INDIAN SPRINGS
HEAD OF SCHOOL
SCOTT G. SCHAMBERGER
ACADEMICS
Dr. Jonathan Gray
ADMISSION
Taylor Docking
ADVANCEMENT & EXTERNAL AFFAIRS
Jim Simon
ATHLETICS
Greg Van Horn
COLLEGE ADVISING
Amelia Johnson
COMMUNICATIONS
Rachel Wallace Preskitt
FINANCE AND OPERATIONS
Tanya Yeager
FACULTY Weslie Wald RESIDENTIAL LIFE
John Fahey
STRATEGY & SPECIAL PROJECTS
Lauren Wainwright ’88
STUDENT LIFE
Hunter Wolfe
BOARD OF GOVERNORS 2022-2023
Elizabeth Goodrich
Robert Aland ’80
Myla Calhoun Martin Damsky ’68 Joe Farley ’81
Jerolyn Ferrari
Clara Chung Fleisig
Braxton Goodrich ’93 Kyung Han ’85
John Hudson, III Ben Hunt ’82
Leo Kayser, III ’62
Emily Hess Levine ’01 Jimmy Lewis ’75
Ellen McElroy ’78
Randall Minor ’99 Scott Pulliam ’85 Lia Rushton Hanson Slaughter ’90 Alan Engel ’73 Ex Officio
Starr Turner Drum ’02 Ex Officio, Alumni Council Connie Hill Ex Officio, Parents Association
MISSION STATEMENT Guided by our motto, Learning through Living, Indian Springs School fosters a love of learning and creativity, a sense of integrity and moral courage, and an ethic of participatory citizenship with respect for individuality and independent thought.
EDITOR
Rachel Wallace Preskitt
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
Ellen S. Padgett
PHOTOGRAPHER
Quez Shipman
EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Erica Richie
CONTRIBUTORS
Kathryn D’Arcy Peggy Fleetwood Bob Hogan ’68 Keith McCoy Jim Simon Cindy Van Horn Eric Velasco
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INDIAN SPRINGS MAGAZINE
Published twice a year, in fall and spring. Printed by Craftsman Printing in Birmingham, Alabama.
COMMENTS rwallace@indiansprings.org
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©2022 Indian Springs School. All rights reserved. 190 Woodward Drive, Indian Springs, AL 35124
Phone: 205.988.3350 | Website: www.indiansprings.org
NOTICE OF NONDISCIMINATORY POLICY AS TO STUDENTS Indian Springs School, an independent school nationally recognized as a leader in boarding and day education for grades 8-12, serves a talented and diverse student body and offers its admission to qualified students regardless of race, gender, religion, national origin, ethnicity, or sexual orientation. Located in Indian Springs, Alabama, just south of Birmingham, the school does not discriminate on the basis of race, gender, religion, national origin, ethnicity, or sexual orientation in administration of its educational policies, admission policies, scholarship and loan programs, or athletic and other school-administered programs.
INDIAN SPRINGS
ON THE COVER
With current student Yuji Nakano ’23, Dr. Mac LaCasse recreates this photo from the 1987 Khalas taken with Jay Winks ’86.
50 Years of Excellence in Teaching
Honoring the career and contributions of math and physics teacher Dr. Mac LaCasse, who has served the school for 50 years. By Eric Velasco P ’23
Celebrating Cindy
Longtime librarian Cindy Van Horn reflects on her retirement.
Soccer State Champions
The boys and girls varsity soccer teams make Indian Springs history.
20 Annual Report
Thank you for your support during the 2021-2022 fiscal year.
ELIZABETH GOODRICH
P ’20, ’23
Chair, Board of Governors
Indian Springs School
GOODRICH
Like most of you reading this magazine, I am grateful for the many ways Indian Springs School has impacted my own life and the lives of my family members. I am the spouse of an alum, Mike Goodrich ’90, a parent of a recent graduate, Catherine ’20, and a parent of a senior, Gibson ’23. I am delighted to serve in my first year as chair of the school’s board of governors and want to take this opportunity to thank the many alums, parents, students, faculty, and my fellow board members who do so much for Indian Springs. A special word of thanks is due to my predecessor, Alan Engel ’73, who masterfully guided the board through a pandemic, leadership transitions, and the ongoing campaign to fund the construction of the Kayser-Samford Community Commons. Indian Springs would not be the strong school it is today without Alan’s vision and his extraordinary generosity and commitment.
We are starting the 2022-2023 school year at an exciting moment in the school’s 70-year history. Indian Springs opened with its second consecutive year of record enrollment, including 326 students from 12 countries and nine states. Our faculty’s collective tenure and expertise always amaze me; they are vital in leading our students on their unique journeys of Learning through Living. Indian Springs continues to challenge students to think and achieve for themselves and their community. This school is, by design, a work in progress that three generations of students have had and continue to have a role in creating.
In these pages, you will learn more about some members of the Indian Springs family who have distinguished themselves and made notable contributions to the school. We recognize Dr. Mac LaCasse’s impressive 50+ year tenure in the classroom, just as we wish longtime librarian Cindy Van Horn well in her recent retirement. We celebrate the recent graduates from the Class of 2022 and their many successes and acknowledge our generous donors who made gifts in support of Indian Springs in the 2021-2022 fiscal year.
Finally, I am excited by the building progress of our Community Commons project, which will provide this and future generations of Indian Springs students with an incredible multi-purpose facility to gather for meals, meetings, and socializing. The Commons will be the site of great discussions and gatherings and where memories will be made by all who call Indian Springs home. Thank you to the 100+ donors who have supported this critical priority with your giving. For those who have not had the opportunity to be a part of this historic effort, I hope you will join the rest of the board and me in support of this campaign.
FROM HEAD OF SCHOOL SCOTT SCHAMBERGER
Indian Springs School is celebrating 70 years of transformative educational experiences. With the 2022-2023 school year underway, our community is operating from a position of strength and a return to ‘Springs normal.’ I qualify this idea of normal as I would never want our community to regress toward the mean of normalcy. On the contrary, I implore us to aspire to the level of excellence that generations of alums expect of their alma mater. Without the same distractions we have experienced for the last two years, we now focus entirely on the aspects that make our community unique: the people, the program, and the sense of place. Because of our people, program, and place, I can confidently say our best days are still ahead.
I continue to share that relationships matter most at Indian Springs, and although it is natural for people to come and go in a community, individual impacts and legacies endure. As members of the class of 2022 recently launched into the next chapter of their lives, I remain indebted to how they have individually and collectively shaped our community under the leadership of Fall 2021 Mayor Andy Schwebel ’22 and Spring 2022 Mayor Joseph Katz ’22. Like their successor, Fall 2022 Mayor Lucy Craig ’23 is already doing this semester, Andy and Joseph left their stamps on the Indian Springs community. Transitions in leadership are part of the natural evolution of human society. We are blessed to have great servant leaders volunteering their time and talents on behalf of the school. As our community welcomes Elizabeth Goodrich into the role of chair of the board of governors, we must also acknowledge the distinguished service of Alan Engel ’73 in that role over four years. Alan’s tenure as board chair was marked by extraordinary circumstances and unique challenges. I am grateful for the partnership I have enjoyed with Alan and his lasting impact on Indian Springs. We are a decidedly better school for the time and energy that Alan, Elizabeth, and all the members of the board—both past and present—devote.
The last issue of Indian Springs Magazine previewed a celebration of Dr. Mac LaCasse’s 50 years of service to the school. I am thrilled that Dr. LaCasse has returned for his 51st year of teaching at Indian Springs and was tickled to watch him playing bridge on McLean Lawn during Club Expo with members of the Bridge Club during the first days of this semester. As I took a mental snapshot, I couldn’t help but think about how that image represents the best of the people, the program, and the sense of place. The program at Indian Springs requires students to get “out of the shallows and into the depths,” as the founding director, Doc Armstrong, would urge the school’s earliest students. Although great teachers have come and gone over the school’s first 70 years, Doc’s notion of digging deeper endures. Our theme for this academic year is one of our core values: intellectual curiosity. I am excited to watch our students continue to dig deeper and think more boldly.
Indian Springs’ people and the program certainly contribute to the sense of place we enjoy here, as do the campus and our facilities. Speaking of the latter, I am excited that we will welcome our community back inside with the opening of the Kayser-Samford Community Commons later this semester. While replacing the old dining hall was bittersweet, this new facility will be the community’s social hub and transform our students’ lives for generations to come. Our students and faculty have grown accustomed to dining al fresco over the last two years. The expansive covered porches and terraced patios of the Community Commons will provide ample opportunity to continue. Still, the state-of-the-art dining room with varied and comfortable seating will be a welcomed change of environment on our colder and wetter days. I hope you will join us for a meal should life bring you to town or out to campus.
SCOTT SCHAMBERGERHead of School
Indian Springs School
MAC LACASSE
BY ERIC VELASCO P ’23WHILE GROWING UP ON THE INDIAN Springs School campus, Kevin LaCasse ’88 realized at an early age that his father, Dr. William “Mac” LaCasse, was revered by students in the physics and calculus classes he taught there.
“I knew that everyone respected him because after kids would graduate, they would come back and pull up to the house just to say hey,” says Kevin, who later learned first-hand as a student, along with his twin, Steven ’88, and sister, Karen ’95.
Since joining the Indian Springs faculty in 1972, LaCasse has had a profound impact in the classroom, after hours as a co-coach in academic competitions, and behind the scenes as one of the institutional anchors of the faculty.
In surveys, alums regularly name him as one of their most influential instructors. After reaching the half-century milestone in May, LaCasse was awarded the MacDonald B. Fleming Distinguished Service Award.
“He’s dedicated 50 years of his life to this place and this age group,” says Scott Schamberger, the head of school. “For 50 years, he’s been at the top of his game.”
David Oh ’87, who took both physics and calculus from LaCasse, draws a direct line from those classes to Oh’s work for NASA as lead flight director for the 2012 project that landed the Curiosity rover on Mars and the ongoing Psyche mission to explore the largest metal asteroid in the solar system.
“All of that really traces back to that first knowledge about physics and calculus that I got from Dr. LaCasse,” Oh says. “That formed the basis for the work I did later at MIT and then in the aerospace business.”
But LaCasse’s intellectual curiosity goes way beyond the topics he teaches, extending into art, history, and other areas of the humanities. One way it finds expression is through his love for crossword and Wordle puzzles.
“A lot of math and physics guys, it’s pretty much math and physics, you know what I mean?” says Dr. Jonathan Gray, assistant head of school for academic affairs and a former chair of the math department. “His breadth of knowledge speaks to the genius there.”
Dr. Bob Cooper, another legendary teacher and LaCasse’s longtime friend, points to the daily dining-hall lunch group of Mac Fleming, Cooper, Richard Neely—all history teachers—and LaCasse. The conversation, naturally, usually revolved around history.
“Mac LaCasse knew as much history as the rest of us,” Cooper says. “Mac is just one of the smart people. He could come in and teach my class. Easily. But I certainly could not go and teach his class.”
Humble and soft-spoken, LaCasse downplays his skills and accomplishments when asked about his career. “I just hope I made a difference for some people, a positive difference, and haven’t put too many barriers in people’s way along the line.”
LaCasse stands in his office in May of 2022 at the conclusion of his 50th year of teaching at Indian Springs.
William McMullen LaCasse’s nickname, Mac, is a birthright. Men in the McMullen branch of his mother’s family tended to go by that moniker. “I got stuck with it,” he says wryly. “From birth.”
Growing up in the 1950s and 1960s during the race to space and eventually the Moon, LaCasse had visions of being a cutting-edge scientist when he started a five-year doctoral program in physics at Vanderbilt University.
“I never wanted to be a teacher,” LaCasse says in a recent interview. “It was never, never a part of what I wanted then. Everybody who was in that program with me had the same idea—we’re going to go into the frontiers of physics and make some great contribution.”
But political winds shifted as the 1970s dawned, and federal funding for physics research began to evaporate. With career prospects drying up, many of LaCasse’s fellow doctoral classmates dropped out. Then just before graduation, LaCasse learned about a temporary opening teaching physics at a small private all-boys school in Alabama. He had never heard of Indian Springs School but was familiar with Alabama, having lived in Montgomery as a youth when his father was posted there with the Air Force.
And while teaching wasn’t part of his original game plan, LaCasse felt fortunate to make some use of his advanced degree when he started at Indian Springs on August 1, 1972.
He was hired to fill in until the regular physics teacher returned from a sabbatical. When the instructor didn’t, LaCasse was asked to stay on. He added calculus to his portfolio in 1973 and has taught it
“His breadth of knowledge speaks to the genius there.”
exclusively since switching to part-time in 2010.
LaCasse may have arrived armed with a bachelor’s degree in physics and math from St. John’s and a doctorate from Vanderbilt, but Alabama still required him to obtain a state teaching certificate, which he did over a few summers at the University of Montevallo.
By then, LaCasse knew he had found his calling. “I never planned to be here for 50 years,” he says. “But each year, I came back. It just became a habit.”
Teaching at Indian Springs had many plusses—high-caliber students, housing and utilities, and meals at the dining hall during the academic year.
Another appeal was the rural setting—this was before Interstate 65 cut through Shelby County when Indian Springs owned property on both sides of Alabama 119. “Raising children in this atmosphere was a very big plus,” he says.
The LaCasse twins were barely walking when the family moved onto the campus, and Karen lived there her entire life until each graduated from the school.
All describe the joys of growing up with other faculty kids to play with, a huge campus for a playground, and onsite cultural opportunities like movies, plays, and other performances.
Steven paints a picture of Mayberry in the country. “I often tell people it was like the 50s,” he says.
“We knew all our neighbors very well, which is very unlike most neighborhoods. We had free reign of the campus to bike around. We’d go to the dining hall every night and were with the boarding students. It was a great place to grow up.”
LaCasse has seen tremendous changes at Indian Springs during a career that spans nearly three-quarters of the school’s 70-year-history.
An all-boys school when he arrived, Indian Springs switched to coed in 1975. Back then, the student population was smaller, and boarding students comprised a larger percentage.
The campus itself has been reshaped. Development outside its boundaries has exploded.
“Society has changed, and the school has changed with it,” LaCasse says. “If you drove a car, when you got on campus, you had to give your keys to the dean of students so he would know you didn’t drive off. It’s not like that now. Every student has a car, and they’re not going to give their keys to anybody.”
But LaCasse says he still takes the same basic approach to teaching based on how he learned. “I was accustomed all my educational life that you walk into the room, and somebody’s giving a speech,” he says. “You pay attention, and then you leave. That’s pretty much the lecture format that I have followed.”
But his teaching persona is not that dry. Steven recalls walking by his father’s classroom one day and hearing him at work. He was
struck by how different Dr. LaCasse seemed from Dad. “I could hardly believe it was him,” Steven says.
Dr. LaCasse was more talkative in the classroom, and his sense of humor shone brighter, the teacher’s children say.
“He could keep it lively,” Kevin says, launching into a Dr. LaCasse imitation to demonstrate. “He’d point at one question and say, Is Aaaaaaaa the answeeeeerrrrr? Or is Bbbbeee the answer?’”
Kevin’s imitation continues, his voice steadily diminishing to a conspiratorial whisper, “‘ No no no no. It’s not B. It’s A.’”
Then there was LaCasse’s metaphoric “physics bus.” Any former student can still practically recite their regular admonition: Don’t fall off the physics bus, or it will run you over.
“You have to stay up with what’s going on in physics because every class builds on the last,” Oh explains. “Once you fall off the bus, getting caught up is hard. I remember using that on my own kids when they were in high school, telling them to ‘Stay on the physics bus.’”
Both Schamberger and Gray say alums in fields related to physics or mathematics constantly cite LaCasse as a catalyst for their careers. Former students, in general, say they breezed through college physics or calculus after his class.
“His ability to relate to young people, take complex ideas and break them down so that it seems easy at the next level, it’s just unbelievable,” Schamberger says.
Oh says that when he started at MIT, he was able to skip the first semester of physics as well as calculus, and the second semester in those classes mostly covered what LaCasse had already taught him.
“That’s at a world-class college,” Oh says. “What that says is we were getting a world-class science and math education at the high school and early college level at Indian Springs.”
“We were getting a worldclass science and math education at the high school and early college level at Indian Springs.”
LaCasse has been an influential teacher in another way. Many alums and students who now play bridge learned the card game from him through the campus club he sponsors.
Dr. Gray, who joined the faculty after LaCasse had gone part-time, recalls glancing into a classroom late one Friday afternoon during his first year.
“I see a huge group of students feverishly playing cards,” Gray says. “There was Dr. LaCasse, laughing, cutting up, and playing bridge. It’s his thing.”
When some students tried to get Gray into the game, he protested that he didn’t know how to play. “They said, ‘Dr. LaCasse will teach it all to you. You’ll love it.’”
LaCasse and Cooper quickly bonded after the history teacher joined the faculty in 1974. They enjoyed playing each other in chess and pairing as doubles partners in tennis.
“We are both extremely competitive,” says Cooper. “I think he’s more competitive than I am.”
Their competitive streaks manifested in another way, through the school’s academic decathlon and scholars’ bowl teams.
Cooper was already coaching the latter when he learned about the decathlon, a grueling test of knowledge in 10 subjects in which each competitor gives a speech and takes a “Super Quiz.” He recruited LaCasse to co-coach.
Each school’s six-person team had to be equally divided among A, B, and C students. That gave Indian Springs an edge.
“We had really good C students,” LaCasse says. “We had outstanding B students—killer B students. They would have been A students at a lot of places. So, we got together some pretty good teams.”
Every year from 1988-1998, Indian Springs’ decathlon team won state. It won regional titles for six consecutive years. In national meets during that run, it perennially finished in the top 11 nationally, rising as high as No. 5.
“In the end, the only reason we gave it up was every other team
in Alabama dropped out because we just won the state every year,” Cooper says.
To prep, Cooper and LaCasse would assign work for students on the team, and then all would meet Sundays on campus to refine speeches, take practice math quizzes, and gain instruction in the other subjects.
“For the kids, it was like taking another curriculum on top of the curriculum they had,” Cooper says.
One subject rotated, providing another twist. “One year, it was aviation,” LaCasse says. “Dr. Cooper got a friend of his who had aviation experience to come in to talk to the students about it.”
Where the academic decathlon was rigorous, the scholars’ bowl was brainy fun, LaCasse says.
“Dr. Cooper was the person who got that started at Indian Springs,” LaCasse says. “Being kind of competitive myself, I decided to see if I could be a co-coach.”
Contestants ring buzzers, “Jeopardy”-style, to answer questions. LaCasse and Cooper would work out their teams, with one playing the quizmaster and the other competing with his own buzzer.
LaCasse or Cooper—generally both—took the scholars’ bowl teams to regular weekend competitions around the Southeast. They were also successful in national tournaments, finishing third one year.
“We were full-bore on this stuff,” LaCasse says, who co-coached from 1992-2009 and solo in 2010.
Leading the two teams was a huge time commitment. But it’s an example of what both educational titans bring to Indian Springs, Schamberger says.
“I think LaCasse and Cooper are prime examples of this isn’t a job,” says the head of school. “It’s a passion that these wonderful, dedicated individuals give to students here. It’s in the classroom. It’s outside the classroom. It’s during school hours. It’s outside school hours. It’s on the weekends. That’s what leads to the transformational experience at Indian Springs.”
Indian Springs has attracted and retained many brilliant, dedicated teachers over the decades.
“There is a continuity of education here,” LaCasse says. “The people who graduate from Indian Springs feel good about sending their children here. What else could you say?”
Gray, the assistant head of school for academic affairs, ticks off name after name of faculty veterans in addition to LaCasse, who form the academic foundation at Indian Springs as it enters its eighth decade.
“One cannot give enough credit to the historical perspective and heritage from long-term faculty members,” Gray says. “These pillars of their academic disciplines set a tone for what the expectations are in any given department.”
But as students change and the subjects they learn evolve, these pillars also must constantly recast themselves, Schamberger says.
“He is just a quiet guy doing what he loves to do.”
Unlike old dogs, they must keep learning new tricks.
And LaCasse is a master magician, Gray says. He recounts how, when Covid hit in early 2020 and teachers had to pivot to remote instruction, LaCasse was issued a new Mac book, an iPad, and a digital pencil to enable him to lecture via the internet.
“He took it all home, and he was teaching remotely within weeks,” Gray says. “This is the new norm in education due to Covid. For him to jump in there and not have any guidance at all, he did a masterful job. He always does. He’s just a natural.”
That’s LaCasse in a nutshell, Karen LaCasse Juliano says. “He is just a quiet guy doing what he loves to do. He loves teaching. He loves teaching the students at Indian Springs.”
So much so that when Schamberger asked him to return in August for the 51st year, LaCasse didn’t hesitate.
“I guess the greatest thing that I can say about Mac is when I’ve come to him and said, ‘Mac, I need you. Would you consider doing this for the school?’ He gives me one response every time: “‘Scott, I can do that for you. I can do that for Indian Springs.”
THIS IS THE STORY OF A DOG THAT KEPT A CLASS SCHEDULE.
Many at Indian Springs School from the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s had some kind of encounter with Pandora, the LaCasse family mutt that routinely escorted twins Kevin ’88 and Steven ’88 and later sister Karen ’95 from class to class. When she could get away with it, Pandora would go inside with them.
“She was pretty smart,” says Steven, who grew up on the campus with his siblings. “She’d trade between me and Kevin depending on which teachers would let her into the classroom and which ones would not. So, parts of the day she’d be with me, and parts of the day she’d be off with Kevin.”
But fall and springtime changes tended to throw off her inner clock. After one such switch, Pandora showed up at Mike Lantrip’s door when she thought Kevin should be in his algebra class.
“Mr. Lantrip politely explained that we reset the clocks last night, and you’re going to have to come back in an hour,” Kevin recalls, pausing when asked if she returned on time. “You know, I think she did.”
Pandora didn’t always make the grade. “When it rained, she would stink,” says Steven. “Some teachers and students didn’t like her stinking the room up.” It even prompted one instructor to send home a report card, explaining that Pandora got a D for coming to class smelling like a wet dog.
In those days, most faculty living on campus had dogs, and they pretty much had the run of the place. Pandora was perfectly content with that arrangement—with one exception.
“She was terrified of thunder,” Karen recalls. “Once, during my brother’s soccer game, she got scared by thunder and ended up jumping in one of the visitors’ cars. They didn’t realize that Pandora was in the car until they got home.”
But the bright lights of Hollywood apparently didn’t faze Pandora, like the time she appeared in a John Badham production.
On campus making a promo for the school, the 1957 Indian Springs grad and award-winning director used Pandora to help portray a typically idyllic scene, capturing multiple takes of her and the LaCasse boys on bikes rounding a corner at the library.
Mac LaCasse is bemused by her, at one point pausing while telling Pandora stories to affectionately note, “She was a very strange dog.”
Take, for example, the daily procession to the dining hall by people and pooch. The humans piled into LaCasse’s old Dodge, but Pandora insisted on leading the way, setting the pace by repeatedly jumping in front of the car.
“She knew we weren’t going to run her over,” Kevin says. “Every time we rounded the faculty circle, she’d cut across the Fleming yard and get back in front of us. She would do this the whole way. Every day. She did not want us to get there first.”
Her passing in 1994 is noted in that year’s Khalas, where her photo is the centerpiece in a campusdog collage. The inscription, a quote from Leo Bustad, describes the joy that Pandora and her canine cohorts brought to campus:
“There are two times when you need animals the most, when you are very young and when you are very old—and often quite a bit in between.”
LEFT: Scott Schamberger, Alan Engel, Elizabeth Goodrich
BELOW, LEFT: Scott Schamberger, Dr. Mac LaCasse, Elizabeth Goodrich
Celebrating Cindy
LIBRARIAN
33 YEARS OF SERVICE
SERVICE AWARDS
Head of School Scott Schamberger and Board Chair Elizabeth Goodrich P ’20, ’23 presented the inaugural MacDonald B. Fleming Distinguished Service Award to three members of the Indian Springs community on May 27 during the 2022 graduation ceremony.
Alan Engel is an Indian Springs alum in the Class of 1973 and the parent of Andrea Engel Haines ’03 and Ilana Engel ’12. Alan was the president of the Indian Springs Alumni Council from 1990-1991 and has served on the Indian Springs Board of Governors since 2006. He was chair of the board from 2018 to 2022. Alan has served on many com mittees helping to lead the school’s efforts in strategic planning, capital improvement initiatives, leadership transitions, the campus master plan, and financial stewardship.
Dr. William “Mac” LaCasse has taught math and physics at Indian Springs since 1972. He is the parent of Kevin LaCasse ’88, Steven LaCasse ’88, and Karen LaCasse Juliano ’95 and the step-parent of Jonathan Brumley ’92 and Brent Brumley ’99. Mac was a member of Indian Springs’ 2011 Smartest Company team, which won the state championship and $20,000 for the school. He was a co-coach of Indian Springs’ academic decathlon team from 1988 to 1998 and the scholars’ bowl team from 1992 to 2009, both of which won numerous state championships and national honors. Mac was a part of the residential life community from 1972 to 2019 and has attended many student performances and alumni events.
Cindy Van Horn (pictured right) is the spouse of longtime Director of Athletics Greg Van Horn and the parent of Blake Van Horn ’02 and Wes Van Horn ’05. She began working at Indian Springs as a library assistant in 1989 and moved into the role of the librarian in 2015. She oversaw the student library aides and served as the school’s testing coordinator. Cindy was co-advisor of Indian Springs’ Habitat for Humanity club for over ten years, an active member of the residential life community from 1980 to 2021, and a resident “friend to all.”
Cindy
Van Horn has been a cornerstone of the Indian Springs community for decades. Not only has she mentored thousands of students, but she’s also shaped the culture of the school through deep involvement in campus life. As her career draws to a close, she reflects on the experiences that have meant the most to her.
Q: When did you and Coach Van Horn first come to Indian Springs?
A: Greg graduated college on June 1, 1980, and we got married on June 28. Sometime between those dates, he was looking through the yellow pages for private schools he could contact due to state education budget cuts. When Greg called, it turned out Indian Springs was in the market for a PE teacher/coach. He dropped off his resume, and Dr. Jackson [former head of school] was there to interview him. Later that day, he showed up at my office wearing a suit and carrying a dozen roses and said, “I got a job today.” We were both excited at the prospect and anxious to tour the apartment above the old clinic where we would be living (I think it was a test to see how much he wanted the job!)
Q: When did you start working in the Indian Springs library?
A: I was going back to work after Wes turned two in 1989. The former library assistant was retiring, and Leanna Webb [former librarian] encouraged me to apply. I worked under her tutelage for 20 years. I gained a great knowledge of the whole operation, which pre pared me well for my move into the main office in 2016. Although I don’t have a formal degree in library science, I feel like I earned an honorary degree via 33 years of on-the-job training.
Q: How have libraries changed during your career?
A: When I started, we had one computer and were con verting all shelf lists and collections retrospectively. I got to be in on the ground floor of automation. We attended conferences all across the country to learn about library technology. We heard Bill Gates predicting the invention of smartphones in 1997 during his keynote address at a National Education Computing Conference. Another keynote speaker whose words resonated with me was a social psychologist and author, Mary Pipher, addressing
attendees at the American Library Association Conference. She spoke on the importance of libraries being a refuge where people can feel connected in a socially changing world where often people don’t know their neighbors or live close to relatives.
In the early 1990s, computers weren’t com monplace in homes, but they were fast becom ing the norm, especially for accessibility to the information superhighway (the internet) and for accessing automated library resources. Students needed familiarity with keyboard functions, typing skills, and word processing to make the best use of expanding educational technology, and I taught keyboarding and word processing from 1997 to 2009. Leanna and I also conduct ed research and information literacy classes. One thing that hasn’t changed, and is even more crucial today, is the need to locate and discern credible information. In this world of informa tion overload, the librarian can help students differentiate between credible and false informa tion. With an eye toward virtual libraries, the librarian role shifted to “guide on the side” versus “sage on the stage.”
Q: What have you enjoyed most about your work?
A: As a child, I would check out as many books as possible from the library. I have always loved reading and language and words. I think it was fate that I ended up working in a library and being surrounded by books. Even though you might not get to read all of them, you feel like you become smarter just by being in that space, maybe through osmosis.
I think back to all the librarians I’ve met over the years. They are the essence of intellectual curiosity combined with service. They love what they do and want to share it with everybody. Having knowledge is gratifying, but sharing it with others is truly fulfilling.
Q: What have you enjoyed most about Indian Springs?
A: Working, living, and raising our children here has enriched my life in so many ways. I’ve had opportunities I never dreamed of, including travel experiences with colleagues and students. I have enjoyed and been so privileged to attend and learn from distinguished speakers via the Goodrich Lecture Series, the performing and visual art programs, sporting events, intercul tural events, as well as many opportunities to participate in the Indian Springs community, including serving as co-sponsor of the Indian Springs campus chapter of Habitat for Human ity for ten years with Jan Fortson.
Living and working in a boarding school makes the experience so much richer. The invest ment of one’s self is not measured in money, but the pay is rich: special times spent with students in our home, karaoke nights in the Dorm Circle, chaperoning Senior Banquet. Above all, observ ing and learning from students from different backgrounds with different beliefs accept,
respect, and support one another personally has been a phenomenal experience.
Q: What are your plans for retirement?
A: Spend as much time as possible with my little people (grandchildren). I also want to re main relevant in the world of libraries, whether volunteering at a local library or becoming involved in the literacy council.
“Librarians are the essence of intellectual curiosity combined with service.” —CINDY VAN HORN
Congratulations to the Class of 2022!
Seventy seniors became Indian Springs alums at the school’s 68th graduation ceremonies held May 27 on McLean Lawn. Speakers expressed gratitude to the greater Indian Springs community for giving them a supportive environment to grow as individuals and closer as a class. Head of School Scott Shamberger told the graduates, “no matter where life’s twists and turns may take you, remember you will always have a home at Indian Springs.”
THE JORDAN MCDAVID AWARD
Selected by the faculty based on extraor dinary leadership and character exhibited through participation in student
THE SPIRITUAL AWARENESS AWARD
Given in memory of Allan Furniss ’63 and Robert Kartus
to two members of the senior class nominated by classmates who embody the qualities of dignity, humani tarianism, and spiritual awareness
Eloubeidi ’22 and Andy Schwebel ’22
THE LIBBY PANTAZIS AWARD
Selected by the faculty based on ex emplary dedication, joy, and passion in service to the school
Gardner ’22
“It’s very much in the spirit of this school as we celebrate graduation to think critically about what our time here meant for us. More than anything, it was a time for experimen tation, intellectually and socially. We knew we could take risks because we had a supportive community with caring adults to fall back on.”
—Andy Schwebel ’22
“This is my epilogue, from the last stanza of our senior choir song entitled ‘North’: ‘Smaller than dust on this map lies the greatest thing we have, the dirt in which our roots may grow and the right to call it home.’”
—Frankie Shen ’22
COLLEGE MATRICULATIONS
“As we leave here, let us continue to embody the Indian Springs spirit; be inclusive, supportive, and embrace our fear with the courage of the unknown. I don’t need to think twice about calling Indian Springs my home and call ing you my family.”
—Hudson Wang ’22
“All of these seemingly insignificant peculiarities provide evidence of the deep-felt sense of comfort and belonging felt by many at Indian Springs… Yes, Learning through Living has a lot to do with making mistakes in a forgiving environment, but it is also about discovering new aspects of ourselves in an inclusive setting.”
—Joseph Katz ’22
Amherst College Agnes Scott College Auburn University (2) Barnard College Birmingham-Southern College Bocconi University Boston University (3) Brown University Carnegie Mellon University Case Western Reserve University Clemson University Davidson College Denison University (2) Emory University (2) Fordham University Furman University Harding University Johns Hopkins University Lee University Lehigh University Loyola University Chicago Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2) Northwestern University Oglethorpe University Oxford College of Emory University (2) Pennsylvania State University Sarah Lawrence College
Skidmore College
Southern Methodist University Texas A&M University Texas Christian University
The American University of Paris
The University of Alabama (3) Tulane University United States Army University of Alabama at Birmingham (3) University of California, Davis (3) University of California, Irvine University of Colorado Boulder University of Montevallo University of Oxford University of Pennsylvania University of Richmond University of Rochester University of Southern California University of Southern Mississippi University of Virginia University of Washington Wake Forest University (2) Wellesley College Wesleyan University
Indian Springs Students Excel in...
STEM
Ninth grader Lua Markert ’26, senior Mayu Nakano ’23, and recent graduate Catherine Kung ’22 have paved new roads for STEM accomplishment at Indian Springs.
Lua was the only student in Alabama to be named to this year’s Broadcom MASTERS Top 300, the nation’s premier STEM competition for middle schoolaged students.
Lua won first place in the 2022 regional and state science and engineering fairs for her computer science and mathematics project, “MRI Image Analysis Using an ImageJ Based Algorithm to Predict New-Onset Dementia.” She also received Auburn University’s Biosystems Engineering Award and Talent in Mathematics and Statistics Award.
Mayu and Catherine became the first Indian Springs students to qualify for the Regeneron International Science and Engineering Fair for two consecutive years.
Mayu was a Grand Award winner at the 2022 international fair, placing fourth in the biomedical and health sciences category for her project, “Evolution of Oncogenic Signatures within Glioblastoma Along a Spatiotemporal Axis.” She also won first place at the 2022 regional fair and third at the state fair. She received the Biophysical Society’s Biophysics Award and the Office of Naval Research Naval Science Award.
Catherine was recognized as one of the South’s top aspiring female scientists. She was named a silver medalist in the 2022 Emmy Noether Awards, open to seniors in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, and received $25,000 for future graduate studies.
Catherine matriculated to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. While at Indian Springs, her research focused on developing a bio-inspired artificial skin and sensory information processing using a Kohonen artificial network. She also explored American Sign Language trigger words using RF sensors and deep neural networks.
Catherine was a special award winner at the 2022 international fair, placing third in the cybersecurity division. She won first place in
the engineering category at the 2022 regional fair and first place in the 2022 Alabama Science Scholars Search.
Catherine also rose among a competitive pool of university students to claim first place for the 2022 SPIE Best Student Paper Award, recognizing research with “a demonstrated connection to smart structures and materials.” She worked with Indian Springs physics teacher Hazal Mohammed on the paper and presented it at a conference in California.
Academics
Recent graduates Andrew Glassford ’22, Catherine Kung ’22, and Andy Schwebel ’22 were among 2,500 nationwide named 2022 National Merit Scholars based on their academic skills and achievements, extracurricular accomplishments, and potential for success in college. Emma Peng ’22 received a college-sponsored National Merit scholarship from Emory University.
Andrew was also named a U.S. Presidential Scholar Semifinalist and was one of only 34 students nationwide to achieve a perfect score on the Beginning Attic (Greek) Exam.
Writing
Heading up the next generation of great Indian Springs writers are recent graduates Lucy Gardner ’22 and Sofia Monteleone ’22, who each received the highest honors in the 2022 Scholastic Art & Writing Awards, garnering national recognition.
Lucy was the only student in the Southern region to receive an American Voices Medal, a “best in show” award selected by a panel of esteemed judges that recognizes originality, technical skill, and the emergence of a personal voice or vision.
Lucy’s gold medal work is a coming-of-age memoir and metaphor for how we outgrow things and people as we age. The title “Moody Orange” references the mandarin orange cups she ate in kindergarten and the color she associates with a childhood friend.
Sofia was one of only six students in the nation to receive the New York Life Award, which recognizes works exploring personal grief, loss, and bereavement and exemplifying how the arts can act as a positive outlet to cope with these issues.
Sofia’s gold medal poem “Despair in the Quiet” is about processing the death of a close family member who was a role model for her growing up. Her silver medal poem “Wasted Time” is about realizing the toxicity of a friend and leaving the relationship.
Both writers say Indian Springs provided an environment welcoming to self-expression, encouraging them to push the boundaries and explore new horizons in their work. They credit supportive friend groups and mentorship from teachers, especially Cal Woodruff (AP English Language and Composition) and Dr. Renee Chow (Memoir Writing).
Art
Senior Kimely Li ’23 was the first Indian Springs student to be recognized in the Visual Arts Achievement Program sponsored by the Alabama State Council on the Arts. She won first place in the high school drawing competition for our district. Her “Cherish” drawing was exhibited at the University of Montevallo in March.
Athletics
Senior Elise Picard ’23 finished last school year with three bronze medals. She placed third overall in the 4A AHSAA cross-country state championship, third in the 3200-meter race at the 4A-5A indoor track state championship, and third in the 3200-meter race at the 4A outdoor track state championships. She was chosen to participate in the 25th annual North-South All-Star cross-country meet during Alabama’s All-Star Sports Week alongside soccer player Gus Colvin ’23.
BOYS TEAM
Isaiah Bingham
Hayes Blackstone
Christopher
Josh Bramblett
Aidan Clarke
Gus Colvin
M,
Smith Craig
Liam Falconer
Gibson Goodrich
Naren Jetty
Sid Jetty
Nick Johnson
Shane Kau
Bruce Lanier
Erik Ledvina
Emiliano Martinez
Harshil Mehta
Jackson Nabors
Yusuf Ozaydin
Andrew Rowe
Sovan Shrestha
Henry Spradlin
Sims Tosh
M,
Nate Tozzi
Hudson Wang
GIRLS TEAM
STATE CHAMPIONS
ndian Springs history was made on May 13, 2022, at the John Hunt Soccer Complex in Huntsville. Our boys and girls varsity soccer teams both became 4A-5A state champions as a large crowd of students, parents, and alums cheered from the stands.
In a rematch from last year’s finals, the boys team defeated Russellville High School 1-0 to claim Indian Springs’ first back-to-back state championship and its fifth state title in boys soccer. Nate Tozzi ’22 scored the lone goal from a penalty kick in the first half. Goalkeeper Sims Tosh ’22 shined in the second half, recording 13 saves and earning the Most Valuable Player award. The boys team finished its season with a record of 21-2-5.
The girls team defeated East Limestone High School 5-0 to claim Indian Springs’ third state title in girls soccer, ending a 17-year drought. Beth Scarborough ’24 scored the first goal three minutes into the game, and Chloe Williams ’23, the second. Most Valuable Player Norah Roller ’23 gained her third goal with 6:24 left to play, completing her second consecutive hat trick. The girls’ team finished its season with a record of 18-3-2.
The greatest challenge for both teams came the day before during the semifinals. The boys team played an undefeated Montgomery Academy and were tied 3-3 after regulation and double overtime before heading to a shoot-out where Indian Springs prevailed 4-3. The girls team defeated Saint James School, ranked No. 2 in the state, in double overtime.
Members of both teams received numerous county, metro, state, and super state accolades in addition to their championship rings and trophies. Most notably, for the second consecutive year, current senior Norah and girls varsity head coach Justin Pino were named the Birmingham B-Division All-Metro Player of the Year and Coach of the Year. Boys varsity head coach Rik Tozzi P ’20, ’22 was named the Shelby County Boys Soccer Coach of the Year.
Boys team recent graduates Sims and Jackson Nabors ’22 will play soccer at Oglethorpe College and Davidson College, respectively. Sims holds the Alabama state record for most consecutive shutouts (9) and a goals saved percentage of 87.5% (70 saves in 80 attempts). He only allowed 19 goals in his career at Indian Springs. Jackson scored a state-best 52 goals and passed for 23 assists during his junior year, earning the titles of 2021 Alabama Gatorade Player of the Year and 2021 Shelby County Player of the Year.
In another historic moment, boys team recent graduate Nate signed a one-year USL Academy contract to play with the Birmingham Legion FC. He will play with the first team, gaining exposure to a professional environment and furthering his development. The contract allows him to retain college eligibility while also being eligible to play in the USL Championship. He had 75 goals and 52 assists in his career at Indian Springs.
Contribute to the Commons
By the time you receive this issue of Indian Springs Magazine, we hope to be just weeks away from fully utilizing the new KayserSamford Community Commons. As of September 2022, over 100 donors have given or pledged more than $10,800,000. Thank you to those who have made a critical investment in the quality of life for our student and faculty community at Indian Springs. Everyone involved in this project has played an important role, and the construction currently underway is the culmination of over ten years of planning, fundraising, and hard work.
As we prepare to launch the life of this new facility that will serve the current and future generations of the Indian Springs community, please know that we still need additional fundraising to reach our goal of $13,500,000. There is still time to be a part of this historic undertaking. The Community Commons campaign is a distinct effort that falls outside of our annual fund. If you are an annual donor and are interested in making a gift or pledge to the campaign, we hope you will consider maintaining your annual giving which provides crucial support for our annual operating expenses.
Any and all new gifts for the Community Commons campaign are instrumental to our success and will be recognized in the next annual report. Donors who give at least $1,000 will be acknowledged on our permanent donor wall of honor in the Community Commons dining hall. Additionally, outdoor tables may be sponsored starting at $5,000, and indoor tables are $10,000 to $25,000. Please feel free to reach out to me or any of my colleagues in the advancement office with questions about this worthy cause, or go to www.indiansprings.org/communitycommons for more information and a list of additional naming opportunities.
Thank you for your consideration of support, and stay tuned for details on when you can come to Indian Springs to tour the new building.
JIM SIMONAssistant Head of School for Advancement & External Affairs james.simon@indiansprings.org I 205.332.0615 indiansprings.org/communitycommons
NAMING OPPORTUNITIES
DINING HALL SEATING AREA $2,000,000
KITCHEN $1,000,000
TOWN HALL LAWN $500,000
THE GRILL $350,000
BELL ENCASEMENT $300,000
ENTRY/FOYER $250,000
EXTERIOR FRONT PLAZA $250,000
OUTDOOR CAFE SEATING RESERVED
SIDE TERRACE RESERVED
LAKESIDE RECREATION LAWN $150,000
COMMUNITY COMMONS CIRCLE $100,000
DINING HALL PATH RESERVED DINING PORCH SEATING AREA RESERVED DINING ROOM SEATING ISLAND $100,000 ENTRANCE PERMANENT BENCH RESERVED LAKESIDE SEATING AREA RESERVED LANDSCAPING $100,000 LARGE CORNER SEATING LOUNGE $100,000
MODULAR BOOTHS $100,000 SERVERY RESERVED CORNER SEATING LOUNGE $50,000 WATERFALL TABLES (PAIR) $50,000 SERVING STATIONS $50,000/EACH LAKESIDE BENCHES $25,000/EACH RESTORED DINING HALL TABLES $25,000/EACH INDOOR TABLES $10,000/EACH OUTDOOR TABLES $5,000/EACH DONOR WALL LISTING $1,000 AND HIGHER
“Thank
—ELIZABETH
DONORS
The following donors made cash gifts, pledges, and pledge payments to the Community Commons Cam paign in 2021-2022.
Bill Engel ’75
Gillian and Mike Goodrich ’63
Leo Kayser III ’62 Joan and Preston Haskell ’56 Ronne and Donald Hess ’66 Catherine and Emmett McLean Lisa and Alan Engel ’73
Caryn and Steven Corenblum ’75 Allan Cruse ’59 David Faber ’66 Emily Hess Levine ’01 and Bob Levine Cecilia Matthews Cindi and Michael Routman ’72 Nancy and Jim Tyrone ’73 Gail and Chip Gamble ’58 Susan and John Abbot ’80 Patricia and Ehney Camp ’60 Mary and Braxton Goodrich ’93 Elizabeth and Mike Goodrich ’90 Ellen McElroy ’78 Susanna Myers '90 and Gerry Pampaloni Rene and John Simmons ’65 Tricia and Troy Wallwork
Lisa Hess Lowrie ’95 Maud Belser Sheri and Jimmy Krell Molly Myers ’92 Mary and Don North Margaret and Kip Porter ’60
Stacy and Scott Pulliam ’85
Lia and Rusty Rushton ’74
Patricia and Rick Sprague ’66
Rik Tozzi Christy and Swaid Swaid
Diane and Tom Gamble ’60
Andrea Engel Haines ’03 and Kent Haines ’03 Malinda and Jimmy Lewis ’75 Melissa and Hanson Slaughter ’90 Sarah Urist Green ’98 and John Green ’95
Tracy and Scott Schamberger
Elise May Frohsin ’88 and Hank Frohsin Judy and Gerson May Barbara and Jack Aland ’75 Heidi and Martin Damsky ’68
Janet Bell Perry Kay Armstrong Carter and Frank Carter ’62
Starr Turner Drum ’02 and David Drum
Betsy Stewart Durst ’09 and Lucas Durst
Ilene Engel Ginny and Joe Farley ’81 Bruce Gamble Edith and Henry McHenry ’68
Kate Konecny Pope ’02 and William Pope Anne Marie Seibel and Steven Rowe Tullia Rushton ’09 William Rushton ’11 Andrew Sperling ’79 Vicky and Peter Sperling ’77
Callen Bair Thistle
’01 and Will Thistle
Whitney Sprague ’01 and Tyler Thomas
Julie and Mark Nelson ’88
Gabrielle Matese and Jeff Barton Meredith and Daniel Odrezin ’05
Clara Chung and Glenn Fleisig Jerolyn Ferrari
Peggy and Michael Fleetwood Sharon Kean and Bob Lipson ’68
Jane and Kevin Tavakoli ’98
Leah and Bo Taylor Cindy Bryan ’02 William Martin April and Blake Berry Jessica Battle ’02
Ginny and Grady Richardson ’57
Jamie and Justin Routman ’02
Joseph Bradley ’02 Jim Simon
Beth and Brooks Clark David Hill ’02 Marisa Bradford Inge ’02 and Edward Inge ’02 Nancy Poynor Rebecca Smith ’02
FROM ASSISTANT HEAD OF SCHOOL JIM SIMON
Many thanks to all of you from all of us at the school for your incredible support during our 2021-2022 fiscal year. Your collective philanthropy for Indian Springs added up to a total of over $4,371,000 which marks an impressive eight-year-high in fundraising.
Over 800 alumni, parents, grandparents, faculty, and friends donated nearly 1,800 gifts to various priorities at Indian Springs, including the annual fund, scholarships, and the Community Commons capital campaign. Our 2021 fall Harvest Market fundraiser had its third consecutive record year of support. We continue to be grateful for the 100% giving participation we see from our board of governors, alumni council, parents association leadership, and near full support from
During a year in which we were able to transition back into a more “normal” routine of events and gatherings, we saw a surge in volunteer interest. We appreciated the many members of the Indian Springs family who helped make all of our events and initiatives possible. As always, I’m particularly grateful for our advancement team’s hard work and all members of our on-campus community who go the extra mile to support the work we do to keep all members of the Indian Springs community
This new 2022-2023 academic and fiscal year marks 70 years since Indian Springs School first opened its doors in the fall of 1952. We look forward to celebrating this important milestone at regional receptions, local gatherings in Birmingham, and here on the Indian Springs campus. Thank you again for supporting so many critical needs at the school. Please know how much we Learning through Living.
July 1, 2021—June 30, 2022
FUNDRAISING
ANNUAL FUND & ANNUAL FUND RESTRICTED 2021-2022
Annual Fund – Unrestricted $612,827.40
Annual Fund – Restricted $97,359.02
Total $710,186.42
RESTRICTED & OTHER GIFTS 2021-2022
Total $3,660,852.21
Total Giving $4,371,038.63
OPERATING STATEMENT
INCOME
Tuition and Fees $11,101,153
Annual Fund & Other Gifts (adjusted for multiyear pledges) $722,103
Total Income $11,823,256
Endowment Draw $336,450
EXPENSES
Salaries & Benefits $6,018,914
Financial Aid $1,930,895
Instructional & Student Activities $536,204
Dining, Transportation & Other Services $1,203,258
Operations & Maintenance $1,093,783
General & Administrative $1,489,874
Total Expenses $12,272,928
SOURCES OF OPERATING FUNDS
Tuition & Fees
Annual Fund & Other Gifts
Endowment Draw
USES OF OPERATING FUNDS
DIRECTORS’ DINNER 2022
Indian Springs is grateful for our leadership donors whose generosity accounts for so much of the funds raised each year for the Annual Fund and capital giving priorities. Our annual Directors’ Dinner is the school’s way of saying thank you to all of our supporters who make gifts of $1,500 or more.
ANNUAL FUND DONORS
Unrestricted annual fund gifts received between July 1, 2021 and June 30, 2022 are listed below. A complete list of donors by constituency and by class can be found at indiansprings. org/2022annualreport.
LEADERSHIP LEVEL
$25,000 +
Ronne and Donald Hess Foundation
ARMSTRONG SOCIETY
$10,000 TO $24,999
Lisa and Alan Engel ’73 Liesel and Will French Gillian and Mike Goodrich ’63 Mary and Rob Henrikson ’65 Ronne and Donald Hess ’66 Jeanne and Richard Monk III Heather and Dan Mosley ’74 Courtney and Jay Pigford Margaret and Kip Porter ’60
FOUNDERS LEVEL
$5,000 TO $9,999
Susan and John Abbot ’80
Hal Abroms
Pris and Eddie Ashworth ’67 Julia and John Badham ’57 Betsy and William Belser ’80 Yunjung Choi and Minyung Chung
Lisa and Jeff Clifton
Pilar Childs Dostal ’92 and Jared Dostal Ray Gildea ’71 Elizabeth and Mike Goodrich ’90 Mary and Braxton Goodrich ’93 Kyung Han ’85 Martha Diefendorf and Robert Hogan ’68 Keith Jacobson and Elizabeth Jacobson
Emily Hess Levine ’01 and Bob Levine
Danny Markstein ’92 Rosalind and Daniel Markstein Cecilia Matthews Catherine and Emmett McLean Kathy and Mark Myatt ’55
Molly Myers ’92
Lia and Rusty Rushton ’74 Tracy and Scott Schamberger Rene and John Simmons ’65 Galin and Kevin Spicer Kyle Strange Alex and Jeff Thompson Nancy and Jim Tyrone ’73 Richard Whitley
GOVERNORS CIRCLE
$2,500 TO $4,999
Margaret and Bruce Alexander Barbie and Steve Arnold ’66 Kelly Bodnar Battles ’85 and Brett Battles
Caroline and E. T. Brown ’74 Camille Stein Butrus Annie and Greg Butrus Myla Calhoun
Heidi and Martin Damsky ’68 Ginny and Joe Farley ’81 Jan and Chip Feazel ’63 Robert Friedel ’67
Carol Dewar and Larry Futrell ’64 Jeff Gale ’92 and Dana Gale Hilary and Scott Gewant Emil and Jimmie Hess*
Lauren and Glen Howard ’67 Nyya and John Hudson
Cathy and Paul Jones, Jr. Sheri and Jimmy Krell Wendy and Bruce Kuhnel ’84 Michael Levine ’74 Wenyan Zhang and Guanghua Lou Ellen McElroy ’78 Edith and Henry McHenry ’68 Susan Brand and Harry Mueller ’62 Susanna Myers ’90 and Gerry Pampaloni
Rhonda and Jason* Nabors Gwen and Carl Oppenheim Nancy and Sandy Petrey ’59 Diana and Gray Plosser ’63
Dolores and Dave Richie Laura Schiele Robinson ’86 and Steven Robinson Mary Helmer and Mark Sabel ’84
Alena Clark and Brandon Smith Ginger Lolley Socolof and Joe Socolof Virginia and Tim Stone
1. Ronique Carter and Anisa Ssengoba-Ubogu P ’21, ’23
2. Ginger Lolley Socolof P ’24 and Heather Swanner P ’21, ’23
3. Fred Heath ’62 and Jean Heath
4. Steven Robinson P ’19, ’20, ’25; Larry Brook ’87 P ’25, ’27; Ginger Brook P ’25, ’27; and Laura Schiele Robinson ’86 P ’19, ’20, ’25
5. Jane Tavakoli; Kevin Tavakoli ’98; Kent Haines ’03; Andrea Engel Haines ’03; Randall Minor ’99; and Emily Hess Levine ’01 P ’27
6. Bart Crawford P ’20, ’23, ’26; Liesel French P ’22; Elizabeth Crawford P ’20, ’23, ’26; and Will French P ’22
Jane and Kevin Tavakoli ’98
Holly Jones Terrell
Chang Zhai and Anxin Wu
Cheng Hu and Leibo Zhang
TOWN MEETING LEVEL
$1,500 TO $2,499
Layla and Roger Baldwin ’87
Elizabeth and John Breyer ’71
Ginger and Larry Brook ’87
Kay Armstrong Carter and Frank Carter ’62
Barbara and Lem Coley ’62
Caryn and Steven Corenblum ’75
Elizabeth and Bart Crawford Allan Cruse ’59
Dansby Evans ’84
Heidi and Bill Falconer
Lori and Richard Feist
Jerolyn Ferrari
Barbara and Jim Flowers
Howard E. Furnas III
Terry and Paul Goldfarb ’69
Andrea Engel Haines ’03 and Kent Haines ’03
Susan and Wyatt Haskell ’57
Shumin Liu and Junmin He
Jean and Fred Heath ’62 Mary and Jay Holekamp ’63 David Huggin ’59 Chris Hunter ’79 Doug Hunter ’73
Amanda and Herndon Inge III Marisa Bradford Inge ’02 and Edward Inge ’02 Natalie and Mike Johnson Dr. Patrick Kung and Dr. Margaret Kim Malinda and Jimmy Lewis ’75 Ying Qin and Honglu Li Barr Linton Cathy and Caldwell Marks ’93 Virginia Bledsoe Mattox ’86 Cheryl and Burk McWilliams ’65 Chinelo Dike-Minor and Randall Minor ’99 Ann and Richard Monk ’57 Julie and Mark Nelson ’88 Libba and John Owen ’70 Tonya and Bartley Pickron ’91 Janet and Charles Plosser ’66 Martha and Michael Pratt ’67 Stacy and Scott Pulliam ’85 Cindi and Michael Routman ’72 Jamie and Justin Routman ’02
Jim Simon
Patti and Scott Simpson Diana and Bill Slaughter ’56 Melissa and Hanson Slaughter ’90 Sarah and Will Slaughter ’91 Blakeley and Bill Smith Leah and Bo Taylor Ann and David Tharpe Callen Bair Thistle ’01 and Will Thistle Judy and Arthur Toole ’58 Robin Greene Wall ’03 and Michael Wall
Helen Gong and Xibo Wang Amy McDaniel Williams ’80 and Steve Williams Barbara and David Williams Nicole Williams
Haili Shao and Zhaorong Ye Fang Zhan and Luhan Zhang Yanna Chen and Yande Zhang MAYORS LEVEL
$500 TO $1,499
Anonymous Amanda Adams ’79 and Paul Weir Barbara and Jack Aland ’75
Kelly and Robert Aland ’80 Dawn and Brian Alldredge ’96 Misty and Chris Antoon Mike Atchison ’79 Candi and C.P. Bagby ’63 Zheng Chen and Xianghu Bai Jennifer Bain ’84
Gabrielle Matese and Jeff Barton Jen Spears ’96 and David Bashford
W. C. Bass Justin Berman Shaheen and Michael Bermudez
Jody Klip Black ’78 and Jeffrey Black
Cathryn and Mark Boardman Jennifer Boll ’92
Tommy Boshell ’81
Karen and Bill Boyle ’62 Elena and Merrill Bradley Adrienne and Julian Brook
Tom Byers ’67
Patricia and Ehney Camp ’60 Jonette and Kenneth Christian ’67
Jim Clower ’64
Andrew Cohn ’99
Jesanna Cooper ’94 and Michael Morris
Anna and Chandler Cox
Martha Anne Rich and Bill Craig Bonnie and Jack Dabbs
Mary Lee and David Darby ’61
Anne Davis and Cris Picard Maria Jerez and Bernardo De La Pava
Jen and Conrad De Los Santos Rebecca Garity DePalma ’80 Anna Margaret and Tommy Donald ’58
Lori and Stephen Dorsky ’71 Sherry and Andy Driggers Jennifer and Clay Dunbar Joe and Sheryl Dunsmore Betsy Stewart Durst ’09 and Lucas Durst
Bill Engel ’75
Ilana Engel ’12
Susan and Sid Evans Sharonda Childs Fancher ’03 and Eric Fancher, Jr. Peggy and Michael Fleetwood Renee Ridgeway and Kimberly Flowers
Elise May Frohsin ’88 and Hank Frohsin
Gail and Chip Gamble ’58 Loren Gary ’76
Sarah and Jonathan Geisen Kris and Todd Glassford Alice and Paul Goepfert Sylvia Goldberg
Talia and Chuck Goldfarb ’88
Rachel Krantz and Edward Goldstein ’67 Sarah Urist Green ’98 and John Green ’95
Sydney and Michael Green Mary and Victor Hanson ’74 Kathy and Bob Henderson, Jr. Kirby Pool Henderson ’07 and Ryan Henderson ’07
Susan and Steve Henderson ’69 Heidi Hess ’89 and James Rucker
Betsy and Steve Hewett
Connie Hill and Doug Turner Amy Thompson Holiditch Dale and John Holditch Todd Holtet, Townsend Honda Kathryn and Edward Hook Jennifer and Ben Hunt ’82 Mitch Ives ’70
Maleesa and Jason Jack Jannike and Brian Jackson ’92
Li Hua and Hua Jiang Jessica and Ben Johnson ’71 George Jones ’98 Lida and Bill* Jones ’63
Radhi Prasad Kakarla ’91 and Naveen Kakarla Maria and Lawrence Katz ’82 Pamela and Prescott Kelly ’61 Katy and David Killion ’00 Christine and Charles Kim Michelle Lee and Joon Yong Kim ’72 Yang Suck and Richard Kim Xiaoling Wang and Lingdong Kong
Sarah Abroms Kunin ’04 and Abraham Kunin
Scottie and Bruce Lanier Hoa Nguyen and Andy Le Alison Goldstein Lebovitz ’88 and Alan Lebovitz Ben Lee ’78
Sandra and Tom Lewis ’66 Sharon Kean and Bob Lipson ’68 Jing Chang and Guoliang Liu Henry Long ’01 Ann and Jeff Majcher Laili and Jim Markert Leslie and David Matthews ’75 Kimberly and Macke Mauldin ’78 Judy and Gerson May Carole and Michael Mazer Dawn and Joe McCarty Brandi and Jeff McCormack Kathryn McDonald Kody McKay ’01 Rebecca and Thomas McWilliams ’97
Carole and Matt Miller
Evelyn Lewis Miller ’11 and Jordan Miller
Carol and B. G. Minisman ’63 Margaret R. Monaghan
Beatrice and Frank Morring ’68 Helen Zhou and Mike Mu Andrea Cherrington and Mike Mugavero
Mary Katherine Myatt ’86 and Randy Earl
Christy and David Nelson ’93 Hilary and Stuart Nelson ’95 Maizie and Tom Nelson
Marcia and Mike Nichols ’70 Mary and Don North Meredith and Daniel Odrezin ’05 Melissa Oliver
Alyson and Alan O’Neil ’93 Marla Weinstein Ostroff ’99 and Steven Ostroff Libby and Dennis Pantazis Janet Bell Perry
Vicki Vitiello and Jeff Pettus ’73 Don Pittman ’78 Emily and Jerry Pittman ’76 Janet and Craig Pittman ’74 Kathy and Bill Pittman ’70 Alison Pool-Crane ’79 Kate Konecny Pope ’02 and William Pope
Nancy Poynor
Katrina Armstrong Randall ’82 and Tom Randall Jan and Dick Richardson ’70 Kay and Paul Roller
Anne Marie Seibel and Steven Rowe Gail and Deak Rushton ’78 William Rushton ’11 Sharon Samford
Kelly and Scott Schell Yikun and David Schwebel Josie and Clark Scott ’71 Karen Shepard ’81
Linda and Robert Sherman ’58 Ream and Mohamed Shoreibah Judy and M. D. Smith ’59
Tom Smith ’72
Patricia and Rick Sprague ’66 Kimberly and Michael Steiner ’95 Keiko and Kayser Strauss ’96
Erin and Shane Street
Anonymous
Linda and Leo Sullivan-Bashinsky ’64
Christy and Swaid Swaid Heather and Jason Swanner
Kristin Henson Tankersley ’86 and Will Tankersley
Elizabeth Barbaree-Tasker and Eric Tasker
Keith Thomson
Martin Tobias ’95 and Robert Marx Merodie and Gene Tomlin
Fergus Tuohy ’96 and Michael Barnett
Anisa Ssengoba-Ubogu and Erobo Ubogu
Connie and Marshall Urist Gareth Vaughan
Heidi Molbak and Rob Verchick Lauren Wainwright ’88
Alison and Rhett Walker ’83 Jill and Thomas Walton Ellen and Mark Warner ’66 Tom Whitehurst ’68 Rowan and Russ Williams ’73 Jackie and David Woodall ’93
Luiwei Zeng and Panrong Xiao Huarong Deng and Xin Xu Tanya and Scott Yeager
Yueling Bao and Lianguo You Debbie and Steve Youhn
FACULTY AND STAFF
The following faculty and staff were donors to the 2021-2022 annual fund.
Anonymous
D’Anthony Allen
Hallie Barrett
Neil Barrett
William Belser ’80
April Berry
Blake Berry
William Blackerby ’05
John Brunzell
Anne Burruss
Athena Chang
Renee Chow
Dan Clinkman
Clay Colvin ’95
Bob Cooper
Christine Copeland
Sabrina Cuadra
Kathryn D’Arcy
Colin Davis
Taylor Docking
Jim Flaniken
Peggy Fleetwood
Mac Fleming
Jan Fortson
Annie Galey
Jon Gray
James Griffin Mandy Grifin
Ann Hamner
Tanya Hyatt
Amelia Johnson
Hye-Sook Jung Mac LaCasse George Mange Boo Mason
Pedro Mayor
Hazal Mohammed Chris Mullinax
Dane Peterson
Justin Pino
Rachel Preskitt
Erica Richie
Mike Rowlett
Scott Schamberger
Tracy Schamberger
Michael Sheehan
Jeffrey Sides ’91
Jim Simon
Brad Skiff
Leah Taylor
Christina Tetzlaff
Cindy Van Horn
Greg Van Horn
Lauren Wainwright ’88
Weslie Wald
Amy Wammack
Hunter Wolfe
Cal Woodruff
Lee Wright
Tanya Yeager
GRANDPARENTS
The following grandparents were donors to the 2021-2022 annual fund.
Hal Abroms
Phyllis Bailey
Adrienne and Julian Brook Camille Stein Butrus Patricia and Ehney Camp ’60
Joan Clark
Becky and Jim Davis Jane and Charles Ellis Bonnie and Joe Embry, Sr. Gillian and Mike Goodrich ’63
Emil and Jimmie Hess* Ronne and Donald Hess ’66 Dale and John Holditch Cathy and Paul Jones, Jr. Mary Beth Katz Rosalind and Daniel Markstein
Judy and Gerson May Ann and Richard Monk ’57 Kathy and Mark Myatt ’55 Gwen and Carl Oppenheim Margaret and Kip Porter ’60 Lorol B. Rucker
Sharon Samford
Carol Schwebel Diana and Bill Slaughter ’56 Margaret and Gene Turner
2022 SENIOR PARENTS GIFT FUND
Parents of the Class of 2022 contributed to the senior par ents gift fund, which generated support for a lakeside bench at the Kayser-Samford Commu nity Commons. The following parents gave to that fund. Ashley and Reed Bates Betsy and William Belser ’80 Elena and Merrill Bradley
GIVE THE ULTIMATE GIFT JOIN THE LEGACY SOCIETY
Leave a lasting legacy by including Indian Springs in your planned giving. The Legacy Society honors alums, parents, and friends who remember the school in their estates or who give assets now with deferred benefits to Indian Springs.
Bob Hogan ’68 has been a generous supporter of Indian Springs but decided to expand his philanthropy to include a generous designation in his estate plans.
“My current estate plan has Indian Springs as a 50% cobeneficiary of my IRA, with the other beneficiaries being my grandchildren,” says Bob. “The nice thing about using the IRA beneficiary designation is that it’s easy to do without changing my will, involving a lawyer, etc.”
To learn more about how you can benefit Indian Springs through your estate plans, please visit indiansprings.org/ plannedgiving or contact Assistant Head of School for Advancement & External Affairs Jim Simon. james.simon@indiansprings.org I 205.332.0615
LEGACY SOCIETY
Judy* and Hal Abroms Patrick Anderson ’92 Susan and Steve Apolinsky ’80 Pris and Eddie Ashworth ’67 Julia and John Badham ’57 Candi and C.P. Bagby ’63 Murray and Keehn W. Berry, Jr.* Lois and Ben Blackwell* Karen and Bill Boyle ’62 Kay Armstrong and Frank Carter ’62
Pinkie and Bryan Chace ’74 Hanelle Culpepper Meier ’88 and Jeff Meier Heidi and Martin Damsky ’68 Cathy and Mell Duggan ’76 Coo Engel ’79* David Faber ’66 Ginny and Joe Farley ’81 Robert Friedel ’67 Howard E. Furnas III Chris Genry ’78 Gertrude Gildea Sylvia Goldberg Rachel Krantz and Edward Goldstein ’67 Billie Grace and Henry Goodrich* Gillian and Mike Goodrich ’63 Eugenia and Larry Greer ’63 Ronne and Donald Hess ’66 Martha Diefendorf and Robert Hogan ’68
Robert W. Johns* George Johnston ’65
Muff* and Gilbert Johnston ’63 Judy and Philippe Lathrop ’73 Sharon Kean and Bob Lipson ’68
Cecilia and Alan* Matthews ’68 Lawrence Matthews ’64* Kristine Billmyer and Russell Maulitz ’62 June and Joe Mays ’63
Susan and Tennant McWilliams ’61
Margaret R. Monaghan Bob Montgomery ’74
Marcia and Mike Nichols ’70 Joe Nonidez ’62*
Margaret and Kip Porter ’60
Carol and Wilmer* Poynor ’56 Nancy and John* Poynor ’58 Cindi and Michael Routman ’72 Sharon and Frank* Samford ’62 Cooper Schley ’64
William S. Schuler ’66*
John Tanquary ’74
Jane and Kevin Tavakoli ’98 Ann and David Tharpe Jill and Chip Thuss ’74
Fergus Tuohy ’96 and Michael Barnett
Nancy and Jim Tyrone ’73
Irvin “Bucky” Weaver ’68* Pamela and Bill Weeks ’69 Marjorie and Jim White ’60
Jeff and Lisa Clifton
Jen and Conrad De Los Santos
Heidi and Bill Falconer
Renee Ridgeway and Kimberly Flowers
Liesel and Will French Jennifer and Keven Gardner Kris and Todd Glassford
Li Hua and Hua Jiang Natalie and Mike Johnson Maria and Lawrence Katz ’82
Dr. Patrick Kung and Dr. Margaret Kim Scottie and Bruce Lanier Stacey and David Monteleone Homa Rabiee and Hamid Moradkhani Hong Li and Colin Peng Dolores and Dave Richie Kelly and Scott Schell Yikun and David Schwebel Melissa and Hanson Slaughter ’90
Hongmei Qian and Jiachun Sun
Christy and Swaid Swaid Niamh Tuohy ’89
Jill and Thomas Walton
Rachel Pang and Zeng Wang
HARVEST MARKET 2021 SPONSORS
RAINMAKER LEVEL
$2,500
Betsy and William Belser ’80 Camille Stein Butrus Jeff and Lisa Clifton
Lisa and Alan Engel ’73 Ginny and Joe Farley ’81 Hilary and Scott Gewant Elizabeth and Mike Goodrich ’90 Ellen McElroy ’78
Dolores and Dave Richie Laura Schiele Robinson ’86 and
Steven Robinson
Mary Helmer and Mark Sabel ’84/Sabel Law Firm, LLC Ginger Lolley Socolof and Joe Socolof
Virginia and Tim Stone
GARDEN LEVEL $1,000
Ginger and Larry Brook ’87
Martha Anne Rich and Bill Craig
Jen and Conrad De Los Santos Susan and Sid Evans Heidi and Bill Falconer Liesel and Will French Elise May Frohsin ’88 and Hank Frohsin Jeff Gale ’92 and Dana Gale Amy Thompson Holiditch Emily Hess Levine ’01 and Bob Levine
Carole and Matt Miller Jeanne and Richard Monk III
Lia and Rusty Rushton ’74
Diana and Bill Slaughter ’56 Leah and Bo Taylor
Chang Zhai and Anxin Wu
SPROUT LEVEL
$500
Shaheen and Michael Bermudez
Cathryn and Mark Boardman Anne Davis and Cris Picard
Joe and Sheryl Dunsmore Kathy and Bob Henderson, Jr. Maleesa and Jason Jack Maria and Lawrence Katz ’82 Scottie and Bruce Lanier
Jing Chang and Guoliang Liu Laili and Jim Markert
Mary Katherine Myatt ’86 and Randy Earl
Stacy and Scott Pulliam ’85 Anne Marie Seibel and Steven Rowe
Over 150 parents, alums, faculty, and friends reunited at Indian Springs on October 30, 2021, for the Parents Association’s annual Harvest Market fall fundraiser. Thanks to the generosity of our sponsorship donors, attendees, and the in-kind support from Martin’s Bar-B-Que, El Barrio, and Milo’s Tea, over $88,000 was raised; a new record! Thank you to Chair Rhonda Nabors, sponsorship co-chairs Tricia Wallwork and Jeanne Monk, and vendor chair Edina Shreshtha for your great work. Details about this year’s Harvest Market will be in a future issue of Indian Springs Magazine.
Tracy and Scott Schamberger
Ream and Mohamed Shoreibah
Melissa and Hanson Slaughter ’90
Galin and Kevin Spicer
Erin and Shane Street
Nicole Williams
David Williams
SEED LEVEL
$250
Regina and John Ammon
Ashley and Reed Bates Elizabeth and Bart Crawford Heidi and Martin Damsky ’68
Maria Jerez and Bernardo De La Pava
Jerolyn Ferrari Elene and Brian Giattina
Tracee and Paul Gilliam
Shumin Liu and Junmin He Betsy and Steve Hewett
Todd Holtet, Townsend Honda
Nimi and Praveen Jetty
Natalie and Mike Johnson Dawn and Joe McCarty Jana and Mukul Mehra ’91 Ann and Richard Monk ’57
Gabriela and Stuart Oates Amy and Keith Richards Rebecca and Josh Rothman Karen Shepard ’81 Edina and Sadeep Shrestha Jim Simon
Connie Hill and Doug Turner Billie Jo and Clinton Waara Alison and Rhett Walker ’83 Tricia and Troy Wallwork Jill and Thomas Walton Helen Gong and Xibo Wang Misha and Josh Whitman Kimberly and Scott Wilder
ANNUAL FUND RESTRICTED GIFTS
Gifts for the following initia
tives selected by the school were received in 2021-2022.
Acworth Foundation Scholarship Fund
Andy Abroms Memorial Scholarship
Archives Athletics Programs Financial Aid General Henry Lee Badham Memorial Scholarship H. Drennen Jones Scholarship Trust
Iain Alexander Scholarship Fund Library Program Medical Properties Trust Scholarship Residential Life Program Scholars Bowl Scholarship Granting Organization Science
Soccer Program Technology Initiatives Tennis Program
RESTRICTED GIFTS
In 2021-2022 gifts were made to support initiatives outside the school’s annual operat ing budget for the following purposes.
ART BUILDING
Nancy Poynor
BROOKS HINES MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP
Rene and John Simmons ’65
CHINESE LANGUAGE CLASSROOM/CHANG
DISCRETIONARY FUND
Troy University Foundation, Inc.
Continued
page 28
Richard Neely; Charles Robinson ’59; Rhea Fleming ’79; Alan Engel ’73 P ’03, ’12; and Scott Schamberger at the Mac Fleming Celebration of Life held during Alumni Weekend 2022.
MACDONALD B. FLEMING ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP
We are grateful to those listed below for honoring founding faculty member MacDonald B. “Mac” Fleming with contributions to his endowed scholarship. Beginning with an initial contribution from John Bigger ’56, the fund has grown to over $77,000 in gifts and pledges as of June 30, 2022. A matching challenge from Chris Genry ’78 to the classes of 1975 to 1981 yielded an additional 15 gifts totaling nearly $9,000. To learn more about the Fleming Scholarship, please visit indiansprings.org/mac.
Susan and John Abbot ’80 Kelly and Robert Aland ’80 Elizabeth and Bob Athey ’59
CJ and John Bigger ’56
Patricia and Ehney Camp ’60
Carey Cauthen ’91
Clara Chung and Glenn Fleisig Joan Clark
Sherrie Cooper
Carolyn and Richard Crocker ’65 Allan Cruse ’59
Will Davis ’86
Rebecca Garity DePalma ’80
Ashley and Donald Edwards Catherine Fleming Edwards ’78 and David Edwards Jane and Charles Ellis
Lisa and Alan Engel ’73
Dona and Rhea Fleming ’79 Linda and Arthur Freeman ’59 Reese and Sally Ganster ’63
Loren Gary ’76
Chris Genry ’78
Gillian and Mike Goodrich ’63 Charles Guo ’05
Helene and Norman Halpern Mary and Victor Hanson ’74
Anne and George Harper ’70
Susan and Wyatt Haskell ’57 Beth Harris Heaton ’78 and Bill Heaton Ronne and Donald Hess ’66 Betty and Cory Jackson ’56 Jan Jander ’95 Ellen Stern Kelsch ’01 Maura and Jerry Kennedy ’66 Caroline and Roy Knight ’59 Joonsuk Lee ’93
Jenny and George LeMaistre ’66 Sharon Kean and Bob Lipson ’68 Leta and Jim Matte ’77 Kimberly and Macke Mauldin ’78 Michael and Carole Mazer Charla and John McKoy ’76 Ruth Ann and Jack McSpadden ’64 Sara and Tommy Moody ’64 Kathy and Mark Myatt ’55 Mary Katherine Myatt ’86 and Randy Earl Marcia and Mike Nichols ’70 Mary and Don North
Susan Dillard Phillips ’80 and David Phillips Susan Pizitz ’80 Sam Pointer ’81 Ginny and Grady Richardson ’57 Shannon Riffe ’00 and Matt Burton
Lia and Rusty Rushton ’74 Mary Helmer and Mark Sabel ’84 Jane and Lester Seigel ’75 Jim Simon
Dottie and Jeffrey Smith ’61 Rose Beth Smith
Elinor and Michael Staff Kimberly and Michael Steiner ’95 David Tavakoli ’91 Jane and Kevin Tavakoli ’98 Sima Tavakoli Dana Crocker Templeton ’78 and Harold Templeton Judy and Arthur Toole ’58 Connie and Marshall Urist Holly Ellis Whatley ’84 and Prince Whatley Beth Wilkinson ’80
CLASS OF 1968 SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Bilee Cauley
Martha Diefendorf and Robert Hogan ’68
Anne and Charles Kessler ’68 Sharon Kean and Bob Lipson ’68
Cecilia Matthews
Pam and Roy Meyer ’68
Beatrice and Frank Morring ’68 Laura Lee and John Samford ’68 Jerry Shadix ’68
Sue and Allan Solomon ’68
Dale Batchelor and John Thomas ’68
DIRECTOR’S PURSE FUND Anonymous
INTERNATIONAL OUTREACH
Hong-Young Kim ’04
LARA HOGGARD ENDOWED SCHOLARSHIP
Dottie and Jeffrey Smith ’61
RAY HARTWELL MEMORIAL MOCK TRIAL FUND
Deborah and Peter Keefe
Rene and John Simmons ’65
THE ALAN MATTHEWS ’68 SCHOLARSHIP FUND
Pris and Eddie Ashworth ’67 Cecilia Matthews
CAMPAIGN FOR SPRINGS ETERNAL
Those who made additional gifts to the Springs Eternal Campaign in 2021-2022 be yond what they had already given are acknowledged here.
Anne Knox Morton Averitt ’04 and Austin Averitt
Mary Ann and John Furniss ’60
Jannike and Brian Jackson ’92 Jeff Pizitz ’75 Michele and Rod Reisner ’84
Anne Ryan ’79 and Robert Goldman
Heidi Molbak and Rob Verchick
CORPORATIONS, FOUNDATIONS & ORGANIZATIONS
The following donors made gifts to one or more of Indian Springs School’s campaigns, programs and/or initiatives in 2021-2022.
Abroms Charitable Foundation, Inc.
Acworth Foundation
Adobe Systems Incorporated AmazonSmile Foundation
Andrea and Kent Haines Family Fund
ARC Realty, LLC Barr Linton Fund
Barton-Matese Giving Fund
Bayer Crop Science
Belser Living Trust
Bessemer Giving Fund Birmingham Jewish Foundation Blair Family Advised Fund Butrus Family Advised Fund Caryn & Steven Corenblum Fund Catherine and Emmett McLean Fund Celanese Foundation
Chafetz Foundation
Charles & Janet Plosser Charitable Gift Fund
Charles S. and Gail F. Gamble Fund Community Foundation of Greater Chattanooga, Inc. Community Foundation of Greater Memphis Community Foundation of Northeast Alabama
The Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham
The Community Foundation of Western North Carolina, Inc. Deak Rushton Charitable Fund
Dr. and Mrs. Arthur F. Toole, III Charitable Fund
Drennen Jones Scholarship Trust
E. T. Brown Family Fund Engel Family Advised Fund Ernst & Young Foundation Fidelity Charitable Foxy Nails & Spa Genentech
Goldfarb Family Donor Advised Fund
Henry S. Long III Charitable Fund
Home Perfection General Contractors, Inc.
J.E. and Marjorie B. Pittman Foundation, Inc. Jewish Community Foundation of Greater Kansas City Jimmie and Emil Hess Fund for Indian Springs School J & L Matte Family Giving Fund John & Laura Lee Samford Charitable Fund John Green Donor Advised Fund
Jones Family Fund Joseph H. and Reva Engel Foundation Michael and Sydney Green Donor Advised Fund Nelson Charitable Fund KPMG Foundation Medical Properties Trust Charitable Fund, LLC Microsoft Corporation Mike and Gillian Goodrich Foundation Milestone Fund National Christian Foundation Carolinas
Oversize Outfitters, LLC Pinellas Community Foundation Pinkerton Foundation Plastic Surgery
Specialists, P.C. Pointer Family Fund Pratt Family Fund
Princeton Area Community Foundation
Publix Super Markets
Rachel B. Krantz & Edward J. Goldstein Donor Advised Fund
Regions Financial Corporation
Ronne & Donald Hess Foundation
Rusty and Lia Rushton Advised Fund
Sharon and Jim Bailey Fund
Sabel Law Firm, L.L.C. Santosha Foundation, a Donor Advised Fund
Scholarships for Kids Schwab Charitable Synopsys Inc. & The Synopsys Foundation
The Blackbaud Giving Fund
The David M Huggin Charitable Fund
The Ehney Addison Camp, Jr. and Mildred Fletcher Tillman Camp Foundation
The Engel Foundation, Inc. The Haskell Foundation
The J. Michael Bodnar Foundation
The Jeff Pizitz Fund of the Birmingham Jewish Foundation
The John & Julia Badham
Family Trust
The Robert and Kelly Aland Charitable Fund
The San Francisco Foundation
The Sperling Family Charitable Foundation Thomas and Virginia Smith Giving Fund
Thompson Family Foundation Timothy and Stacy Price Fund Tuthill Square Foundation U.S. Charitable Gift Trust Unum Group
Vanguard Charitable Vulcan Materials Company William and Blakeley Smith Fund
MATCHING GIFTS
The following employers matched their employees’ gifts to Indian Springs School in 2021-2022.
Ernst & Young US
KPMG US Microsoft Corporation Regions Financial Corporation Unum Group Vulcan Materials Company
GIFTS-IN-KIND
Gifts of tangible property and services are also a signif icant help to Indian Springs throughout the year. Giftsin-kind from the following people were contributed in 2021-2022.
El Barrio Restaurant/Rachel and Neville Baay
Lisa and Alan Engel ’73 Heidi and Bill Falconer Mandy and James Griffin Jan Jander ’95 Maura and Jerry Kennedy ’56 Scottie and Bruce Lanier Martin’s Bar-B-Que/Shay and John Michael Bodnar ’88 Milo’s Tea/Tricia and Troy Wallwork
Tamara and Kazuo Moriya ’84 Lisa Read ’78
Carolyn Sherer
Alison and Rhett Walker ’83
IN MEMORIAM GIFTS
Gifts to Indian Springs School were given in 2021-2022 in memory of:
IAIN ALEXANDER ’91 Margaret and Bruce Alexander
DR. LOUIS ARMSTRONG Pamela and Prescott Kelly ’61
JANICE Q. BASS
W. C. Bass
JIM BROWN ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
CLYDE BUZZARD
Tom Byers ’67
FULLA CARIDAKIS
Kiki and Pierre Scalise
WENDELL CAULEY ’68
Beatrice and Frank Morring ’68
EMMETT CLOUD ’95
Daniel Alarcon ’95
Graciela and Renato Alarcon Dick Briggs Jr., MD
Nancy Delony
Joan Eaton
Amy Finkelstein ’95 and Myles Steiner Barbara and Robert Glaze
Jill Griffin
Jan Jander ’95
Pauline Beach and Phil McEntee Cathy Cloud Redwine Ann Rosdick ’96
Karen Shepard ’81 Barbara and John Sholl Lydia Cheney and James Sokol Kimberly and Michael Steiner ’95 Cindy, Steve and Chris Tilghman Martin Tobias ’95 and Robert Marx
Merodie and Gene Tomlin Fergus Tuohy ’96 and Michael Barnett Linda Vernon and Peter Walsh Frances and Philip Watts
Richard Whitley
BRIAN DOWLING ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
ROBERT DRENNEN ’80
Susan Pizitz ’80
MAC FLEMING
Susan and John Abbot ’80 Kelly and Robert Aland ’80 Elizabeth and Bob Athey ’59 Tory Cohen ’89 and Matt Baldwin Patricia and Ehney Camp ’60 Carey Cauthen ’91
Clara Chung and Glenn Fleisig
Joan Clark
Jeanne Conerly ’80 and David Venturo Sherrie Cooper
Carolyn and Richard Crocker ’65 Allan Cruse ’59
Will Davis ’86
Rebecca DePalma ’80 Ashley and Donald Edwards Catherine Fleming Edwards ’78 and David Edwards
Robert Fleming ’86 Jane and Charles Ellis
Lisa and Alan Engel ’73
Nedra and Joey Fetterman ’74 Dona and Rhea Fleming ’79 Linda and Arthur Freeman ’59 Reese and Sally Ganster ’63 Loren Gary ’76 Gillian and Mike Goodrich ’63 Charles Guo ’05 Dana Grant
David Halpern
Helene and Norman Halpern Mary and Victor Hanson ’74 Anne and George Harper ’70 Susan and Wyatt Haskell ’57 Beth Harris Heaton ’78 and Bill Heaton
Ronne and Donald Hess ’66 Liz and Greg Hodges ’66 Lauren and Glen Howard ’67 Betty and Cory Jackson ’56 Jan Jander ’95 Jessica and Ben Johnson ’71 Ellen Stern Kelsch ’01 Maura and Jerry Kennedy ’66 Caroline and Roy Knight ’59 Joonsuk Lee ’93
Jenny and
George LeMaistre ’66 Leta and Jim Matte ’77 Sharon Kean and Bob Lipson ’68 Patricia and Tom Lloyd ’59 Kimberly and Macke Mauldin ’78 Michael and Carole Mazer Charla and John McKoy ’76
Ruth Ann and Jack McSpadden ’64 Sara and Tommy Moody ’64 Kathy and Mark Myatt ’55 Mary Katherine Myatt ’86 and Randy Earl
Marcia and Mike Nichols ’70 Mary and Don North Nancy and Sandy Petrey ’59 Susan Dillard Phillips ’80 and David Phillips Susan Pizitz ’80 Sam Pointer ’81 Ginny and Grady Richardson ’57 Shannon Riffe ’00 and Matt Burton Lia and Rusty Rushton ’74 Mary Helmer and Mark Sabel ’84 Jane and Lester Seigel ’75 Kathy and Mike Seltzer ’66 Nathan Shepura ’98 Amy and Jeffrey Sides ’91 Jim Simon
Dottie and Jeffrey Smith ’61 Rose Beth Smith Elinor and Michael Staff Kimberly and Michael Steiner ’95 David Tavakoli ’91 Jane and Kevin Tavakoli ’98 Sima Tavakoli Dana Crocker Templeton ’78 and Harold Templeton Anne and Lee Thomas ’70 Judy and Arthur Toole ’58 Connie and Marshall Urist Holly Ellis ’84 and Prince Whatley Beth Wilkinson ’80
MARTIN FREEMAN ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
ALLAN FURNISS ’63 Rene and John Simmons ’65
BILL GWIN ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
RAY HARTWELL ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65 Deborah and Peter Keefe
BROOKS HINES ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
MARY TAYLOR ISRAEL, SPOUSE OF CHRIS ISRAEL ’58
Chris Israel ’58
NICK JAMROZ ’09
A.J. Jamroz ’11
ROBERT W. JOHNS, PH. D. Jonette and Kenneth Christian ’67
JOHN JOHNSON ’65
Sara and Tommy Moody ’64
MERRILL JOHNSTON ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
BILL JONES ’63
Jan and Chip Feazel ’63 Augusta and Bill Forbes Nancy Poynor
SUMIYE KAKITANI Masaki Kakitani
ROBBIE KARTUS ’68
Rene and John Simmons ’65
FRANK LARY ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
DR. WILLIAM E. LEVERETTE Elizabeth and Fred Wooten ’61
MRS. JENNIE LEWIS Beth and Brooks Clark Lisa and Alan Engel ’73 Peggy and Michael Fleetwood William Martin
CHARLES LUPTON ’65 Rene and John Simmons ’65
RANDY MARKS ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
ALAN MATTHEWS ’68 Cecilia Matthews Beatrice and Frank Morring ’68 MISSY WILLIAMS
MCCARTY ’92
Joonsuk Lee ’93
PELLUM O. MONCRIEF III ’77 Rick Dominick ’78
CLAY NEWSOME ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
MAK OBRADOVIC
Noah Walton ’18
BEN PADEN ’66
Rene and John Simmons ’65
DICK PIGFORD ’65
Rene and John Simmons ’65
JOHN W. POYNER ’58
Nancy Poynor
JOE ROBINSON ’56
Anna Margaret and Tommy Donald ’58
MOTHER SANDRA STORM AND STEPFATHER
BOB ROSS
Shannon Johnson ’88
WILLIAM JAMES (BILLY)
RUSHTON III
Caryn and Steven Corenblum ’75
Lisa and Alan Engel ’73
Peggy and Michael Fleetwood
Vicki Vitiello and Jeff Pettus ’73
FRANK SAMFORD ’62
Sharon Samford
Rene and John Simmons ’65
PAUL SCALISE
Kiki and Pierre Scalise
JULIUS “SCOTTY”
SCOTT ’73
Vicki Vitiello and Jeff Pettus ’73
ELAN LAXER STRANGE ’10
Kyle Strange
MICHAEL FRANK TURNER
Starr Turner Drum ’02 and David Drum
BLAKE VAN HORN ’02
Alyson and Alan O’Neil ’93
JUDGE AND MRS. ELIAS C. WATSON, JR.
Lucy and Elias Watson ’58
DAVID WOODS ’85
Brian Woods ’90
ALUMNI WEEKEND 2022
Areturn to a full schedule of in-person Alumni Weekend events saw alums from every decade on campus, at class reunion dinners, and special receptions. Thank you, especially to reunion alums whose class years ended in 2 or 7, for coming back to Indian Springs. We hope to see you for this year’s alum festivities
the weekend of April 21-22, 2023!
Pointer
Susanne
Carolyn
Peter Waldo
Class of 2002 Reunion; Justin Routman
Rebecca Smith
Andre Toffel
Cox
Jack Lacy
Alford
Andrew
Norton Owen
COMMEMORATIVE GIFTS
Gifts to Indian Springs School were given in 2021-2022 in honor of:
HAROLD ABROMS
Justin Berman
THOMAS ’21 AND TEA ’23 ADRIAN
Erin and Adam Adrian KAY AND FRANK CARTER Jennifer Carter Logan and Jerome Logan ED CASSADY ’76
Claire and Wesley Vaughn KATHRYN D’ARCY
Gisele and Steve Crowe
THE WEDDING OF REBECCA DE PALMA ’80 AND LOREN GARY ’76 Jane and Charles Ellis JOSH DOBELBOWER ’21
Dr. and Mrs. Dobelbower
JIM ELLINGTON Clara Chung and Glenn Fleisig
ALAN Z. ENGEL ’73 Ilene Engel
Marcia and Mike Nichols ’70 Meredith and Daniel Odrezin ’05 Libby and Dennis Pantazis
Rene and John Simmons ’65
MAC FLEMING
Karen and Curt Bassett ’57 Kimberly and Macke Mauldin ’78
LINDA AND ARTHUR FREEMAN ’59 Sheri and Jimmy Krell
BRAXTON GOODRICH ’93 Teresa Sutter and Samit Roy ’93
ERIKA GROOMS ’96 Sandra and Gary Grooms
LILY HAMPTON ’24 Michelle Hampton
DR. JONATHAN HORN ’75 Lauren and Grey Tilden ’98
DR. TANYA HYATT
Clara Chung and Glenn Fleisig
LAWSON KATZ ’24
Mary Beth Katz
LEO KAYSER, III ’62
Rene and John Simmons ’65
DR. WILLIAM M. LACASSE
Kimberly and Macke Mauldin ’78
JIMMY LEWIS ’75
Kathryn and Allen Corey ’76
Courtney and Jay Pigford
JULIA PEARCE ’11
Madeleine and Hubert Pearce
SCOTT SCHAMBERGER
Huarong Deng and Xin Xu
ROSA SCHWEBEL ’25
Carol Schwebel
AMORY STRANGE ’12
Kyle Strange
RIK TOZZI
Kate and Charles Simpson
LAURA AND RIK TOZZI’S
MARRIAGE
Carroll and Scott Phelps, Paul Phelps, Anna and Rudy Hill
JIM SIMON
Conor Gubbins
MARSHALL URIST ’94
Connie and Marshall Urist
CINDY AND GREG VAN HORN
Kate and Charles Simpson
THE CLASS OF 2022 IN WHOSE HONOR THEIR PARENTS AND GRANDPARENTS
MADE GIFTS:
Caroline Bates
Adrienne Belser ’22
Christopher Bradley ’22
Aidan Clarke
Olivia Clifton
Jordan De Los Santos ’22
Liam Falconer
Grace Flowers
Thomas French
Lucy Gardner
Andrew Glassford
Wellington Jiang ’22
Joseph Katz ’22
Catherine Kung ’22
Bruce Lanier ’22
Sofia Monteleone ’22
Amitis Moradkhani ’22
Sheri Peng ’22
Abby Richie ’22
Andy Schwebel ’22
Christian Swaid ’22
Hayden Schell ’22
Virginia Slaughter ’22
Yijie “Linda” Sun ’22
Zola Thompson ’22
Kennedy Tyson ’22
Seth Walton ’22
Hoacheng “Hudson” Wang ’22
ADVANCEMENT OFFICE
Jim Simon, Assistant Head of School for Advancement & External Affairs
Leah Taylor, Director of Advancement for Individual Gifts & Special Events
Kathryn D’Arcy, Advancement Associate
Peggy Fleetwood, Advancement Associate
2021-2022
VOLUNTEERS
ALUMNI COUNCIL
Starr Turner Drum ’02 (President)
W. C. Bass ’97
Johnny Creel ’79
Betsy Stewart Durst ’09
Claire Maples
Edwards ’89
Emily Fleisig ’13
Andrea Engel Haines ’03
Kate Hawley ’09
Alex Jamroz ’11
Kazuo Moriya ’84
Sarah Mills Nee ’03 Daniel Odrezin ’05
Evan Pantazis ’09
Kate Konecny
Pope ’02
Rod Reisner ’84
Jason Riffe ’03
Mark Sabel ’84
Rhett Walker ’83
ADMISSIONS
Kevin Butler
Marion Chartoff
Heidi Falconer
Elise May Frohsin ’88
Elene Giattina
Elizabeth Goodrich Mary Goodrich
Braxton Goodrich ’93
Connie Hill
Scarlett Kilgore
Emily Hess Levine ’01
Bob Levine
Rhonda Nabors
Atticus Rominger
Mark Sabel ’84
CHOIR
Elise May Frohsin ’88
Connie Reeves Dana Schneider
Amy and Jeff Sides ’91 Hanson Slaughter ’90 Melody Tagtmeyer
HARVEST MARKET COMMITTEE
Rhonda Nabors (Chair)
Jeanne Monk (Co-Chair, Sponsorships) Edina Shrestha (Vendor Coordinator) Tricia Wallwork (Co-Chair, Sponsorship)
Elizabeth Barbaree-Tasker
Ginger Brook
Jiang Chang Heidi Falconer Bill Falconer
Elise Frohsin ’88 Elizabeth Goodrich Mike Goodrich ’90
Meleesa Jack Scottie Lanier Yikun Schwebel Niamh Tuohy ’89
Kimberly Wilder Nicole Williams
Ellen Witt
PARENTS ASSOCIATION
Elizabeth Crawford
Heidi Falconer (President)
Michele Forman
Parents Association and Harvest Market Committee leaders Rhonda Nabors P ’22, ’24; Heidi Falconer P ’22; Tricia Wallwork P ’23, ’25; and Jeanne Monk P ’23 at Harvest Market 2021.
Elizabeth Goodrich
Emily Hanna
Kathy Henderson
Scottie Lanier
Gabe Matese
Jeanne Monk
Rhonda Nabors
Karen Naylor
Laura Schiele Robinson ’86
Yikun Schwebel
Edina Shrestha
Tricia Wallwork Kimberly Wilder Amy Williams Nicole Williams
PARENT POTLUCK
HOSTS
8th Grade–Tracy and Scott Schamberger
9th Grade–Laura Robinson ’86 and Steven Robinson
10th Grade–Kimberly and Scott Wilder
11th Grade–Tricia and Troy Wallwork
12th Grade–Scottie and Bruce Lanier
RESIDENTIAL LIFE
Amy Albert
Rachel Baay
Ashley Bates
Ginger Brook Lisa Clifton
Christine Copeland
Catherine Cox Maria Jerez
De La Pava
Susan Evans
Heidi Falconer
Kathy Gaines
Paola Garza Elizabeth Goodrich Amy Holditch Ingrid Huff
Elizabeth Jacobson Monica Kelley Joy Maples Ledvina Hong Li Shumin Liu
Brandi McCormack
Lisa Miller
Homa Rabiee Moradkhani
Tamara Moriya
MK Myatt
Gabriela Oates Outdoors Club
Karin Payton Doris Cristel Paredes Karin Payton Carrie Pomeroy Colin Peng Martha Anne Rich Laura Schiele Robinson ’86
Lourdes Sanchez Yikun Schwebel Anne Marie Seibel
Amy Sides Melanie Smith Joyce Solomon Virginia Spradlin
Virginia Stone Erin Street Christy Swaid Katie Tosh Eric Velasco
Jill Walton
Heather White ’92 Leigh Wilson Panrong Xiao
THEATRE
Lisa Boyd Mason Boyd Kathryn D’Arcy Jeff Gale ’92
Sarah Geisen Ellen Graham Stanley Holditch Sukaina Meghani
Connie Reeves Karen Shepard ’81
Amy Sides
Erin Street Magda Szaflarski Billy Jo Waara
Jill Walton
Noah Walton ’18 Thomas Walton
Indian Springs School opened its doors in 1952 with just 62 students and 10 teachers. In our 70th year, Indian Springs continues to be a beacon for the highest standards of independent school education and is home to a vibrant school of more than 320 students and 85 faculty and staff.
Our community of learners would not be able to embark upon their unique journey without the support of our school’s alumni, parents, and friends and their gifts to the annual fund. Thank you for your incredible generosity last year.
We hope you will help Indian Springs during this year’s milestone
platinum anniversary with your ongoing annual support. Our founding director, Doc Armstrong, championed “participation in creation” and encouraged all members of the Indian Springs family to participate in the school’s formation and growth. The annual fund is one of the best ways you can participate in that growth and support every aspect of life at the school.
We appreciate your consideration of a gift to aid our ongoing effort to create an environment where students can continue to be themselves and faculty continue to mentor and provide academic rigor. All of the broader Indian Springs School family continues to celebrate our collective endeavor of Learning through Living. THANK YOU!
MEET INDIAN SPRINGS’ 2022 OUTSTANDING ALUM OF THE YEAR
Dr. Katrina Armstrong Randall ’82 leads Columbia University’s medical campus as chief execu tive officer of the Columbia University Medical Center and dean of the faculties of health sciences and the Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. She is the executive vice president for health and biomedical sciences for Columbia University and the Harold and Margaret Hatch professor in the faculty of medicine. Katrina is the 25th dean of Vagelos, founded in 1767 as the nation’s second medical school and the first to award a doctor of medicine.
After graduating from Indian Springs, Katrina received a bachelor’s degree in architecture from Yale University, a doctor of medicine from Johns Hopkins University, and a master’s degree in clinical epidemiology from the University of Pennsylvania, where she began her academic career. She served in numerous positions at Penn, including physician-scientist fellow, professor, chief of general internal medicine, associate director of the Abramson Cancer Center, co-director of the Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholars Program, and director of research at the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics.
Katrina is the first woman to lead Columbia’s medical school and center. Before joining Colum bia, she was also the first woman physician-in-chief at Massachusetts General Hospital, the Jackson professor of clinical medicine at Harvard Medical School, and the professor of epidemiology at the T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Katrina is committed to educating, recruiting, and retaining diverse talent and has created programs for pipeline development, flexible career pathways, coach ing, mentorship, and sponsorship.
Katrina’s research focuses on medical decision-making, quality of care, and cancer prevention and outcomes. Her work has examined cancer risk and prevention in Black and Latino patients, racial inequities in genetic testing and neonatal care, and the roles segregation, discrimination, and dis trust play in the health of marginalized populations. Her most recent research studied disparities in rural areas and included partnerships with Lakota tribal communities and organizations in western South Dakota.
Katrina has been elected to the National Academy of Medicine, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Association of American Physicians, and the American Society for Clinical Investigation. She has received awards from the Society of General Internal Medicine, the American Federation of Medical Research, and AcademyHealth. She accepted her Outstanding Alum of the Year Award at a ceremony during Alumni Weekend 2022.
“The people who went to Indian Springs love this place like you will never understand until you’re sitting in New York City getting on a plane to come back to Birmingham,” said Katrina to an audience of fellow alums, students, and faculty members. “I couldn’t be more honored to receive this award. I want you to know my commitment to each of you. If there’s a way I can help, I am forever a part of your connections and community.”
CLASS NOTES
CLASS OF 1959
M.D. Smith ’59 published a romantic suspense novel, Love in Turbulent Air, now available for Kindle and paperback purchase on Amazon. See more of M.D.’s work at his website, mdsmithiv.com.
CLASS OF 1967
Walter Stephens ’67 retired from Johns Hopkins University, where he was the Charles S. Singleton Professor of Italian Studies in the department of modern languages and literature, co-editor of the academic journal Modern Language Notes, and founder of Great Books at Hopkins. Walter joined Johns Hopkins in 1999 and previously taught at Dartmouth College, the University of Washington, Cornell University, and a K-8 school in the former Yugoslavia. Walter has been a visiting professor at Yale University and the Université François Rabelais in France and taught a faculty seminar at Folger Institute. He has been a visiting fellow at the Oxford University colleges of All Souls and Christ Church, the University of Durham Institute of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, and the Oriental Institute of Oxford University Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies. Walter returned to Indian Springs to live and teach for one year after completing his bachelor’s degree in French/Italian at Yale University. He earned doctorate degrees in comparative literature from Cornell University and philosophy from the Scuola Normale Superiore in Italy. His teaching and research explore the relation of medieval and Renaissance literature to theology, witchcraft, literary forgery, and the history of scholarship.
CLASS OF 1975
Bill Engel ’75, the Nick B. Williams Professor of Literature at Sewanee: The University Of The South, used Covid lockdown to complete several book projects: The Printer as Author in Early Modern English Book History (Routledge), The Death Arts in Renaissance England: A Critical Anthology (Cambridge), and two collections of co-edited essays, Memory and Mortality in Early Modern England (Cambridge) and The Shakespearean Death
Arts: Hamlet
CLASS OF 1988
Amol Bapat ’88, a cardiologist in Marietta, Georgia, was named a “Top Doctor” by Atlanta Magazine for the 10th consecutive year. He has served as director of the Congestive Heart Failure Clinic, on the board of directors for the Heart and Vascular Institute, and vice chairman of the peer review committee at St. Joseph’s Hospital of Atlanta. He has served as vice chairman of medicine and chief of cardiology at North Fulton Hospital and chairman of the section of cardiology at Northside Hospital Atlanta/Forsyth. Amol completed his medical degree at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and his residency at Baylor Medical College. He stayed at Baylor for training in cardiovascular disease and interventional cardiology and was the recipient of a National Institutes of Health research grant. He was the first physician to work with the Larry King Cardiac Foundation and received its Physician Laureate Award in 2006.
CLASS OF 1991
Margaret Peacock ’91 appeared on CBS Evening News on April 6, 2022, to offer expertise in Russian military history and insight into how the war in Ukraine might progress. Margaret is an associate professor of Russian history and the director of undergraduate studies in the department of history at the University of Alabama. She previously taught at the University of Texas at Austin, where she earned her doctorate in Russian history.
CLASS OF 1992
Patrick Comer ’92 recently sold Lucid, where he was CEO and Founder, to Cint AB, a public company in Stockholm, for $1.1 billion. Headquartered in New Orleans, Lucid has become the first “unicorn” valuation of a tech start exceeding the $1 billion threshold in Louisiana. Patrick has become the chairman of the Cint board of directors.
CLASS OF 1995
John Green ’95 is an executive producer of the New Line Cinema adaptation of his New York Times bestselling novel Turtles All the Way Down. The film stars Isabela Merced, known for her title role in Dora and the Lost City of Gold, and is directed by the acclaimed Hannah Marks from a script by Isaac Aptaker and Elizabeth Berger. Producers Marty Bowen and Wyck Godfrey return from The Fault in Our Stars and Paper Towns. Filming began in April 2022.
COMER ’92
CLASS OF 1998
Barry Tobias ’98 is the lead electrical, environmental, and consumables manager (EECOM) for the NASA Artemis missions. He is responsible for the vehicle’s passive and active thermal controls, cabin atmosphere, supply systems, and fire detection. He works at Johnson Space Center and recently gave a tour to Indian Springs staff members Scott Schamberger and Jim Simon. Learn more about Barry in the next issue!
CLASS OF 2002
Kate Konecny Pope ’02 and her husband, William, welcomed a daughter, Charley Ann, on November 4, 2021. Kate is the director of business and community outreach at Georgia Military College. She was named to the Milledgeville Scene 2022 “20 Under 40” list.
CLASS OF 2003
Elliot Corenblum ’03 married Allyson Goldscher on May 29, 2022, at the Woodholme Country Club in Baltimore, Maryland. Numerous members of the Indian Springs community were in attendance, including Elliot’s father, Steven Corenblum
IN MEMORIAM
ALUMNI
Charles Lloyd “Pete” Wyrick ’57 passed away on August 5, 2022, in Charleston, South Carolina. He served for four years in Army intelligence and studied English and creative writing at Davidson College, the University of North Carolina, and the University of Missouri. Pete was an award-win ning poet and an art and architecture critic for the Richmond News Leader. He began a career in arts administra tion at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and directed the Delaware Art Museum and Gibbes Museum of Art. Pete served terms leading the City of Charleston’s Board of Architectural Review and the Coastal Conservation League. In 1986, he founded Wyrick & Company, a trade book publisher later acquired by Gibbs Smith. He is sur vived by his wife of 59 years, Connie; sons, Charles (Katherine) and Christo pher (Sandi); grandchildren, Charles, Helen, and Silas; brother, Louis Wyrick ’60; sister, Melinda (Jim); and many cousins, nephews, and nieces.
’75, and brothers Carl Corenblum ’06 and Zach Corenblum ’11. Elliot and Allyson honeymooned in Hawaii.
CLASS OF 2005
Daniel Odrezin ’05, a member of the Indian Springs Alumni Council, will serve a five-year term on the Mountain Brook Board of Education. Daniel is a real estate attorney with a practice in Cahaba Heights and previously served as the assistant executive director of the Birmingham Jewish Foundation.
FRIENDS
Pictured on a May 2022 trip to Israel are Emmett and Catherine McLean P ’03, ’06, ’11; Donald ’66 and Ronne Hess P ’89, ’93, ’95, ’01 GP ’23, ’27; Barbara and Jack Aland ’75 P ’04, ’06, ’10; Jean Dent (wife of Jim Dent ’72); and Assistant Head of School for Advancement & External Affairs Jim Simon.
Thomas Coleman Lipsey, Sr. ’60 passed away on July 17, 2022, in Vestavia Hills, Alabama. He attended Wake Forest University and Birming ham-Southern College. Coleman served 22 years in the Army National Guard and Reserve and retired as a major. He worked in finance for over 40 years, mainly at First Protective. Coleman chaired the Birmingham Association of Health Underwrit ers and the American Society of Chartered Life Underwriters and Chartered Financial Consultants. He taught courses for the Life Underwrit ers Training Council and was referred to as “The Professor” by many who relied on his assistance in challeng ing cases. Coleman loved hunting, fishing, singing in his church choir, and traveling the world with his wife of 37 years, Georgia. He is survived by Georgia; children, Coleman (Son ya), David (Fran), Amy (Seth), and John (Kristie); grandchildren, Jeremy, Tyler, Jaden, Gabe, Andrew, Maisie, Thomas, and Charlie; brother-in-law, Edward; nephews; and friends.
Bruce Edward Morton, Sr. ’62 passed away on May 1, 2022, in Falls Church, Virginia. He was a Vietnam War veter an, a captain in the Army, and served in the Army Judge Advocate Gener al’s Corps. Bruce studied law at the University of Alabama and George town University. Before relocating to
Virginia, he began his career practicing law with his father at Whitman, Morton, and Coleman. Bruce was a trial attorney in the United States Department of Justice Tax Division for nearly 25 years. He was an avid University of Alabama sports fan and enjoyed traveling, garden ing, bicycling, reading, and caring for his dog, Holly, in his retirement. He is survived by his wife, Cynthia; children, Ted (Alicia) and Britt (Seth); grandchildren, Maggie, Quinn, George, and Thomas; sister, Ann (George); and many niec es and nephews.
John Lowery Johnson ’65 passed away on February 16, 2022, in Newport Beach, California. He served in the Alabama National Guard, attended Washington and Lee University, and began a career in banking. John worked and traveled internationally as a member of his father-inlaw’s Texas-based firm, Fisk Electric, before moving to California in the 1990s to join an internet company. In 1994, John and his wife, Susan, founded Susan’s Healthy Gourmet, a meal delivery service that won numerous awards, including the Los An geles Times Orange County “Entrepreneur of the Year.” He was preceded in death by Susan. He is survived by children, Kerry and John; brother, Ben Johnson ’64; sister, Nancy; grandchildren, Helena, Ben, Jackson, George, and Kenady; and many nieces and nephews.
Gould Harrison Kitchens Blair ’69 passed away on March 22, 2022, in Mountain Brook, Alabama. He attended Johns Hopkins University and the University of Melbourne Law School and worked as an attorney. He was passionate about sharing his love for Christ, classical music, Ro mantic-era literature, and the French language. He is sur vived by his children, Harrison (Tao), Virginia (Andrew), and Walter (Nora); five grandchil dren; and sister, Florence.
William “Bill” Hamilton Varner ’83 passed away on April 29, 2022, in Lynchburg, Virginia. He attended the University of Alabama and the University of Alabama at Birmingham. Bill worked in healthcare administration at Roper St. Francis, Novant, and Centra. Most recently, he was the CEO of the United Way of Central Virginia. Bill dedicated his 27-year career to enhanc ing healthcare, focusing on excellence in care delivery and the patient experience, and expanding services and accessibility to care for all. He volunteered for and served on the boards of numerous community organizations and, after battling chronic disease, became a coach and support er for others battling health issues. Bill loved supporting his children’s interests and traveling the world with them. His hobbies included guitar, motorcycles, photography, sketching, magic, genealogy, and astronomy. Bill is survived by his wife of 22 years, Cath erine; children Julia and Will; father, Bill Varner, III; and his father’s wife, Mary.
FAMILY & FRIENDS
JUDITH LEE ALAND
April 14, 2022
Mother of Jamie Spector ’94
ANNE SHEEHAN BLANCO
August 8, 2022
Mother-in-law of Lawrence Katz ’82 (Maria); grandmother of Joseph Katz ’22 and Law son Katz ’24
JULIA HAUSMAN BRADLEY
June 1, 2022
Grandmother of Christopher Bradley ’22
HORTENSE CALHOUN
July 2, 2022
Mother of Indian Springs board member Myla Calhoun; grandmother of Caroline Choy ’11 and Lizzie Choy ’13
NELL CAMERON
May 13, 2022
Former staff member
HARRY LEE DELLINGER
April 3, 2022
Father of George Dellinger ’80
LOUISE BEEDIE FARWELL
March 28, 2022
Mother of Indian Springs staff member Christine Copeland; grandmother of Joshua Copeland ’13 and Joseph Copeland ’17
BETTY SUE MILLAR FILER
January 9, 2022
Mother of Dan Filer ’77, David Filer ’80, and Carol Filer DeBoer ’84
ROSA PARKER HANKS
August 9, 2022
Mother of Georgette Hanks ’80
MARY JENNINGS “JENNIE”
HATFIELD LEWIS
February 10, 2022
Mother of Indian Springs board member Jimmy Lewis ’75; grandmother of Evelyn Lewis Miller ’11 and Stewart Lewis ’11
SCOTT JASON NABORS
May 31, 2022
Husband of former Indian Springs board member Rhonda Nabors; father of Jackson Nabors ’22 and Thomas Nabors ’24
REV. ROBERT “BOB” L. ROSS, JR. April 7, 2022
Father of Frances Ross Nolan ’77; grandfather of Jonathan Ross ’03 and William Nolan ’09
JOHN FREDERICK SCHMITT January 30, 2022 Father of Tyler Schmitt ’09
LOUIS SPENCER SHAW July 2, 2022
Former Indian Springs faculty member
REV. DR. JAMES FIDELIS TUOHY
April 8, 2022
Husband of former Indian Springs faculty member Elma Hannon Tuohy; father of Niamh Tuohy ’89 and Fergus Tuohy ’96; grandfa ther of Aidan Clarke ’22
BACK TO SCHOOL WITH DR. COOPER
Longtime faculty member Dr. Bob Cooper reprised his popular class on the text Modern Times by Paul Johnson and led seminars via Zoom on the book’s first six chapters. Seminars were held on Tuesdays and Thursdays from June 14 to June 30, and the registration was limited to 10 attendees per class to allow for discussion. Throughout the seminars, 52 Indian Springs alums from 22 states ranging from class years 1961 to 2019 actively participated.
Some of the comments from partici pants were:
“The class took me back to the best days of my Indian Springs experience. After my father, Dr. Cooper is my favorite teacher.”
“Dr. Cooper, thank you so much for offering your time to host this lecture series. It made me so thankful for my Indian Springs experience and the lifelong lessons you’ve imparted to thousands of students.”
“Please thank Dr. Cooper for his dedication to Indian Springs. It was great to be his student again. I wish I had applied myself more when I took his classes the first time. If I could get a few more Class of ’92 classmates to take a future course with me, that would be really fun.”
Future alum seminars from Dr. Cooper and other faculty are being considered, and more information will be provided as courses become available.
—Peggy Fleetwood
UNIQUELY SPRINGS
SAVE
THE DATE
ALUMNI EVENTS
ALUMNI HOLIDAY PARTY
Friday, December 23 | 6:00–8:00 p.m. EastWest | 2306 2nd Ave. N, Birmingham, AL 35203
ALUMNI WEEKEND
Thursday, April 20–Sunday, April 23
All are welcome! Reunion class years ending in 3 and 8
Learn more & register at www.indiansprings.org/alumni. peggy.fleetwood@indiansprings.org 205.332.0610
ADMISSION EVENTS
OPEN HOUSES
Sunday, December 4 | 2:00–4:00 p.m. Sunday, January 8 | 6:00–7:00 p.m.*
MEET THE FACULTY
Wednesday, November 9 | 8:00–9:00 a.m.*
MEET THE COLLEGE ADVISORS
Wednesday, December 14 | 8:00–9:00 a.m.*
Event
Learn more & register at www.indiansprings.org/admission. admission@indiansprings.org