issue each
Oppenheimer found that students who take
boy his “own” laptop for use at
notes on laptops mindlessly take down every-
school and at home — we strongly
thing a teacher says.
encourage faculty not to allow
Additionally, their study determined that 40 percent of college students using laptops during lectures had unrelated material on their screens. Students who take notes by hand, however,
students to have their laptops “on and open” during class. Rather, in Upper School, the use of laptops is largely confined to
can’t keep pace with the teacher’s voice and
homework tasks completed during
are forced to listen and decide what is most
free periods or to supervised and
important to write down, a process ultimately helping them to learn. Joseph Stromberg noted xin Vox that students who use laptops for note taking ultimately find that doing so interferes with their effective recall of that information. At Brunswick, we agree. And, as many of you may know, we don’t issue laptops to our students until they reach Upper School. While we do provide ample
directed projects
IN BUILDING YOUNG MEN OF STRONG CHARACTER, WE NEED TO DO AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE TO ENCOURAGE OUR STUDENTS TO THINK AND ACT ON THEIR OWN AND TO INTERACT WITH EACH OTHER.
in class. Perhaps ironically, powerful and versatile as a laptop may
and attention in so many endeavors becomes
be, it presents a literal and
increasingly prey to technology.
figurative obstacle between each
Hence, when it’s most prudent to do so, we
student and his teacher, as well
endeavor to keep the learning process as simple
as between him and others in
and pure as possible.
the class. To add to the irony, as
bury his head in a computer screen instead of
smaller and smaller, the chal-
interacting with other students and teachers?
lenge of managing their use meaningfully in an educational setting grows exponentially, as we never want “the tool” to
iPads, laptops, and even desk-
become “the master.” we need to do as much as possible to encourage
very specifically project oriented.
our students to think and act on their own and
an aid to learning as well as an impediment.
To us, none of this discussion is earthshattering. It’s really just common sense. And it will continue to be common practice at Brunswick.
In building young men of strong character,
access to computers during the academic day is Our firm belief is that technology can be both
Why not take full advantage of our enviable student/faculty ratio? Why allow a student to
powerful devices become
access to technology through tops in our Pre, Lower, and Middle Schools,
efficiently and wisely — especially as our time
to interact with each other. In tandem, we want to teach students how to harness electronics
Thomas W. Philip
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S P R I N G
2 01 6
CONTENTS
times of
Brunswick School 100 Maher Avenue Greenwich, CT 06830 Tel: 203.625.5800 BrunswickSchool.org
Headmaster Thomas W. Philip Executive Director of Development Thomas G. Murray Associate Director of Development Meghan McCarthy Director of Institutional Communications Daniel J. Griffin dgriffin@brunswickschool.org Associate Directors of Communications Mike Kennedy ’99 mkennedy@brunswickschool.org Wayne Lin wlin@brunswickschool.org Class Notes Editor Libby Edwards ledwards@brunswickschool.org Contributing Writers Tucker Calcano ’17 Daniel J. Griffin Mike Kennedy ’99 Katherine Ogden Alex Okinaka ’16 Thomas W. Philip
6 FEATURES 06 Compassion, Commitment and Community Nurture the Building of Character By Katherine Ogden & Mike Kennedy ’99
Contributing Photographers Oliver Bierman-Lytle Dan Burns Camp Dudley Ben DeFlorio Jamie Fessenden Michael Graae Jeffry Konczal Minush Krasniqi Wayne Lin Heather Prescott Cliff Robbins P ’11, ’14, ’17 U.S. Squash Dale Walker Cam Welch Will Widmer Design Mary Lester Design marylesterdesign.com Printing Flagship Press, flagshippress.com
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39 Wondrous Winter: Excellence Across the Spectrum By Mike Kennedy ’99 46 On Stage! On Pitch! On Target!
m
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CONTENTS
39
6
DEPARTMENTS 01 Message from the Headmaster 50 Beyond the Books – Iconic Sleuth Ventures to Maher Avenue
FLEX TIME
– Making It in ‘The Bigs’
04 ‘Enjoy the Moment’
– Faces in the Crowd
38 ‘Ask No Guarantees, Ask for No Security: See the World’
– ‘Outside-the-Box’ Science & Engineering
55 Happy Dash Builds Community
– Senatorial Advice: ‘Value Education, Cross the Aisle’ – Golden Bear Sighting – ‘Encourage, Inspire, Protect the Girls in Your Life’ 56 Class Notes 59 In Memoriam 61 Alumni Events 64 Last Look
46
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FLEX TIME 8 6 T H A N N UA L FAT H E R - S O N D I N N E R
‘Enjoy the Moment’ By Mike Kennedy ’99
A
S A sophomore in high school, Pete Bevacqua ’89 entered the game in the
fourth quarter to loud and disparaging jeers from the crowd inside a jam-packed gymnasium at St. Mary’s — his former classmates chanting the Brunswick transfer’s nickname as he peeled himself off the end of the bench. He was a nervous wreck. But after knocking down two free throws, the point guard quickly found himself transformed — wanting the basketball in his hands and thriving amid the hostility and pressure of heated competition. Two years later, Bevacqua starred at quarterback for the Bruins — his team needing a win in a rain-soaked game against Fieldston to earn a spot in the FAA championship.
As a Bruin, Pete Bevacqua ’89 starred on the football, basketball, and golf teams, playing for the legendary gridiron coach and lifelong influence Bob Sampson (below).
Late in the first half and with a linebacker on his heels, Bevacqua
memories — of the good, the
rolled to his right and tried to
bad, and the ugly variety — as
draws on them in both
throw the ball through the end
the keynote speaker at the 86th
his professional and
zone to salvage another play.
Annual Father-Son Dinner, held on
personal life — whether
Thursday, March 10.
making decisions about
The pigskin slipped out of his hands, however, creating a Joe
“My memories from my time
To this day, Bevacqua
the Ryder Cup or about
Montana-to-Dwight Clark moment
at Brunswick haven’t eroded,”
the lessons he wishes
as Geoff Nichols ’89 swooped
he explained to the audience of
to instill in his three
across the end zone to snatch the
more than 600 fathers, sons, and
children.
fortuitous touchdown pass and
coaches — all on hand for one of
boost the Bruins to an eventual
the School’s oldest and most long-
looking back on moments of
14–0 victory.
standing traditions.
trophy-raising triumph — recalling
Bevacqua was the hero. Now the CEO of the PGA of
“They’ve become stronger.
And he’s not always
one specific instance on the
They’ve become more important.
gridiron when he stepped out of
America, Bevacqua relived a
And they’ve really defined who
bounds to avoid a head-on collision
handful of his Brunswick sports
I am.”
with an imposing opponent.
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Flex TIME
01 Perry and Conor Boyle ’17, Tom and Cole Fiorita ’17, and Andrew ’17 and Brooks Hennessy ’17 with their father, Peter. 02 Charles Tate ’20 and his father, Charles 03 Cameron Evans ’21 and his father, Steve 04 Senior moms Kate Lieder and Beba Errichetti 05 Philip Chadwell ’20 and his father, Philip 06 Student speaker and tri-varsity athlete Jack Stephenson ’16
01
02
04
03
05
It haunted him for years.
you have, the bonds you build.”
“Whether they’re good, bad, or
Bevacqua concluded with some
otherwise, you can learn from these
words of wisdom for his fellow
experiences as you reflect on them,”
Bruins — wishing he could travel
he explained.
back in time to join them and to
“How did you respond? Did you answer the bell? Did you play your best? Did you have your teammates’ backs? “Sports is one of the great things that lights our world. It’s you versus him. It’s your
play one more game for the Brown & Gold. “Enjoy the moment and realize that the decisions you make on the fields are important. They define who you are. “And, as Coach Sampson taught
team versus their team. There’s
me, we’re all going to win. Be sure
nothing so pure — the teammates
to have fun.”
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06
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COMPASSION, COMMITMENT AND COMMUN IT Y NURTURE THE
BUILDING OF
CHARACTER I N A C O M P L E X W O R L D , A N I M P E R AT I V E C H A L L E N G E
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Brunswick faculty and students unite in endeavors to think anew and act anew to safeguard and enhance the essence of the School’s long-standing dedication to building young men of character through commitment to the unwavering tenets of Courage, Honor, Truth. BY KATHERINE OGDEN AND MIKE KENNEDY ’99
IN THIS SECTION 12 Pre School 14 Lower School 17 Middle School 20 Upper School: Camp Dudley 28 Student Journal
For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
It was a Sunday, the very first morning of a weeklong expedition into the wilderness — and already, ’Wick junior Tucker Calcano ’17 was all in.
He and a cadre of classmates from the Upper School had arrived at Camp Dudley on the shores of Lake Champlain just one day before. 08 | TIMES
character_20.indd 8
“LITTLE LOG CABINS AND
was no textbook. No lecture hall.
deciduous trees scattered
No new-fangled computer app
throughout the landscape,
offering the latest workaround or
all overlooking a serene and
shortcut.
picturesque lake,” he wrote in his journal. “A gorgeous place.”
Instead, the silence of the wilderness in winter and a
It didn’t take very long at all
budding camaraderie with his
for beauty to work its magic. By
classmates brought him to that
the very next morning, the muse
transformative moment.
made an appearance.
T
“Woke up — breathtaking view — feel like an inspired poet.” For the Upper School junior, the power of education came in the experience. There
UCKER’S EMOTIONAL and psychological journey to inspiration may well have happened in the only
way it could, experts say.
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The Best Teacher? No Question: Experience
T
HE ASSOCIATION for
Experiential Education
offers a good definition of the pedagogy of experiential education: “Challenge and experience followed by reflection leading to learning and growth.” It’s a type of education that can include things such as outdoor education and service learning, and the association articulates some of its principles on its website. For example, the pedagogy offers: Experiences structured
“People who have studied character development through the ages have generally found hectoring lectures don’t help,” writes New York Times columnist and champion of character David Brooks. His is an insight that shines light on a paradox for educators interested in teaching character. If we can’t teach character in the classroom, how, exactly, do we do it? Some leading thinkers say community-building is the key. Here again, Brooks sheds some light. In a recent column, he quotes Kurt Hahn, a founder of Outward Bound: “‘It is the foremost task of education to ensure the survival of these qualities: An enterprising curiosity, an undefeatable spirit, tenacity in pursuit, readiness for sensible denial, and above all, compassion.
to require the learner to take
“‘All over the country, there are
initiative, make decisions, and
schools and organizations trying to
be accountable for results.
come up with new ways to cultivate
Throughout the experiential learning process, learners’ active engagement in posing questions, investigating, experimenting, being curious, solving problems, assuming responsibility, being creative, and constructing meaning. Intellectual, emotional,
character. The ones I’ve seen that do it best, so far, are those that cultivate intense, thick community. Most of the time character is not an individual accomplishment. It emerges through joined hearts and souls, and in groups.”’ Others, including Hahn himself, have added experiential education
social, soulful, and/or physical engagement and challenge — confirming a sense that the learning task is authentic. Development and nurturing of relationships: Learner to self, learner to others, and learner to the world at large.
LEFT Camp Dudley adventurers Siyan Shaikh, Tucker Calcano, Andrew Mellert, and Paul Grasso pause for a cup of warmth. MIDDLE The Camp Dudley crew of junior boys gathers for a nightly discussion. BOTTOM Lower Schoolers George Braun ’24, Owen Unger ’25, and Tony Zhu ’25 work together in their analysis of character traits.
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
Experts say experiential education may well be the only way to teach character, the only way for students to find that readiness to dig deep. 10 | TIMES
character_20.indd 10
to the mix. Yes, strong community
classroom intellectually to students
is a piece of the puzzle, they say,
mechanically taking notes. Good,
but true character develops under
wise hearts are obtained through
a more complex umbrella of peda-
lifetimes of diligent effort to dig
gogy best described as “experiential
deeply within and heal lifetimes of
world imperils character develop-
education.”
scars. You can’t teach it or email
ment with threats coming in many
it or tweet it. It has to be discov-
forms — technology being one of
passage from his 2015 book The
ered within the depths of one’s
the biggest. In a development that
Road to Character:
own heart when a person is finally
has lifelong ramifications, teachers
ready to go looking for it, and not
are increasingly seeing the effects
before.’”
of a shortened attention span
Brooks sheds more light in a
“The truth,” he writes, “was hammered home to me after I wrote a column expressing frustra-
Experts say experiential educa-
Nick Mosher ’18 and Henry Hill ‘19 sand the walls at 4515 Feliciana Drive in New Orleans during a service trip.
in the classroom. Brooks made
tion with how hard it is to use the
tion may well be the only way to
the connection to character in a
classroom experience to learn how
teach character, the only way for
recent commencement speech at
to be good. A veterinarian named
students to find that readiness
Dartmouth:
Dave Jolly sent me an email that
to dig deep. And beyond that, it’s
cut to the chase:
never been more important to try.
decommitment devices. Tinder,
More than ever, they say, today’s
OkCupid, Instagram, Reddit; the
“‘The heart cannot be taught in a
“We live in a society filled with
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 1:09 PM
“And if there is anything we are striving for, it is to prepare our boys to lead lives of meaning. Lives of purpose. Lives of fulfillment.” As such, the Trust really serves
Pre-Kindergartner Declan Hart-Syed shows off his “lego” idea of fairness.
entire Internet is commanding you to sample one thing after another.
The initiative has already seen
around character; and providing a
to deepen and define the School’s
every member of the Brunswick
“menu” of leadership and character
commitment to the values it has
faculty complete an online
development opportunities beyond
always held dearest.
Coursera course, “Teaching
what’s traditional.
“Academic, artistic, and athletic
Character and Creating Positive
Now, as Brunswick moves ahead,
Our phones are always beckoning
pursuits all have their place,”
Classrooms,” with a representative
a School community tradition-
us to shift our attention span. If
Headmaster Tom Philip said. “But
from each division attending other
ally and intensely committed to
you can’t focus your attention for
without strength of character, those
conferences and lectures.
the building of character is in an
30 seconds, how can you make a
pursuits will prove meaningless.
commitment for life?”
A
“And if there is anything we are
As the year has progressed,
ever-stronger position continually
results have accrued quickly — all
to develop and focus on large and
striving for, it is to prepare our
geared toward articulating tangible
small experiences designed to have
T BRUNSWICK, char-
boys to lead lives of meaning. Lives
ways to teach boys about character
powerful and lasting impacts on
acter education has been
of purpose. Lives of fulfillment.”
and leadership; offering vocabulary
students at every level.
the essence of the School’s mission
since its founding, nearly 115 years ago. Now, an initiative formally launched at the beginning of this academic year involves the entire School community in thinking about and acting on ways to articulate and further strengthen Brunswick’s long-standing commitment to Courage, Honor, and Truth. The Brunswick Trust cultivates experiential education in every corner of the School, from ’Wick’s youngest students in Pre School classrooms on Maple Avenue to new leadership roles for Lower School students, from a new vocabulary of character infused in every Middle School classroom to a new Outdoor Education Program that sees Upper School students tackle winter camping.
Fourth-graders Will Schmitz, Jack Connolly, and Patrick O’Connor “play it forward” by donating used-sports gear.
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
AT T H E
PRE SCHOOL
‘ CHARACTER CRITTERS’ OFFER PINTSIZED INSPIRATION “ A person’s a person, no matter how small.”
A
T THE PRE SCHOOL, it’s a character critter that most often relays the lessons of the Brunswick Trust, and in this case it is the famous elephant from Horton Hears a Who that provides some basic food-for-thought. Tasked with the challenge of talking to very small children about character, teachers at the Pre School have turned to critters like Horton and Fran the Fair Frog to tell the story for them.
“Critters,” said Pre-Kindergarten teacher Deb
“ Critters help us talk about character in a way that is perfect for preschoolers.”
LEFT Pre-Kindergartner Paul Kesmodel displays the character pillar of respect.
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Schwartz, “help us talk about
ness,” she said. “We spend a whole
to my mom when I eat all my
character in a way that is perfect
month talking about caring.”
vegetables!”
for preschoolers.” Schwartz, along with colleagues Connie Snetzko and Kristen Ingarra, have spearheaded the effort to strengthen character education for Brunswick’s youngest charges. Together, the three have helped implement Character Counts!, which teaches character education
“This is all such a part of Courage, Honor, Truth,” Schwartz said. “It’s not new. “I love the whole pillar idea, because it’s so concrete.” Here’s an overview of what some
On caring: “Caring is when you take care of
LEFT
Stuffed critters tell stories of character growth.
your friends. Like if a friend is hurt, you
of the youngest Brunswick students
take them to the
are saying about character.
nurse.”
On fairness: “If I have the
by emphasizing the six pillars of
Titanic and the Mayflower, it
character: trustworthiness, respon-
would be fair to give the Mayflower
sibility, respect, fairness, care, and
to my friend. If I kept both boats,
citizenship. “We spend a whole
that is unfair.”
month talking about trustworthi-
On trustworthiness: “Trustworthiness is being trusted!”
ABOVE Pre-kindergartners Blake O’Hara, Graeme Morley, Charlie Marks, Santi Loynaz, and Declan Hart-Syed add their smiles to the six pillars of character.
On respect: “I show respect
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Liam Green and William Connell take their turns representing the second grade at a student council meeting.
THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
AT T H E
LOWER SCHOOL
AMBASSADORS SPREAD A WONDERFUL WORD
C
ALL THEM AMBASSADORS for character education. This year at the Lower School, 22 fourth-grade boys who would otherwise have been warming the proverbial bench have instead stepped up to help lead Brunswick’s new initiative in character education. Every two weeks, these new envoys for character visit the classrooms of their younger classmates to lead discussions on character traits of the highest order. Grit, zest, self-control, modesty: Each lesson brings a new expedition into the teaching of character. And, the boys are doing it for each other, often heading back to the
exact classrooms they passed through just a few short years ago. Now in fourth grade, Gabriel Lopez said visiting his old classroom as an
ambassador gave him a sense of “nostalgia” and even “déjà vu.” Even more, it got him thinking about how to engage his younger counterparts in the business of learning character. “You can’t be too boring,” he said. “You have to have
ABOVE A Lower School boy spreads the word about “playing it forward.”
enthusiasm. That way, you can teach them more about how to have self-control and zest.” For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
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Often, the desire to serve far outstrips available roles. After all, there can be only one president. Such was the case at the Lower School last fall, when a total of 48 third- and fourth-grade boys expressed a very clear desire to serve their community in spirit and deed. Here it is in a nutshell: In a crowded race last fall, four dozen Lower School boys jockeyed for just four spots on the student council.
Grit, zest, selfcontrol, modesty: Each lesson brings a new expedition into the teaching of character.
Ten fourth-grade boys vied for the chance to be vice president, while 13 fourth-graders vied for the chance
Fourth-grader Colin Devine helps fellow Bruins look into the mirror of character.
to be president. The remainder ran with hope they could serve as treasurer or secretary. Each student worked hard. He created posters, lobbied for support, and then stood to offer a one-minute speech to the entire Lower School. In the end, the 216 boys who make up the Lower School community did as they were asked. They elected four boys to the four roles on the student council. The rest were invited to sit on the council by attending meetings. It almost goes without saying. The election plainly revealed scores of young students with a desire to learn more about leadership, and no clear place to do it.
LEFT The team of Lower School ambassadors: (Front) Cael Dalton, Reed Hyde, George Braun, Patrick O’Connor, William Newton, Lundeen Cahilly, Gabriel Lopez, Zane Saad, Harrison Hoover, and Thomas Coughlin
(Back) Hudson Hausmann, Colin Devine, Harrison Girard, Connor Crosby, Will Schmitz, Jake Murphy, Ryan West, Jack Connolly, Matty Augustine, and Luke Brooks (Missing) Devin Price and Chris Smoller
ABOVE Co-head of the Lower School Student Council Brett Martell explains a task to ambassadors Cael Dalton, Matty Augustine, and Jack Connolly.
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Twice a month, the boys fan out to help lead morning meetings in classrooms throughout the Lower School.
ABOVE As an ambassador, Gabriel Lopez ’24 shares his thoughts about character with younger Brunswick boys.
Gardner Carney Leadership Institute (gcLi) in Colorado Springs, while Massie had used a similar ambassador program when teaching fifth grade at her previous school. The two threw around ideas. Massie recalled her previous experience, and noticed that many students around School seemed to
Until now.
have no idea what was happening
lead morning meetings in class-
The Ambassador program
on the student council.
rooms throughout School.
widens opportunities for learning by giving more students a role.
She suggested boys on the
By the end of the year, the goal is
TOP Co-head of the Lower School Student Council Annie Massie leads the group through a brainstorming exercise on “zest.”
council visit first- through fourth-
to have the ambassadors take over
grade classrooms to spread the
and lead the discussions, running
tion between two Lower School
word about its work. It occurred to
the meetings from start to finish.
teachers who serve as advisors to
Martell to combine that idea with
the student council, fourth-grade
character development articulated
the idea of inclusion for all the
teacher Annie Massie and science
by the Trust. All of a sudden, there
members of the School,” Martell
that occur each and every day. We
teacher Brett Martell.
was plenty of work to go around.
said. “We wanted a program
are seeing the boys taking the lead
It grew from the collabora-
Early in the year, the two
The two now coach their ambas-
ABOVE Student Council Officer Tony Zhu ’25 and Student Ambassador William Newton ’24 share news at a second grade morning meeting.
“A big driving force for this was
that could be student-centered
by modeling what leadership is
discussed goals for the program,
sadors about how to talk about
and student-driven. It really just
all about. This ended up being a
with the clear desire to provide
specific character traits, providing
came about through our previous
wonderful idea,” he said. “It really
additional opportunities for leader-
a template on topics like grit or
experiences and the goal of student
gives fourth-graders leadership
ship among fourth-grade students.
zest that the whole School is trying
inclusion with leadership.
opportunities, and the third-
Martell was fresh home from
to learn more about. Then, twice
“I would say our ‘aha moment’
a conference last summer at the
a month, the boys fan out to help
has turned into a series of moments
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character_20.indd 16
graders say, ‘You know what? I want to do that.’”
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
AT T H E
MIDDLE
SCHOOL
TEACHER’S SPARK IGNITES PASSION FOR CHARACTER
K
RISTA WYNIA teaches fifthgrade science. Her classroom is a place you’d expect to find lessons on forces
and motion, states of matter, or the scientific method. It’s true. This classroom does have the traditional trappings of a Middle School science class. Eco-science dioramas line the windowsills, and a guinea pig happily makes its home in a corner. This particular classroom, however, is doing more than just providing space to learn science. There’s a knitting area in one corner, where students are making scarves for the Wounded Warrior Project and for Midnight Run. In another corner, a backpack on the floor reminds visitors of a new student-initiated drive to collect food specifically for those elsewhere who might not have access to it on weekends. On the wall, meanwhile, is a bulletin
Thomas Fouts ’20 and Nick Weiss ’23 promote a community-service event with creative artwork.
board headlined by a famous quote
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
from John Wooden, with displays that outline the new vocabulary of character education at Brunswick.
Science teacher Krista Wynia was one of four faculty members to attend the Gardner Carney Leadership Institute last summer.
Truth, self-control, honor, enthusiasm, adaptability: The words remain close at hand throughout
Marshmallows and golden
the year, so students and teachers
retrievers have provided other
alike can quickly make connections
character lessons for Middle
to whatever task is at hand. “We’ve
School boys, who now gather once
got lots going on,” Wynia admitted.
a month at a morning advisory
F
meeting to specifically talk about RESH HOME from the
character. The lessons are anything
gcLi conference in Colorado
but staid.
last summer, Wynia said
At one of the year’s first meet-
she returned to campus
ings, the boys were asked to “zoom
determined to help launch a new
in on self-control” after watching
community service club at the
a video showing very young
Middle School.
children trying to resist eating
She takes credit for the idea, but
a marshmallow. “The Stanford
says she soon found herself in the back seat. The desire to help was so great that students quickly took over tasks needed to get projects moving. “Our students want to help so much,” she said. “They needed the means to do that — a means of channeling it. They are the ones making the posters. They are the ones sending the emails.”
ABOVE Fifth-graders Nick Weiss and Campbell Officer, Krista Wynia, and eighthgrader Logan Darrin discuss plans at a Community Service Club meeting. LEFT Wynia’s classroom has signs of science — ecosystem dioramas and a guinea pig (right) — but that’s not all.
18 | TIMES
character_20.indd 18
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
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“ We’re trying to show kids that leadership and character can be many different things.”
Marshmallow Test,” as it is known, is a famous illustration of the concept of delayed gratification. In another funny video, a golden retriever becomes hopelessly distracted by the toys and treats laid along his route at a dog show. While both videos clearly demonstrate the pitfalls of poor self-control, the real point is to show self-control as a muscle — something that can be strengthened with practice. Wynia said the lessons have all proved powerful. “This has blossomed into more than I thought it would be,” she said. “We’re trying to show kids
Eighth-graders Jeffrey Sprung (top) and Eric Meindl, along with fifth-grader William Klein, pack lunches — ’Wick volunteers packed 672 in all — at an event at the Fairfield Food Bank to help people in need.
that leadership and character can be many different things. “Now that we’re all on the same page and using the same vocabulary, I really have seen a big change.”
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
AT T H E
UPPER SCHOOL
OUTDOOR EXAMS TEST ‘TRUST’ IN WINTER WILDERNESS
T
HE CLIFF WAS 80 FEET HIGH AND draped with thick, white ice. The task, for a group of ’Wick juniors on this otherwise ordinary Tuesday, was to climb. Gray clouds covered the sky — though sun wouldn’t have helped much. For ice climbers, even a sunny day won’t offer much warmth, because rock that offers the best ice for climbing almost always faces north. On this day, the temperature would creep slowly to a balmy 15 F, up just four degrees from the morning low. It was cold enough for many would-be climbers to cover every bit of exposed skin, including their faces. LEFT Tim Doyle and Ryan Harteveldt savor their warm and toasty van rides. ABOVE Camp Dudley is located in Westport, N.Y., on the shores of Lake Champlain.
For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
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Conor Boyle strategically maneuvers his way down the ice-climbing wall.
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
Matthew Beninati gets a jumpstart on the daylong hike.
this case, however, deep January cold had toughened this particular Adirondack ice into hard-like granite or concrete. Not ideal. Whacking a pick into ice of this kind causes it to fracture and break off in round plates (“dinner plates,” as they’re called in ice-climbing vernacular), ranging in diameter from eight to 10 inches — or more. A swing that fails to stick can not only send a “dinner plate” of ice cascading down the cliff, it can Faculty chaperones Danny Dychkowski and Oliver BiermanLytle document the events.
also waste one of the most precious Backpacks weighed in excess of 40 pounds — and didn’t have wheels.
climbing, ice can be soft, hard,
placement if it’s really cold,’ said
conditions on the icefall even more
brittle, or tough. Warm conditions
Teresa Palen, of Adirondack
forbidding. Unforgiving, even.
make for lovely, soft ice — ice
Rock and River in Keene, N.Y.
perfect for landing an ice pick. In
“Sometimes, you have to reset.”
Wikipedia tells us that, in
character_20.indd 22
winter enthusiast: Energy. “It’s harder to get good clean
It was also cold enough to make
22 | TIMES
resources available to any outdoor
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
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87
9
89
Burlington
Charlotte
C
7
9
OLLECTING THEM-
withstood a competitive appli-
on that day were 14 boys
cation process and been granted
from Brunswick.
approval by their teachers,
Students had been selected
exams to challenge themselves
first in School history to embark
in a non-traditional educational
on a new phase of education at
environment.
The Outdoor Leadership
Vergennes 87
stepped away from first-semester
from a pool of applicants to be the
Brunswick.
Ferrisburgh
Participants, all of whom had
selves at the base of this cliff
Addison
Middlebury
Hammond Pond
They learned how to survive in the wilderness — to orienteer,
Program, as it is known, is a key
to build a fire, to pitch a tent, to
component of the Brunswick Trust,
layer their clothing properly and
and took place Jan. 16–23, with
efficiently, to cross-country ski, to
historic Camp Dudley on Lake
make stream water safe to drink,
Camp Dudley has remained true to its mission for 130 years: To develop moral, personal, physical, and leadership skills in the spirit of fellowship and fun, enabling boys to lead lives characterized by devotion to others.
Champlain serving as home base. Vast and wild and very cold, the snow-capped Adirondack Mountains served as the classroom.
Green Mountain National Forest
Conor Boyle, Logan Hoelscher, Michael Tang, and Oliver Bierman-Lytle carry out an exercise in team-building. 87
7
4
4
7 4
87
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
to cook in the backcountry, to ice
“We’re using cutting-edge neuro-
climb, and to leave no trace for
science tools to try and understand
bears or other unwelcome visitors.
what people have been writing
These were conditions leading
about for 200 years or more,”
one ’Wick student to exclaim: “I
Strayer told OutsideOnline.com. “If
felt like an inspired poet.”
you talk to Thoreau or John Muir,
I
they’d say, ‘No kidding!’” NCREASINGLY, SCIENCE
No kidding, indeed. Camp
tells us that the sense of awe is
Dudley has been using the
the gateway to creative problem
were recently featured in a story
outdoors for education for genera-
solving and psychological well-
on OutsideOnline.com for their
tions. Founded in 1885, the camp is
being. It’s a notion now studied at
work using electroencephalo-
the oldest operating camp for boys
universities, and passed along in
grams (EEGs) to confirm that the
in the country.
popular media on the Internet.
prefrontal cortex takes a much-
Among the neuroscientists to study the effects of awe is David
needed break when we visit nature. Such a visit often leaves us
Dave Langston, development director at Dudley, said outdoor education helps create oppor-
Strayer, professor of cognition and
refreshed and ripe for new ideas, as
tunities for boys to “feel free” to
neural science at the University of
poets and environmentalists have
learn, to make mistakes, and to
Utah. Strayer and his colleagues
long described.
learn from those mistakes. Cell
ABOVE LEFT Paul Grasso gives a thumbs-up after submerging his gloved hands into icy water to fill his five-gallon water container. ABOVE Ice picks and belaying were the key to getting to the top. LEFT Peter Wise watches from below as he awaits his turn on the man-made wall. ABOVE RIGHT Alec Esmond focuses intently on every inch — on every step — of the slippery climb. RIGHT The team photo: (Front) Counselor Colin, Michael Tang, Logan Hoelscher, and Conor Boyle
(Middle) Counselor Tom, Alec Esmond, Charlie Pang, Tucker Calcano, Matthew Beninati, Peter Wise, Michael Beninati, and Siyan Shaikh (Back) Counselor Tom, Ryan Harteveldt, Paul Grasso, Tim Doyle, Andrew Mellert, Oliver Bierman-Lytle, and Danny Dychkowski
24 | TIMES
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
phones are checked at the door, enabling campers to look up, to see the space around them, and to see the people around them. “It’s not something you learn from a textbook,” Langston said. “You learn it from games. You learn it from hardship. “We need places like camp that offer genuine and meaningful ways for kids to learn to play, to grow, to work through struggles and to experience genuine relationships,” he said. Colin Loher, outdoor program director at Dudley, echoed those sentiments and more. He said education that requires people to leave their comfort zones remains very powerful. “That,” he said, “is where the launching pad is.” Benefits are vast, extending far beyond the inspired sense of awe described by poets. “One of the best parts about outdoor education is helping people make positive connections to the environment, to themselves, and to others around them,” Loher said. Brunswick teacher Daniel Dychkowski, who grew up camping with his family and has since done extensive work taking students on trips around the world, said outdoor education is the perfect venue for the Brunswick Trust and the kind of character education that Brunswick has long championed. Winter camping, in particular, provides unparalleled opportunities to hone crucial character traits like grit and self-control. Grit, especially, comes into play when the only way to a warm meal and a cozy fire is your own two feet. “I couldn’t think of a better way to develop these characteristics,” Dychkowski said. “The end of the trail is not going to come to you.”
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
“ We had to watch each other’s every move and guide the person above us down step by step. Because of our mutual support and advice, everyone was able to conquer the challenge.”
Man-made fires helped the boys stay warm amid the ice-cold temperatures.
FRIGID FINALE
BABY, IT’S COLD OUTSIDE!
NATURE IS CALLING.
reach down for your jacket. You
however, tightening up the
find your mountaineering boots,
drawstrings on your zero-degree,
maneuvering your fingers through
adventure, this very experience
mummy sleeping bag — ignoring
frozen laces to manufacture a knot.
epitomized the type of survival
the ice crystals formed by the
m
Ca
26 | TIMES
character_20.indd 26
11 d
°
You emerge from the tent,
Schoolers and two members
of the faculty gathered for the
mode they’d entered during their
condensation of your breath on
headlamp and stars above your
its outer layer.
only sources of light, and you
Above all, they learned to
trudge the 75 paces (camping
put “The Other Fellow First,” as
— only your mouth and nose
regulations, mind you) to your
states the Camp Dudley motto
exposed to the frigid Adirondack
outdoor repository — to where
dating back to 1885.
air seeping through the canvas of
nature has beckoned you.
You’re cold — freezing cold
Somehow, though, you fall
u pD
F
OR THE 14 Brunswick Upper
You’d much prefer not to answer,
your three-person tent.
ley
You unzip your sleeping bag and
Afterward, you make the
weeklong winter excursion.
They knew they’d have to do just that as they awoke at 6 a.m.
mad dash back to your tent
after a restless night of winter
and retrace your steps before
camping, set to embark on a
climbing back into your sleeping
grueling, survival-skill-testing
minutes later, you wake up again.
bag. For good measure, just prior
hike to an Adirondack summit.
You’re losing the mental battle.
to reentry, you race through a
You can no longer convince
set of 25 sit-ups to increase your
culminating exercise — their final
yourself that you can stay warm
body heat.
exam, if you will. And no pen or
back to sleep. But soon, perhaps mere
— that you can sleep until dawn. You must answer nature’s call. It’s the only way.
You close your eyes and sleep until the first break of sun. You have a long day ahead.
The ascent served as their
pencil was required. Early in the five-mile trek, Tim Doyle, a ’Wick lifer, Honor Roll
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 1:10 PM
student, and right-
cautiously, as the slope was too
handed pitcher on
steep to slide down and too
the baseball team,
long to jump,” Pang explained.
tasted the water from his Nalgene
somewhat challenging,
“Fortunately, we could find footing
bottle and knew immediately it
but it turned out to be the hardest
on small ledges in the ice and make
was unsafe to drink. He hadn’t let
thing I’ve ever done in my life.”
our way to the bottom. It was a
the stream water boil long enough
Charlie Pang, a standout All-New
nerve-wracking, scary descent.”
The group traversed rocky and steep terrain on its way to the summit, making the seated view from the top all the more worthwhile.
we subtly helped one another
during the treatment process.
England water polo goalie and
In those instances, Pang said,
But he’d have to press on —
an Honor Roll student himself,
Camp Dudley’s founding motto
simply lending out a hand. Actions
40-pound bag strapped to his
remembers hearing gasps and
echoed loudly above the beautiful,
like these represent the valuable
back, brick-like ski boots fastened
groans from the front of the pack
white-capped mountains and across
lessons that we learned during our
to his feet, thousands of vertical
after surpassing the halfway mark
the picturesque, sun-filled skyline.
time at Dudley.”
(even potentially treacherous)
of the adverse climb.
steps ahead of him.
Once atop the summit, Doyle,
every move and guide the person
understandably, could resort only
the trail ahead of them seemed to
above us down step by step,”
to cliché.
vanish without a trace — instead
he said. “Because of our mutual
taking a sharp, perpendicular,
support and advice, everyone was
world,” he said. “There is no
when dirty snow starts to look
and perilous turn downwards for
able to conquer the challenge.
greater feeling — knowing that all
delicious,” Doyle recalled. “I had
several yards.
There was no turning back now — and Doyle had just begun. “You know you’re dehydrated
thought the hike would be fun and
As the leaders inched forward,
“We had to watch each other’s
without saying a word, just by
“We had to move slowly and
“There were dozens of other times along the route, too, when
“I felt like I was on top of the
of the hard work and perseverance paid off in the end.”
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
IL DE RN ES S DA Y BY DA Y IN TH E W
JOURNAL OF ATIVE TRANSFORMA EXPERIENCE ’17 By Tucker Calcano
S AT U R D AY
character_20.indd 28
collaborative, interactive classroom,
A Gorgeous Place AFTER ARRIVING AT CAMP Dudley, we toured the campus,
vulnerable while blindfolded. I also greatly overestimated distances
S U N D AY
which, in many respects, represents
when deprived of sight. The exercise
the stereotypical image of a summer
gave me a new appreciation for sight
camp: Little log cabins and decid-
but also a new awareness about the
What Goes Up Must Come Down
uous trees scattered throughout the
inferiority of my other senses.
landscape, all overlooking a serene
28 | TIMES
I vividly remember hearing a cacophony of sound, as well as feeling incredibly overwhelmed and
We moved on to a LEGO activity,
as opposed to a lecture hall. Food for thought.
AN EXCERPT FROM MY JOURNAL entry that morning
and picturesque lake. A gorgeous
sitting back to back with a partner.
reads: “Woke up — breathtaking
place.
One built and instructed while the
view — feel like an inspired poet.”
We settled in for a few team-
other imitated without the luxury
Cross-country skiing 101: What
building games to break the ice. In
of speaking. It did not go well. We
goes up must go down. However
the first, we spread out in a large
then repeated the activity with both
high you trek is how far you get to
circle as our partners shouted a
partners allowed to speak, resulting
ski down. But that’s painfully intu-
phrase back and forth until we were
in dramatic improvements and
itive. The mountain was beautiful.
able to locate them.
bringing to mind the advantage of a
I felt like I was in a trance all day
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 1:10 PM
during our skiing adventure. What a difference movement
aspects of the trip. I was assigned to the food group. We quickly coined
makes for keeping warm. At lunch,
ourselves “Hell’s Kitchen.” Creative,
as I stood around an outdoor table
I know.
to eat, I got cold very quickly, even
Each subgroup — orienteering,
in all of my layers. While skiing,
clothing, risk management, and food
I wore only a base layer and was
and nutrition — gave a presentation
quite warm in the 20- to 30-degree
to the entire excursion group about
temperatures — a crucial nugget of
its area of focus.
knowledge to use in the wilderness. That night, we had our first vesper, a cabin group discussion.
Let’s not bore you with what we learned — but know that we were ready.
We assessed ourselves on two spectra (each a different personality
T U E S D AY
trait) and were then placed on a
Heart Racing, Muscles Taut
two-dimensional plane, which was subsequently divided into four quadrants representing four leadership types: Architect/analyst, relation-
ICE-CLIMBING DAY. We spent a few hours getting
ship master, driver, and spontaneous
equipped with the necessary
motivator (me!).
gear: Boots, crampons, and safety
Quick shout out to the relationship master, Paul Grasso!
harnesses. Because of the cold temperatures, the ice was firmer and harder to pierce with ice picks and
M O N D AY
crampons, making the ice climbing
Planning for Adventure
itself more difficult.
PREPARATION DAY. Uneventful but crucial
Undeniably, the cold functioned as a psychological burden as well. Again, the best way
for planning our adventure. We split into four groups to plan different
GET OUT YOUR SNOWSHOES!
(from top to bottom) Charlie Pang, Oliver Bierman-Lytle, Logan Hoelscher, and Michael Tang work on their skills. LEFT The masked journalist himself — Tucker Calcano.
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to stay warm was to stay active —
the first lean-to. We set up our tents
to climb. Despite all of the ropes
and made hot cocoa, providing both
and harnesses, I could not trick my
warmth and psychological comfort
brain into a sense of security. My
in the woods. We hiked up to the
heart was racing. My muscles were
next campsite just to stay warm, but
taut. My bone-white fingers were
turned back as we lacked the proper
wrapped around my lifeline — my
equipment. As it started getting
ice picks were in a death grip.
dark, we made dinner (macaroni
I felt as if I were surpassing my
and cheese) using stream water and
own limits out of self-preservation.
pocket rocket stoves.
Each time I reached the top
We had a quick vesper, but it was
and allowed myself to be lowered
dark and cold, so we went to our
down by the rope, my arms would
tents and fell asleep.
suddenly go completely numb,
Necessary rest for the weary.
too worn out to even move. I remember looking at my hand,
F R I D AY
trying to make a fist, and not being
Culmination & Reunion
able to. I touched briefly on this phenomenon in my keywords-only journal: “Adrenaline pumping — can overexert myself.” I gave the vesper that night, focusing on the Myers-Briggs personality types, which consist of four personality criteria that, when combined, create 16 distinct person-
My bone-white fingers were wrapped around my lifeline — my ice picks were in a death grip.
THE EARLY MORNING WAS not pleasant, to say the least. Moisture in the air had condensed into snow on my hat — the only part of me not protected by the sleeping bag. The temperature had crept into the single digits.
ality types. People decided which
We made breakfast, filled our
side of the spectrum they fell on
packs, and set off to meet the other
for each criterion, and then briefly
of snow, and the sheer presence
described the personality type with
looming above and around me
consisting of two sleeping yurts and
which their choices corresponded.
was awesome — in the traditional
one cooking yurt, we set down our
trails were far more challenging, at
I feel like the activity was well
meaning of the word.
packs and divided into our sleeping
some points barely wide enough for
groups. We then familiarized
one person to traverse. They were
done on this trip would have been
ourselves with the stoves we would
also steeper, sometimes involving
to stare at the ground and the
use the next night (whisper lights
near vertical ascents or descents,
W E D N E S D AY
feet in front of us throughout the
and pocket rockets).
requiring meticulous limb place-
Captivated by Trees
hike. To do so would have been to
Our vesper that night focused on
deprive ourselves of the chance to
trying new things and sharing stories
experience this dreamlike winter
of times we did things for the first
LET THE WILDERNESS excursion begin.
wonderland. I have always had a
time.
received and enjoyable for most. A full, but incredible day.
The worst thing we could have
soft spot in my heart for mountains,
After arriving at Yurtville,
Every voice was heard.
We finished up some last minute
trees, winter, and snow. But even to
preparations, and pushed off in two
those who are summer-blooded and
T H U R S D AY
buses toward our departure point.
California-bound, the natural beauty
After a snowshoe-impeded relay
was undeniable.
Hiking Toward Weariness
race (you try it), we started our trek
At one point in the hike up to first night), we saw an ice-covered
I WOKE UP COLD — the fire in the stove had gone out overnight. We
mountains is staggering, but I found
crevice running down the mountain
packed our bags, ate breakfast, and
the trees more captivating than
with a small stream of water that
hiked down the hill, getting back on
anything else.
culminated in a watering hole a ways
the buses and driving to High Peaks.
into the Adirondacks. The sheer vastness of these
Each is worthy of attention. The
Yurtville (our residence for the
down the mountain. We traversed
After a short hike up to the first
combination of the structured but
this formation from above on a
lean-to, the group split in two. Half
beautifully randomized pattern of
well-worn wood bridge. Aesthetic
continued upward to the other
needles, the miniature collections
perfection and natural complexity.
campsite, while my group stayed at
30 | TIMES
character_20.indd 30
group before continuing onward. These woods were denser, and the
ment and a fair amount of physical exertion. We journeyed all the way from elevated viewpoints down to low rivers and then all the way back up as we explored the Adirondacks. After a full day of hiking, we eventually returned to the entrance to High Peaks, having completed a two-day, five- to six-mile hike. It doesn’t sound like much — and it wouldn’t be in the summertime — but the combination of snow and cold made the distance much more grueling. Dinner that night marked the end of our trip, as we left a day early to avoid an incoming storm. A truly fun, rewarding, and memorable experience.
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
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After long days in the wilderness and on the ice walls, Tucker Calcano untied his boots and reflected on his experiences in a journal.
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
AT T H E
UPPER SCHOOL
‘ KATRINA KREWE’ UNITES IN RECONSTRUCTION
T
HOUSANDS OF LIVES were taken and many more were turned upside down after Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans in August 2005. And there’s still a ton of work — and a ton of rebuilding — to rtrain Lake Pontcha be done as the city fights to get back 4515 Feliciana Dr on its feet more New Orleans than a decade after the natural disaster. MAP 4515 Feliciana Ten Brunswick Drive — the jobsite of Brunswick’s service trip Upper School students, to New Orleans — sat in the heart of the along with three catastrophe created by Hurricane Katrina. members of the faculty, RIGHT The “krewe” joined the efforts by gathers for a culminating cheer after a week of traveling to the Bayou hard work. 55
12
12
32 | TIMES
12
10
55
10
12
10
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
55
10
10
10
310
Lake Borgne
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TOP The “krewe” enjoys a welldeserved lunch break. ABOVE Duke Guadalupe ’16 and Henry Hill ’19 prep the walls for a painting session. RIGHT Conrad Graf ’16 readies for his daily mudding tasks.
For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
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character_20.indd 34
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER LEFT Conrad Graf ’16 takes time out to play his saxophone on King Street in the French Quarter. BELOW Sleeping quarters were tight at the Annunciation Church. FAR BELOW The “krewe” visits the Living with Hurricanes: Katrina and Beyond exhibit at the The Presbytère.
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THE BUILDING OF
CHARACTER
The “krewe” gathers in the Lower Ninth Ward: Henry Hill ’19, Will Jeffery ’16, Conrad Graf ’16, Jourdon Delerme-Brown ’16, Matthew Kirby-Smith, Johnny Montanez, Ryan Callaghan ’16, the tour guide, Nick Mosher ’18, Brendan Gilsenan, Alex Okinaka ’16, Trystan Sarcone ’18, Duke Guadalupe ’16, and Andrew Floersheimer ’16.
“ It may just be one drop for the city, but what we did will ultimately fill a whole bucket for a family someday.” Country in January to spend a
Annunciation Church, where they
week working for the St. Bernard
came together as a group and
Project, a nationally recognized
reflected on each nail hammered,
leader in disaster resilience and
each relationship formed, and each
recovery.
lesson learned.
The team of Bruins — mudders,
all of its assigned tasks before
spent five days on the job site, 4515
returning to Brunswick for the
Feliciana Drive, as they united to
start of second semester.
reconstruct a broken home. They also toured the Lower ABOVE It took many able hands and a lot of cooperative teamwork to finish the assignment at 4515 Feliciana Drive.
36 | TIMES
character_20.indd 36
The “Katrina Krewe” completed
drywallers, sanders, and drillers —
“It may just be one drop for the city, but what we did will
Ninth Ward, the French Quarter,
ultimately fill a whole bucket for
and the Superdome — taking
a family someday,” senior Will
temporary residency within the
Jeffery said.
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 1:10 PM
NOLA REFLECTION
THEY DID ‘WHAT NEEDED TO BE DONE’ By Alex Okinaka ’16
W
decades — before, during, and
of finding her family that she
visited, to the restaurants we
after Hurricane Katrina.
showed any sign of emotion.
dined in, I found Lisas every-
When describing how she
where. I found individuals who
her story, focusing on the nine
happened upon her sister in an
“did what needed to be done.”
days she oversaw the estimated
isolated town in Texas, her voice
20,000 people who took refuge
caught.
And she was about to tell us
in the Superdome following the natural disaster. From the begin-
Tears formed. Lisa had to take a second to compose herself.
While New Orleans still has a lot of healing left to do, we did our small part to help bring the city back to its feet. Local citi-
HILE SITTING ON THE
ning, I determined Lisa to be an
floor of the New Orleans
extremely levelheaded woman.
hardship — or the economic loss
stories, inspired us. They drove
She methodically relived the
— that tore people apart. It was
us to work hard and efficiently
Saints locker room, within the
It was not the physical
zens, all with their own unique
world-famous Superdome, I felt
horrors of managing thousands
the emotional distress of not
for the five days we walked
a warm, wet nose nuzzle against
of frightened, frustrated, and
knowing the fate of your family.
among them.
my leg.
(even) furious people. Through
It was the psychological terror
each twist and turn — through
of not knowing when the torture
her dog at my feet, Lisa had
each setback — she kept coming
would end.
given me the ability to connect
A small black dog had curled up beside me — Lisa’s dog. Lisa was our tour guide that afternoon as we explored the arena, home to the 2009 Super Bowl champions. She’s been the security coordinator there for
back to one phrase: “I did what needed to be done.”
The greatest scars left by
But in that very moment, with
with a recovering city. I truly
Katrina cannot be seen by the
understood the unquantifiable
naked eye.
toll Katrina had taken.
It was not until Lisa delved
From the landmarks we
into the heart-wrenching story
toured, to the churches we
And I stood up ready to help in any way that I could.
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character_20.indd 37
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5/19/16 1:10 PM
FLEX TIME ALUMNUS ON CAMPUS
‘ Ask No Guarantees, Ask for No Security: See the World’ By Mike Kennedy ’99
A
S HE sat in the Old City — in the ornately designed lounge of his hotel in the Arab quarter of Jerusalem
— Tommy Mulvoy ’96 scanned an ominous, flashflood-like warning from the U.S. State Department,
“I realized that a true sense of failure and regret would have settled into the deepest recesses of my soul. I couldn’t turn back.”
urging Americans to defer travel to the West Bank immediately. “Violent demonstrations, kidnappings, and shootings are unpredictable and can occur at any time,” the message read, forebodingly. It was the fall of 2008: Mulvoy was in the midst of a five-month, 20-country tour of the world, his goal to stuff his senses with the Department’s warnings of “shoot-
at Mary McDowell Friends School, a
central objective to become physi-
room for the night, not reading or
ings,” “kidnappings,” and “gun
Quaker school in Brooklyn, N.Y., for
cally and emotionally closer to the
returning to another word of the
battles.”
students with learning disabilities,
Israeli–Palestinian Separation Wall.
message. Sleepless hours of tossing
“The immediacy of the strangers’
and turning, of endless wondering
generosity and their spirit of engage-
Switzerland, with his new bride,
and wavering, awaited him.
ment decisively won the battle that
Vicky, a native of London.
history that he taught, his most
“I taught the Israeli–Palestinian conflict for six years at Brunswick in my World Cultures class,” said
He got up and headed to his
When he awakened, Mulvoy had
I had struggled with the previous
Mulvoy will next venture to Basel,
On campus to encourage
the 1996 ’Wick graduate, who also
made up his mind, deciding to press
night,” he said. “It was an influential
students to pursue the Study
worked in the Academic Support
on to the Wall despite the clear and
victory that continues to rule my life
Abroad and Foreign Language
Office and coached hockey, cross
present threats of danger — soon
today.”
Immersion Programs, Mulvoy left
country, and lacrosse during his
crossing into Ramallah at the infa-
professional return to his alma
mous Qalandia Checkpoint.
For Mulvoy, that life has since
his fellow Bruins with a lasting
taken him to King’s Academy in
piece of advice — one he found
“I realized that a true sense
Amman, Jordan — a country very
while in the literary depths of Ray
“But, as much as I studied the
of failure and regret would have
much then (and now) in the throes
Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451.
barrier, my lessons only scratched
settled into the deepest recesses
of enormous political change —
the surface of the Separation Wall’s
of my soul,” Mulvoy explained to
where he taught for two years, from
than any dream made or paid for in
construction. I desperately wanted
Upper School students during his
2011 to 2013.
factories. Ask no guarantees, ask for
to engage with the Wall — to
January visit to Maher Avenue. “I
grapple with it and to climb inside
couldn’t turn back.”
mater, from 2002–2008.
Palestinian skin.” And so, here he sat — merely
Hours later, he’d befriended a
He, too, has returned to the Wall, even chaperoning a small group of students to the tiny Palestinian
“See the world. It’s more fantastic
no security, there never was such an animal,” he quoted. “And, if there were, it would be
local doctor. He’d been given a ride
village of Mas Ha during Eid al
related to the great sloth which
20 kilometers south of the city
by a man who sensed he was lost.
Adha, the Islamic festival commem-
hangs upside down in a tree all day
of Ramallah, the seat of the
He’d been handed an orange by a
orating the willingness of Abraham
every day sleeping its life away.
Palestinian Authority in the central
fruit seller on the street.
to follow Allah’s command to sacri-
West Bank — strongly advised by his own government not to move.
38 | TIMES
Flex Mulvoy.indd 38
And, most important, he’d forgotten about the State
fice his son Ishmael. After two years teaching English
“To hell with that, shake the tree and knock the great sloth down on his ass.”
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 10:18 AM
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WONDROUS
WINTER
WINTER SPORTS
WRAPUP
The Bruins have been a tough team to beat at Hartong Rink, dropping only two games on home ice in the last two seasons.
Excellence Across the Spectrum BY MIKE KENNEDY ’99
I
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T WAS anything but a winter of (our) discontent for Brunswick athletes. On the courts, on the ice, and on the mats — on the hardwood, on the slopes, on the strip, and in the pool — the Bruins backed up a fantastic fall
season with a wondrous winter of athletic excellence, earning regional accolades and national acclaim for their superior performance and sportsmanlike play. Across the spectrum of all seven varsity sports, the Brown & Gold won with dignity, lost with grace, and competed with class. The Bruins played to represent the name on their chests. They played to represent the ideals of Courage, Honor, and Truth. And the results say it all.
Senior captain Lucas Bell led the Bruins to an undefeated season on the mats.
For more photos of Bruin Sports, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
Sports.indd
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| 39
5/19/16 10:37 AM
SQUASH
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Will Holey ’18
New England, National Repeats
A
on, rallied for an improbable come-
win both the regional and national
from-behind victory (7–11, 6–11,
crowns in the same season. Last
was the best squash I’ve ever
11–3, 11–8, 11–5) to turn the tide
year’s Bruins were the first to
seen a Brunswick kid play for two
T THE Philadelphia Cricket
and clinch ’Wick’s second straight
accomplish the rare double feat.
matches in a row,” he said.
Club — in the finals of the
national title.
U.S. High School Team
Tyler Carney ’17, Boden
again,” Stephens said. “As a coach,
Polikoff ’16, and Will Holey ’18
match,” head coach Jim Stephens
to see a team pull it off two years in
added to the accolades by
against Haverford School —
said. “Haverford is a great team.
a row is unbelievable.”
capturing individual New
Brunswick stared straight into the
They had the whole Philadelphia
eyes of defeat as the match came
crowd behind them.
Squash Championships
to a close.
“It was a pretty spectacular
“I never thought it would happen
“I’ve been here 31 years. That
Led by senior captains and
England championships in their
Jim Stephens Racquets Award
respective draws (No. 2, No. 6,
“But our guys hung in there and
winners Drew Monroe and David
and No. 7).
The Fords appeared destined
didn’t let anything bother them. I’m
Yacobucci, the Bruins finished the
And so, with this season of star-
to raise the Justi Cup in front of
proud of them for maintaining their
season 13–0 to run their record to
studded success now behind them,
their raucous, standing-room-
focus and not letting the crowd get
31–0 across the last two winters
the Bruins — no doubt — will look
only hometown crowd, holding a
to their head. Watching our team
of competition, taking home their
to build on their illustrious history
commanding lead in the deciding
play was really something special.”
fifth consecutive New England
when the courts at Stephens Squash
match at the No. 4 position on the
And, even more special, the
trophy and 14th in School history.
Center open again next winter.
Brown & Gold claimed the New
Yacobucci shined at the No. 1
ladder. But the Bruins didn’t back down.
England Class A Championship
position in his final year as a Bruin,
Sophomore Max Finkelstein,
two weeks later, becoming the
his top-notch talent highlighted
second-ever high school team to
by a January weekend
with his teammates cheering him
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Carney and fellow classmate Tate Huffman ’17 will serve as captains.
sweep of his opponents
TOURNAMENT TESTED
from Avon Old Farms
NO. 1 David Yacobucci ’16 New Englands, 6th place
both natives of Egypt.
NO. 2 Tyler Carney ’17 New England Champion
once-in-a-lifetime
NO. 3 Drew Monroe ’16 New Englands, 2nd place
and Westminster — Stephens called it a performance.
NO. 4 Max Finkelstein ’18 New England Champion NO. 5 Patrick Feeley ’18 New Englands, 2nd place NO. 6 Boden Polikoff ’16 New England Champion NO. 7 Will Holey ’18 New England Champion Patrick Feeley ’18
40 | TIMES
Sports.indd 40
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 10:38 AM
FALL SPORTS
WRAPUP
oooooooooooooo oooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooo
Christian Farricker ’19
ooooooo ooooooo ooooooo ooooooo ooooooo ooooooo
SWIMMING Seniors Blaze Trail to New England Success
been on an incredible journey,”
vidual championship in the 500
Montgomery said.
freestyle, while James Simone ’17
“They watched this team grow
and Christian Farricker ’19 placed
EAD COACH Aaron
around them and paved the way for
third in the 500 freestyle and 200
Montgomery calls them
youth and depth to follow in their
individual medley, respectively, to
trailblazers.
path. We’re now in great position
earn spots on the podium.
H
They’ve been around
since the very beginning, diving into the pool at Greenwich YMCA
to be a force to be reckoned with in the years ahead.” The Bruins, in fact, have already
In all, the Brown & Gold set 10 team records in the event, as a School-best contingent of 22
four years ago to help kick start a
proven their formidable worth,
Brunswick racers qualified for the
budding young swim program.
outracing 11 opponents to win
season-ending swim.
They opened the doors. They set the tone. They did the heavy lifting. And they — seniors Thomas
this year’s Connecticut Valley
“Last year, we catapulted out
Independent School Swimming
of obscurity to place a distant
Association Championship, as well
seventh at the New England
Errichetti, Chris Gendell, Henry
as the first-ever, four-team FAA
Championships — 115 points out
Harris, Markus Lake, Jack Muccia,
Swimming Championship.
of sixth place,” Montgomery said.
Pat Stefanou, and Nelson Vargas
At the New England
“This year we were eight points
(to name names) — leave enor-
Championships, ’Wick had seven
out of sixth. We’re in the mix and
mous shoes to fill upon their
finalists and placed a respectable
contenders now.”
graduation.
seventh in a strong field of peren-
“From new team to new
Powers and Simone, both rising
nial swimming powers, including
seniors and newly elected captains,
coach to new pool — to earning
Andover, Exeter, Choate, and
will lead the team’s continued climb
well-deserved respect across New
Deerfield.
up the ranks when it hits the water
England — these young men have
Will Powers ’17 captured an indi-
TOP TO BOTTOM Charlie Ariyibi ’18, James Simone ’17, Koby Ofori ’19
at Mehra Natatorium next winter.
WWW.BRUNSWICKSCHOOL .ORG
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5/19/16 10:38 AM
WRESTLING
oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo oooooooooooo
Emmett Bell ’17 sent the crowd into an uproar by pinning his opponent from Greenwich High School.
‘Banner’ Season on the Mats
H
“It was a special moment,” the
tler,” Ostrye said. “He’s humble.
29-year head coach said. “The
He’s modest. And he’s a true
boys worked so hard every day and
workhorse. He raised the level of
EAD COACH Tim
deserved to take a step back and
Brunswick wrestling the minute he
Ostrye lives and breathes
enjoy a little celebration.”
stepped into our room.”
Brunswick wrestling — and has an uncanny knack for
cherishing the moment.
The senior class, in particular,
With graduation claiming only
led by quad-captains Lucas Bell,
five team members, the Bruins
Jon Errico, Joe Fervil, and Alex
have visions of another storybook
After his team put the stamp
Russell, will go down as one of the
season next winter. Newly elected
on an undefeated season (21–0)
most successful in Ostrye’s tenure
captains Lachlan Rosato ’18 and
with a convincing victory against
— compiling a dual-meet record
twin brothers Andrew and Brooks
cross-town rival Greenwich High
of 81–4 and going untouched
Hennessy ’17 will lead the way.
School, following up a record-
in FAA and WNEISWA
setting performance and title at
tournaments.
the WNEISWA Championships,
third at the New England
boisterous home crowd to disperse
Championships, trailing only
and gathered the Bruins in the
perennial grappling powers
corner of the wrestling room.
Belmont Hill and Phillips Exeter Academy.
four coaches strong — they stood
To cap the dream season,
as one underneath the Brown &
Errico claimed fourth place in
Gold banner highlighting champi-
the 145-pound weight class at
onships and undefeated dual-meet
the National Prep Wrestling
seasons on the mat.
Championships to earn
Ostrye modestly explained that
All-American honors for the
this year’s team would take its
second consecutive year, becoming
rightful place among the very best
the School’s fifth all-time and
in the program’s history, adding its
joining Nick Simmons ’07 as the
name to both distinguished lists
only two-time selections.
and becoming the first unbeaten squad since 2003–04.
42 | TIMES
Sports.indd 42
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In addition, the Bruins finished
the longtime coach waited for the
As a group — 35 wrestlers and
Alex Russell ’16
“Jon proved himself to be
ON THE PODIUM At the New Englands, Brunswick placed third to match its best-ever performance at the regional tournament.
Brunswick’s greatest all-time wres-
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 10:38 AM
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HOCKEY
LEFT Senior goaltender Brian Ketchabaw will play collegiate hockey at Middlebury College. MIDDLE Freshman Charles Shaffer got the Bruins on the board in their home opener against Choate. BOTTOM Senior Colin Slyne, a four-year varsity letterman, netted 15 goals in his final season.
In ‘Elite’ Company
A
S THE Brunswick icemen buckled their chinstraps for the third period, holding a tenuous 2–1 lead against
Albany Academy in the finals of the Empire Cup, they knew a victory would vault them into prep-school hockey’s highest order — the Elite 8 New England Tournament. The Bruins controlled their own destiny. They held their playoff lives in their own hands. They win — and they’re in. After narrowly falling short of the School’s first-ever Elite 8 berth a season ago — by mere percentage points — this year’s veteran group stepped onto the ice for that final 18 minutes determined to seize such a rare and coveted opportunity. And they would not be denied. The Bruins played a relentless,
it takes to win — skating off
the Belmont Hill-Nichols Holiday
ooooooooooooo ooooooooooooo key roles and providing crucial ooooooooooooo depth and experience to the lineup. ooooooooooooo Each “left it out there” — and ooooooooooooo would surely wish for a rematch ooooooooooooo — in his final game as Bruin, a ooooooooooooo somewhat nightmarish defeat at o o o o o o o o o o o o o
with a 3–1 title-clinching
Tournament and finishing with a
the hands of Avon Old Farms, the
record of 21–8–2.
No. 1 seed and eight-time New
possession along the boards; and
workhorse Jack Stephenson — and
gutty brand of hockey to get the
selling out on the backcheck and
a core group of seven additional
job done — firing pucks deep into
sacrificing their bodies to protect
seniors — the Brown & Gold
enemy territory and forcing their
the front of the net.
exceeded the 20-win plateau
offensive-minded opponents to
As a team, with all 20 players
for the second consecutive year,
defend; chipping pucks through
pulling their weight, they did what
defending their championship at
dangerous areas and competing fearlessly for
“W” and punching their ticket to the Big Dance. The Bruins, though,
spanning Dec. 14 to Jan. 29, the
England champion. And yet, despite the first-round
hadn’t reinvented
Bruins tied highly ranked Exeter,
exit and disappointing end to the
themselves against the
3–3, and reeled off victories against
season, the Bruins could proudly
Cadets. They didn’t
Belmont Hill (twice), Taft, and
hang up their skates knowing they
need a last-gasp,
Hotchkiss.
had achieved something very special
season-saving chalk
Senior goaltender Brian
talk from the coaching
Ketchabaw, along with class-
staff to remind them of the winning formula. They had, after all, played this style of hockey since the doors opened at Hartong Rink way back in early November. Led by senior captain and
Sports.indd 43
Amid a 14-game unbeaten streak,
the forward position — all filling
mates Colin Bernard and All-New England pick Max Fuld on the backend, spearheaded a stingy
— something no other Brunswick hockey players ever had. They’ll long be remembered for their accomplishments. Rising seniors and top scorers
’Wick defensive corps that allowed
Christian LeSueur and Nick
fewer than two goals per game.
VanBelle — “C’s” stitched to their
Fellow seniors Eric Ganshaw,
sweaters — will attempt to lead the
Jack Mendillo, Matt Sealy, and
Bruins to an encore performance
Colin Slyne joined Stephenson at
next winter.
ooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooo oooooooooooooooooooooo
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| 43
5/19/16 10:38 AM
FENCING
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Joey Jiménez ’16
Thomas Burke ’17
Improvement in Short Order
I
mined to prove they could compete with the best — determined to prove they had improved in short
N A January bout with Masters
order under the watch of head
School, Brunswick’s fencing team
coach Jose Samora, a member of
came out on the short end by a
the Dominican Republic National
considerable margin, losing 22–5
Foil Team.
to its hosts in Dobbs Ferry, N.Y. For fencing novices in the
Led by senior captain Ridgley Knapp’s 3–0 win for the Men’s Épée
reading audience, here’s a quick
Team, they almost pulled off the
scoring lesson: As there are nine
unthinkable, falling to their once
bouts per weapon — and three
far superior adversaries, 14–13, in
weapons — fencing duels are
as hotly contested a fencing meet as
always scored on a 27-point scale.
numerically possible.
The Bruins were outmatched
Other standouts on that day
against their more experienced and
— and throughout the winter —
technically sound opponents —
included Austin Sammons ’18
who lay claim to four permanent
(Men’s Foil), Joey Jiménez ’16
fencing strips, each hardwired to
(Men’s Épée), and the Men’s
scoreboards, in their brand-new
Sabre Team of Paul Grasso ’17 and
facility — dropping lopsided
George ’19 and Thomas Burke ’17.
matches in foil (2–7), épée (1–8),
The Brown & Gold wrapped
and sabre (2–7) to accumulate the
up its schedule at the CT High
final result.
School Individual and Team
The Panthers would ultimately finish the season undefeated. Fast forward to late February: The imposing and dominant Masters squad visits Ramsing
Championships, where that same sabre trio of Grasso and the Burke brothers highlighted the event with a third-place finish. Now looking ahead to next
Gymnasium at Greenwich
season, the team will take to the
Academy for a second bout
strip with a host of battle-tested
with Brunswick, a team with six
and bout-ready fencers. Rising
newcomers to the sport.
senior Thomas Burke has been
The Bruins, though, were deter-
44 | TIMES
Sports.indd 44
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
Junior Nick Blum (right) and freshman Ian Murray earned All-State recognition from the Connecticut Interscholastic Ski League.
SKIING
For the first time since 1989 (based on yearbook research), the Bruins returned to the slopes this winter to ski competitively against New England opponents. At Crotched Mountain in New Hampshire, the team of Bruins finished 7th in the NEPSAC Class B Championships, capping a 15–7 season of alpine racing.
named captain. ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
5/19/16 10:38 AM
oooooooo ooooooo oooooooo ooooooo oooooooo ooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo oooooooo
BASKETBALL
Senior Leaves Lasting Legacy
N
ACHO NWANA ’16 stepped
would ultimately drop a tightly
Kevin Decker ’07 did so in 2007,
all around.” Nwana will attend
onto the court for his
contested FAA Quarterfinal
finishing his three-year varsity
M.I.T., where he’ll play collegiate
final home game at Dann
matchup with Greens Farms two
tenure with 1,231 points.
basketball, in the fall.
Gymnasium with the spot-
days later, 79–68, to end their
light shining entirely on him. The sole Brunswick senior did not stand among a group of classmates. He didn’t pause to celebrate
Head coach Robert Taylor has
As for the rest of the Bruins — with a host of up-and-coming
season — also marking the end
paced the sidelines since
of Nwana’s storied career in the
Nwana arrived at Brunswick
and veteran talent returning
Brown & Gold.
as an 8th grader in 2011,
next season, including Sealy
Nwana, a co-captain along with
seeing his star player’s
Kelly ’17 and Will
junior swingman Charlie Sealy,
dramatic evolution and
He didn’t pat them on the back and
became the first ’Wick basketball
climb toward the
Marvin ’17 — they’ll
pose for a photograph.
player to eclipse 1,000 points since
storybook mark.
vie to carry on their
alone. And he surely didn’t disappoint
“It’s really Graham Pierce ’18
the crowd. Nwana put on an ESPN Top 10
a symbol of how hard he’s
year ahead.
Taylor said. “He’s
finishing layups in transition,
got an amazing
outmuscling his defenders in the
set of traits. It’s not
paint, and scoring on put-backs
only his work ethic, but also
and from the free-throw line to
the quality of his character that
total a career-high 42 points and
really has come out on and off the
lead his team to a 66–42 victory
basketball court.
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success to the
since he was in Middle School,”
The Bruins (9–15 on the season)
and bring greater program in the
knocking down three pointers,
against FAA rival King.
teammate’s legacy
worked here
show of basketball versatility —
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and fellow captains Cam
and cheer their accomplishments.
It was his Senior Day — and his
Sports.indd
Nacho Nwana ’16 goes off the glass and in for his 1,000th point.
Charlie Sealy ’17
“Athletically, academically, and socially — he’s pretty outstanding
WWW.BRUNSWICKSCHOOL .ORG
| 45
5/19/16 10:38 AM
! H C T I P N ON STAGE! O
on
! T E G R A T
Upper Schoolers Charm & Enchant in Irving Berlin’s Classic Musical Annie Get Your Gun shimmered as a sureshot musical jewel. In a production that hit the theatrical bull’s-eye time and again, students set Baker Theater’s stage for the unforgettable musical duel of marksmanship and romance between sharp-shooting legend Annie Oakley and rival rifleman Frank Butler. For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
46 | TIMES
Theater_11.indd 46
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 10:51 AM
01
L
ADIES AND GENTLEMEN!
students as February
Boys and girls! The sparkling
came to its leap-year
Annie Get Your Gun offered
conclusion to stage
something sure to delight and
this unforgettable
dazzle everyone.
treasure trove of
First staged on Broadway in
1946, the classic Irving Berlin musical tells the story of rival
classic melodies and
02
memories. With Chris Peisch ‘16 and Sarah
sharp-shooting stars of
Gold (GA ‘16) taking the leads as
two 19th-century Wild
Frank Butler and Annie Oakley,
West shows. Sparks of competition
the production included moments
quickly ignite a simmering romance
offering the full cast of characters a
between the famed Annie Oakley,
chance to shine.
who becomes the main attraction
Upper Schoolers taking their
of “Buffalo Bill’s Wild West,” and
turn as leading characters in the
Frank Butler, who had been long
song-and-dance spotlight included
unchallenged as the undisputed sharp-
Will Powers ’16 as Buffalo Bill Cody,
shooting champion.
Jack Kulesh ’17 as Tommy Keller, Colin
For Annie, Berlin assembled a
MacFaddin ’17 as Charlie Davenport,
cornucopia of lyrics and tunes that
Thomas Kern ’16 as Chief Sitting Bull,
quickly became American standards,
David Schroeder ’18 as the Dining Car
03
04
05
including “There’s No Business Like Show Business,” “They Say It’s Wonderful,” “I Got the Sun in the Morning,” “You Can’t Get a Man With a Gun,” and many more. The original Broadway production ran for 1,147 performances, and,
OPPOSITE PAGE Seniors Chris Peisch and Sarah Gold starred as Frank Butler and Annie Oakley.
01 Senior Will Powers took the stage as Buffalo Bill Cody.
like the Wild West spectaculars
02 Jack Kulesh ‘17 and Darren Drittel (GA ’16)
that inspired its plot, proceeded to
03 Daniel Osemobor ‘18
tour the nation and destinations far
04 Chris Cassidy ’16
beyond. Like their on-stage showbiz counterparts, Upper Schoolers joined forces with Greenwich Academy
05 Fifth-graders Riley Redahan and Campbell Officer added youthful pizzazz to the show.
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5/19/16 10:51 AM
Waiter, Keshav Raghavan ’17 as the Messenger, and Andrew Israel ’16 as Pawnee Bill. The production even offered
Costume Designer Lauren Josef. In all, nearly 60 students appeared on the Baker Theater stage. Behind the scenes, a dedicated crew of
opportunities for Middle Schoolers
students from both Brunswick and
to step into the show’s few leading
Greenwich Academy, along with
roles for younger actors. Fifth-
faculty, staff, and parents, worked
graders Campbell Officer and Riley
tirelessly to polish Annie into a
Redahan joined the cast as Annie’s
classic theatrical jewel.
younger brothers. In an annual musical miracle of
At every performance, audiences
ABOVE Chorus members (left to right) Nicky Winegardner ’20, Gabriel Mehra ’20, Connor Tyler ’18, Andrew Kelly ’17, Gus Fraser ’16, Jamie MacFarlane ’16, and Will Bass ’16 surround the lead in a performance of “My Defenses Are Down.” RIGHT Thomas Kern ’16, as Chief Sitting Bull, has Annie all ears.
responded with resounding cheers
sorts, Annie came together under the
and smiles, once again confirming
direction of Upper School Theater
that “There’s No Business Like Show
and English teacher Seth Potter,
Business.” Looking back on Annie
wonderful,” he observed. “Every year,
enchanting and, often, amazingly
with musical direction by Chorus
after the lights were dimmed and
students with little or no theater
hilarious. The whole experience can
and Theater Arts teacher Alexander
the stage had been struck, Potter
experience have the courage to step
be completely surprising — we get
Constantine, sets by Upper School
reflected on the joy and extended
up and take a place in the spotlight —
to see sides of boys’ personalities
Theater Technical Director Matthew
sense of community that the annual
often for the first time.
we’ve never seen!”
musical brings to Brunswick. “It’s really amazing and
“In Annie, the results of our students’ courage were absolutely
For students, Annie Get Your Gun
Kirby-Smith, and costumes by
was a journey into the distant past of Andrew Israel ’16 returned once again to Baker Stage as Pawnee Bill.
American musical theater. “By far, it’s the oldest show Brunswick has staged in many years,” Potter observed. “And so, it naturally includes the American cultural stereotypes of the 1940s that have (thankfully) passed out of our present experience. “But, ultimately, the show’s message is heartwarming and timeless — that the best relationships are those in which we see each other as equals and partners. And, even more important, no matter who we are — man, woman, Native American, young or old, rich or poor — we all have fundamentally the same hopes and dreams.”
48 | TIMES
Theater_11.indd 48
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 10:51 AM
01
DECLARATION
IN SONG & DANCE
T
HE 4TH GRADE brought history to life with its production of 13 Colonies,
a musical review of early-American history led by none other than George and Martha Washington. Special-guest appearances by Ben Franklin, the Iroquois, Ponce de Leon, and Sibyl Ludington kept the audience in tune with the historical facts and figures. And, to ensure all characters followed the script, the History Police kept a keen eye (and ear) on the stage.
02
05
03
04
01 Reed Hyde, Connor Crosby, and Gabriel Lopez 02 Tucker Williams, Leland Fraser, and Thomas Coughlin 03 Lundeen Cahilly, Hudson Hausmann, Thomas Coughlin, and Will Howard 04 Ajay Bagaria, Nick Mitchelson, Harrison Girard, and Colin Devine 05 Alan Calver, Carlos Perez-Eder, and Zane Saad
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BEYOND THE BOOKS
NEWS AND NOTEWORTHY EVENTS
Iconic Sleuth Ventures to Maher Avenue
P
ART DETECTIVE, part reporter, Tintin
In “The Adventures of Tintin: The Blackstones’
traveled to the Soviet Union, to Tibet, to
Microchip” — a 30-page comic book written as part
North Africa, and to the Arctic Ocean —
of an independent study in French — Russell explores
among many other exotic and foreign lands
the broader themes of cultural ignorance and rela-
— in search of stories and adventures.
tivism, just as Hergé did so brilliantly in his 24 Tintin
He took on drug traffickers in Egypt and India. He faced off against Al Capone and
stories (now published in more than 70 languages and having sold more than 200 million copies).
his gang in Chicago in the middle of Prohibition.
“I read every Tintin series book when I was a little
He clashed with a mastermind counterfeiter in
kid, many of them several times,” Russell said. “This seemed like the perfect way for me to continue my
Scotland. And he walked on the moon before Neil Armstrong.
study of the French language — and to have some fun in the process.”
Since 1929, in fact, when created by the renowned Belgian cartoonist Hergé, Tintin
In Russell’s story, of course, Tintin nabs the bad guys and saves the day.
has trekked to the world’s every corner in the pursuit of truth and in the fight against injustice. He’s become a literary hero for graphic-novel aficionados of all ages — sporting his recognizable quiff hairdo and working alongside his faithful companion, Snowy, a white wire fox terrier. And now, thanks to Brunswick senior Alex Russell, Tintin has come to Maher Avenue to foil a terrorist plot targeting financial assets in the community.
Here’s a sampling of Alex Russell’s work, including the cover page and an illustration of Tintin himself. “What is it?” he asks.
50 | TIMES
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OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 11:36 AM
BEYOND the BOOKS
And he kept writing for the next 18 months, authoring the Amazon five-star bestseller The Bigs: The Secrets Nobody Tells Students and Young Professionals About How to Find a Great Job, Do a Great Job, Be a Leader, Start a Business, Stay Out of Trouble, and Live a Happy Life. Carpenter — a salesman, trader, sales manager, co-chief operating officer, and co-CEO during his 20-year career at Greenwich Capital — shared his stories and experiences in the working world with Brunswick seniors during a series of four seminars in April. “The right way to choose a career is a
Making It in ‘The Bigs’
B
two-step process,” he advised students. “First, decide what you care about most — work environment, compensation, location, using your specific talents, or any other issues. “Second, by talking to experienced profes-
EN CARPENTER’S heart pounded and his blood pressure
sionals, identify industries and positions that give you the best chance
skyrocketed.
to fulfill those desires.
He’d just opened his email to find a note from his
“Since it’s likely you’ll know little about most industries, stay open-
daughter, Avery, with the subject line reading, “Is this
minded about what jobs will give you the best chance to realize your
okay to send?”
hopes and dreams.”
Avery, a recent graduate of Vanderbilt
University, had been offered a job as an assistant to the co-executive producer of “The Katie Couric Show” on ABC, and was wanted in the office to start work as soon as the following Monday. But Avery wanted to ask for an extra week to tie up some loose ends — hence the draft email for her father’s review. “DO NOT SEND — MORE TO FOLLOW!” Carpenter quickly responded. He wasn’t angry at Avery: He was scared for her. “I realized for the first time that my daughter — so smart, so well-educated, and in some ways so seemingly sophisticated — had no idea of what the working world was about to demand of her,” he explained. Ultimately, he sent Avery a stream-of-consciousness email detailing 22 bullet points he felt she must under-
David Yacobucci ’16 and his twin sister, Jessica, graced the pages of Sports Illustrated’s “Faces in the Crowd” for their accomplishments on the squash courts this season.
stand before embarking on a career.
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BEYOND the BOOKS
‘Outside-the-Box’ Science & Engineering
U
students
nition at the event include:
Colonies following a Traumatic Bleaching Event
returned to
Andrew Mellert ’17 and Kineo Gorman ’17 Soil Remediation: Removing Contaminants by Means of Thermal Desorption Followed by Remineralization Through Addition of Organic Material
Matthew Restieri ’18, Greyson Wolfram ’18, and Chris Burdick ’18 The Future of the Prosthetic Limb: Sacrificing Visual Aesthetics and Individualized Movement to Yield Greater Strength and Utility
Colin MacFaddin ’17 and Alex Wada ’17 Research on the Feasibility of How a Cooperative YeastAlgae Biofuel Production System Will Affect Biomass and an Investigation into the Feasibility of Biofuel as the Next Clean Energy
Wesley Peisch ’18 Optimizing Efficiency of Urban, Track-based Rapid Transit Systems
PPER SCHOOL
Greenwich as award winners after the
Connecticut Science and Engineering Fair, held Saturday, March 19, at Quinnipiac University in Hamden. “These students worked so hard,” Science Department Chair Dana Montanez said. “They demonstrated incredible dedication and outsidethe-box thinking in developing their concepts — and the results of their hard work really shined at the fair.”
52 | TIMES
BTB_10.indd 52
Students earning recog-
Thacher Scannell ’18 and Ned Camel ’18 Acropora Grafting: A Feasible Method to Reestablish Zooxanthellae
Jack Stefanou ’17 Observing the Synergistic Effect of Pesticides on Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystems Lachlan Rosato ’17 Improving Standard of Living for Refugees: Use
of Recycled Materials to Modify Internal Temperature and Dryness, and to Provide Electricity and Water in Tented Housing Siyan Shaikh ’17 and Tucker Calcano ’17 Extracting DNA from Hair Follicles of Canis latrans to Understand Interrelatedness Among a Transient Population Matthew Jacobson ’18 and Avi Mukherjee ’18 Improving Methodologies for Preclinical Data Collection: Tracking Motion of Biological Test Subjects in Laboratory Environments Jack Driscoll ’18 An Investigation of the Ability of Pseudomonas putida to Counteract
Elevated Heart Rate in Daphnia magna Exposed to Nicotine Nick Saah ’18 Optimizing Growth of Phaseolus vulgaris Using Hawaiian Cinder Cone Soil as a Proxy for Agricultural Conditions on Mars
FRONT Thacher Scannell ’18, Nick Saah ’18, Wesley Peisch ’18, and Ned Camel ’18 MIDDLE Science Chair Dana Montanez, Lachlan Rosato ’17, Matthew Restieri ’18, Jack Stefanou ’17, Kineo Gorman ’17, Andrew Mellert ’17, and Tucker Calcano ’17 BACK Matthew Jacobson ’18, Jack Driscoll ’18, Greyson Wolfram ’18, Chris Burdick ’18, Avi Mukherjee ’18, Siyan Shaikh ’17, Alex Wada ’17, and Colin MacFaddin ’17
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 12:15 PM
BEYOND the BOOKS
SENATORIAL ADVICE
‘ Value Education, Cross the Aisle’
U
.S. SEN. Richard Blumenthal
proudest moment in the Senate, culmi-
Michael ’07, David ’10, and Claire
nating with a visit to the White House on
(GA ’12) — visited Brunswick in February,
February 12 to witness President Obama’s
encouraging Upper School students to
signing of the Clay Hunt Suicide Prevention
become involved in public-service initiatives
for American Veterans Act — bipartisan
close to their hearts.
legislation designed to help in combating
The senator, too, urged his audience to be inspired by the lessons and values instilled
United States Senator and former Brunswick and Greenwich Academy parent Richard Blumenthal spoke to Upper School students in February.
In addition, Blumenthal spoke about his
(D-Conn.) — father of Matthew ’04,
suicide by U.S. military veterans. Blumenthal co-sponsored the bill with
by a Brunswick education — very much
Senator John McCain (R-Ariz.). “This
like those that inspired Blumenthal himself
breakthrough bipartisan step will help
during his years as a student at Riverdale
countless veterans overcome invisible
Country School in the Bronx and later at
wounds of war that lead to 22 tragic
Harvard College and Yale Law School.
suicides every day,” Blumenthal said.
“The values impressed upon me by my
“Going forward, I’ll continue to work to
teachers and parents — at your same age —
cross the aisle in Washington to get the job
spurred me into a career of public service,”
done. I encourage you to do the same in
Blumenthal said.
your own meaningful endeavors.”
G O LD E N BE A R S IG HTI NG
W
HILE READYING to tee it up at The Bear’s Club during its
spring trip to Florida, the varsity golf team had a real-life encounter with the game’s golden bear, Jack Nicklaus. The 18-time major championship winner relived his collegiate days at the Ohio State University with the Bruins during a memorable 15-minute Q&A, before wishing them luck with their season ahead on the links.
FRONT
Matty Dzialga ’19, Jack Kulesh ’17, Nick VanBelle ’17, Charlie Knight ’17, and Connor Belcastro ’19
Charlie Marvin ’19, Eric Ganshaw ’16, Matt Camel ’18, John Hughes ’16, Jack Nicklaus, Lance Johnson ’18, Thomas VanBelle ’18, and Reid Robbins ’17 MIDDLE
BACK
Coach Mike Kennedy, Coach Anthony Fischetti, Jamie MacFarlane ’16, and Coach Jim Stephens
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BEYOND the BOOKS
‘ Encourage, Inspire, Protect the Girls in Your Life’
A
S A 19-YEAR-OLD DIXIE
Spanish class waiting to draw
girl on the campus of the
her attention.
University of Southern California — with a full ride, a skyrocketing modeling career,
Alexis Jones — internationally recognized speaker, media personality, activist, and author — visited the Upper School to encourage students to fight for something greater than themselves.
Only eight words followed. “Alexis Jones, the girl with the perfect life,” she dead-
a TV show on the red carpet, and
panned with an overwhelming sense
above water — countered with a
on the road with a new message
a boyfriend handpicked out of an
of clarity.
piece of advice that her daughter
— ProtectHer: Redefining
would never forget.
#Manhood — speaking to largely
Abercrombie catalog — Alexis Jones
That was it. The quiet girl from Spanish class walked away — her
“As long as you live a life of mere
mission accomplished. All Alexis
consumption, not a life of contribu-
about the ever-growing issue of
to private school in her mother’s
could do was smile and run her
tion,” she explained, “you will never
domestic abuse and sexual assault
jaundice-colored, battered and
hand through her long brown hair,
stand in the warehouse of joy.”
on campuses.
bruised 1976 Dodge Malibu in her
trying to shrug off the five-second
rear-view mirror. She’d moved
encounter as nothing to avoid public
Alexis took students on her life’s
10 years, I had only been preaching
beyond those early mornings
embarrassment among her friends.
journey since that day — when she
to ‘half of the sky,’” she said. “The
But deep inside, where her inse-
began to define herself by serving
treatment of women is no longer a
appeared to have it all. She had put the dog days of riding
stocking cheap beer and cleaning
In an April visit to Brunswick,
male audiences across the country
“It dawned on me that for the past
urinals at the local bar to earn extra
curities had long
others and by empow-
women’s issue or a women’s move-
money for her family. No longer
wrestled with her
ering young men and
ment. It is a human movement. We
did she hide in the shadows of her
conscience and
women to fight for
just forgot to include the other half
former ZIP code in the grungy,
her identity, she
something bigger than
of humanity.”
rundown slums of Austin.
was rocked to the
Alexis was a Beverly Hills sorority
core. She made
“ As long as you live a life of mere consumption, not a life of contribution, you will never stand in the warehouse of joy.”
themselves. After graduating
Alexis doesn’t claim to be someone who’s reinventing the wheel — but
“chick” now — strutting with
a beeline for her
Texas-tomboy bravado, radiating
apartment and
with Southern-Belle charm. “I had
called home to
achieved everything the world says
Texas, immediately breaking into
Relations and a masters in
matters by my sophomore year in
uncontrollable, mascara-smearing
Communication Management,
the girls and women in your life,”
college,” she said. “I had the right
sobs and tears.
she launched I AM THAT GIRL — a
she said. “I’m actually inviting you
nonprofit movement inspiring girls
to participate and to be on the right side of history now.
guy, the right apartment, the right
She told her mother that she felt
from USC with a
rather someone who has a conver-
bachelor’s degree
sation with young men on behalf of
in International
their sisters, girlfriends, and moms.
body, the right everything. I was
like a fraud — that she felt like she’d
to love, express, and be exactly who
living the dream.”
be lied to for her entire life.
they are — in 2008.
Reality, though, soon struck Alexis unexpectedly hard. Standing outside on a sun-filled California afternoon — shooting the breeze with friends and making
“I have everything. Aren’t I
The movement has more than
the cure. You have the power to be
175 local chapters and has reached
a builder or a wrecker. You have the
tioned over and over again, pleading
more than five million people, taking
opportunity to encourage, to inspire,
with her mother for an answer.
Alexis on a worldwide speaking tour
and to protect the girls in your life.
And the woman who raised Alexis and her four brothers in Texas —
to find an unassuming girl from her
working two jobs to keep the family
BTB_10.indd 54
“You’re not the problem. You’re
supposed to be happy?” Alexis ques-
plans for the evening — she turned
54 | TIMES
“I’m not just asking you to respect
with stops at the United Nations, the White House, ESPN, and NIKE. And since January, she’s been
“There’s going to be a moment when you get to be a good guy. “Be ready.”
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 11:36 AM
FLEX TIME ’ W I C K WA L K R U N
And they’re off: More than 360 participants raced out of the starting gate.
Happy Dash Builds Community 01
T
HE BRUNSWICK community was out in full
More than 360 registered participants lined
force — with students and faculty of all ages
up at the starting gate and took to the 1.75-mile
and all divisions, along with many families
course tracing the outskirts of Edwards Campus
and friends — for the annual ’Wick Walk
on King Street.
Run on a sunny spring day in late April.
“This year’s ’Wick Walk Run was truly a community-
Parents Elisabeth Hasselbeck, Mairead Finn,
building event — and embodied our slogan: We run
and Shelby Katz co-chaired the event, which was set in motion by the Men of Brunswick’s performance of the National Anthem.
on Courage, Honor, and Truth,” Katz said. “We hope to continue this meaningful schoolwide and family tradition for years to come!”
02
01 Father and son Rich and Declan Radonis ’28 triumphantly cross the finish line. 02 Event organizers Mairead Finn, Elisabeth Hasselbeck, and Shelby Katz 03 Master of Ceremonies Tim Coupe
05
04 Bryce Shine will enter the Class of 2030 in September.
03
05 Second-graders stick together: Ryan Baxter, Finn Sargent, George Johnson, Teddy Bancroft, and Nolan McCutcheon.
For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
04
Flex Wick Walk Run.indd 55
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5/19/16 11:46 AM
CLASSNOTES C O M P I L E D B Y L I B B Y E D WA R D S
FROM THE ARCHIVES
A
S WE looked from our perch in
Headmaster Philip’s old house on a
morning in early April, we saw giant paper snowflakes falling from the sky. Spring was not quite in the air. The Upper School building stood as the backdrop to this wintry scene on Maher Avenue — just as it does in this archival photo from the 1980s. Only now — as students hang out classroom windows, shouting “words of encouragement” to those below — they peer down upon the Pedersen Lawn, a rectangular courtyard named in honor of Headmaster Norman A. Pedersen (1969–87). Seniors often congregate there to throw the Frisbee or even to barbecue in the days leading up to graduation. Teachers, too, hold occasional classes on the Lawn when the sun is shining (above). The front entrance, along with the parking lot, was moved to the west side of the building after renovations to accommodate a new theater and glass atrium, in 2008. But how about this 1978 Toyota Corolla (according to resident car expert Jimmy Romanello)? Anyone know the owner of such a classic? He must’ve had VIP parking. Please call or email Libby Edwards (ledwards@brunswickschool.org: 203-6255864) if you can identify this Bruin!
56 | TIMES
Class Notes.indd 56
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 11:55 AM
CLASSNOTES
01
1957 Here’s an update from Walt Brothers: I had a phone call from lifelong friend and fellow Brunswick classmate John
Class of 1973. “C’mon, boys, share the news!” they say.
1994
Mead. John and I have known each
Eric Ferraris and his wife, Demi,
other since 1944, when my family
happily welcomed their first baby
moved to Greenwich. John was a
girl, Heath Eleanor, on March 1. She
“lifer” in our class. I came to Brunswick
joins her brothers, Cameron (5) and
in the 9th grade. We were both “Best
Tanner (3). See photo 01.
Man” in each other’s weddings.
1995
of Greenwich and Brunswick. Those
Ted Adler and his wife, Abby,
were wonderful years, and have
welcomed their second boy to the
shaped my life even to this day.
family, Samuel Cole, on March 14.
There are two things that stand out most of all from my four years at Brunswick:
He joins his big brother, Jack. See photo 02.
prophet Isaiah, which was painted
1999
over the entrance to the library
Kip Graham and his wife, Adriane,
at school: “With all thy getting,
are the proud parents of a baby boy,
get understanding.” The second
Russell Frost III. “Trip” was born on
was Brunswick’s motto: “Courage,
June 29, 2015. See photo 03.
The first was a quotation from the
Honor, Truth.” life: A military officer, a businessman,
2000
and now a senior citizen giving back
Graham Gyesky and his wife, Lori,
to my community. My success in each
welcomed a baby girl, Everly Hope,
career was and is aided by living up
on October 8, 2015. See photo 04.
I’ve had three major careers in my
04
03
present, brought back fond memories
Talking over our lives, past and
02
05
to those inspiring words learned long ago at Brunswick. They are lifelong
Jake Heller married Alex Hughes
values for us all.
on August 8 in Todi, Italy. After
1962
six years of serving in the Obama Administration as a political appointee at the Department of
Lin Wells is keeping busy (to say
Homeland Security, Jake has joined
the least!) — teaching a “Wicked
the D.C. office of the law firm Foley
Problems” course and a few others
& Lardner, where he is a member of
at National Defense University,
the firm’s Transactional & Securities
volunteering at the Pentagon, and
Practice. Jake and Alex are living
working with the STAR-TIDES project
in Woodley Park. If you’re in town,
on building resilience to natural and
don’t hesitate to reach out to them!
man-made disasters.
See photo 05.
1973
2001
Rick Cambere ran into Mike
Ryan McDonald and his wife, Dani,
Bender at Westchester Airport in
welcomed a baby girl, Izabella Esther,
February, both commenting about
on March 6. “Izzie” joins her big
the dearth of updates from the
sister, Ophelia. See photo 06.
06
01 It’s eyes wide open for Heath Ferraris, the daughter of Eric Ferraris ’94. 02 Jack Adler holds his younger brother, Samuel, the new son of Ted Adler ’95. 03 Trip Graham, the son of Kip Graham ’99, sports the Nantucket Reds. 04 Everly Gyesky, the daughter of Graham Gyesky ’00, is excited for a sunset cruise. 05 At the wedding of Jake Heller ’00 and Alex Hughes, Chip Jones ’00, Dave Ranta (former faculty), Shane Heller ’03, the married couple, John Weir ’00, and Pete Schruth ’00 enjoy the beautiful Italian landscapes. 06 Pretty in pink: Izzie McDonald, the daughter of Ryan McDonald ’01, sleeps peacefully.
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5/19/16 11:55 AM
CLASSNOTES
07
07 Charlie and Logan Taney happily sandwich their new brother, Joseph, all sons of Charlie Taney ’01. 08 A big ’Wick and GA contingent gathered at the wedding of Patrick McGowan ’02 and Whitney Shanks. FRONT: Peter Samponaro ’02, Jory Caulkins ’02, Katherine Rowe (GA ’02), Matt Slaine ’02, the groom, Marcus Lindholm ’02, Asya Varshisky Geller (GA ’02), and Greg de Spoelberch ’00 BACK: Mike Kagan ’02, Carter Matschullat ’02, Taylor Roach ’02, Charlie Adamski Caulkins (GA ’02), Graham Caulkins ’05, Freddy Sykes ’02, and Ben Nichols ’02
08
09 The Gartin family — Chris ’03, new baby Liam, Julie, and Ella (2) — are now a clan of four. 10 Rick Berger ’05, Jack Taylor ’06, and James Thorman ’06 take a (bar) break from their studies at the Wharton MBA program at University of Pennsylvania.
09
10
2003
as classmates in the Wharton
As Product Manager, Erik over-
welcomed their third boy to the
MBA program at University of
sees development and deployment
family, Joseph Sawyer, on March 24.
Chris Basham tied the knot with
Pennsylvania. Jack is in his first year,
of StudioNow’s web application,
He joins his brothers J. Charles V (4)
Claire Rindlaub in Shelburne, Vt., on
while Rick and James will be gradu-
which connects Fortune 500 compa-
August 15.
ating in May and working at BCG in
nies with filmmakers worldwide. He
Philadelphia and Bain & Co. in New
doesn’t mind that Napa Valley is
York City, respectively. See photo 10.
nearby, the weather is good, and he
Charlie Taney and his wife, Ana,
and Logan (2). See photo 07.
2002
Chris Gartin and his wife, Julie,
Patrick McGowan married Whitney
March 15. He joins his older sister,
Shanks at the Castle Hill Inn in
Ella (2). The family lives in Battery
Newport, R.I., on October 23, in front
Park. See photo 09.
of a big contingent of Brunswick and GA folk. See photo 08.
58 | TIMES
Class Notes.indd 58
welcomed a baby boy, Liam, on
2007
can bike to work.
Erik Spangenberg packed up his
2011
piano keyboard and moved from the
David Jaramillo will be starting
Music City (Nashville) to the City
Berkeley’s inorganic chemistry Ph.D.
by the Bay (San Francisco) with his
program this fall, having received a
Jack Taylor, James Thorman, and
company StudioNow, a global video
national government fellowship to
Rick Berger ’05 were reunited
production marketplace.
fund his studies.
2006
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 11:55 AM
CLASSNOTES
FACULTY NOTES Junior Class Dean Rob Follansbee and his wife, Katie, became parents of a second baby boy, Russell
12
Wentworth, on April 8. He joins his
11 Danny Follansbee (4) is the proud big
brother of Russell, the new son of Junior Class Dean Rob Follansbee.
older brother, Danny (4). See photo 11.
12 Jacob White, the son of 5th-grade
Fifth-grade teacher Katie White and her husband, Ethan, welcomed
teacher Katie White, lies comfortably in his polar-bear PJ’s.
11
their second son, Jacob Joseph, on December 17. He joins his older brother, Sawyer, a Brunswick
National Sales. Stan left Columbia
pre-kindergartner. See photo 12.
Records to co-found Cleveland
Philadelphia, Pa., to James Stephen
International Records in 1977.
Corrigall and Lucy (nee DuMoulin)
IN MEMORIAM
Although Stan was often around
Steve was born on July 11, 1945, in
of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. He is
many famous Rock & Roll personali-
survived by his wife, Lynn (nee Amato),
Stanford I. Snyder ’56, known to
ties, he was happiest with his friends
of Cumming, Ga.; son William Corrigall
friends as “Stan,” died peacefully on
and family. Born in Chicago, Ill.,
and his wife Katherine, and grandchil-
February 19.
Stan was raised in Riverside, Conn.,
dren Nolan and Maeve, of Portland,
Stan is survived by his wife, Bridget
attending Riverside Elementary
Maine; daughter Rebecca Corrigall
Snyder, brother David Snyder, former
School and Brunswick. He was a
and her husband Walter Biscardi, of
wife Jerry Steen, daughter Julie
multisport athlete and talented
Buford, Ga; daughter Heather and her
Pildner, son Kyle Snyder, and three
musician, playing piano in bands
husband Randy Lockey, and grandson
grandchildren. He is predeceased by
starting at age 12. He was a lifelong
Quentin (Quinn), of Buford, Ga.; sister
sister Sue Johnson.
member of the Riverside Yacht Club.
Catharine (Kitty) and her husband
Stan’s passion was music. He was
Stan proudly served in the
John Goldberg, of Chicago, Ill.; sister
lucky enough to have a successful
United States Marine Corps from
Lucy Corrigall and her husband David
career as a music-industry executive
1958 to 1959. He graduated from
Orleans, of Guam.
and to play jazz piano throughout his
Yale University in 1962 and later
life. With music as the backdrop, he
attended Columbia Business School.
Washington & Jefferson College, in
forged many lifelong friendships. Stan
In 1964, Stan left Columbia Business
Pennsylvania, earning a B.A. in 1967.
was a natural storyteller and, due to
School for an entry-level position
He worked in the insurance industry,
his rich life experiences, always had
at Columbia Records, beginning his
and achieved his CPCU designation.
an entertaining story to share.
career in the music industry.
He met his wife, Lynn, in Hartford
Stan’s career at Columbia Records,
Stan’s life was full of long lasting
After graduation, Steve went on to
at the Hartford Insurance Company.
and later at Cleveland International
friendships. He remained close
Records, put him at the epicenter
to his Riverside childhood friends
of the music industry during the
throughout his life. He was a
building rockets. He was a member
heyday of Rock & Roll. He headed
generous, kind, and fun person who
of SoAR (Southern Area Rocketry).
the Sales Department in Columbia’s
enjoyed life and loved to tell stories
He loved traveling in his RV and
San Francisco office in 1968. While
of his many adventures.
staying connected with family and
there, he worked with musicians that
He was inseparable from his best
became some of the country’s most
friend and wife, Bridget, since they
influential acts, like Santana and his
met in 1989.
friend Janis Joplin. He returned to Columbia’s
They married in 1987 in San Francisco. Steve enjoyed traveling and
friends all over the country. To only write of Steve’s hobbies and accomplishments does not represent all he was as an individual.
Stephen (Steve) Stuart Corrigall ’63,
He was in the hearts of so many
headquarters in New York, where
70, died on January 23, surrounded by
people and was kind, generous, and
he held positions as Vice President
family, after an eight-year battle with
loving to everyone he met, especially
of Marketing and Vice President of
multiple myeloma.
his friends and family.
DIGITAL PHOTOS We love pictures, and we like you to look good. Here are tips for providing digital photos that will look fantastic in print: • Set the photo size to 4x6 inches or larger, in 300 dpi. • If photos have been taken by a professional photographer, submit hi-resolution files obtained from the photographer. Low-res files from photographers’ websites don’t reproduce well. • Set your digital camera to the best photo setting. • Save files as JPG. • Identify everyone, left to right, and provide a caption. • E-mail photos as attachments to Libby Edwards at ledwards@brunswickschool.org.
If you’d rather send a traditional print (made from a negative), we love that, too. But please send them on glossy paper. Matte prints and prints from digital photos do not scan well. We can’t reproduce photos from photocopies, magazines or newsprint. Mail prints to: Libby Edwards Brunswick School Development/Alumni Office 100 Maher Avenue Greenwich, CT 06830
WWW.BRUNSWICKSCHOOL .ORG
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5/19/16 11:55 AM
CLASSNOTES
ALUMNI SNAPSHOT
‘Bravery in the Pursuit of Truth’ By Katherine Ogden
T
HE ACCOLADES keep coming for documentary filmmaker
Matthew Heineman ’01, whose latest project, Cartel Land, was nominated for an Academy Award. The film, a searing examination of the drug war on both
sides of the U.S.–Mexico border, premiered at the 2015 Sundance Film Festival. There, Heineman earned the Best Director Award in the U.S. Documentary Competition and a Special Jury Prize for Cinematography. More recently, Heineman won the Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Documentary Award from the Directors Guild of America, the prestigious Polk Journalism Award, and the Courage Under Fire Award from the International Documentary Association “in recognition of conspicuous bravery in the pursuit of truth.” He was also named one of Foreign Policy magazine’s 100 Top Global Thinkers of 2015. The film documents armed vigilante groups — operating in Arizona and Mexico — that have organized to fight murderous Mexican drug cartels. Heineman and his team served as front-line witnesses to their (sometimes) brutal tactics. Bullets fly, meth is cooked up in a Mexican forest, and victims of the cartels bury their dead. “I made Cartel Land to put a face to this violence and to examine the ramifications of what happens when citizens take the law into their own hands to fight back,” Heineman explained. “I hope the Oscar nomination will give voice to those trapped by this senseless cycle of violence, suffering, and corruption.” Praise for this dangerous work has been copious. Not only does Heineman have a “terrific eye,” said the New York Times, but also “guts” and “nerves of steel.” Released theatrically last July, the movie had its broadcast premiere on A&E in January and is now available on iTunes and Netflix.
AND THE OSCAR GOES TO...
CHRIS JENKINS ’73!
Chris Jenkins ’73 added to his Oscar collection at this year’s awards, winning his third golden statuette in the Best Sound Mixing category for Mad Max: Fury Road. Jenkins won for Out of Africa in 1985 and The Last of the Mohicans in 1992.
Heineman previously directed and produced the Emmy-nominated documentary Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American Healthcare.
60 | TIMES
Class Notes.indd 60
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 11:55 AM
ALUMNI EVENTS WINTER 2016
01 FRONT Coulter Bailey ’09, Roger Walker ’86, Scott Rodwin ’86, Brad Hajim ’86, and Ned Freeman ’99 BACK Vass Eliopoulos ’92, Dwight Clasby ’71, Jarrett Shine ’92, Clay Freeman ’95, Charlie Tashjian ’05, Peter Dunn ’62, and George Boynton 02 Duncan Burn ’96, George Boynton, and Charlie Tashjian ’05 03 Fellow alumni from the Class of 1986: Roger Walker, Brad Hajim, and Scott Rodwin 04 Peter Dunn ’62 and George Boynton 05 Ned Freeman ’99 and his wife, Elizabeth
For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
01
ALUMNI RECEPTION: DENVER
Rocky Mountain High
’W
ICK AND GA alumni convened for cocktails and hors d’oeuvres
underneath the western skyline at Cherry Hills Country Club in
Denver on February 24. More than 30 Bruin and Gator alumni turned out for the 1st annual reception in the Rocky Mountain state, as did legendary Brunswick teacher and coach George Boynton. All raised a glass to their alma maters — and to new and old friendships with their fellow west-coast transplants. Here’s to everyone who attended! 02
03
04
05
WWW.BRUNSWICKSCHOOL .ORG
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5/19/16 12:00 PM
ALUMNI EVENTS WINTER 2016
FRONT Billy Chapman ’09, Corey Dobbs ’08, Daniel Taylor ’11, Henry Taylor ’14, Mac Morse ’11, Ed Kosnik ’88, Nick Federici ’96, and Mike Cuneo ’01
BACK Chris Kono ’09, Joey Scalzo ’09, Tommy Hoyos ’08, Zach Dobbs ’06, Tom O’Connor ’91, Jim Berger ’85, Tim Edwards ’05, Jason Ienner ’97, Ryan Purcell ’02, Phil Ford ’02, and Taylor Ingraham ’02
ALUMNI BUST
Above the Rim
’W
ICK ALUMNI relived their glory
days on the varsity basketball
01
court at Dann Gymnasium in the 1st annual Alumni BUST — Brunswick Upper School Tournament — held on March 12. The event drew alumni spanning the class years of 1985 to 2014 (19 players in all) and followed the traditional BUST format: double elimination, three-on-three, half court games to 11, win by two. Games were hotly contested — and played well above the rim. Two former ’Wick varsity hoopsters, Tim Edwards ’05 and Ryan Purcell ’02, teamed up with hockey player Billy Chapman ’09 to claim
03
the first-ever alumni championship — and the
04
all-important bragging rights.
01 The champs: Tim Edwards ’05, Ryan Purcell ’02, and Billy Chapman ’09 02 Daniel Taylor ’11 fades away against the shot block attempt of Jim Berger ’85. 03 Billy Chapman takes it to the hoop against the Dobbs brothers, Zach ’06 and Corey ’08. 05 Tom O’Connor ’91 goes up for the skyhook as Mac Morse ’11 and Henry Taylor ’14 defend the rim.
62 | TIMES
02
For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
Alumni Event BUST.indd 62
5/19/16 11:58 AM
ALUMNI EVENTS WINTER 2016
01
ALUMNI PADDLE PARTY
Friendly Rallies, Fireside Food & Drink
N
EARLY 30 ’Wick alumni gathered for an unseason-
ably warm and pleasant evening of paddle tennis
at Stanwich Club on February 20. The can’t-miss winter tradition — sponsored by
02
01 Nick Federici ’96, Jon Ryckman ’88, Matt MacDonald ’02, and Justin Weinstein ’99 02 Tom Toepke ’99 returns serve. 03 Greg Wyman ’07 04 Jon Ryckman ’88 and Billy Chapman ’09 cheer on the action. 05 Chris Constantine ’07
03
Grant Gyesky ’98, Zac John ’05, Billy Chapman ’09, and the Brunswick Alumni Association — brought together a youthful contingent of alumni and featured hard-hitting matches, friendly rallies, and fireside food and drink. All on hand, yet again, enjoyed ample conversation and competition (along with the very necessary “light” cardio) as they took to the courts for a fun night of paddle with their fellow Brunswick graduates. 04
05
FRONT Scott Caffrey ’98, Graham Gyesky ’00, Brendan Seaver ’09, David Better ’11, Justin Weinstein ’99, Matt MacDonald ’02, Zac John ’05, Jon Ryckman ’88, Jarrett Shine ’92, Chris Harris ’07, and Greg Wyman ’07. BACK Brian Shepard ’97, faculty member Rob Follansbee, Chris Wirth ’97, Jimmy Ritman ’94, Tom Toepke ’99, Shahryar Oveissi ’98, Grant Gyesky ’98, Jamie Fowler ’07, Sam Philip ’10, Nick Philip ’08, Nick Federici ’96, Zach Dobbs ’06, Billy Chapman ’09, Chris Constantine ’07, and Matt Gormly ’07
For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2016
Alumni Event Paddle Party.indd 63
WWW.BRUNSWICKSCHOOL .ORG
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5/19/16 12:03 PM
LAST LOOK BY MIKE KENNEDY ’99
High Fives in the Compromise Photo by Jeffry Konczal
I
N EXCHANGE for a day of truancy — Senior Skip
their fellow Bruins by encouraging them to run an
known — the Class of 2016 cut a deal with Senior
impromptu gauntlet — a safe, secure, and dry gauntlet
Dean Paul Withstandley.
of high fives, if you will.
As a compromise, they’d ALL have to
be on hand first thing in the morning at the Lower School to greet their younger ’Wick counterparts — a tradition begun in honor of Robert L. Cosby and customarily involving only a small score of senior boys. Shooter Jeffry Konczal saw this as a clear-cut photo op, arriving on the rainy
“That’s what makes photography fun. It’s about discovering something that can often come out of nowhere.”
and cold May morning with a pictorial
he ducked and weaved through the tunnel of soon-to-be graduates. Konczal immediately switched his focus to capturing this spontaneous moment, one born in everyone’s favorite name of hooky. “That’s what makes photography fun,”
he said. “It’s about discovering something that can often
the cover of an umbrella.
come out of nowhere.
imagination.
Last Look.indd 64
First-grader Peter Saunders takes his turn here, starting his day with a smile as
vision of two Brunswick boys walking into school under But things didn’t quite go according to his
64 | TIMES
The enthusiastic mass of seniors, instead, welcomed
Day as it’s more formally (and perhaps regrettably)
“I ended up with a photo completely different from what I had expected — and much more memorable, too.”
OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2016
5/19/16 12:04 PM
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES REQUESTS YOUR PARTICIPATION IN
R a isi ng ’ Wick
to
New Heights
SUPPORT THE 2015–2016
’WICK ANNUAL FUND YEAR, S P E C IA L IN T H IS ider
’ll cons I hope you erosity in special gen tion ur contribu making yo und. k Annual F to the ’Wic Best, 8 (p ’1 9) . Har tch ’8 Gregory B uste es Tr , B oard of Chairman
Your gift may be made online, by email, phone, or text. And, in advance, thank you! We’re always grateful for your support.
To make your Annual Fund gift
Online
BrunswickSchool.org/give
By email, telephone, or text Krista Bruce, Annual Fund Director 203.625.5864 kbruce@brunswickschool.org
NONPROFIT ORG. U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 3931 Stamford, CT
100 Maher Avenue Greenwich, CT 06830 Address Change Requested
MARK YOUR CALENDARS Annual Dinner.................................................... September 15 Homecoming...................................................... October 21-22 For more events and updates, please visit BrunswickSchool.org.
ATTENTION ALUMNI PARENTS Please notify us of your son’s current address at 800.546.9425 or Alumni@BrunswickSchool.org.