CLASSNOTES COMPILED BY MIKE KENNEDY ’99
For Alumni, Career Resources for a Lifetime Brunswick Career Center: Five years in, a vast array of ’Wick alumni and parents are gladly volunteering their expertise and mentorship to Brunswick alumni as they launch and manage their careers. By Katherine Ogden
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TIMES OF BRUNSWICK • SPRING 2022
D
AYS B E FO R E G R A D UATIN G
tools and resources for the decidedly distinct
from Brunswick School back in 2018,
endeavor of finding meaningful work.
young Caleb Osembor, then 18, was
The result is his first job: Osembor accepted
selected as a No. 1 teen-to-watch by
an offer to serve as a private equity analyst at
his hometown monthly, Stamford Magazine. Featured as a “Dream Teen” in the magazine’s
L Catterton in Greenwich. He is thrilled to return to his old stomping grounds in
annual homage to teen talent, Caleb told the
Connecticut, and he credits the invaluable help
magazine that his career goal, at that time,
of Director of Career Service Paige Montinaro
was to combine his education with his love for
(P ’15, ’18) and a Career Center Panel that
filmmaking to one day lead a major production
included Scott A. Dahnke (P ’17, ’19, ’26) for
or entertainment company.
helping him find his way.
Today, Caleb is on the verge of collecting a
“Every step of the way, Mrs. Montinaro
hard-earned degree from Georgetown University,
was available,” Osembor said. “She was really
and will shortly be testing out his dreams in the
invested in helping me.”
new world of work and adulthood. As he began
Five years after its inception, the Brunswick
to contemplate his future beyond school, Caleb
Career Center has become a hive of activity for
found it was Brunswick, and specifically the
alumni of all ages, not just for 20-somethings
Brunswick Career Center, where he found the
beginning their careers but also those who might
For more photos, visit bwick.org/tob_spring2022