Foxcroft Gone Away (Spring 2015)

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Gone Away

Spring 2015


www.foxcroft.org Published by Foxcroft School P.O. Box 5555, Middleburg, VA 20118 540.687.5555 info@foxcroft.org Please address queries to: Bethany Stotler Editor, Gone Away

540.687.4513 bethany.stotler@foxcroft.org Cathrine Wolf

Director of Communications

540.687.4511 cathrine.wolf@foxcroft.org Catherine S. McGehee Head of School

Marion L. Couzens Director of Institutional Advancement Development Office Jennie Wills, Associate Director Laura Booze, Gifts Administrator Lee Clark Breeden ’00, Alumnae Affairs Associate Pam Dobbs, Office Manager Terry Meyer, Development Coordinator Laura Scharfenberg, Campaign Coordinator Christine Thomas, Development Assistant

For admission inquiries, please contact: Gina B. Finn

Director of Admission and Financial Aid

Patrick M. Finn

Director of Enrollment

800.858.2364 admission@foxcroft.org Foxcroft School is accredited by the Virginia Association of Independent Schools. Foxcroft School admits students of any race, color, religion, national and ethnic origin. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national or ethnic origin in the administration of its educational, admission, or financial aid policies, or in any school-sponsored programs. Printed on FSC-certified 10% post-consumer waste recycled paper. cell Download a QR code reader from your

smartphone's app store to view additional content 2 throughout this issue.

Gone Away

Spring 2015

WHY “Gone Away?” Like so many traditions at Foxcroft, the name “Gone Away” originates with fox hunting. According to Keswick (VA) Hunt Club’s Glossary of Fox Hunting Terms, a fox has “gone away” when he has left the covert [which means cover] and hounds are “away” when they have left the covert on the line of a fox. Foxcroft founder Charlotte Haxall Noland suggested the term as the name of the School’s alumnae publication in June 1935 when it debuted. Miss Charlotte wrote that she hoped the “premier Alumnae Bulletin” would realize its goal of being “a straightforward, informative booklet, issued annually, about what has happened since your flight from Foxcroft.” The hunting term “gone away,” she suggested, was an apt name and would correlate the alumnae publication to the student yearbook, Tally Ho! In 1983, an expanded magazine, called Foxcroft, was introduced and the traditional moniker, “Gone Away,” became the name of the alumnae section. In a nod to tradition, though, we continue to call abbreviated, class notes-filled issues, such as this one, “Gone Away.” — Editor

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Thank You, Ruth!

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Distinguished Alumna Award

5 Telling “Our Own Stories” 6

Centennial Campaign Update

8

Engaged and Engaging

9

Reunion 2015

12

Gone Away

19

Foxcroft on the Road! 2014-15 Board of Trustees

Reggie Groves ’76, Chair Anne Michele Lyons Kuhns ’87, Vice Chair Victoria B. Mars ’74, P ’03 Secretary Carla Rodil Ciperski ’88, Treasurer Dorothy Pickering Bossidy ’71 Ellen MacNeille Charles ’55 Sara Bartholomay Downey ’78, P ’01 John Durrett, Jr. P ’02 Priscilla R. Denègre P ’05 Mercedes Rudkin Gotwald ’72, P ’10, ’12 Clifton R. Gruver P ’07, ’09

Elizabeth Hanbidge ’00 Elizabeth Hazard ’82 Trevania Dudley Henderson ’76 David D. MacDonald P ’12, ’14 Karla H. Evans MacMahon P ’06, ’14 Patricia Sifton-Munro ’76 Nan M. Stuart ’71 Melissa Tochterman ’88 Michele M. Velchik P ’11 Susan Wilford P ’12 Roberta Couch Woeltz ’74

Alumnae Council Sheldon Gerry Withers ’61, President Amanda Hartmann Healy ’98, Vice President Ali Eskridge Hoce ’96, Secretary Barkley Boutell Henning ’73, Treasurer Annie Bishop ’98 Kate Hartshorn Domanski ’96

Adela Griswold ’06 Karen Lilly ’84, P ’13 Alden Denègre Moylan ’05 Jenn Sgro Orfield ’91 Lisa Hubbard Patterson ’89 Jessica Walker ’05 Foxcroft Gone Away


Thank You, Ruth! Ruth Bedford ’32 Receives Anne Kane McGuire ’52 Distinguished Service Award Foxcroft School’s Board of Trustees recently bestowed its highest honor—the Anne Kane McGuire ’52 Distinguished Service Award— on Ruth Thomas Bedford, a member of the Class of 1932 whose love for her alma mater led to an historic gift to Foxcroft. The first posthumous recipient, Bedford becomes the 29th recipient of the award, which is named in honor of McGuire, a dedicated former Board Chair and member of the Class of 1952. The presentation took place Friday, April 17,

at a community-wide assembly of students, faculty, trustees and alumnae visiting for Reunion Weekend. Board Chair Reggie Groves ’76 and trustee Trevania Dudley Henderson ’76 made the presentation, along with Head of School Cathy McGehee. The McGuire citation for Bedford, which follows below, cited Ruth’s spunky personality, love of sports and devotion to service.

By chance, Ruth Thomas Bedford, was born the year that Foxcroft School was founded. By design, she embraced and reflected the characteristics and values of the School from which she graduated in 1932. And by choice, she forever changed her alma mater with an act of love and generosity unmatched in the history of girls’ schools.

basketball for the School and for her beloved Hound team. Ruth later became a skilled sailor, golfer, and tennis player, and also carried on the family penchant for racing horses with success. All this she did long before women’s participation in sports was widely accepted, much less celebrated.

Spunk. Like Foxcroft and Miss Charlotte, “whom she followed,” Ruth embraced life on her own terms. She worked on Broadway, backstage, when nice girls from Connecticut didn’t do such things. She was a licensed pilot, often seen skimming her seaplane across Long Island Sound.

Service. With an appreciation for giving back passed down by her family and solidified during her time at Foxcroft, Ruth’s “Understanding Heart” just kept growing. She wasn’t afraid to get her hands dirty either: She served with the Red Cross in Europe during World War II, offering to be stationed in England during the Blitz and, along with her sister Lucie, volunteered at the Norwalk Hospital in Connecticut for over 50 years.

“Ruth was always a very independent person, a true woman ahead of her time,” is how former trustee Bill Weeks describes her. Like many Foxcroft women, she was not afraid to speak her mind, and she had a sense of humor. As a student at the School, she loved to pull a good prank; “Nothing you could get kicked out for,” she would say with a grin and a sparkle in her bright blue eyes. Unpretentious. Despite her great wealth, Ruth was a no-glitz, no-glamour kind of girl, who drove around her hometown of Westport in a beat up Oldsmobile station wagon and lived well below her means. She loved Foxcroft’s lack of pretension, perhaps because she had none either, and she was thrilled that the School remained true to its values as it continued to grow with the times. Sports. An accomplished rider from an early age, at Foxcroft Ruth embraced the School’s motto of “mens sano in corpore sano,” honing her riding skills and playing

At the end, Ruth inspired us by acknowledging the place that she felt made her the woman she was, with a transformational gift to her alma mater, Foxcroft. And in the process, Ruth demonstrated that women can be agents of change. Her generosity will help to sustain the School she believed in and loved for many future generations of young women. For being a shining example of strength, independence, and service to Foxcroft students and women around the world, and for inspiring us all to be true to ourselves, to follow our passions, and to make a difference in the world, the Board of Trustees and Catherine S. McGehee, Head of School, honor Ruth Thomas Bedford, Class of 1932, with Foxcroft’s highest honor, the Anne Kane McGuire ’52 Distinguished Service Award. n

Spring 2015

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Distinguished Alumna Award NSA and State Department Pioneer Suzanne “Sukie” Kuser ’49 is Honored Intelligence, working in resources and representing the department on various interagency committees. Often, she was the only professional woman at the table and had to stand up for State’s interests, which were frequently different from those of the CIA and military.

Suzanne “Sukie” Kuser ’49, a pioneer and power in the U.S. intelligence community during a distinguished 33-year career, received the 2015 Distinguished Alumnae Award at the Senior Luncheon which was held on Saturday, April 18, of Reunion Weekend. Alumnae Council President Sheldon Gerry Withers ’61, together with Council members Karen Lilly ’84 and Barkley Boutell Henning ’73, presented Kuser, a resident of Washington, D.C., with the award, citing her illustrious career working in intelligence at the National Security Agency and U.S. State Department, as well as her long and varied service to Foxcroft and selfless involvement in various non-profits. After Foxcroft, Kuser attended Bryn Mawr College, graduating with a Chemistry degree in 1953. She went to work for NSA, which had been established less than a year earlier, as a cryptologic linguist. “They asked me if I was good at crossword puzzles,” recounts Kuser with a smile, “and when I said yes, they hired me.” It was in the midst of the Cold War and Sukie helped to collect and analyze communications intelligence information, cracking codes and learning Arabic along the way. In 1953, Kuser moved to the State Department, where she would spend the next 28 years. She continued in 4

Kuser studied national security affairs at the National War College in 1977— one of just seven women in a sea of men—and eventually rose to be head of the U.S. State Department’s Intelligence Reporting Division. Since retiring in 1986, she has continued as a part-time consultant and a senior reviewer of classified documents at the NSA. Kuser’s service to Foxcroft has also been extensive. She helped create one of the first career panels for students, organized the School’s first phonathon, and established a scholarship for daughters of foreign service officers. For 19 years, beginning in 1988, she served on the Board of Trustees, including several terms as Vice President. She has been on numerous committees, including Buildings and Grounds, Development, Steering, and Planned Giving, and she continues as a key member of the Investment Committee even now. In 1999, Kuser received the Anne Kane McGuire ’52 Distinguished Service Award from Foxcroft’s Board of Trustees, its highest honor.

often related to her passion for gardening and nature or her abiding interest in international relations. Currently, she sits on the boards of both Friends of the National Arboretum and The Foreign Policy Discussion Group of Washington, D.C. She is a Fellow and serves on several committees of the National Tropical Botanical Garden. Her past service includes the Foreign Student Service Council, World Affairs Council of Washington, D.C., Institute of World Politics, McKee Botanical Garden, St. John’s Community Services, and Georgetown Symphony. Foxcroft’s Distinguished Alumna Award recognizes graduates who have been pioneers and/or made outstanding contributions in their fields; received local or national recognition of achievement; demonstrated dedication and interest in civic affairs; and been a role model. Previous recipients include the former Ambassador to St. James Court Anne Legendre Armstrong ’45, anthropologist Dr. Anna C. Roosevelt ’64, longtime congresswoman Millicent Hammond Fenwick ’25, and White House photographer Diana Hardin Walker ’59. n

Kuser has served on many other boards and councils over the years, Foxcroft Gone Away


Telling “Our Own Stories” Student Head of School Lilly Potter ’15 Wows as Senior Class Speaker at Alumnae Association Luncheon At a special luncheon on Saturday of Reunion Weekend, the Class of 2015 was officially welcomed into the Alumnae Association by President Sheldon Gerry Withers ’61. Attended by our seniors, trustees, alumnae returning for their

reunions, several faculty members, and friends, the luncheon included the presentation of the Distinguished Alumna Award (opposite), and remarks by Withers and Head of School Cathy McGehee. In addition, the four newly-elected alumnae class representatives for the Class of 2015, Hannah All, Madeline McNamara, Molly Murphy, and Tori Weber, were announced.

One of our favorite things about Alumnae Weekend is getting to hear all the stories you tell us. What was different, what has stayed the same, the fun you had. . . and the things you got away with. As we approach the time when we will leave the student community and join the alumnae network, we realize we have these stories, too. As we lost track of time on the sleeping porch with our disembodied whispers connecting us in the dark, or as we stared with Astronomy Club into the vast sugar-smattered expanse of our country sky at night, we felt the need to pick and press these details, to immortalize these experiences that are so uniquely our own, because they are too precious to be lost. These memories, which now compel us to be historians, are the things that made us fall in love with Foxcroft. We held witness to four years of a century-long legacy. We were classmates and teammates and sisters to a parade of strong, funny, independent girls. We made our own stories, and we would like to share with you now a few of our most precious. We remember how magical Fox/Hound always seemed as underclassmen. . . and scary, but mostly magical. Screaming cheers, feeling the vibrations of drums in our teeth. We remember the sense of belonging as we told stories in the lounge, at the PX, on Senior Porch, trying and failing to catch our breath, laughing so hard we hurt. We remember the people who helped us shape ourselves into the kind of people we wanted to be.

For many, however, the wonderful speech by Student Head of School Lilly Potter ’15 (below) was a true highlight of the gathering. Conveying a sense of poise, confidence, and insight beyond her years, Lilly noted that students’ favorite aspect of Reunions and other times spent with alumnae is hearing stories of their time at Foxcroft. She then took the opportunity to share some of her class’s stories, “a few of our most precious memories.”

These are some of our favorite memories; however, they were the best of times and it wasn’t always like that. When things went well, as they usually do, we tended to forget just how lucky we are to be here, but when we were vulnerable or feeling low, we realized the strength of our community. When we were wheezing through another lap around Big Track, our Class President slowed down to our pace and invited us to run with her. When we struggled in class, our teacher worked with us after school every week until we understood. When the sound system went out during our performance, everyone cheered for us and tried to sing the song so we could finish. It is in these moments, when we were most insecure, that we felt the power of over a hundred friends, housemothers, administrators, and teachers functioning as a safety net to catch us and push us back to our feet. The time that we have spent in this community, where our friends are our sisters, our teachers know us and really care about us, our passions are encouraged, where our safety net is firmly below us, has made us into women who will never be afraid to climb higher. The most important story we can tell is this: Foxcroft will always be our home. It is yours as well. We thank you for sharing your stories and listening to ours. We hold close every memory we have created here, as we prepare in these next 40 days to leave home. n To view video of Lilly’s speech and the Distinguished Alumna Award presentation, scan this code or visit www.foxcroft.org/reunion/luncheon2015

Spring 2015

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Centennial Campaign Update Together We Will Step Boldly into the Future

The Centennial Campaign for Foxcroft School During Reunion Weekend, Head of School Cathy McGehee announced, “I want to share some exciting news about Court,” to assembled alumnae, students and faculty. “We have raised the 80% necessary to begin the construction that will repurpose Court as Foxcroft’s new Welcome Center! To celebrate and before Court becomes an active construction site, I want to give you an opportunity to walk through the building. And, for those of you who cannot view the building today, I invite you to take a virtual tour – using your smartphones!” The QR codes to the right enable you to imagine, wherever you are, the possibilities of some of this old building’s new spaces. Welcome to Court! The repurposing of Court is the second project in the Residential Initiative of Foxcroft’s Centennial Campaign. The first project was Stuart Hall, the School’s Gold LEED-certified, 50-person dormitory. As the oldest dormitory on campus, Court was slated to be next in the lineup for renovation as a dormitory. When the construction bids were received, however, the estimated $15 million cost associated with rehabilitating Court as a dorm left no reserves to address the remodeling of the remaining four dormitories. Thus came the decision to preserve the building by repurposing Court as the School’s Welcome Center. And the cost to do so . . . $8 million versus $15 million! Construction will begin immediately on Court with an anticipated completion date of early Summer 2016. Funds raised as of April 30, 2015, for this $8 million endeavor (which includes endowment for the building) total $6 million, leaving $2 million to be raised to complete the project. Foxcroft’s Centennial Campaign, a $75 million effort to increase Foxcroft School’s endowment by $50 million and to secure $25 million for our Residential Initiative, has raised over $61 million.* Of the total raised to date, $45 million is earmarked for financial aid, programs, and general endowment. Of the $16.4 million raised for the Residential Initiative, $9.4 million covered the construction of Stuart Hall, $6 million is designated for Court, and $1 million will be used to upgrade windows on the existing dorms (see box below). If you would like more information on Foxcroft’s Centennial Campaign, please contact Marion L. Couzens, Director of Institutional Advancement, at 540.687.4518 or marion.couzens@foxcroft.org. *This figure includes Ruth Bedford ’32’s extraordinary gift.

Residential Initiatives Underway! Foxcroft School is pleased to announce that it has received an anonymous $1 million gift for the replacement of the windows in Applegate, Dillon, Orchard, and Reynolds dormitories. This $1.3 million project, which is part of the Residential Initiative of Foxcroft’s Centennial Campaign, will begin this summer and, barring any complications, should be finished by the time School opens in the fall! Only $300,000 remains to be raised to complete this endeavor. The installation of new energy-efficient windows will enhance dormitory and faculty living spaces benefitting the School, students, and faculty in the years to come. 6

Foxcroft Gone Away


Plans for Court MEETING ROOM MEETING ROOM

RESTROOM

RESTROOM

CHAPEL

Take a virtual walk through Court's future spaces! Scan the QR codes below to explore each location.

OFFICE OFFICE

STAIR

STAIR LU/LA

RECEPTION

ELEC

SCHOOL STORE STORAGE / MAIL

JANITOR

Lobby

OPEN OFFICE

First Floor

SCHOOL STORE

LEVEL 1

Foxcroft School

WORK

ROOM / COURT DORMITORY RENOVATION KITCHENETTE

2000 Duke Street, Suite 120 Alexandria, VA 22314 571.388.7761 www.hcm2.com C Hord Coplan Macht, Inc.

September 22, 2014

School Store

RESTROOM STAIR STAIRS

BOARD ROOM

LU/LA

ELEC. RESTROOM 209

A/V OFFICE

OPEN OFFICE

STORAGE 211

OPEN OFFICE

Second Floor

Board Room

LEVEL 2

Foxcroft School

COURT DORMITORY RENOVATION

2000 Duke Street, Suite 120 Alexandria, VA 22314 571.388.7761 www.hcm2.com C Hord Coplan Macht, Inc.

September 22, 2014

RESTROOM

RESTROOM

DATA

STAIRS

STORAGE

STAIRS

Open Offices

LU/LA

STORAGE

STORAGE

Third Floor

LEVEL 3

These plans include the artist’s renderings of potential spacial configurations. Spring 2015 COURT DORMITORY RENOVATION Foxcroft School

September 22, 2014

2000 Duke Street, Suite 120 Alexandria, VA 22314 571.388.7761 www.hcm2.com C Hord Coplan Macht, Inc.

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Engaged and Engaging Second Diversi-Tea celebrates inclusivity and activities on campus

Of the many marvelous things that resulted from last year’s Centennial Celebration, one of the highlights is the grand gathering of sharing and celebration called the “Diversi-Tea.” Perhaps because it fits as well with Foxcroft’s Second Century focus on making connections as it did with the Centennial Committee’s goal of engaging a broad range of alumnae, the second Diversi-Tea was a rousing success when it was held on Friday of Reunion Weekend. Roomies was filled with Foxcroft alumnae and students, faculty, Trustees, and friends and, once again, the personal connections made across the generations and cultures touched minds and warmed hearts. It was not a reprise of the first, though. Fittingly for a Centennial event, last year’s Diversi-Tea focused on the historical as alumnae told personal stories of their experience at Foxcroft and paths taken since. Laughter, tears, love, and understanding accompanied tales of being among the School’s first African-American students or arriving on campus from a country or community drastically different from Foxcroft. This year, the emphasis was on the present. Students, some of whom had 8

been moved to action by last year’s event, talked about the clubs and activities on campus that – like the Diversi-Tea – embrace and celebrate the many cultures, countries, circumstances, and ethnicities that comprise our community. Maleia Meadows ’15, Natalie Harris ’16, and Maria Del Cueto Abascal ’18 talked about “We the People,” a club they founded this year to honor diversity in all its forms, from race and religion to nationality and sexual orientation. “We wanted to offer a safe place to talk about different issues,” said Maleia, whose mother, Deborah Rivers Meadows ’74, was Foxcroft’s first African-American Student Head of School. In addition to getting together socially, the group has attended several interscholastic conferences on diversity and made a number of presentations at Morning Meeting. The highlight of these was a terrific video for Martin Luther King Jr. Day that the group made, led by talented, nascent filmmakers Natalie and Nicole Newman ’15. The video, which asks Foxcroft community members about their dreams for America, was picked up on social media by both the National Coalition for Girls’ Schools and the National Association of Independent Schools. “When we premiered our Martin Luther King Jr. Day video,” Natalie said, “it was very powerful to see the

response from the alumnae as they heard our current students share their dreams of inclusion and their hopes for society. Many alumnae approached us offering kind words and support. It was amazing to see how much our work influenced everyone!” Phoebe Fei ’15, one of the leaders of International Club, and Linda Yang ’16, representing the Chinese Language and Culture Club, reviewed their groups’ goals and activities. Other students spoke about “language lunch tables” for girls who are learning a new language, be it French, Spanish, or English. An open discussion followed, deftly moderated by Liz Hanbidge ’00, a member of Foxcroft’s Board of Trustees, 2014 Centennial Diversity Committee Co-Chair, and a driving force behind both Diversi-Teas. Perspectives were shared on several topics, including Foxcroft's ability to welcome diverse students, opportunities for support of student activities going forward, and the nuances of integrating people into community. “You can have a lot of diversity and a lot of tolerance in a community without inclusion, “ said Trustee Carla Rodil Ciperski ’88, who came to Foxcroft from Guatemala, “We need to think about the words we use.” If the second annual Diversi-Tea is any indication, the Foxcroft community is indeed thinking about those words, building bridges and working to create a truly inclusive spirit that spans all differences. n To watch We the People's film, scan this code or visit www.foxcroft.org/ wethepeople/MLK_tribute Foxcroft Gone Away


Reunion 2015 The campus saved its peak blooms of spring for the 100+ women who gathered to celebrate milestones during Reunion Weekend in mid-April. From a reception at Covert and tours of campus to trail rides under the cherry blossoms and an informative State of the School presentation, there were many venues for alumnae to reconnect with their alma mater and each other. 50 years! Members of the Class of 1965 Ann Getz Duncan, Lee Hovey King, RheaTopping, Julia Armstrong Jitkoff, Cynthia Michalis, and Jani Brown Jussel with Sheldon Gerry Withers ’61

Head of School Cathy McGehee, here with Sophie Gotwald ’10 and Jayne Gunter ’10, hosted a lovely reception at Covert on Friday evening. From the Class of 1985 (below): Molly Smith Hamman, Roxana Hill de Salaverria, Susie Der Garry Haleblian, Maria Paiz, and Courtney Maier Burbela

From the Class of 2000: Amber Compton Samol, Elisabeth Thayer Pendergrass, and Courtney McMillan Schultz Cathy (below) with Jane Choremi Roll ’75, trustee Trevania Dudley Henderson ’76, and Jacqueline Russell Williams ’75

From the Class of 2010: Martina Caputy, Annabelle Thompson, and Kristina Lindquist with their Schoolhouse mentors, Jane Lockhart and Patty Boswell.

At the reception, the Class of 1975 (above) unveiled custom t-shirts, proclaiming themselves the “Foxcroft Fossils!” What a great gift to bring, along with a wonderful sense of humor, to a 40th reunion!

Members of the Class of 2010 Dish Harris and Xanna Garner were thrilled to see ßGlen and Katie Ryan Kantz at Covert!

From the Class of 1965: Neville Holter and Angie Reynal Thieriot

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Members of the Class of 1985 took a tour of the newest building on campus, Stuart Hall.

Celebrating its 50th reunion, the Class of 1965 (above) held a tea and service of remembrance in Miss Charlotte’s Garden on Saturday afternoon.

True friends to the end

A State of the School presentation by Cathy McGehee was one of several opportunities during the weekend for alumnae to learn about Foxcroft today. Others included a student panel and classes.

Time for Fox/Hound Field Hockey! Current students supported each team, and alumnae got a taste of their favorite tradition.

It was a beautiful morning for a trail ride for Julia Armstrong Jitkoff ’65, Betsey Johanns’65, Maggie Stewart Gilman’65, and Martha Spencer Burke ’80

The Fox/Hound sidelines were full of spectators from the Class of 2010, including (above) Sophie Gotwald, SuBin Lee, Emily Druckman, Hunter Wilhoit, and Terry Lynne Garvey and (left) Devon Donohue, Lindsay Allardyce, and Monica Salmeron with their guests.

Class Photos


Class of 1985

Class of 2005

For more photos from the weekend, search (and share!) using

#FXCReunion

on Facebook, Instagram & Twitter.

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Foxcroft on the Road

Los Angeles, CA

San Francisco, CA

Hosts: Eliza Brown ’84, and Sabrina and Mick Hellman, P ’05, ’08, ’10

Boston, MA Hosts: Elizabeth Hazard ’82 and Ted Dintersmith

Hamilton, MA

Palm Beach, FL Hosts: Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Gotwald (Mercedes Rudkin ’72)

Miami, FL Hosts: Mr. and Mrs. Adam Ciperski (Carla Rodil ’88)

Wellington, FL With Exceptional Proficiency Program riders

New York, NY Hosts: Mr. and Mrs. Donald Glickman (Mia Martin ’78)


22407 Foxhound Lane • P.O. Box 5555 Middleburg, Virginia 20118

Save the Date Reunion Weekend 2016 April 15-17, 2016 All classes ending in 6 & 1 – Plan now to celebrate your reunion next spring! For more information, please contact the Development Office at 540.687.4510 or alumnae@foxcroft.org


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