2017-18 Annual Report

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Annual Report

2017-2018


2017-18 By the numbers

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Message from the head of school

“Our time-tested values and liberal arts curriculum, coupled with the new programs and facilities reflected in our strategic vision, MB Believes, create a holistic and powerful model for 21st-century education. We seek to provide foundational knowledge, skills, and experiences to help students explore a complicated world from multiple perspectives. We value experiential learning, where students work in teams to solve authentic problems that don’t have simple yes-or-no answers. We honor humankind’s accumulated wisdom and literature, even while pushing students to become conversant with emergent fields like coding and entrepreneurship. And throughout, Quaker values provide an animating sense of purpose, which is to inspire the rising generation to make the world a better place.” — Matt Glendinning, Head of School


thanks to our trustees and committee members

THANK YOU! We offer our deep appreciation to the alumni, parents, grandparents, and Friends who give so much of their time and expertise serving on the Board of Trustees and the various board committees.

Budget & Finance

Buildings & Grounds

Campaign Steering

Enrollment & Marketing

Carl Weinberg, Clerk John Barrett ’63 Peter Crysdale Jane Dietze Karen Hammond Gardner Lane Shaun Levesque Jim Lombardi David Lucier Nikki Monchik ’96 Vin Porcaro ‘83 Paul Silver ’68 Reza Taleghani ’90 Heather Tow-Yick ’94 Richard Yates School liaison: Shaun Buckler

Brad Shipp ’83, Clerk Mauricio Barreto ’65 Carl Bogus ’66 Meg Clurman Dele Mabray Jamie Reardon Elsie Morse Kara Milner Dave Murphy ’91 Peter Ramsden ’82 Jamie Reavis Tom Sepe Steve Tripp School liaison: Shaun Buckler

Gary Goldberg ’87, Clerk Chris Baker ’70 John E. Baldwin ’94 John Barrett ’63 Neil Beranbaum ’86 Meg Clurman Alex Egan ’03 Ted Fischer ’83 Matt Fishbein ’02 Robin Gibbs Brian and Barbara Goldner Habib Gorgi ’74 Gardner Lane Shaun and Kate Levesque Don McNemar Jim Procaccianti ’76 Jane Ritson-Parsons Meg Tunnicliffe Priscilla Wong ’83 School liaison: Ron Dalgliesh

Elaine Dickson, Clerk Gabe Amo ‘05 Albie Dahlberg ’87 Gardner Lane Kara Milner Kaplan Mobray ’90 Keith Monchik ’90 Alisha Pina ’96 Darius Shirzadi Ed Schmults Alex Tadmoury Steve Tripp Cecily Ziegler School liaison: Hugh Madden School liaison: Adam Olenn

4 | annual report 2017-18


2017- 18 Board of Trustees Paul Adler

Kaplan Mobray ’90

Gabe Amo ’05

Mary Lee Morrison

Issmat Atteereh

George T. Panichas ’83

John T. Barrett, Jr. ’63

Alisha Pina ’96

Peter Crysdale

Vincent Porcaro, Sr. ’83

Elaine Dickson*

Jim Procaccianti ’76

Jane Dietze*

Jane Ritson-Parsons

Thomas J. (T.J.) Fullam*

Brad Shipp ’83*

Gary I. Goldberg ’87*

Liesa Stamm

Michael Hirtle

Stephen Thomas

Gardner Lane

Heather Tow-Yick ’94

Rachel Littman ’87, Clerk*

Dawn C. Tripp*

Dele Mabray

Marguerite Tunnicliffe

Mike McGuigan

Carl Weinberg*

Donald McNemar*

Cecily Kerr Ziegler*

Kara Milner

Betsy Zimmerman* HEAD OF SCHOOL Matt Glendinning*

* Executive Committee

Trustees and Committee members listed on these pages are from the 2017-2018 school year.

Investment

Nominating

Reza Taleghani ’90, Clerk John Barrett ’63 John Gochberg ’92 Laurens Goff ’90 Jordan Goodman ’72 Lloyd Granoff ’75 Shaun Levesque Rory Riggs ’71 Adam Shepard ’84 School liaison: Shaun Buckler

Dawn Tripp, Clerk Elaine Dickson Kara Milner George Panichas ’83 Vin Porcaro ’83 Jamie Reavis Lisa Rocchio ’85 June Tow Meg Tunnicliffe Betsy Zimmerman School liaison: Ron Dalgliesh

Nurturing Friends Education Betsy Zimmerman, Clerk Issmat Atteereh Victoria Ekk Galen McNemar Hamann Mike McGuigan Mary Lee Morrison Liesa Stamm Carol Smith Nia Thomas Rachel Littman ’87, ex officio Frederick Weiss, ex officio Lilly Cataldi-Simmers Debbie Phipps Erik Wilker Scribe: Meg Fifer

Trustees T.J. Fullam, Clerk Paul Adler Maitrayee Bhattacharyya Mike Hirtle Jennifer Hutchinson Joe Kuzneski Matt Parker ’00 Jamie Reavis Steve Thomas Carlton Tucker

Thank you for being TRUE BLUE! annual report 2017-18 | 5


connecting alumni from coast to coast

Brooklyn, New York Alumni & Friends Reception and MBAA Dinner October 2017

San Francisco, California Alumni & Friends Reception hosted by Peter Noonan ’63 February 2018

Chicago, Illinois Alumni & Friends Reception hosted by Vinny Buonanno ’61 October 2017 Washington, D.C. Dinner with Head of School Matt Glendinning March 2018

Thanks again to the 62 alumni who served on their Reunion Class Committees in 2018, as well as the 26 class agents who kept their classmates and MB connected!

Thanks to George Panichas ’83 (left), MBAA Clerk (pictured here with Hilary Fagan and his wife Sia Panichas), and Albie Dahlberg ’87 (left in second photo), MBAA Assistant Clerk (pictured with Whitney Tibolt ’87 and her husband David Abbott), at the Newport International Polo Event.

6 | annual report 2017-18


thanks to the 2017-18 MBAA board of directors Watertown, Massachusetts

Warren, Vermont Sugarbush Après-ski February 2018

Alumni Stewardship Dinner October 2017 Cambridge, Mass. Alumni & Friends Reception hosted by Bill Barrett ’60 February 2018

2017-18 MBAA Board George Panichas ’83, Clerk Albie Dahlberg ’87, Asst. Clerk Brian Panoff ’94, Treasurer John E. Baldwin ’94, Recording Clerk Maggie Moran ’08

Gabe Amo ’05

Taylor Rotondi Anderson ’02 David Murdock ’93 Cheryl Schadone Cohen ’81

David Murphy ’91

Joanne Debrah ’97

Nicole Navega ’89

Jason Engle ’98

John Pariseault ’97

Thomas Frater ’82

Vincent Porcaro ’83

Katherine Gorgi ’08

Matthew Romano ’14

Austin Jaspers ’11

Matthew Runci ’64

David Keyser ’89

Miles Rutter ’04

Jane Knowles ’81

Conal Smith ’06

MB Campus

Todd Machtley ’00

Ahvi Spindell ’72

Young Alumni Reception August 2017

Vin Marcello ’60

Harvest Dinner October 2017

The Moses Brown Alumni Association Board works tirelessly to grow and maintain the network of personal and professional relationships that benefit MB students long after graduation. The school actively partners with the MBAA to design programming and communications that keep alumni connected to each other and the school.

Expo – Homecoming October 2017 Turkey Tailgate November 2017

Thank you for being TRUE BLUE!

Annual Spree Bowl in memory of Evan Spirito ’06 and Zech Chafee ’07 November 2017

MBAA Winter Reception at Head of School Residence March 2018 MB Connects with Ransom Griffin and U.S. Poet Laureate Tracy K. Smith April 2018 MB Reunion May 2018 Alumni/ae Games 7v7 Football Soccer Hockey Lacrosse

Newport Newport International Polo Event July 2018

Alumni E-News

A PUBLICATION FROM HEAD OF SCHOOL MATT GLENDINNING

From

Learning TO Leading Summer 2018

What’s Inside: Students Shine at Every Level Matt reflects on the year and how students come into their own.

Taking Chances

Quaker Classic September 2017

See how students are the heartbeat of the performing arts department.

Head, Heart, and Hoops Oluchi Ezemma ‘18, a star on the courts with a huge heart.

Exploring the World Around the Corner Eighth graders use their Providence PBL to continue their relationship with DelSesto Middle School.

Inch By Inch, Row By Row See how first graders, upper schoolers, faculty, and a parent helped to update our new garden!

YOU CAN’T ALWAYS MAKE IT BACK TO CAMPUS

250 Lloyd Avenue, Providence RI 02906

Gorgi Family Squash & Education Center Dedication December 2017

Staying Connected to MB

Moses Brown School

Providence MB Connects Dinner at Persimmon with Ross Mattis ’95 and Lisa Harrison ’95 November 2017

Download the MB Alumni App today!

annual report 2017-18 | 7


Thanks to our 2017-18 Parent volunteers The partnership between home and school is at the center of a Moses Brown education and it could not happen without the robust support of the MB Parents’ Association, which plays an active role in the life and culture of the school. The map below outlines just some of the ways the PA and our parent community support our teachers and children every day.

2017-18 Executive Board

ALUMNI AVENUE

Meg Tunnicliffe, Presiding Clerk Amy Cooper, Administrative Clerk Laura Phillips, Programming Clerk Sandy Grand, Recording Clerk Kara Milner, Outreach Clerk Emily Atkinson, Communications Clerk Jim Paquette, Treasurer Lisa Donahue, PA Events Coordinator Tracey Tyrell, PA Events Coordinator

MB Rocks Visiting Poet: U.S. Poet Laureate, Tracy K. Smith PA MBe There Feeding our thespians before every performance Chaperoning middle school dances

Class Representatives

PA Speaker: Chris Herren

HOPE STREET

Lower School Coordinators: Deanna Lund, Lauren Miller Angela Bailey, Second Daniela Hutchinson, Nursery Caylen Sepe, Third Dylan Greene, Nursery Anu Yeransian, Third Luciana Greene, Nursery Sky Beauregard, Fourth Krista Quattrocchi, Pre-Primary Norie Sherman, Fourth Jenna Rose, Pre-Primary Kirsten King, Fourth Alicia Grasfeder, Kindergarten Vanessa Lombardi, Fifth Annie Schwartz, Kindergarten Sandra Shuster, Fifth Nicole Dreyer-Gavin, First Sara Varley, Fifth Lauren Pelletier, First Kelly Taylor, Fifth Michelle Gario, Second

PA Speaker: Toby Morse

Middle School Coordinators: Jessica d’Entremont, Diane Stratton Michelle D’Alessandro, Seventh Lisa Weinberg, Sixth Maria Plante, Seventh Rebecca Rubin, Sixth Elizabeth Kirk, Eighth Drew Moran, Sixth Sheila Poku, Eighth Samantha Faria, Sixth Kerry Sweeney, Eighth Julie Berry, Seventh Diane Erickson, Eighth Michelle Petrarca, Seventh Upper School Coordinators: Andrea Daniels, Antonia Zubiago Vanda Blinn, Eleventh Wendi Metters, Ninth Cheryl Blazar, Eleventh Julia Atwood, Ninth Sue Stallman, Twelfth Melissa Ruhl, Ninth Sia Panichas, Twelfth Nina Kizekai, Ninth Jen Yates, Twelfth Lynn Kuzneski, Tenth Charlene Cassese, Twelfth Shari Elice, Tenth Stephanie Fawcett, Twelfth Anne Ludes, Tenth Donna Voccola, Twelfth Ayla Cevik, Eleventh

Thank you for being TRUE BLUE! 8 | annual report 2017-18

The Moses Brown Fund phonathon volunteers PA MB Book Festival PA Ladies’ Night Out

Volunteering in the cafeteria

Providing food for athletic team banquets Post-concert and recital refreshments Upper school parent orientation Setting up for the all-school art show PA All-school PA meetings


parent partnership

Head of School Residence PA New parent reception

Former college and professional basketball star Chris Herren (center) spoke to middle and upper school students, sharing his 14-year struggle with drug and alcohol addiction. His direct and honest presentation was aimed at bringing awareness to the dangers of substance abuse and helping to create a sober culture within schools.

Countless oranges, Gatorade, and snacks for our student athletes

LS classroom volunteers Open House and Admissions volunteers PA Expo

Musician and motivational speaker Toby Morse (of the punk rock band H20, bottom) spoke to middle and upper school students, sharing his message of positive thinking/self-determination, staying true to yourself, living free of alcohol and drugs, and ending racism.

PA Monthly divisional meetings

PA Year-end celebrations for 5th, 8th, and 12th Grade

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PA Teacher Appreciation Days

Off Campus

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PA Class potlucks Field trip chaperones

Parents’ Association volunteers at Expo, MB’s fall open house. annual report 2017-18 | 9


It all started in 2012-13, with a 229-year tradition of educational excellence extended by a visionary head of school leading 42 Discernment Dialogues, with 1,000 community members, resulting in 1 vision for the future of education, with 3 guiding principles, our North Stars: Expert thinking Global stewardship Ethical leadership, and 9 distinct priorities, that inspired a $65.23 million campaign, with 3,400 contributors, who have given

$53.6 million, resulting in 60,000 sq. ft. of new facilities 70% growth in endowment (now $37m+) 400 students on TRIPs each year 2X more funding for faculty training COUNTLESS new opportunities for students to be creative problem solvers: Entrepreneurship & Social Innovation, Project-Based Learning, Engineering & Design, Coding, and 2X more students on scholarship


MB Believes A CAMPAIGN FOR LEARNING, PEOPLE, AND PLACE

A Vision Becoming Reality Time passes quickly in a school, and as we report on the last year at Moses Brown I find myself wanting to look back just a bit farther. This year marks my tenth as MB’s Head of School. Arriving in the summer of 2009, I recall having butterflies in my stomach (much like everyone on their first day of school). How could I help MB honor its remarkable past while embracing an exciting future? What is the best model for education in the information-rich, globally-interconnected 21st century? And how could we prepare the school for the next 200+ years of its history? These were just a few of the big questions that kept me up at night. Fortunately, the first thing I learned at MB is that the school has always been far-sighted, nimble at adapting to changing times while not losing sight of its fundamental values. The second thing I learned is that MB is blessed with really creative people— students, parents, faculty, staff, and alumni—and when I asked for input about the future of the school, the response was resounding and innovative. In October of 2013, we published MB Believes: a Vision For Learning, People, and Place, a strategic plan that emerged from a yearlong, communitywide series of Discernment Dialogues with 1,000 participants, including numerous business and educational leaders. In MB Believes, we define the skills and values we think students will need to be successful in a rapidly changing world, e.g., creative problem-solving (what we call Expert Thinking), Global Awareness, and Ethical Leadership. And we identify a number of big, interconnected projects designed to create the conditions—programmatic, demographic, financial, and physical—for fostering those traits in our students. It was a wildly ambitious plan and now, five years into its implementation, we’ve made a series of investments that have dramatically enhanced the learning, people, and places of MB. In the pages that follow, we provide a five-year overview

of the transformational progress we’ve made as we also focus in on specific growth in 2017-18. Our time-tested values and liberal arts curriculum, coupled with the new programs and facilities highlighted in these pages, reflect a holistic and powerful model for 21st-century education. We seek to provide foundational knowledge, skills, and experiences to help students explore a complicated world from multiple perspectives. We value experiential learning, where students work in teams to solve authentic problems that don’t have simple yes-or-no answers. We honor humankind’s accumulated wisdom and literature, even while pushing students to become conversant with emergent fields like engineering and design, coding, and entrepreneurship. And throughout, Quaker values provide an animating sense of purpose, which is to inspire the rising generation to make the world a better place. Thanks to MB Believes, I believe that Moses Brown’s graduates are truly prepared for success in today’s world. These investments in MB’s future have been fueled by nearly $54 million in fundraising, an unprecedented amount for our school (indeed for any N-12 school in Rhode Island). And just before Thanksgiving, we announced two new historic commitments. Inspired by our progress to date, two anonymous donors have now given a total of $8.9 million, including a $3 million lead gift to the lower school project and the largest scholarship endowment gift in school history! Their generosity ensures that our long-held dream of renovating the lower school becomes reality, and— with a dollar-for-dollar matching challenge—that we reach our $15 million scholarship goal. More broadly, our $65 million campaign objective is within reach. Now ten years into my tenure at MB, I still have those butterflies in my stomach. But they’re ones of excitement, as we take a great school to even greater heights. Matt Glendinning, Head of School

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Learning Moses Brown sparks a hunger for learning, nurtures it with breadth and rigor, and fosters a lifetime habit of inquiry and reflection.

What happened?

Five-year Progress Report: The Expert Thinking Model enriches the school’s liberal arts curriculum with an explicit focus on applied and experiential learning, including: • School-wide adoption of Project-Based Learning (PBL) • All-school Engineering & Design program • Program in Entrepreneurship & Social Innovation • MB Immersion TRIPs (Travel, Research, & Immersion Programs) promote exploration of diverse cultures and global perspectives, with 400+ students of all ages now traveling annually to places like: • Cuba, Nepal, Kenya, the Hague, Dominican Republic, Galapagos Islands, China, Spain, Italy, Colorado, the White Mountains, Wyoming, Washington, D.C., and New York City School-wide coding and robotics highlights include: • Among first schools in the country to offer AP Computer Science Principles • New Python offering and coding with Microbits in Geometry • Middle & upper school VEX Robotics clubs; US qualified for and competed in world championships! • Seventh grade programming with Spheros

Upper School Vex Robotics traveled to Kentucky in April to compete in the World Championships with over 600 teams!

• Lower school coding with Creatorverse, Cargo-Bot, Code-apillar, Dot & Dash, and Lego robotics kits Enhanced Math program focused on computational thinking: • Expanded differentiated learning; supports skill-building and additional challenge • Summer Algebra I and Geometry classes for rising ninth graders who wish to accelerate in math. • Math clubs/teams, competitions, and enrichment opportunities in all divisions • Added Multi-variable Calculus and multi-level AP Physics

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We believe in learning through experience and in applying knowledge to solve real problems.


Expert Thinking Model TRIps (Travel, Research, and Immersion Programs) As a part of their interdisciplinary social studies curriculum, third graders learned the history behind the first Thanksgiving, and studied the relationship between the Wampanoags and the English colonists. They worked with Save The Bay to learn about the land Native Americans would have worked, and then worked together to raise up a cage meant to capture sea creatures and identified them using various resources.

We believe in bringing our classrooms to the world and the world to our classrooms.

EXPERT THINKING MODEL

TRIPS

$1,566,848 raised / $1.5 million goal

$892,225 raised / $4 million goal

What Happened? Last year...

What Happened? Last year...

• 450 students in all three-divisions engaged in Engineering & Design projects in year one of the Y-Lab • 100 upper school students engaged in coding and engineering courses • Launched program in Entrepreneurship & Social Innovation, including a new year-long Freshman experience (Orientation Trip, Freshman Studies focus, Immersion) and two sections of Economics of Social Innovation elective • Added four programming workshops for all 7th-grade students with Spheros, and Girls Who Code club for middle school girls • Extended lower school programming to pre-primary and kindergarten using Kids First Coding & Robotics by Thames and Kosmos. • Continued growth of upper-level math and science courses, adding: AP Computer Science (programming in Java), Python Programming with Discrete Math, and AP Physics 2 • 39 students participating in middle and upper school VEX robotics teams in new Y-lab home; US team qualified for the World Championship in Louisville, Kentucky in April 2018

• 364 students and 47 faculty participated in overnight TRIPs: Upper school 124 (31%) Middle school 172 (100%) Lower school 68 (38%) • With 6 international, 3 domestic, and 5 local overnight TRIPs, Moses Brown students had over 14 options to choose from: • INTERNATIONAL Galapagos Dominican Republic Berlin/Amsterdam • DOMESTIC White Mountains: Washington D.C.:

Nepal Italy China Third grade Fifth grade Civil Rights Trip US Literature of War class

• LOCAL / REGIONAL Service Retreat (Providence, R.I.) MS Team Trips x3 (New Hampshire and Connecticut) Fourth grade Nature’s Classroom (Charlestown, R.I.)

• 2018 Rhode Island High School Ethics Bowl state champions

annual report 2017-18 | 13


People As a Friends school, everything we do reflects the idea that we each have an Inner Light and are all uniquely valuable. Our charge is to cultivate that Light in children, helping them grow into adults who are intelligent, compassionate, and ethical.

What happened?

Five-year Progress Report: The new Russell H. Carpenter ’59 Program in Teaching Excellence has: • Doubled the funding annually available for faculty professional development and travel • Created new teacher leadership opportunities, incentivizing faculty as change agents • Supported a new evaluation process for faculty, including a cohort model for veteran teachers (year-long process of growth and evaluation every 5 years) • Funded faculty development of two new cross-disciplinary, team-taught electives offered each year Dramatic expansion in scholarship funding ensures the quality and enhanced socioeconomic and racial diversity of the student body (statistics through 18-19 school year): • Nearly $10 million raised in new endowed scholarship funding • 130% increase in the scholarship budget since 2008-09 to $4.4 million • 82% increase in the number of students receiving scholarship support since 2008-09 (now 215 or 29% of student body) • 50% increase in students of color The Moses Brown Fund: • Annual giving has increased by nearly 30% over the past five years to almost $1.3 million annually • Over the past five years, 2,797 contributors to The Moses Brown Fund have given $7.08 million. Funds are immediately invested in these enduring priorities: • Teaching, technology, and the academic program • Scholarships • Athletics, the arts, and Friends education • Our historic campus

14 | annual report 2017-18

“I approach my work as a history teacher with a concern for the enduring issues of conflict, power, and inequality, and have long been intrigued by the idea of learning from history.” Upper school humanities teacher Jennifer Stewart received a Fulbright Distinguished Award in Teaching in the fall of 2017. She will use her semester abroad to study humanities instruction in Finland. Jennifer is interested in learning how Finnish schools achieve top international academic performance with low- to nohomework strategies.

We believe in inspiring mentors who foster passion and curiosity.


World-Class Teaching

Open access (scholarship)

The Moses Brown Fund

WORLD-CLASS TEACHING

OPEN ACCESS

$4,989,742 raised / $3.5 million goal

$9,883,248 raised / $15 million goal

What Happened? Last year...

What Happened? Last year...

• Invested more than $180,000 in the ongoing training, education, and professional growth of MB faculty.

• Highest-ever level of student support: 206 children receiving scholarship representing 28% of the student body (up from 118 students and 15% of student body in 2008-09).

• More than 38 faculty members engaged in significant professional development in the summer of 2018. Areas of study included: learning and the brain, strategies to support executive function challenges in math education, development of AP Music Theory and visual art courses, school safety, media literacy, women and educational leadership, foreign language instruction: proficiency through reading, storytelling and interpretive speaking, and the upper school immersion program.

• A record $4.3 million awarded in scholarship, with an average award of $20,368 (US tuition was $35,555). • Students of color represented 25% of the student body. • 72% of all applicants for 2017-18 requested scholarship support (up from 43% in 2007-08). • Moses Brown’s student body was 50% boys and 50% girls, including 80 alumni children and 19 Quakers.

• 15 faculty members participated in MB’s unique Teacher Cohort Program that encourages ongoing growth for veteran faculty. Year-long projects included: development of a science curriculum for nursery, pre-primary, and kindergarten students; training on the creation of a Transition to College program; design of a new English senior elective course; creation of a podcast; and work to improve climate for girls in STEM programs. • Hosted Columbia University Teachers College writing experts at MB to work with lower school faculty.

MOSES BROWN FUND $7,083,047 raised over 5 years What Happened? Last year... • The Moses Brown Fund raised $1,286,519, a 3% increase and new record for the fourth straight year! • Earned the full $75,000 2:1 matching challenge that was offered by an anonymous donor in the last week of the fiscal year. • Overall donors: 1,414 • Alumni donors: 698 • Current families: 304 • Moses Brown was also fortunate to have • 625 Grove members (five consecutive years of giving) • 449 Front Circle members (gifts of $1,000+)

annual report 2017-18 | 15


place From the Front Circle to the Studio of the Three Oaks, from Alumni Hall to the Grove, a strong sense of place has been part of the MB experience for over 230 years. We seek to honor our past and support a bold vision for the future by developing new teaching spaces that foster creativity, problem solving, and collaborative learning.

What happened? Five-year Progress Report: 60,000-sq.-ft. of new and upgraded facilities have transformed Moses Brown’s physical infrastructure and support for student learning. Woodman Family Community & Performance Center Complete renovation of Walter Jones Library Y-Lab: 5,000-sq.-ft. engineering and maker space Gorgi Family Squash & Education Center

We believe in coming together to learn, play, perform, and celebrate.

Renovated McCullough Baseball Field Renovated Wasserman Soccer Field Renovated Cooper Tennis Courts New high-efficiency central heat plant for financial and environmental sustainability

A Facility Like No Other On December 9, 2017, Moses Brown and SquashBusters opened the doors on a facility unlike any in the world. The Gorgi Family Squash & Education Center is named in honor of Habib ’74 and Susan Gorgi and their four children, all Moses Brown graduates and squash players— Kate ’08, Joe ’10, Alex ’12, and Maddie ’17. The Gorgi Center features 12 squash courts, classrooms, study space, changing and locker facilities, and a pro shop. This unique building is now home for MB’s squash teams; the Nicol Squash Club; and the Rhode Island chapter of SquashBusters, an organization that uses squash and academic achievement to improve the education and life outcomes of underserved children. In January 2018, SquashBusters welcomed its first class of 26 sixth graders from DelSesto Middle School in Providence. The Nicol Squash Club offers affordable public memberships and elite-level coaching to newcomers and experts alike and has attracted over 300 members from the local community. The club is operated and directed by five-time world champion Peter Nicol with defending seven-time Irish national champion Arthur Gaskin as the resident pro. 16 | annual report 2017-18


Woodman family Community & performance center young learners center

y-lab

gorgi family squash & education center

WOODMAN CENTER

Y–LAB

$13,586,502 raised / $17.5 million goal

$1,242,069 raised / $1.5 million goal

What Happened? Last year...

What Happened? Last year...

• 47 classes and presentations

• Official opening and dedication on November 8, 2017.

• 22 Meetings for Worship

• Over 25% of MB faculty brought their students into the Y-Lab for coursework and special projects.

• 6 major MB alumni and parent events: • MBe There, True Blue, Reunion, Grandparents Day, Baccalaureate, Senior Dinner • 19 Student Performances and events, including: • SPAF (Student Performing Arts Festival), MS Talent Show, MB Rocks, MBinRep: The Crucible and Twelfth Night, Winter & Spring Music Concerts, LS Musical: Annie, Kids, MS Musical: Legally Blonde, Jr., LS Holiday Sing, Versatones, US Spring Musical: Les Misérables • 16 major public events, including: • U.S. Poet Laureate Tracy K. Smith, Mixed Magic Theater’s Live Reading of MLK’s ‘Letter from Birmingham City Jail,’ First Works: Manual Cinema: Lula Del Ray, RISE Up Singing Again: Hope and Strength (Community Concert to Benefit Refugees), First Works: Chick Corea & Steve Gadd, AISNE Student of Color Conference

• Over 750+ classes, presentations, and academic activities. • 450+ students engaged in significant project work in the Y-Lab, including every lower and middle school student and over 150 upper schoolers. • Hosted extensive after-school and co-curricular programs, including upper and middle school VEX robotics teams and the lower school Design Squad (MB After 3). • Used for five weeks during the summer of 2018 for weeklong camps including: Junior Engineers, Digital Fabrication and Design, and Down City Design: Inventors Studio.

GORGI SQUASH CENTER $6,571,409 raised / $7.87 million goal What Happened? Last year... • Official opening and dedication on December 9, 2017.

YOUNG LEARNERS CENTER $3,015,323 raised / $5.6 million goal See page 20 for exciting news on the Lower School Project

• 60+ upper school students competed in the MB Squash programs (up from 22 last year); weekly practice time doubled. • 23 MB lower school students were introduced to squash in a new MB After 3 program. • Revenue from the club fully funded operating expenses in the first six months.

annual report 2017-18 | 17


open access Moses Brown has put increased scholarship funding at the center of its vision so that we can continue to attract the most talented and diverse students. We believe that enhancing access to MB will allow us to enroll the best minds and expose our students to the broadest range of perspectives, thereby strengthening the educational experience for our entire community.

$3.5m Scholarship Challenge!

Every dollar given to scholarship is matched As part of an historic $5 million gift, an anonymous donor has made the largest scholarship pledge in school history—$3.5 million. This commitment was made as a dollar-for-dollar matching challenge to the MB community. • Every dollar given to scholarship has double the impact. • We must raise $3.5 million to “earn” the $3.5 million in matching challenge funds. • That’s a potential $7 million in new scholarship funds for MB! The annual income from that level of endowment would allow 15 new students to attend MB each year, in perpetuity (at the current average scholarship of $20,315). All new gifts, multi-year pledges, and documented planned gifts (bequests, charitable annuities and remainder trusts, etc.) made after Nov. 19, 2018 earn matching scholarship funds for MB.

Peter ’82 and Laura Ramsden P’16 ’19: The Ramsden Family Endowed Scholarship In 1951, a 13-year-old boy from a working-class family in the Fairlawn neighborhood of Pawtucket received a full scholarship to attend Phillips Exeter Academy. That scholarship not only afforded Dick Ramsden a top-notch secondary education but it launched him on a path to attend Brown University and then Harvard Business School. He went on to pursue a career in higher education and finance and was able to support his own three children in their pursuit of higher education and rewarding careers, the youngest of whom is Peter Ramsden ’82, parent to Haley ’16 and Liza ’19. In recognition of how scholarship can be life-changing in the trajectory of a family over generations, Peter and his wife Laura joined the MB Believes campaign by establishing the Ramsden Family Scholarship in 2018. In making this commitment to MB, Peter humbly offered; “I feel very fortunate and proud to have a Moses Brown education and I know without the generosity of a scholarship for my father nearly 70 years ago, it may have never come to be. Laura and I sincerely hope this scholarship will be equally beneficial and impactful for future MB graduates and their children.” 18 | annual report 2017-18


We believe in best minds engaging with broadest perspectives.

How You Can Help

Abby Gerrish ’20: Passion and Dedication Moses Brown has increased its commitment to scholarship support, awarding financial aid to twice as many students as 10 years ago. One of these exceptional students is Abby Gerrish ’20, who has seized every opportunity— academic, athletic, and extra-curricular— and helped to build community. “‘Passion’ and ‘dedication’ are the first words that come to mind when I think of Abby,” says Kate Turner, Abby’s advisor. “She isn’t afraid of a challenge, and is dedicated to doing the best she can, seeking understanding rather than simply good grades. In class, she’s an active participant, clearly enjoying the material and applying it to her life. Also,” Kate adds, “aside from her passion for academics, Abby is a fiercely loyal friend and sister. It’s heart-warming to see her lift up her peers, especially her sister who is a freshman this year. Students like Abby are so valuable to our community.” Abby manages a rigorous course load and varsity athletic schedule as captain and MVP of Cross Country and as a member of the Track & Field team. She is also widely recognized for her leadership roles on the Disciplinary Committee and Environmental Council. “When I first joined the MB community in the

Scholarship Challenge Giving Opportunities

seventh grade, I recognized the benefits of its rigorous, competitive atmosphere built upon a foundation of compassionate teaching,” she says. “I feel that it is my responsibility to push myself, given that I’m surrounded by amazing teachers who do so much for me.”

Endowment gifts and pledges of all sizes are welcome: • Every gift is doubled by earning

challenge dollars (up to $3.5M) • Contributions are added to MB’s

endowed scholarship fund $25,000+ minimum gift level for a named endowed scholarship (honor your family or someone important to your MB experience in perpetuity)*

Running is just one of Abby’s outdoor passions. She took part in MB’s Galapagos Islands TRIP last summer and loves Ornithology: “Mr. Aaronian brings us out of the classroom and into the field to observe and identify birds in nature. The level at which we apply classroom learning to the real world is beyond any course I’ve ever taken.” She hopes to carry out fieldwork as a biologist or conservationist. “I’d love to someday live in close proximity to a national park or wildlife refuge and maintain a sustainable lifestyle, growing food, using solar and wind power, and not asking from the land more than I can give in return. I want to do what I love in a place that I love.”

Scholarship @ MB: Last 10 Years Dramatic Prog re ss, Growing De mand

W it h 70%+ of new appl icant families requesting scho larshi p, increased funding is essent ial to sustaining the size and qual it y of the st udent body.

$500,000 Endows the average scholarship award ($20,315) in perpetuity* $900,000 Endows a full tuition scholarship in perpetuity* * MB welcomes 3-5 year pledges and documented planned gifts (bequests, charitable annuities and remainder trusts, etc.), which count toward meeting the challenge. To learn more or to explore specific giving opportunities, please contact Asst. Head of School Ron Dalgliesh P’21 at (401) 8317350 x111 or rdalgliesh@mosesbrown.org

2008-09 vs 20 18-19

Students Receiving Sch

olarship

118

Percent of applicants requesting scholarship

215

82% increase! Average Award

54% 70% 2008-09

2018-19

Percent of students on scholarship

$15,975

15%

$20,315

2008-09

29% 2018-19

Annual Scholarship Bu

$1.89 m

$4.36 m

dget

130%

report 2017-18 | 19 incrannual ease!


young learners center The Young Learners Center is a renovation and expansion to MB’s lower school designed to support the way children learn in the 21st century. By clustering together the more ‘hands-on’ disciplines— science, art, music, and library—the project will promote experiential and interdisciplinary learning.

$3M Lead Gift Propels Lower School Project

$2.59 Million Still Needed

• As part of an historic $3.9 million commitment, an anonymous donor recently made the largest contribution to elementary education in MB history – the $3 million lead gift to the lower school project. • An extensive renovation and expansion of the lower school is a core priority of MB Believes: A Campaign for Learning, People, and Place. • With the lead gift in place, the architectural design process will accelerate through the winter and spring of 2019. • The lower school project campaign fundraising goal is $5.6 million. • $2.59 million in new gifts and pledges are needed to complete fundraising and begin construction.

Getting to Know OJ OJ Martí brings a wealth of educational leadership experience to his role as Head of Lower School (as of July 1, 2018). After earning his M.Ed. at the University of Pennsylvania while teaching high school math, he joined the leadership team at Teach for America and, most recently, was the founding Head of Blackstone Valley Prep Mayoral Academy middle school in Central Falls, R.I. But his experience is only part of what makes OJ a great match for MB. A dynamic visionary, he is passionately committed to a demanding and engaging academic program, and the differentiated instruction that meets the needs of all students. He values and develops top-quality teachers and nurtures the home/school partnership that is so central to our culture. But his self-described ‘north star’ is his passion for engaging with and supporting the educational journey of young children, and he’s been very focused on getting to know and work with students across the lower school. In just a short time at MB, OJ has achieved a great deal. He’s designed and fostered a student support team that works to both challenge and provide skill-building for all lower school learners. He’s focused meetings with classroom teaching teams on both developing curriculum and the experience of students, with particular attention to social-emotional wellness. Three mornings a week, all lower school faculty gather for a “huddle” before school to celebrate successes, share experiences and ideas, and strengthen adult community. OJ has focused the formal after-school faculty meetings on professional growth and development. And he’s now leading a process with Matt Glendinning to develop plans for a revitalized lower school facility. Clearly, OJ doesn’t believe in easing into a new job! 20 | annual report 2017-18


We believe in the wondrous experiences of young learners and the inspired spaces that propel them.

How You Can Help Lower School Project Giving Opportunities Consider a 3-5 year pledge to help reach our $5.6 million goal and get the project underway. Gifts of all sizes are welcome and encouraged!

Leading Big Changes in Lower School

A variety of attractive naming opportunities will be available, ranging from $25,000 to $1 million. • Honor or remember your family,

“The lower school program has grown dramatically in the past few years,” says Head of Lower School OJ Martí, “but our facility isn’t up to the level of our program.” Redesigned STEM curricula have lower schoolers tackling sophisticated material at a young age. A student support team ensures that all children have access to skill-building and accelerated learning as needed, and a rich social-emotional learning program keeps Friends values and development of the whole child at the center of our work. However, the lower school building isn’t quite as cutting-edge as the curriculum and teaching. Recently, an anonymous donor offered the school a lead gift of $3 million for a major lower school renovation. This gift has inspired the community to dream about the ideal 21st-century elementary education environment. “We want to preserve what’s great about

the lower school,” says OJ, “like the indoor play areas that foster collaboration and relationship-building. But there are also many ways that new spaces can create dynamic learning opportunities.” Bringing library, art, and science back into the lower school building can increase interdisciplinary, multi-modal learning. And flexible new early childhood education spaces will create a more dynamic environment for MB’s youngest learners. Enhanced community areas are also essential. “Having a community space lets children practice communicating what they know,” says OJ, “and develop confidence as public speakers and clarity as presenters. These are critically important life skills for the 21st century.” With the $3 million lead gift in place, the design process will accelerate in the months ahead to distill community input and our early visioning into detailed architectural plans.

a beloved family member, or treasured friend. • Honor or remember one of MB’s

iconic elementary educators, such as former Head of Lower School and faculty member Connie Raymond, who was at MB from 1974-2011.

To learn more or to explore specific giving opportunities, please contact Asst. Head of School Ron Dalgliesh P’21 at (401) 831-7350 x111 or rdalgliesh@mosesbrown.org.

Imagine what’s possible for the lower school Think of all the ways the Woodman Family Community & Performance Center, the Jones Library renovation, the Y-Lab, and the Gorgi Family Squash & Education Center have transformed the MB experience. Do you remember when those projects were just ideas? Now, imagine all that is possible for elementary education at MB as we bring the same proven ability to deliver thoughtful, cutting-edge design to our lower school!

annual report 2017-18 | 21


Moses Brown Thanks You


Our community thrives because so many people contribute in so many ways: volunteering time, sharing expertise, and supporting the school financially. When we each do what we can, the results are dazzling. In the following pages, we thank every one of last year’s contributors to MB Believes: A Campaign for Learning, People, and Place, listed according to their roles in the 2017-18 school year.


The Grove

The Front Circle

MB’s most loyal contributors

MB’s annual leadership contributors

Moses Brown School’s mission is focused on inspiring the inner promise of each child.

The Front Circle recognizes those who have made gifts of $1,000 or more in the last fiscal year. Record levels of philanthropy to the priorities of MB Believes—including The Moses Brown Fund— are fueling a dynamic period of growth and innovation, extending and amplifying our 234-year traditions of ethical leadership and academic excellence. Levels of membership within The Front Circle are denoted by the key on each page.

In our work to build philanthropic support for today’s students and teachers, we also value the ways each person contributes to MB. With this values-centered approach in mind, we created The Grove to recognize our most loyal contributors. Members have given to MB for at least five consecutive years, starting on July 1, 2013 and ending June 30, 2018. Years of consecutive giving are noted in italicized numbers following the donor’s name. Based on the limitations of MB’s electronic donor records, 34 years of consecutive giving is the maximum we are able to confirm.

ALUMNI

Min ’85 and Lynne Ahn Arthur M. Aloisio ’80 9 Mark Richard Alperin ’76  33 Jillian Alpert ’85 Ramon ’48 and Elaine Alvarez Gabriel Kofi Amo ’05 Frohman ’80 and Kimberley Anderson  32 Jordan Matthew Anderson ’10 Kenneth C. Anderson ’64 6 Keith Andrade ’95 Chris Angelone ’90 and Jonna Mollicone Angelone ’90  9 Robert Anthony ’58 and Mary Ann Anthony Peter Arden ’55  33 Alexander Ardente ’08 Stanwood F. Armington ’60 Peter Hoyle Armstrong ’52  33 Mrs. Henry J. Arnold* R. Joseph Artabasy ’67 Philip G. Ayoub ’91 Boris Babic ’07 Christopher P. Baker ’70  33 Jesse R. Baker ’92  17 Norman ’56 and Ann Baker  32 Samuel H. Baker ’85  John E. Baldwin ’94  8 Robert Lee Baldwin ’56  32 William G. Ballaine ’63 6 Bradford and Coralee Barnes Philip Bernard Barr ’00 David ’72 and Alison Barrall 5 Charles ’67 and Allison Barrett 13 John T. Barrett, Jr. ’63 and Jane W. A. Barrett  13 William S. Barrett ’60 John C. Bartlett ’65 24 | annual report 2017-18

Thanks for being TRUE BLUE! We thrived in 2017-18 because so many people contributed in so many ways. TRUE BLUE recognizes: VOLUNTEER LEADERS: All those who invest so much of their time and talent in the life of our school (see pages 4-9) THE GROVE: MB’s most loyal contributors THE FRONT CIRCLE: MB’s annual leadership contributors

Ralph G. Barton ’57 18 Michael W. Bate ’54 Charles ’47 and Charlotte Bearse 13 Kathryn E. Beattie ’83 Charles Bechtel ’01  Douglas M. Behrendt ’55 Allan R. Bellows ’43 10 B. Michael Beneduce ’12 Carina Huynh Benningfield ’87 Neil ’86 and Randi-Beth Beranbaum  31 Rhonda Clement Bergeron ’90 Julie Thomas Berry ’87 and Seth Berry Angelo ’86 and Mari Bianco  9 Talman Bigelow ’13 Kimberly Hurley Birmingham ’91 and Bill Birmingham 8

Carl Bogus ’66 and Cynthia Giles  Margaret-Mary Boitano ’83 Samantha ’85 and John Bradshaw Matthew G. Brady ’08 William ’60 and Geraldine Brehm Robert ’46 and Carol Breslin 20 David Bresnahan-McRae ’08 James ’81 and Mary Briden 32 Benjamin Brier ’00 Jacob N. Brier ’98 Jeffrey ’71 and Jessica Brier 7 Francis A. Brooks ’51 9 Clifford W. Brown ’60 33 James ’76 and Kendall Brown 20 Marie Ewens Brown ’95 Scott ’78 and Jill Brown Stephen G. Brown ’79 16

$1,286,519

A MOSES BROWN FUND RECORD! F. Steele Blackall III ’42* 33 Frederick S. Blackall ’68 Charles A. Blake ’61 7 Fred Blakeman ’52 18 Carolyn Richins Blanks ’78 13 Philip E. Blazar ’82 Anna H. Bliss ’94 John Bloom ’66 and Joan Caldarera Kenneth A. Bloom ’78 9 C. Perry Blossom ’82  8 Robin Dunn Blossom ’80  Stephen Blough ’75 and Sally Locksley  Leah E. Boch ’05 Emily Low Boenning ’81  33 David M. Boghossian ’74  5 Paul O. Boghossian ’72  5

Taylor Gifford Brown ’03 6 Arthur ’49 and Joan Brunner Alexis Demetrakas Buchholz ’83 Jeffrey Dennis Buckler ’01 and Natasha Buckler 8 Steven ’70 and Wendy Buckler James C. Bulman ’65 12 Bernard ’84 and Heidi Buonanno  30 Bernard V. Buonanno, Jr. ’55  18 Vincent J. Buonanno ’61  9 Dr. and Mrs. Richard I. Burton ’54  Blake Cady ’49 and Dorothy Ross 8 Steven ’76 and Mary Calabresi  13 Rachel Kaplan Caldwell ’02 Cara Camacho ’97 and Adam Hodge 9

Peter ’77 and Deborah Canning 9 Anthony ’78 and Lauralyn Cannistra 6 Scott A. Carlson ’73  Russell H. Carpenter ’59*  33 Elizabeth ’86 and David Carroll  29 Jennifer M. Casey ’81  12 Martin Macdermott Cassidy ’51  33 Mark Anthony Castro ’01 8 Richard Chadwell ’51 and Wanda Lincoln  6 Richard ’49 and Inge Chafee 13 David S. Chaffee ’60 17 Robert A. Chamberlain ’64 10 Thomas ’61 and Katherine Chappell  14 Adam Forman Chase ’81 7 Jeremy H. Chase ’66  30 Jon M. Chase ’64 Pamela Fishman Cianci ’91 William Howard Claflin ’46  33 Thomas ’60 and Nancy Clark John W. Cocroft ’62 Cheryl Schadone Cohen ’81 7 F. Sessions Cole ’65 and Patricia Cole 6 Joseph J. Colello ’76 13 Bradford D. Coleman ’71 12 Lodowick Collins ’65 and Marjorie Jackson 33 Thomas W. Colomb ’90  13 Christine Rieger Conklin ’83 John F. Conley ’85 Alicia M. Conte ’87 Andrew S. Cooney ’80 Dean G. Copans ’94 Kenneth G. Copans ’64 Christine Murphy Costello ’93  9 Thomas J. Cotter ’72 Thomas Cotter ’82 and Kerri Mather Alexander D. Crary ’66 7


Ralph R. Crosby ’48 33 Richard ’55 and Carolyn Curtis 32 Jessica Howland d’Entremont ’93 and Jeffrey d’Entremont 15 Andrew R. J. D’Uva ’86  13 Albie Dahlberg ’87 and Hilary Fagan  18 Lindsay Sara Dallman ’02 Michael Dennis Dallman ’98 Samuel Pierce Daly ’02 Howard H. Dana ’58 9 Murray ’72 and Judith Danforth  32 Jeffrey Stephan Darman ’61 7 Stephen Sewell Dashef ’59 Lyman A. Davenport ’60  Joel P. Davidsen ’59  Geoffrey ’65 and Lisa Davis Abigail DeBlois ’10 Charles ’78 and Araxie DeBlois 19 Emily Goff Decker ’87 Stephen ’79 and Julie DeLeo  10 George K. Demopulos ’83 Bruce ’46 and Elizabeth Derbyshire Mr. and Mrs. Ralph C. Derbyshire ’74  Richard G. Derbyshire ’76 6 Daniel O. DeVlieg ’60 Emma A. H. Dickson ’12 Sara B. Dickson ’05 Stephen J. DiGianfilippo ’85 Robert ’64 and Ellen DiLibero 33 Lauren Barry DiSarno ’90  Meredith ’96 and Christopher Donato  Richard ’62 and Patricia Donovon  Charles ’85 and Sophie Dowling  John ’53 and Judith Dowling  6 Joe and Diana Dowling  Audrey Latham Dreibelbis ’90  25 Stephen Paul Dretler ’56  6 Stefano Dukcevich ’89 and Angela Serrano-Dukcevich  6 Kyle Sinclair Dungan ’04 8 Mr. Richard S. Dunphy ’51 Donald ’55 and Bonnie Dwares  33 Peter Lance Dwares ’62  6 Joseph J. Dziczek ’72 6 Nathaniel Cabot Earle ’97 David Worthington Edwards ’83 Alexander Egan ’03 and Celene Menschel  Eric Egan ’04 10 M. Isabella Califano Ehrlich ’91 Elizabeth Rose Ekeblad ’93 Glendon ’76 and Caroline Elliott Andrew ’53 and Carole Elsbree 10 Eugene V. Elsbree ’51  7 James ’71 and Robin Engle  33 Jason S. Engle ’98 Richard ’73 and Mary Engle  32 Gary A. Enos ’79 Stephen W. Ensign ’65 32 Walter G. Ensign ’61  John Arthur Epstein ’92 18 Harold L. Espo ’71 Mark ’67 and Noel Estes  33 Alonzo Maurice Etheredge ’81 George Evans ’66 and Sharon Piper 20 Barry Fain ’60 and Elaine Fain Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Fain ’65  8

625

MEMBERS OF

Edward V. Famiglietti ’61 18 Georgia Hunter Farinholt ’96 9 Malcolm Farmer ’57 16 Walter E. Farnam ’59  33 William Colby Farnham ’15 Robert W. Farwell ’45 32 Lloyd J. Feinberg ’61 6 Christopher A. Ferri ’05  Noel Macdonald Field ’52  15 Victor J. Field ’59 John ’79 and Gretchen Filoon 9 Ted ’83 and Lisa Fischer  33 Briana Leigh Fishbein ’00 Matthew ’02 and Jacqueline Fishbein  8 B. Mason Flemming ’55 11 Zachary P. Florin ’94 7 Catherine ’98 and Brett Ford Guy Forman ’85 Jeff Forman ’60 5 Jeremy R. G. Forsythe ’01 Jonathan Forsythe ’03 Peter van Rensselaer Franchot ’65 Hernan R. Franco ’60  Adam J. E. Freedman ’02 8 Jesse M. E. Freedman ’99 Robert ’68 and Debra Freedman Benjamin A. Froehlich ’08 9 Thomas A. Gagnon ’82 14 Gregory W. Gammell ’78 Kelly Carman Garner ’93 Peter C. Garzone ’64 Arnold P. Gass ’59 John ’68 and Pamela Gentile 15 George J. Georges ’70  9 Michael C. Geremia ’53 Jonathan R. Gershon ’90 Burrill M. Getman ’48 13 James L. Giddings III ’65 Seth K. Gifford ’39 Richard ’69 and Cate Gilbane 9 Thomas F. Gilbane ’93  Alexander W. Gim-Fain ’13 Rachel ’95 and Brian Gingold Lisa Rocchio ’85 and Vincent Giordano ’83 Earl C. Gladue ’71 32 Arthur ’59 and Mary Ellen Goddard  5 Thomas L. Godfray ’59 14 Laurens M. Goff ’90  7 Laurens Goff ’59 and Andrea Goff 11 Robert A. Goff ’78  5 Gary ’87 and Elizabeth Goldberg  17 Joshua A. Golden ’92 Seth Goldenberg ’03 Eugene ’82 and Melina Goldstein  33 Lauren Finkel Goloboy ’93 Jordan Elliot Goodman ’72 5 Sara ’82 and Ari Goodwin Robert Gordon-Fogelson ’08 Melissa Gordon ’09 Habib ’74 and Susan Gorgi  28 Katherine Thérèse Gorgi ’08 Youssef Habib Gorgi ’10

Carl ’66 and Barbara Johnson Amy Roebuck Jones ’79 7 Estate of Richard Jones ’42  THE GROVE William M. Jose ’78 6 David Gower ’87 Timothy K. Judge ’78 Richard ’53 and Ellen Gower Michael J. Julian ’82 Evan ’77 and Elizabeth Granoff Peter Karlson ’74 Todd M. Grant ’84 Steven E. Karlson ’78  10 William B. Greenough ’49 9 Matthew O. Karshis ’92 Phillip H. Gregory ’05 Stephen B. Kay ’52 Jamie T. Griffin ’00 Peter W. Keegan ’62 9 Stephen ’84 and Christine Griffin  Robert M. Keen ’71 Paul ’48 and Katherine Grimes 32 Robert E. Kellar ’49 18 Charles E. Gross ’68 8 Tobin ’88 and Margaret Kelly Calvert G. Groton ’78 Drew Kemalian ’59 32 James D. Gruetzmacher ’11 William W. Kenyon ’70  32 Ralph A. Guglielmi ’64 Jonathan Kern ’72 Michael A. Guild ’97  Lawrence B. Kilham ’59 32 Jane Gorham Gurzenda ’84 Peter H. Kilmarx ’79 19 Pamela Priestley Gyles ’04 Andrew A. Kling ’79 David ’56 and Susan Haffenreffer  Robert I. Knibb ’77  32 Allen Hall ’84 Romi Skolnik Knott ’85 11 David E. Hall ’68 Jane Knowles ’81 14 Nancy O. Han ’88 Kenneth G. ’49 and Sally Knowles 7 John P. Haran ’70 Lawrence G. Knowles, Jr. ’57 and Jeremy Siceloff Harkey ’99 Deborah Knowles 17 Isabel D. Harrington ’16 Michael ’59 and Sudie Knowles 15 Jane Sydney Harrington ’14 Olayinka S. Kolawole ’92 Terrence W. Harris ’90 9 Daniel M. Kortick ’85  14 Wendell G. Harris ’44 32 Jonathan Andrew Kosterlitz ’93 Peter Hartz ’71 7 Allison E. Krause ’02  14 Thatcher Harvey ’69 Judge Robert Krause ’63 and Lisa Perlman Harwood ’94 Marjorie Krause  34 Charles ’66 and Pamela Haskell  Uday N. Kumar ’90 14 Luke W. K. Hathaway ’04 Peter ’67 and Constance Lacaillade  32 Alison Spencer Hayes ’10 Walter Lada ’72 John Kenneth Hays ’02 Joseph H. Ladd ’60 Nathan Michael Heavers ’96 Ryan T. Laders ’11 Eric D. Hedison ’67 6 William Land ’79 and Margaret Seif Melissa Crouchley Hem ’85 30 William P. Lane ’86 Adrian ’58 and Phyllis Hendricks  32 William E. Lannigan ’69 13 Bruce A. Henkle ’60 Stephanie Burke LaShoto ’01 Kevin ’66 and Jacqueline Hill 16 Laraine L. Laudati ’71 6 Richard ’58 and Laura Hillman Frederick V. Lawrence ’56 Anthony ’55 and Carol Hindley Janet Dryfoos Hixson ’87 19 DONOR RECOGNITION KEY Geoffrey Hogan ’10 Matthew D. Holland ’01 THE GROVE Gordon Holmes ’56  32 Italicized numerals indicate Alan Holoff ’60 years of consecutive giving. Mark T. Hough ’67  John W. Houriet ’55 16 THE FRONT CIRCLE Jeremy L. Howard ’00  Blue and White Society Philip ’78 and Judith Howell 30 $1,000–$2,499 Kenneth A. Hoxsie ’68  32  Head’s Society Albert Shuyu Huang ’99 8 $2,500–$4,999 Alfred M. Hunt ’66  Jeffrey L. Husserl ’78  1784 Society David Husted ’86 and Denise Kmetzo $5,000–$9,999 Peter Iovino ’58 and Charlie Iovino   Cupola Society Mark A. Izeman ’82 $10,000–$24,999 David A. Izzi ’85 17 Samuel ’01 and Nina Jack  Founders’ Society E. Gardner Jacobs, Jr. ’43 33 $25,000 and above Sarah Jaffe ’83 and Richard Eisert 7 * Deceased Marc ’82 and Krista Janigian  Donald H. Jepson ’63 14 annual report 2017-18 | 25


Class of ’48 – 47% 70th Reunion

Top 5 REUNION CLASSES BY PARTICIPATION

Class of ’53 – 38% 65th Reunion

ALUMNI CONT.

Caroline Means Laye ’00 Julie R. LeBlanc ’02 Jason Blake Lees ’88 Brian Matthew Lehrman ’99 Christopher J. Lembo ’84 Douglas W. Lemire ’68 Jeremy Phelps Leon ’55 Tara ’93 and Robert Levine 8 Frederick ’55 and Carol Levinger  James C. Lewis ’70  8 William S. Lindblad ’45 33 Rachel Littman ’87 and Doug Davis  7 Frederick ’64 and Karen Livingston Stephen D. Loeber ’59 David ’60 and Toby London 7 William A. Lord ’73 Kristen L. Lorello ’00 Theodore Low ’44 and Kay Low William H. Lynch ’61  32 Geoffrey ’68 and Evelyn Lyon  R. Ian Maccini ’13 K. Roberton MacColl ’62 5 Patricia and Will Mackenzie ’56  33 Harold ’52 and Mary Mackinney  Hugh ’84 and Kristen Madden 14 Eric A. Magendantz ’85 Janice Calabresi Maggs ’78 Paul M. Mahoney ’61 32 Terrence W. Mahoney ’65 Miles M. Maiden ’76 David C. Makkers ’77 Maxwell Mann ’08 Peter B. Mann ’64 19 Robert ’69 and Judy Mann  33 Zachary Mann ’10 Laura A. Marasco ’94 Vincent A. Marcello ’60  Anthony A. Markward ’85 Douglas P. Marquis ’58  32 Greg Marsello ’73 and Melinda Foley-Marsello Keith W. Marsello ’78 Stephanie Sadwin Masiello ’85 Elizabeth Foulkes Masterson ’87 Richard A. Matthews ’50 Ross Mattis ’95 and Lauren Miller  6 Edmund Mauro ’50  David McCahan ’74 Timothy ’80 and Elizabeth McCahan  12 William C. McClaskey ’57 32 Ellis Singer McCue ’04 Zachary Devin McDonald ’96  Christopher K. McGrath ’95 7 Bruce G. McInnes ’55 Joseph ’51 and Barbara McKechnie 11 Daniel Joseph McKinnon ’94 6 Kristan Wynn McLaughlin ’85 26 | annual report 2017-18

Class of ’58 – 36% 60th Reunion

Micheal P. McLaughlin ’79 8 Charles ’69 and Victoria Means Morris B. Mellion ’57 32 Samuel ’74 and Ann Mencoff  32 Mr. and Mrs. Michael B. Messore, Jr. ’50 5 Frederick J. Metters ’84  13 Richard F. Meystre ’61 6 Lisa M. Michael ’85 Mark W. Miller ’85 Ralph B. Mills, Jr. ’54 Arthur ’51* and Martha Milot  32 Charles ’76 and Maria Milot  18 Liam David Miner ’09 Susan M. Minter ’79 David A. Mittleman ’85 Keith Monchik ’90 and Michelle Lefebvre  16 Nicole Elizabeth Monchik ’96  M. Willis Monroe ’04 and Hayley Monroe 8 Peter Charles Moon ’83 20 Matthew James Moore ’88 12 Margaret Moran ’08 Terrence ’76 and Patricia Moran  32 Ted ’87 and Drew Moran 5 Stephen H. Morris ’66 13 W. Gregory Morrison ’66 Karin Morse ’79 11 Peter Morse ’82 and Kathleen Van Gorden Morse Jan ’60 and Donna Moyer Robert N. Mumaw ’64 David W. Murdock ’93 David ’91 and Tracey Murphy  Mark D. Murphy ’78  Patrick M. Murphy ’85 25 Thomas F. Murphy ’68 Bill ’48 and Helene Myers 32 Thomas R. Myers ’77 23 Dylan V. Neel ’11 J. Geoff Nelson ’01 Brian A. Nichols ’83 Keith Frederick Nichols ’73 16 Kayla Saarinen Nicoletti ’15 Jack ’60 and Sharon Nixon Henry M. Nodarse ’79 Peter B. Noonan ’63  Richard ’51 and Martha Nourie  5 Mark H. Novick ’73 Courtney Collins Nowell ’89 Rebecca Shaw O’Hara ’99 Sean ’72 and Catherine O’Neil 6 John P. O’Neill ’86 5 Adam ’91 and Jennifer Olenn 5 Gary M. Orenstein ’86  Richard K. Oresman ’53 Michelle Berube Ozcan ’89 Joshua A. Padwa ’09 James M. Paisner ’66 23 Neath Pal ’81 and Beth Toolan 14

Class of ’83 – 33% 35th Reunion

George ’83 and Anastasia Panichas  Brian S. Panoff ’94  22 Alicia Rose Pari ’03 Gordon L. Parker III ’96 5 Gordon ’51 and Jane Parker 5 Matthew Hayes Parker ’00 11 Richard J. Parker ’78 11 Theodore ’04 and Heather Parker 7 Christopher ’74 and Amelia Parks Nancy A. Pasquariello ’91 Alexander H. Patch ’08 Stephen S. Patterson ’83  8 Jeffrey R. Peirce ’85  28 Lauren Angelone Pelletier ’94 and Corey Pelletier ’94 E. John Pennington ’63 Angela Perry ’88 Bruce H. Perry ’60  7 Joseph ’84 and Kara Petrosinelli  7 Philip Gerhardt Petteruti ’93 6 William ’48 and Virginia Pettine 8 R. Wendell Phillips, Jr. ’45* 14 Nadja Pisula-Litoff ’90 and Jim Pisula  Harmon A. Poole ’42 19 Vincent Porcaro ’83 and Southychanh Salinthone  25 Joss N. Poulton ’07 Eric V. Pozzo ’71 7 Beth Prairie ’89 and Todd Underwood  12

Class of ’68 – 31% 50th Reunion

Edward Ricci ’67 and Janet Ricci  Daniel ’51 and Carol Rice 14 John ’59 and Nina Richardson  Alexander Harmon Rickler ’09 David S. Ridderheim ’54 8 Lawrence G. Rider ’68 Robert A. Riesman ’72  9 James H. Rigney ’60 Schuyler Christen Riley ’89  15 Divya M. Roberts-Gaddipati ’16 John D. Roberts ’75 Arthur B. Robertshaw ’45  33 James ’59 and Esther Roitman 5 William J. Roland ’68 16 Marc ’90 and Tara Rollo 6 Andrew G. Romano ’11 Matthew John Romano ’14 William ’53 and Paula Rooks  Jennafer Rampone Rose ’01 and Brendon Rose Max P. Rosen ’77  13 Kenneth Rosenthal ’67  8 Rachel Gavin Rosenzweig ’01 Darrell ’65 and Susan Ross  34 Heather Handrigan Ross ’85 and Charles Ross 9 Peter ’70 and Rosemary Rotelli Andrew T. Rourke ’93 Ethan ’93 and Julie Ruby Brooke L. Rudnick ’98

8 NEW ENDOWED FUNDS Thomas Pranikoff ’80 Frederick L. Pratt ’49 11 Lisa Gordette Preston ’83 Stephanie Ogidan Preston ’97 17 Jeffrey C. Pritchard ’59 8 Matthew Przygoda ’03 Mia Leigh Puddington ’09  David B. Quigley ’90 Albert P. Quito ’74 Peter ’82 and Laura Ramsden  33 Peter Y. Rapelye ’65 17 David ’68 and Diana Raphael 15 Jonathan D. Rappoport ’93 6 Joshua M. Rappoport ’93 Sarah Goff Raslowsky ’81 Alexander Ratensky ’58 and Martha Sherman Kathleen Morse Reardon ’96 12 Jennifer L. Reavis ’13 6 Thomas L. Reed, Jr. ’65 William I. Reid, Jr. ’50 13 Alan Evan Reider ’67  14 Jeffrey ’70 and Sherri Reider Madison Ellen Rex ’10 Nathaniel Bronson Rex ’12 7

Christopher ’88 and Beth Runci Matthew ’64 and Laraine Runci Evan C. Ruppell ’06 Alison ’82 and Barry Russell 8 Miles Caswell Rutter ’04 Victoria L. Sadler Karlsen ’05 Thomas ’72 and Cynthia Sadler 6 Nicholas Sadovnikoff ’73 13 James R. Saklad ’62 8 Bob Samors ’77  6 Davis Swantz Sanford ’00 Gerrit ’45 and Elizabeth Sanford  32 Gregory Prescott Sanford ’67 Dawn Santana ’83 Livia M. Santiago-Rosado ’90 Cass Edward Sapir ’97 Francis B. Sargent ’48 10 Hannah Saris ’12 Leah Saris ’09 7 Daniel G. Sarles ’94  16 Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Sauber ’68  Kevin J. Savage ’87 14 Timothy Savage ’04 and Sarah Wu Herbert C. Sawyer ’60 7 T. Luke Scaramella ’91


Madeleine Rita Schaberg ’93  Gregory Schadone ’85 and Christina Schadone Peter John Scheidler ’96  6 James Schlothauer ’70 and Gretchen Ellis  33 Christine M. Schomer ’87 Frederic Schwartz ’60 and Jill Nevius Peter Scoliard ’75 and Sarah Sinclair  32 J. Parker Scott ’51* 10 John ’81 and Susan Scungio Richard Seiferheld ’57 Justin Walter Shaghalian ’96 12 Walter ’64 and Viviane Shaghalian 13 Jonathan R. Shank ’98  Henry D. Sharpe ’41  16 Craig S. C. Shaw ’48 32 Randolph ’78 and Carla Shaw 32 L. Peter ’75 and Pamela Sheehan 23 Adam ’84 and Mary Shepard  15 Allen G. Shepherd III ’54 14 Richard Sherman ’63 and Jane O’Farrell Thomas G. Sherman ’06 Brad Shipp ’83  31 Peter David Shore ’73 Jody Buonanno Shue ’87 Andrew B. Sides ’73 14 Inga Sidor ’88 and Richard Donovan Abigail B. Siegel ’17 Andrew ’01 and Jenna Silver 11 Nathaniel Haspel Silver ’06 Paul Silver ’68 and Katherine Haspel  32 Elizabeth F. Silverman ’90  7 Michael A. Silverstein ’51 Kaia Elizabeth Simmons ’09 Benjamin Joseph Simon ’02 Derek Simpson ’08 Robert V. Simpson ’63 Christopher A. Sinton ’63 John Slafsky ’83 and Amy Rosenberg Ted ’85 and Diane Slafsky Charles A. Sleicher ’42 Harry Sleicher ’43 and Ruth Sleicher Conal Smith ’06 Luiza Maria C. Smith ’08 Robert Ellis Smith ’58* Ronald Bancroft Smith ’57 Mr. and Mrs. Stephen C. Smith ’64 Stuart P. Smith ’51 13

Sara E. Snow ’98 Catherine B. Snyder ’97 Glenn ’85 and Cynthia Sparr Lawrence M. B. Specht ’86 Frederick W. Spencer ’71 11 Ahvi Spindell ’72 34 Hannah B. Stahl ’08 Charles ’47 and Joan Staples 32 Jonathan Carroll Stapleton ’66 Andrew G. Stead ’62 7 Joseph ’74 and Dawn Steim Benjamin H. Steingold ’16 Neal Steingold ’78 and Linda Kaplan  17 Sarah E. Steingold ’14 Rike Sterrett ’10 Burr Stewart ’71 9 William H. Stewart ’47 Jennifer Swantz Stokum ’92  Richard Stoll ’70 and Cathy Troisi Bruce J. Stone ’70 6 Kevin ’73 and Susan Stone Thomas P. Stone ’85 Reva Margaret Street ’05 David J. Strom ’74 7 Charles B. Stuart ’56  23 Paul ’67 and Mary Suttell  32 L. Wendel Swaszek ’08 James Y. Sweet ’48 14 Paul ’59 and Barbara Sydlowski Babak Taleghani ’75 Kaveh ’83 and Rosario Taleghani 16 Reza ’90 and Deme Taleghani  Jon Paul Tangen ’62 Miguel Augusto Teixeira ’99 Charles B. Temkin ’65 Dean N. Temkin ’69 Samuel A. Tenney ’12 Jill S. Teverow ’04 Corey E. Thibodeau ’10 John-David H. Thomas ’94 Rodney M. Thomas ’87  15 Robert Bruce Thompson ’64 Allison Gates Tierney ’83 C. Nicholas Tingley ’53 and Cary Tingley 33 Harleigh V. S. Tingley ’47 20 H. Mark Titus ’65 6 Jorge M. Tobon ’08 The Andrew P. Tothy ’55 Family  Steven W. Toulmin ’87 Heather Paige Tow-Yick ’94 15 W. Gerry Tow ’60 33 John T. Townsend ’45 Anthony Michael Tracy ’04 Robert Warren Treut ’04

J. Russell Triedman ’87  11 Leonard ’46 and Cynthia Triedman  10 Scott C. Tsagarakis ’76 32 Thomas J. Tsagarakis ’72 32 Herbert F. Tucker ’67 Alexander M. Turner ’66 Richard B. Turner ’58 5 Pepi John Ursillo ’89 Wilson F. Utter ’45  32 Jeffrey T. Vancini ’85 David Vanech ’98 George M. Vetter ’75 14 Mark Paul Viana ’97 Thomas W. Vignali ’93 Cara E. Vileno ’95 Jessica A. Villella ’09 Celina V. Vogel ’88 Joshua Ian Vogel ’86 25 Peter O. von Simson ’85 Ashley Haffenreffer Wagstaff ’82  20 Allison Twomey Walton ’91 6 Mark J. Warburton ’65  Stephen T. Warde ’13 Richard N. Wasserman ’83  Stephen L. Wasserman ’81 28 Edward M. Watson ’73  Ashley ’01 and Andrew Weiderman Devin Weinberg ’16 Jason Randall Weiss ’93 Paul H. Welch ’53  6 Mark Weremchuk ’75 32 Meagan Gibson Wheeler ’02 15 William K. Wheeler ’66  Nathaniel M. White ’59 Richard C. White ’84  19 Sarah Whitford ’94 7 Betsy Burrell Whittaker ’87 Andrew Wigren ’92 and Kelley Ciampi Wigren ’92 13 Bruce ’70 and Karen Wilks 32 Wade M. Wilks ’66 32 David James Wilner ’83 Brian ’89 and Katherine Wilson Robert M. Wilson ’67 20 Thomas L. Wilson ’08 Prescott Thomas Wing ’10 Daniel Abraham Winston ’05 9 Ted ’74 and Denise Winston 32 Gordon G. Wisbach ’63 33 J. Scott Wolf ’71 Astrid Christina Womble ’87  21 Graham Hayde Woodberry ’10 Hannah Gordon Woodberry ’04 9 Dean ’46 and Jane Woodman  24 David L. Woronov ’78

Decade-by-decade Participation TOP NON-REUNION CLASSES

James ’85 and Kimberly Worrell 19 Richard ’52 and Mary Worrell 14 Timothy S. Wright ’61 L. Kinvin Wroth ’50 10 Thomas ’53 and Elizabeth Wroth 5 Stephen W. Yan ’76 32 Herman K. Yip ’93 Edward L. Yoon ’98  9 Michael P. Yules ’10 6 Farhad Zaltash ’77 Lily Zexter ’15 Samuel R. Zwetchkenbaum ’79 Hilary Cohen Zwicker ’84 31 Anonymous (25)

CLASS OF 2018

Sophia L. Ahn ’18 Melissa Arias ’18 Vincent J. Armenio ’18 Lucy Spence Atkinson ’18 Jack M. Bertman ’18 Caroline H. Cassese ’18 Phoebe B. Chase ’18 Mackenzie Conley ’18 Sofia Costantino ’18 A. Eric Dahlberg ’18 Elma C. De Sousa ’18 Paloma DeCastro ’18 Britton C. DeFeo ’18 Brannen A. Dickson ’18 Andrew Dorman ’18 Yara S. Doumani ’18 Frances M. Elliott ’18 Eli S. Epstein-Lubow ’18 Alex Flaxman ’18 Allison L. Gower ’18 Chase P. Griffin ’18 Julia J. Gurzenda ’18 Brendan P. Hall ’18 Christopher R. Holzwarth ’18 Abigail H. Klipfel ’18 Abigail Lambert ’18 Owen Lassalle ’18 Qiran Li ’18 Sabrina H. Liston ’18 DONOR RECOGNITION KEY THE GROVE

Italicized numerals indicate years of consecutive giving. THE FRONT CIRCLE

 Blue and White Society $1,000–$2,499

 Head’s Society $2,500–$4,999

 1784 Society $5,000–$9,999

 Cupola Society $10,000–$24,999

1940s: Class of ’42 – 43%

1960s: Class of ’60 – 55%

1980s: Class of ’85 – 34%

2000s: Class of ’04 – 15%

 Founders’ Society

1950s: Class of ’59 – 55%

1970s: Class of ’70 & ’71– 23%

1990s: Class of ’90 – 21%

2010s: Class of ’10 – 13%

*Deceased

$25,000 and above

annual report 2017-18 | 27


78% OF SENIORS PARTICIPATED IN THE CLASS OF 2018 GIFT Maitrayee Bhattacharyya and Christopher Kahler Jing Liu ’18 William Binder Jacob L. Malkin ’18 and Anne Noel 7 Alisha K. Marble ’18 Paul and Karen Bitterman Liam McGuire ’18 Alan and Vanda Blinn Sara McLaughlin ’18 Margaret-Mary Boitano ’83 Stephen Moss ’18 James and Michele Bonner 14 Melina A. Panichas ’18 Robin L. Boss  Isabelle L. Paquette ’18 Samantha ’85 and John Bradshaw Andrew D. Plumb ’18 Lauren Brignac-Huber Daly J. Ravino ’18 and Warren Huber 5 Ethan Roberti ’18 Richmond Brittingham Jessica C. Rylander ’18 and Melinda Cox Georgia S. Saville ’18 Daniel and Maureen Brown John C. Scungio ’18 Jeffrey Dennis Buckler ’01 Euan Smith ’18 and Natasha Buckler 8 Eleanor Sokol ’18 Bernard ’84 Andie Stallman ’18 and Heidi Buonanno  30 Jacob C. Steckler ’18 Perry and Darby Buroker  13 Skyler P. Sullivan ’18 Steven Calabresi ’76 Lyle W. Tingle ’18 and Mary Calabresi  13 Adam Towey ’18 Thomas and Kerrin Callahan Caitlin E. Tucker ’18 John and Charlene Cassese  5 Rowan Van Lare ’18 Elkin Castano and Claudia Cartagena Xiaomeng Wang ’18 Gang Chen and Jian Gu Harry C. Wasser ’18 Xiangyang Chen Sophia Yates ’18 and Xiaohong Yang  Yue Zi ’18 Josny and Kathleen Chery Peter Zubiago ’18 Thomas and Rebekah Chestna 7 CURRENT PARENTS Margaretta S. Clurman  9 Arthur and Jennifer Coia  5 Peter Adamy and Patricia Flam 8 Dennis and Miriam Coleman  Onoriode Agabi John and Kelly Coleman  and Veronica Annoh-Agabi Ellen and John Conley  Idrees and Hilina Ajakaiye Ahmad and Nesreen Al Raqqad  John Connell and April Smith 5 Amy and Robert Cooper  6 Nicole and Steve Andelman  Gregory and Lisa Costantino  Jeffrey Anderson Keith and Nicole Couto 5 Matthew Andrews John and Pam Cummings  and Megan Langevin 5 Jessica Howland d’Entremont ’93 David and Cynthia Antonelli and Jeffrey d’Entremont 15 Joey Arcari Albie Dahlberg ’87 Fredy and Sara Arias 7 and Hilary Fagan  18 Vincent Armenio Ron and Carolyn Dalgliesh  11 and Jennifer Jeremiah Laird and Andrea Daniels 8 Peter and Lisa Arpin David Darlington and Erin Carroll Emily and James Atkinson 9 Michael DeAngelo 19 Issmat Atteereh Ronald Powers DeFeo and Beshara Doumani and Dorianne K. DeFeo Mark and Julia Atwood  6 Mark and Helen DelGiudice Michael Baker Andrea and Zachary Dewhirst 7 and Tracey Pereira-Baker  Allan Ballou and Diane Stratton  6 Spencer A. Dhupa Chris and Bethany Di Napoli 6 Stephen Barker Furhana and Joseph DiBiase and Clotilde DiDomenico  Sarah Barnum and Joseph Rabatin 7 Loree and Michael DiCenso Easton and Elaine Dickson  10 Ashley and Peter Barrett  5 Jeff Diehl and Ann Diver Bruce and Linda Bates 5 Jane Dietze and Robin Rains  Karyne Bazzano Albert and Sarah Dobron  Raymond Bazzano Meredith Donato ’96 Neil Beranbaum ’86 and and Christopher Donato  Randi-Beth Beranbaum  31 Bradley P. Dorman  Julie Thomas Berry ’87 Nicole Dreyer-Gavin  9 and Seth Berry CLASS OF 2018 CONT.

28 | annual report 2017-18

Melissa DuBose and Amy Harrington Stefano Dukcevich ’89 and Angela Serrano-Dukcevich  6 Alison and Peter Durant Charlie and Siriporn Ea Drs. Craig and Shari Elice 13 Glendon ’76 and Caroline Elliott Wayne and Julie Elpus  Divya and Gary Epstein-Lubow  7 Rodolfo and Rosmery Estrada 7 Lance and Michele Evans 5 Matthew and Michelle Fabisch Kevin and Samantha Faria 5 Stephanie and Dan Fawcett 7 Gara Field and Erin Broderick Kelly and John Fitzsimmons David Flaxman and Alicia Ruiz Flaxman Catherine ’98 and Brett Ford Kirk and Dawn Franklin Maria and Vinnie Fugere James Gadol and Hui Tin Chua Sylvio and Michelle Gario Carolyn and Geoffrey Garth Murette and Pierre Gedeon 5 Peter and Diana Gemma  8 Gina Gesamondo and Walter Martish Nicholas Giardino Robin and Bradford Gibbs  Lisa Rocchio ’85 and Vincent Giordano ’83 Catherine Anne Glazzard Gary ’87 and Elizabeth Goldberg  17 Andrew Gonsalves and Jennifer Robbins Julia Gonzalez James M. Gooding Jeanne Kelly Gooding David Gower ’87 Kristen C. Gower  12 David and Sandy Grand 6 Todd M. Grant ’84 Richard and Alicia Grasfeder  William and Kira Greene Stephen ’84 and Christine Griffin  Christian Guadagni and Heather Lee Baris and Sema Gurerk 5 Jane Gorham Gurzenda ’84 Kristen Haffenreffer  6 Lydia and John Hage 7 J Mi and Jonathan Haisman Thomas and Debra Hall  Charles Hamann and Patricia Miller Seth and Charlotte Handy James and Lisa Harrington Benjamin Harris and Jennifer Raney Brendan Hassett and Eileen Cheng Sally and Matt Herreid 7 Michael and Nadine Himelfarb Alexander and Nicole Hofstetter Graham Holland and Alison Anderson 7

Chris and Pattie Holzwarth  6 Robert and Randi Horowitz Shah and Farzana Hossain  7 Clay Howland and Amy Grundt Daniela and Peter Hutchinson David and Jennifer Hutchinson Henry and Vanessa Ibbotson David Jaffe and Leslie Kane Jennifer and Andrew Jencks  9 Rudolph and Maureen Johnson  Lajhon Jones and Leslie Caito-Jones Kelly and Timothy Joseph Dean and Laura Jumes Aravind and Vandana Kamath Kongbin Kang and Yunhe Xie Thomas and Leslie Kellogg  Andrew and Michaela Kelton Christopher and Molly Kerr Eglantina Kica and Douglas Kraut Steven and Christine King Nancy and Tom King  12 Brendan and Katie Kinnell John Kinney and Karen Wysocarski Elizabeth and Christopher Kirk Emmanuel Kizekai and Nina Reid-Kizekai Jonathan and Sue Klein  Adam and Cindy Klipfel  Eric and Samantha Kravitz Joseph and Lynn Kuzneski  10 Zhongbin Lai and Huiling Ji Jarvis and Jennifer Lambert  Elizabeth and Gardner Lane  6 Karl and Corryn Langmuir 8 Michael Lanza and Terry Allen  Mckenzie and Amy Larkin Sebastian and Olga Lassalle Paul and Hilary Latham  Lamousse and Marie Lauture 9 Christopher and Sarah Lee 5 Matthew and Molly LeStage Guo Qing Li and Autumn Zi  6 Kent and Karen Liston Matthew and Susan Littlefield 6 Rachel Littman ’87 and Doug Davis  7 Liansheng Liu and Liyun Yan 6 Philip and Tallulah Lloyd Fran Loosen Brandon Lowy and Kristen Lupoli Gang Lu and Lie Chen  John and Anne Ludes  8 Eric and Deanna Lund  Simidele and Keith Mabray 5 Ralph and Lori Ann Macari Hugh ’84 and Kristen Madden 14 David and Rose Malkin  John Marion and Karen Ng Scott and Tanya Martin  7 David J. Martirano  Jennifer B. Martirano  Ross Mattis ’95 and Lauren Miller  6 Robert and Regina McAdam Mark and Suzanne McCormack


Parent Participation UPPER SCHOOL

LOWER SCHOOL

Class of ’18 (12th): 72%

Class of ’25 (5th): 57%

Class of ’19 (11th): 54%

Class of ’26 (4th): 43%

Class of ’20 (10 ): 63%

Class of ’27 (3rd): 67%

Class of ’21 (9 th): 58%

Class of’28 (2nd): 50%

MIDDLE SCHOOL

Class of’29 (1st): 54%

th

Class of ’22 (8th): 29% Class of ’23 (7th): 50% Class of ’24 (6th): 67% Erika and Shaun McEnery Timothy and Sarah McGahan John and Chinatsu McGeary Michael and Diane McGuire 5 Kevin McLaughlin and Ourida Mostefai 7 Sarah McShane and Veronica Jutras John Mello and Lynn Rognsvoog 10 Wendi and Keith Metters  12 Stephen and Mary Miley Kennon Miller and Jennie Newkirk 5 David and Kara Milner  6 Joseph Mocco and Teresa Jucha Keith Monchik ’90 and Michelle Lefebvre  16 Francisco and Erica Monteiro Ted ’87 and Drew Moran 5 Peter Morse ’82 and Kathleen Van Gorden Morse David Moss and Kathleen Cornely 8 Sandra Musial Eric and Laura Nyman John O’Bell and Jessica Rosenthal Carlos M. Ocampo Dan and Alisa Ohl 11 Adam ’91 and Jennifer Olenn 5 Nnenna and Ikponmwosa Oronsaye Aaron and Margo Ott Jose and Lyndsey Pachon Bahram Pahlavi and Iman Ali  Neath Pal ’81 and Beth Toolan 14 George ’83 and Anastasia Panichas  James Paquette and Denise Parent  8 Kevin Pearce and Irene Barnett 6 Jennifer Pedrick Nancy J. Pedrick Lauren Angelone Pelletier ’94 and Corey Pelletier ’94 Emilia Peña-Disla and Saul Disla Michael and Barbra Perry Thomas Pizzuti and Jenny Andersson  Susan and Peter Plumb  5 Osei and Sheila Poku Angie and Richard Polion Vincent Porcaro ’83 and Southychanh Salinthone  25 Samuel and Jennifer Potter Marie Pugliese Yiguang Qiu and Ying Zhu

Class of ’30 (K): 52% Class of ’31 (PP): 50% Class of ’32 (N): 58% Peter ’82 and Laura Ramsden  33 Christopher and Jen Rawson  13 James and Jennifer Reardon  David Reville and Tina Tryforos 13 Margaret Reynolds and William McKee  Levi Richardson and Kate Motte Michael and Julie Ridge Arthur Riss and Nina Markov Jane Ritson-Parsons and Ian Parsons  5 J. Patrick Rollo and Michelle Russo  7 Marc Rollo ’90 and Tara Rollo 6 John and Rosemary Romano  Margaret-Mary Romero 7 Jennafer Rampone Rose ’01 and Brendon Rose Andrew Rosenzweig and Susan Weinman 14 Heather Handrigan Ross ’85 and Charles Ross 9 Kenneth and Rebecca Rubin 5 Charles and Melissa Ruhl 8 Christopher ’88 and Beth Runci Philip and Lorna Russell  7 Anthony and Lauren Rust John and Joyce Rylander Faber Salazar Paul and Navyn Salem  Prakash Sampath and Ritu Goel  Ellen and Wilson Saville  Gregory Schadone ’85 and Christina Schadone Edward and Anne Schmults  8 Anne J. Schwartz  7 John ’81 and Susan Scungio Paul and Caylen Sepe  Thomas Sepe and Maria Mileno  18 Divya and Raj Shankar Jesse Shapiro and Emily Oster Jesse and Jessica Sherwood 5 Darius Shirzadi Olga Shirzadi George Shuster and Stephanie Van Patten  Sandra and James Shuster  10 Alan and Bonnie Silverman Steven Sitrin James Skillings and Ingrid Dyck 32

Dawn and George Slack 5 Michael and Kirsty Smith  10 Reinhard Sokol and Connie Grosch  9 Mario and Eloisa Sousa Glenn ’85 and Cynthia Sparr James and JoHannah Speltz Matthew and Nicole Steckler  6 Joanne and Jeffrey Stokes  Daniel Stone and Karen Seiler 6 David and Christina Strickler  8 Raymond and Beth Studley David and Shelly Sullivan  Kerry E. Sweeney  Alex and Isabelle Tadmoury  Steven S. Taylor Nelson and Kelly Taylor Himmeler and Nerlandes Themistocle Stephen and Molly Thomas  5 Steve and Heather Tingle  12 Matthew and Deborah Towey 6 Steven Tripp and Dawn Clifton Tripp  12 George and Tara Tsakraklides Carlton and Kathleen Tucker  Marguerite and Kent Tunnicliffe  9 Stephen and Tracey Tyrrell 6 Peter van Dommelen and Ayla Çevik 6 Melinda and Ted Van Lare Lajiri and Ronald Van Ness-Otunnu Julie and Peter Veale 7 Anya Wallack 6 Thomas and Adrianne Walsh David Wasser and Susan Abbotson 8 Carl and Lisa Weinberg  15 Aaron and Joy Weisbord David and Meirav Werbel  Matthew and Laura Whiteley  Charles and Lori Wiesner Bradley Wightman  Erik and Holly Wilker 11 Lenke Wood and David Moscarelli 10 James ’85 and Kimberly Worrell 19 Zhihua Xiao and Jin Xu  Stewart and Marlene Yang  Lindsey Yates-Grimley and John Grimley  6 J. Andrew and Jennifer Yates  Richard L. Yates  6 Henry and Eileen Young 11 Cynthia Zeller Cecily Ziegler  8 Karl Ziegler  8 Hui Zou and Fenghong Liu  Antonia and Stephen Zubiago  7 Anonymous (9)

GRANDPARENTS

Richard and Peg Aaronian Priscilla Buck Alfandre Paulette and James Allaire 5 David and Estelle Andelman 12 Thomas Andrew and Katherine Bick 8 Peter and Adelaide Atwood Richard and Susanne Baccari 

Daniel and Hildegard Barnett Charles ’67 and Allison Barrett 13 Bruce and Ellen Bates 5 Diana Derrig Behn Allan R. Bellows ’43 10 Stephen and Francine Beranbaum 33 Paul and Margaret Bernier 5 Dipa and Arup Bhattacharyya Joan Boghossian  5 Carl Bogus ’66 and Cynthia Giles  Adele and John Bourne Ken and Frances Broderick Bernard V. Buonanno, Jr. ’55  18 Charles and Elaine Buroker Adriana Ciarallo Rick and Katy Clarke Roger L. Clifton  12 William and Stephanie Close 8 Gerard and Sherryl Cohen  Ellen Collis  34 Sandra A. Cooper Leslie A. Crossley The Dahlberg Family  Geoffrey ’65 and Lisa Davis Peter and Linda DiBiase John ’53 and Judith Dowling  6 Ellen S. Eaton Claire Edouard Jim and Pat Eldridge Lisa and Peter Evans 8 Murton and Ilene Fabisch Peter S. Fagan 6 Jesse Lee Ferrell Edward and Mary Fitzgerald Bill and Joyce Fletcher  Mary Ellyn and Jim Fossum  William and Frances Geary Karima Gebel John ’68 and Pamela Gentile 15 Robert and Sally Gillespie Faith M. Gitlow Isabel Hitz Goff 11 David H. and Susan L. Haffenreffer  Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Hall  Earl E. Handrigan DONOR RECOGNITION KEY THE GROVE

Italicized numerals indicate years of consecutive giving. THE FRONT CIRCLE

 Blue and White Society $1,000–$2,499

 Head’s Society $2,500–$4,999

 1784 Society $5,000–$9,999

 Cupola Society $10,000–$24,999

 Founders’ Society $25,000 and above *Deceased annual report 2017-18 | 29


GRANDPARENTS CONT.

Michael DeAngelo 19 Stephanie DiPrete Lance and Michele Evans 5 Joan A. Hannon Lisa and Peter Evans 8 James and Linda Hassett Gara Field and Erin Broderick Jean O. Hermele Kelly and John Fitzsimmons Alan and Janet Hertzmark David Flaxman and Alicia Ruiz Flaxman Franklin and Joanna Holland 5 Brett and Catherine Ford ’98 Alvin and Prima Hower Clara A. Freire John and Carol Howland  12 Maria and Vinnie Fugere Fred Hutchinson and Ruth Bishop Carolyn and Geoffrey Garth Mary L. Hutchinson Paul T. Gazin Stephen Jordan Laura A. Gladding and Elizabeth Bullock 8 Katherine and Matt Glendinning  9 Roland and Claire Jutras Jonathan Gold Carollyn Kahler Ransom Griffin 33 Barbara and Sidmon Kaplan  Stephen ’84 and Christine Griffin  Nancy L. Kaye Martha and Kevin Handley 16 Thomas and Dorothea Kelley Sally and Matt Herreid 7 Alexander and Margaret Kerr 7 Michael and Nadine Himelfarb John E. King Graham Holland Joni and Howard Klein and Alison Anderson 7 Michael ’59 and Sudie Knowles 15 David Husted ’86 Abigail R. Lambert 16 and Denise Kmetzo Elease Latimer Kelly and Timothy Joseph Camilla W. Lee Linda Kaplan Henry and Mary Lee and Neal Steingold ’78  17 Garner and Marilyn LeStage Brendan and Katie Kinnell Barbara and Richard Lustig Samantha and Eric Kravitz Rita S. Lynch Anne Krive and Susan Ellis 10 Madeline A. Mabray  10 Hugh ’84 and Kristen Madden 14 Robert and Magdalin MacGregor Jeff and Lisa Maidment 8 Frederick R. Mattis  Samantha Mandeville Allan and Linda McDonald  Cheryl A. McDonald 8 Erika and Shaun McEnery FACULTY & STAFF CONTRIBUTORS Sarah McShane and Veronica Jutras Helen Burke Montague Karin Morse ’79 11 William and Nancy McEnery FACULTY & STAFF David Moss and Kathleen Cornely 8 Christina and Jerry McIntyre  Simone Ahlborn 8 Carmen and Gary McNamee 5 Thomas Andrew and Katherine Bick 8 Dan and Alisa Ohl 11 Adam ’91 and Jennifer Olenn 5 Donald and Britta McNemar  6 Matthew Andrews Emilia Peña-Disla and Saul Disla Constance K. Milner and Megan Langevin 5 Jean and Joseph V. Pennacchio 8 Arthur ’51* and Martha Milot  32 Peter and Lisa Arpin Kevin and Debra Perry 14 Jack and Susan Monchik  Jordan Bailey Debora Phipps 11 John and Jacqueline Moran Julia Baker Robert Pike Terry U. Mossop Anni W. Barnard 5 Walter and Louise Munroe Sarah Barnum and Joseph Rabatin 7 Susan and Tony Pirruccello-McClellan 21 Bill ’48 and Helene Myers 32 Wilfred R. Beaudoin 8 Brian Platt Jim and Susan Nagle 16 Laura Bennett Melissa and David Rabinow Tom and Julie Nash  12 Adele and Kenneth Blackman Jack ’60 and Sharon Nixon Samantha ’85 and John Bradshaw Mary Pat and Dejan Radeka 5 Jen and Christopher Rawson  13 Richard ’51 and Martha Nourie  5 Lauren Brignac-Huber Joseph M. Ribeiro  14 Ellen E. O’Connell 14 and Warren Huber 5 Katharine S. Rosenfeld David and Christina Oliver Shaun and Linda Buckler  8 Beth and Christopher Runci ’88 Richard K. Oresman ’53 Perry and Darby Buroker  13 Sandra D. Oster  Leslie Caito-Jones and Lajhon Jones Kimberly and Jeff Samways John P. Sargent Diana Phillips  Elisio and Arminda Castro Patricia and John Savage Shirin Platt Lillian R. Cataldi-Simmers Jared and Katherine Schott 14 Arthur and Janice Post 11 Laurie E. Center 11 Bruce and Judith Shaw 7 Ned and Ginna Priest Joyce Champlin Freeman Diane Silvestri and Tom O’Malley Marie Pugliese Thomas and Rebekah Chestna 7 James Skillings and Ingrid Dyck 32 David and Belle Rampone  5 Adolphe Coulibaly Dawn and George Slack 5 Richard J. and Sallie Ramsden  Kristen A. Curry 8 Adam Smith Roger and Mary Beth Reville 5 Jeffrey d’Entremont and Edward ’67 and Janet Ricci  Jessica Howland d’Entremont ’93 15 Jessica Stewart and Daniel Bien 6 Kristin and Randy Street Donald and Dorothy Rosenthal Ron and Carolyn Dalgliesh  11 Stephen Toro  Fred and Marcia Rosenzweig 14

105

30 | annual report 2017-18

John and Susan Ruhl Matthew ’64 and Laraine Runci Guido and Barbara Salvadore Gerrit Sanford ’45 and Elizabeth Sanford  32 Nancy Ruth Schwartz 8 Dolores Seiler Paul and Geraldine Sepe Arvin and Joyce Shapiro William and Gail Shepherd Margaret Silva-Pacheco and Steve Pacheco Harris Sitrin Anne R. Skinner 7 Judy and John Slonaker 10 Carol Smith and James Doak 10 Frederick and Anne Stratton  Helen B. Taft Suzanne Tompkins Gladys and Joe Torres Leonard ’46 and Cynthia Triedman  10 Mary Tryforos Charles and Beatrice Van Patten Arthur and Terry Wasser Jo Ann Weathersby Frederic C. White  9 Mrs. Theodore S. Whitford 33 Kate and Rod Wilger Roger and Linda Wilker Mrs. Dudley A. Williams 5 Robert and Anne Wood 6 Richard ’52 and Mary Worrell 14 Anonymous (7)

George and Tara Tsakraklides Melinda and Ted Van Lare Karen and Richard van Tienhoven  7 Ryan Vemmer 5 David Wasser and Susan Abbotson 8 Ana and Barry Weiner Erik and Holly Wilker 11 Denise and Ted Winston ’74 32 Lenke Wood and David Moscarelli 10 Anonymous (4)

FOUNDATIONS, BUSINESSES, & ORGS

Aetna Foundation Amica Companies Foundation  B & T Association, Inc. Bank of America Charitable Foundation Employee Giving Prog. Benevity Community Impact Fund Bilodeau Property Management  The William Bingham Foundation  The Paul O. and Mary Boghossian Memorial Trust  The Boston Foundation  Broadwaters Foundation CBS Corporation Tom and Kate Chappell Family Foundation  Citizens Charitable Foundation Emma Clyde Hodge Memorial Fund  Collis Foundation  Contempo Card Co.  Contractors Supply, Inc.  Core Consulting Group Inc. DeLaCour Family Foundation  7 DTCC Giving Program Peter L. Dwares Foundation  The Joan and Leonard Engle Family Foundation  ExxonMobil Foundation, Inc. Fidelity Foundation Matching Gifts to Education  FM Global Foundation  Foundation 33:11  Gartner, Inc. Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Gilbane Haffenreffer Family Fund  Hanover Insurance Group Foundation, Inc. Hasbro Employee Giving Campaign The Hazard Family Foundation  Hutchins Family Foundation  Estate of Richard Jones ’42  Kellar Trust Lemonade & Mint Studio Inc. J. Loring Brooks Foundation  Lubrano Family Charitable Foundation  Lucier & Company, CPA, Inc.  Ludes Family Foundation  Lumina Foundation for Education, Inc.  Nellie Mae Education Foundation  Moses Brown MBe There  McLaughlin & Moran, Inc.  Northwestern Mutual Foundation


Edward and Linda Magro Robert ’69 and Judy Mann  33 30+ YEAR CONTRIBUTORS Ronald Markoff and Karen Triedman Greg Marsello ’73 John and Susan Froehlich 18 Steven ’70 and Wendy Buckler and Melinda Foley-Marsello John Burnham and Rachel Balaban 14 Thomas and Claudia Fullam Frederick R. Mattis  Bernard V. Buonanno, Jr. ’55  18 Venkateswara Gaddipati Edmund Mauro ’50  and Mary Roberts  10 Stephen and Cornelia Burnham Timothy ’80 Zoilo and Carmen Garcia Judith and Len Cabral and Elizabeth McCahan  12 David and Diane Canepari  5 Paul T. Gazin Christina and Jerry McIntyre  Anthony ’78 Alan and Rosalyn Geller Barbara and Jim McKay 20 and Lauralyn Cannistra 6 Michael and Linda Gershon Michael Gilson and Joan McPhee  14 Mr. and Mrs. Daniel V. McKinnon Scott and Laura Carlisle Albano and Maria Carvalho 8 Stephen Glinick and Elizabeth Welch 7 Paul and Patricia McMahon Philip and Elizabeth McMaster Gertrude M. Goff  Meredith H. Cassick 5 Maria and Patrick McNally Laurens ’59 and Andrea Goff 11 Elisio and Arminda Castro Charles ’69 and Victoria Means Philip and Roberta Chadwick Barbara and Brian Goldner  17 Richard ’49 and Inge Chafee 13 Habib Gorgi ’74 and Susan Gorgi  28 Paul Miles-Matthias, M.D. and Linda C. Coffin, M.D. Evan ’77 and Elizabeth Granoff Joyce Champlin Freeman Arthur ’51* and Martha Milot  32 Kim and Steve Clark 17 Thomas and Noreen Graul Charles ’76 and Maria Milot  18 Ransom Griffin 33 John W. Cocroft ’62 Lodowick Collins ’65 Paul ’48 and Katherine Grimes 32 Jack and Susan Monchik  John and Jacqueline Moran and Marjorie Jackson 33 Jill Peixinho Gudoian  Jean and Paul Moran Richard Gudoian  Ellen Collis  34 David ’56 and Susan Haffenreffer  Terrence ’76 and Patricia Moran  32 Susan N. Cordina 14 Bill ’48 and Helene Myers 32 Karen Hammond Michael and Jamie Costello  and Michael Quattromani  15 Victor and Lila Neel Glenn and Mary Jane Creamer  8 Jack ’60 and Sharon Nixon Martha and Kevin Handley 16 Marc and Melissa Crisafulli  Melissa O’Neil  7 Earl E. Handrigan Mrs. Addi Crouchley Robert O’Neil*  7 Todd and Zoe Hart  Elizabeth W. Crowther 9 John and Elizabeth Ohlson  9 Patricia A. Harvey The Dahlberg Family  Richard K. Oresman ’53 John and Patricia Harwood  Paul and Donna Darling 8 Gordon ’51 and Jane Parker 5 Dorothy and John Hays 21 Geoffrey ’65 and Lisa Davis Jim and Cynthia Patterson Charles ’78 and Araxie DeBlois 19 Brian P. and Lori Hogan 13 Jean and Joseph V. Pennacchio 8 PARENTS OF ALUMNI Stephen ’79 and Julie DeLeo  10 Philip ’78 and Judith Howell 30 Ralph and Trish Perfetto 6 Paul Adler and Lori Basilico  13 Bruce ’46 and Elizabeth Derbyshire John and Carol Howland  12 Patricia and Steven Petteruti  5 David G. Hunter Deborah and Peter DeStefano  Barry and Lisa Alofsin 5 Susan and Isabelle C. Hunter 6 Nancy-Lee Devane 13 Claude and Terri Anderson 9 Tony Pirruccello-McClellan 21 Thomas O. D. Hunter* 6 Dennis and Barbara Dobbyn 15 Frohman ’80 and William G. Preston Nephele and Thomas Domencich  14 Walter and Dottie Hunter 5 Kimberley Anderson  32 Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey P. Puddington Paul and Joan Hurley Bruce and Joan Drobnis Thomas Andrew Betsey Chaplin Quigley 32 Dorothy H. Jacobs David S. and Marina M. Drooker and Katherine Bick 8 Mary Pat and Dejan Radeka 5 Donald ’55 and Bonnie Dwares  33 Judith K. Jamieson 8 Ellen and Bill Apfel David and Belle Rampone  5 Marc ’82 and Krista Janigian  Anne G. Earle  16 Betsy and Ted Archibald Richard J. and Sallie Ramsden  Herbert and Deborah Katz Robert and Cynthia Elder 5 Philip and Bette Ayoub Lawrence G. Knowles, Jr. ’57 Henry Elliot and Sarah Carlson Richard and Susanne Baccari  and Deborah Knowles 17 James ’71 and Robin Engle  33 DONOR RECOGNITION KEY Barbara and James Bachand John and Berit Kosterlitz 30 Richard ’73 and Mary Engle  32 Norman ’56 and Ann Baker  32 THE GROVE Betsey Purinton and James English  Judge Robert Krause ’63 Jeffrey and Lisa Bamonte 7 Italicized numerals indicate and Marjorie Krause  34 Charles ’67 and Allison Barrett 13 Pamela Nelson Erskine years of consecutive giving. Anne Krive and Susan Ellis 10 Lisa and Peter Evans 8 John T. Barrett, Jr. ’63 Seth Kurn and Barbara Harris  Barry ’60 and Elaine Fain and Jane W. A. Barrett  13 THE FRONT CIRCLE Anne Landis 31 James and Jeanette Falcon Susan and Robert Baxter 18  Blue and White Society Patty and Steve Lang 13 Eric and Dana Falk  Charles Beauchamp $1,000–$2,499 John Farber and Wendyll Brown  5 Amey and Charles Larmore 7 and Linda Morrison 5 Laura and Charles Farnham 7 Steven and Roberta Lasser 7 Allan R. Bellows ’43 10  Head’s Society Shaun and Kate Levesque  13 Gerard and Tricia Farrington Laura Bennett $2,500–$4,999 Sayre and Roseanne Litchman Stephen and Francine Beranbaum 33 Ted ’83 and Lisa Fischer  33  1784 Society Michael and Jane Litner Bruce and Karen Fleming Harrison and Arria Bilodeau  $5,000–$9,999 Frederick ’64 and Karen Livingston Katharine Hazard Flynn F. Steele Blackall III ’42* 33 and Lawrence Flynn  17 David ’60 and Toby London 7 Adele and Kenneth Blackman  Cupola Society Theodore ’44 and Kay Low Deborah Block and William Harley 9 Faith U. Fogle $10,000–$24,999 David and Maria Lucier  22 J. Thomas and Linda Foley 8 Joan Boghossian  5  Founders’ Society Madeline A. Mabray  10 Kenton Forsythe and Kathy Bourque  10 $25,000 and above Christine Chiacu-Forsythe 11 Andrew MacKeith Ann and Tom Boyd and Shawen Williams 6 Steven Frank and Lisa Frappier-Frank Jeffrey ’71 and Jessica Brier 7 *Deceased Harold ’52 and Mary Mackinney  Glenn and Eula Fresch  19 James ’76 and Kendall Brown 20 NuGen Capital Management LLC  Other Stratton Foundation  Pacifica Foundation  Phillips Family Charitable Foundation  Procaccianti Family Foundation  Quito’s Shellfish and Restaurant, Inc. Reliance Standard Life Insurance Company Darrell and Susan Ross Charitable Foundation  Royal Little Family Foundation  Saint-Gobain Corporation Foundation Law Offices Of Gregory J. Schadone, LTD. Thomas E. Sepe, M.D. Inc.  Sharpe Family Foundation  Ralph & Clara Shuster Family Foundation  The Philip Snyder Foundation St. James Realty LLC State Street Foundation, Inc.  Stearns Charitable Trust  UBS Matching Gift Program Voya Foundation Matching Gift Program  Carl and Lisa Weinberg Family Foundation  Wilcox Family Foundation  Thomas & Nephele Wing Domencich Foundation  Wingate Residences Winston-Salem Foundation Anonymous (5)

95

annual report 2017-18 | 31


PARENTS OF ALUMNI CONT.

C. Jody and Randy Spencer  5 Susan and Tony Spirito  7 Constance and George Raymond Nancy Boghossian Staples John and Jane Reeder 7 and David Staples  5 Jack and Marianne Renza 11 Ellen and Kenneth Steingold 10 Edward ’67 and Janet Ricci  Neal Steingold ’78 Raymond Richardson and Linda Kaplan  17 and Pamela Webster Thomas C. Stones Judith E. Rocchio Kristin and Randy Street William J. Roland ’68 16 Robert and Beatrice Swift William ’53 and Paula Rooks  Paul ’59 and Barbara Sydlowski Darrell ’65 and Susan Ross  34 Catherine Terry Taylor Peter ’70 and Rosemary Rotelli and Robert K. Taylor Barbara and Allen Rubine  Zuhal and Tahir Tellioglu  7 Eric and Terry Ruby 29 Cheryl I. Teverow 11 Matthew ’64 and Laraine Runci Joshua and Cindy Teverow Thomas ’72 and Cynthia Sadler 6 C. June Tow 30 Gerrit ’45 Leonard ’46 and Cynthia Triedman  10 and Elizabeth Sanford  32 John and Stephanie Turini Marilyn and Jay Sarles Tenley and Onne van der Wal Patricia and John Savage Karen and Richard van Tienhoven  7 Cynthia A. Schimelpfenig 6 Newell and Robin Warde  20 Jared and Katherine Schott 14 Richard N. Wasserman ’83  Walter ’64 and Viviane Shaghalian 13 Edward M. Watson ’73  Kathleen and Peter Shank Ana and Barry Weiner Bruce and Judith Shaw 7 Thomas Weiss and Priscilla Read Craig S. C. Shaw ’48 32 Benjamin and Elizabeth White L. Peter ’75 and Pamela Sheehan 23 Charles L. White William and Gail Shepherd John and Elizabeth White  17 Richard Sherman ’63 and Jane O’Farrell Mrs. Theodore S. Whitford 33 Stephen Siegel Ted ’74 and Denise Winston 32 and Jayne Kurkjian-Siegel Robert and Anne Wood 6 Paul Silver ’68 Peter N. Woodberry  11 and Katherine Haspel  32 Dean ’46 and Jane Woodman  24 Diane Silvestri and Tom O’Malley Russell and Kathy Woodward Bill and Cheryl Simmons 20 Richard ’52 and Mary Worrell 14 Robyn and Ted Smalletz  23 James and Harriet Wrenn 11 Robert Ellis Smith ’58 Martha and Sidney Yules Rory and Betsy Smith Elizabeth R. B. Zimmerman 32 Joan and Paul Sorensen  26 Anonymous (7)

1,601 CONTRIBUTORS TO OUR SCHOOL 281 First-time Donors

766 Alumni Donors

FRIENDS OF MB

The Integlia Family  Elizabeth Acheson Kim Atkinson Bob and Tanja August Randy and Pia Brown Teal Butterworth 11 Beverly A. Dalessio 9 Robert Drake Brenda Fitzgerald Michael P. Fraioli Sarah B. Gant Sylvia Goodrich  Charles and Charlotte Gosselink 9 Peter R. Henry Lynn Herro Michael Hirtle and Judith Coffey  Richard W. Hoffman 25 David M. Holdt 8 Priscilla Jackson Miriam G. Kenney 15 David LaPorte Karen Linehan  James B. Maland David and Elizabeth McNab 14 Lucy D. Metcalf  5 Mary Lee Morrison Elsie and Doug Morse  15 Annette L. Nazareth and Roger W. Ferguson  Denise Panichas Jane F. Parker 12 Elizabeth Pendergast Sean Redfern

412 Current Families

Samuel and Meg Richards Gregg and Gerri Russo Staci Saks Paula R. Shaer Peter and Jean Signori Amy Singer George T. Sipp 6 Brenda Rae Smith Janet Smith Shannon Smith Blair D. Stambaugh Liesa Stamm Jill A. Stockman 7 Joanne Summer Rosalind R. Tracht Mr. and Mrs. Harvey A. Walzer Elizabeth H. Ward 12 Anonymous (2) DONOR RECOGNITION KEY THE GROVE

Italicized numerals indicate years of consecutive giving. THE FRONT CIRCLE

 Blue and White Society $1,000–$2,499

 Head’s Society $2,500–$4,999

 1784 Society $5,000–$9,999

 Cupola Society $10,000–$24,999

We have made every effort to ensure that this list is complete and accurate. If you have any questions, please contact Kelly Fitzsimmons, Associate Director of Development, at 401-831-7350 ext. 195 or kfitzsimmons@mosesbrown.org.

32 | annual report 2017-18

 Founders’ Society $25,000 and above *Deceased


The Obadiah Brown Society More than 200 years ago, Moses Brown’s son Obadiah (1771-1822) established a model of giving for all who care about MB. His gift of $100,000—at that time, the largest single bequest to an educational institution in the United States—built a strong financial foundation for the school. The Obadiah Brown Society recognizes and honors members of the community who have thoughtfully provided for MB in their estate plans via bequests and other deferred gifts (gift annuities, charitable remainder trusts, etc.). Mark Richard Alperin ’76 Frohman C. Anderson ’80 Peter Hoyle Armstrong ’52 Barbara and James Bachand Robert Gifford Berry ’40* Richard H. Blanding ’29* Zenas W. Bliss ’44 Emily Low Boenning ’81 Russell A. Boss ’57 Jeffrey G. Brier ’71 David* and Anne Burnham* Blake Cady ’49 Russell H. Carpenter ’59* Richard H. W. Chadwell ’51 Thomas Chappell ’61 and Katherine Chappell William Howard Claflin ’46 Americo W. and Judith L. Colaluca Bradford D. Coleman ’71 Ellen and Charles* Collis Melissa MacGillivray Dane ’87 Audrey Latham Dreibelbis ’90 Donald Dwares ’55 Peter Lance Dwares ’62 Harley A. Frank ’81 Fred Goodrich ’51* Mrs. Ransom Griffin, Jr. GP’96 ’98* Gordon Holmes ’56

Charles P. Isherwood ’40* Peter Iovino ’58 E. Gardner Jacobs, Jr. ’43 Richard H. Jones ’42* Amy Roebuck Jones ’79 Walter R. Jones ’01* John C. Juhasz* and Susan W. Juhasz* Peter E. Lacaillade ’67 Kathleen and Shaun Levesque Phillips L. Lillibridge ’41* Theodore F. Low ’44 Will Mackenzie ’56 Vincent A. Marcello ’60 Stanley Markowitz ’46 Douglas P. Marquis ’58 William C. McClaskey ’57 James R. McCulloch ’70 Bruce G. McInnes ’55 Terrence P. Moran ’76 C. William Myers ’48 C. Rodney O’Connor ’50 Lester N. Odams ’47* King B. Odell Harmon A. Poole, Jr. ’42 Beth A. Prairie ’89 Marianne and John Renza John Dennett Richardson ’59

Is MB already in your will? If so, we’d love to thank you now! Please contact Perry Buroker at pburoker@mosesbrown.org or 401.831.7350 x 289

Ann and Robert Rheault Stuart B. and Donna Robinson Thomas Rockel ’53* Gail S. Samdperil ’81 Bob Samors ’77 Francis B. Sargent ’48 Turner C. Scott ’66 Peter Shattuck ’52* Craig S. C. Shaw ’48 P ’78 ’82 Carol J. Smith* A. Homer Skinner, Jr. ’38 Charles G. Staples II ’47 & Joan Staples Charles B. Stuart ’56 Reza Taleghani ’90 Stephen Toro Leonard J. Triedman ’46 Deborah A. Venator Anthony F. Vincent ’59* Richard H. Webster ’42* Paul H. Welch ’53 Wade M. Wilks ’66 Robert A. Whitaker ’29* Daniel Winston ’05 Dean Stuart Woodman ’46 Dudley J. Woodman ’25* and Alma Woodman* Anonymous (9) Please note that * denotes Obadiah Brown Society members being honored posthumously.

Giving Back Mr. T. ensures the band will always play on… When wind and jazz ensemble director Stephen Toro started at Moses Brown, he found a supportive and creative environment, but a music program in its earliest stages. Two and a half decades later, MB’s instrumental music program is transformed, largely thanks to Steve and his colleagues who have helped build a winning program: lower, middle, and upper school wind ensembles; middle and upper school jazz ensembles; lower, middle, and upper school string orchestras; upper school percussion ensemble; upper school brass ensemble; a private music lessons program; and in- and out-of-state music festivals and trips.

“I don’t have kids of my own,” says Steve, “so these are my kids. And I want to make sure they all have the opportunity to make music.” While Steve’s commitment to his students is widely known, he recently took another step in making sure that MB students for generations will have a strong musical education. “Some kids can’t afford an instrument or lessons,” says Steve. “I want to make sure that doesn’t stop them from enjoying music.” And so this past spring he updated his will, including a $100,000 bequest to establish the Stephen Toro Music Education Fund as part of MB’s permanent endowment. For Steve, this means he can

help children learn, even when he’s not there personally to teach them. “Every day I get to help children become musicians,” Steve says. “This way, I can keep helping them when I’m gone.”

annual report 2017-18 | 33


Dollars and Data: An Overview of MB Finances and Enrollment

2017–2018 Operating Budget Income Tuition Scholarship* Tuition Remission

$25,341,000 - $4,303,000 - $1,932,000

Net Tuition

$19,106,000

The Moses Brown Fund** Restricted Gifts Endowment Income Camps and Bookstore Application Fees Interest

Total

Source of Funds

$1,177,000 $243,000 $960,000 $30,000 $70,000 $57,000

$21,643,000

* Scholarship includes non-tuition financial aid. ** Funding was raised in the 2015-16 school year.

88.3% Net Tuition 4.3% Endowment Income 6.5% The Moses Brown Fund 0.7% Other Income and Other Contributions

Expenditures Compensation Instruction Staff and Administration Operations

$11,541,000 $3,137,000 $920,000

Total Compensation

$15,598,000

Facility Operations Academic Program Funding Non-Academic Program Funding Plant Renewal and Replacement Debt Service Utilities Insurances: Liability, Workers Comp, Commercial

Total

34 | annual report 2017-18

Application of Funds

$1,702,000 $1,578,000 $835,000 $700,000 $482,000 $438,000 $310,000

$21,643,000

72.1% 7.9% 7.3% 3.9%

Total Compensation Facility Operations Academic Programs Administrative Programs

3.2% 2.2% 2.0% 1.4%

Plant Renewal Debt Service Utilities Other


Enrollment and Scholarship Overview While the size and quality of the applicant pool have all remained fairly stable over the last decade, scholarship demand has increased dramatically—providing the single greatest challenge to MB’s sustained excellence. Prior to the financial crisis of 2007-08, approximately 40% of applicants requested financial assistance. Ten years later, 72% of applicants for the 2017-18 school year applied for scholarship support. MB has met the challenge by doubling the scholarship budget since 2008-09 to $4.3 million. As demand continues to grow, urgency has increased to meet the $15 million endowed scholarship objective of the MB Believes campaign. See page 18 for more information. 800 800 600 600

Total Applications Total Requesting Financial Aid

5

543 543

505 505

513 513

400 400

200 200

Financial Aid Budget

Student Financial Aid Requests

233 233 43% 43%

273 273 54% 54%

282 282 55% 55%

523 523 371 371 72% 72%

563 563 387 387 69% 69%

4

52 3.83 m 3.18 m

3

2

4.3 m 3.44 m

1.89 m

1

0 0

2007/08 2007/08

2008/09 2008/09

2016/17 2016/17

2017/18 2017/18

2018/19 2018/19

0

2008/09

2014/15

2015/16

2016/17

2017/18

Students Receiving Financial Aid 800 800

Total Enrollment Total on Financial Aid

787 787

781 781

769 769

776 776

748 748

Attrition Rate Students leaving each year

60

600 600

50

400 400

55

52

40

41

30

200 200

0 0

113 113 14% 14%

118 118 15% 15%

2007/08 2007/08

2008/09 2008/09

189 189 25% 25%

195 195 25% 25%

206 206 28% 28%

41 31

20

10

2015/16 2015/16

2016/17 2016/17

2017/18 2017/18

0

2008/09 7%

2014/15 5%

2015/16 4%

2016/17 5%

2017/18 6%

Annual attrition rates for independent schools nationally average 9%.

annual report 2017-18 | 35


Endowment fuels the future

Like a smooth-running machine, Moses Brown’s fiscal engine is powered by income received through tuition, charitable donations, and annual distributions from endowed funds. Endowed funds, like 401k or 529 accounts, are saved and invested today for a specific purpose tomorrow. Endowment distributions help us provide the best education possible—supporting great teaching, academic and cocurricular programs, and scholarship. MB Believes is an opportunity to secure the financial future of Moses Brown. At the start of the campaign in 2013, and amassed over nearly 230 years, MB had an endowment of just $23 million. With the ultimate success of MB Believes, the school will add over $28 million in new gifts to the school’s endowment, more than doubling its size. Thanks to recent fundraising success and market growth, as of June 30, 2018, MB’s endowment stood at $37.29 million. To secure MB’s reputation and strength, the school needs to build the financial resources to attract the best teachers and students and provide them with truly world-class facilities and programs. This campaign has the potential to catapult MB to a much stronger position among peer schools regionally and nationally.

As of June 30, 2018 MOSES BROWN MB endowment $50m+ with the success of MB Believes

$37.3m $59m

SIDWELL FRIENDS

$75m

BUCKINGHAM BROWN & NICHOLS

$150m

NOBLE & GREENOUGH

$145m

ST. GEORGE’S

$310m 0

MILTON ACADEMY

50

100

150

200

ENDOWMENT VALUE (IN MILLIONS) 36 | annual report 2017-18

250

300

350


endowment funds Moses Brown is proud to recognize the 150 endowed funds comprising the school’s $37.3 million endowment. This list includes the 8 endowed funds that were established in 2017-2018. The following funds are organized by purpose: Robert and Linda Fischer Scholarship Fund M. Falk Fund F. H. Gifford Fund G. M. Gifford Fund Fred N. S. Goodrich ’51 Endowed Scholarship The Eric and Dana Falk Endowed Scholarship Fund The Flynn Family Endowed Scholarship Fund The E. E. Ford Foundation Fund for ACCESS Frank Fuller Scholarship Fund Program/Student Experience The Goldberg Family Scholarship Fund Anderson Fund Philip Gould Scholarship Fund Jake Bliss ’93 Endowed Fund for Adventurous Service Phyllis Gunion Fund Class of 2011 Legacy Fund The Haffenreffer Endowed Scholarship Fund Collis Family Fund for Social Entrepreneurship Peter Iovino ‘58 Family Scholarship Fund Marc A. Dwares ’94 Fund for Community Service The Jaffe Family Scholarship Fund Expert Thinking Fund Joanne P. Hoffman Endowed Scholarship Friends Education Fund Stephen R. Howe Scholarship Fund Debbie Goff Library Fund John F. Kenney, Jr. ’50 Endowed Fund The Goddard Fund for Student Projects Lacaillade Family Endowed Scholarship Fund H. Scotte Gordon Endowed TRIPs Fund Joseph Lake Endowed Scholarship Sarah Howland Fund Tony L. Leonard ’79 Endowment Fund Rip Hudner ’99 Fund for Outdoor Leadership Low Family Fund Lacaillade Family Student Travel and Experience Fund Jack A. Lubrano 1920 Scholarship Fund Physical Plant Lower School Fund for Special Projects Michael Maggiacomo ’85 Memorial Scholarship Fund C. Brier Fund MB TRIPs Fund Marathon 2500 Endowed Scholarship Fund Chase Fund Middle School Fund for Curriculum Vincent A. Marcello ’60 Endowed Scholarship Fund Innovation & Technology MB Scholarship Fund Unrestricted Funds Donald Aldrich Murdock Fund McCune Endowed Scholarship Fund Bowditch Fund Pansey Visiting Artist Theatre Fund Thomas Melucci ’84 Memorial Fund F. Brownell Fund Richard M. Oster ’52 Endowed TRIPs Fund Milner Family Endowed Scholarship Fund Campaign for Moses Brown School Endowed Fund Petteruti STEM Co-curricular Experience Fund Moses Brown Parents’ Association Fund for Scholarship Centennial Endowed Fund Alexandra Quattromani ’14 TRIPs Fund New York Friends Scholarship Fund Class of 1914 Fund Andrew Quattromani ’14 Expert Thinking Fund Dwight Hall Owen, Jr. and Sr., Endowed Fund C. Cooksey Fund Brad Shipp ’83 Endowed TRIPs Fund Petrosinelli Family Endowed Scholarship Fund G. M. Gates Fund Lillian H. Simmons Library Fund Beth Prairie ’89 Endowed Scholarship Fund Jason Goldstein ’58 Fund Sorensen Fund for Engineering & Design Learning Ramsden Family Endowed Scholarship Fund Charles G. Greenhalgh Fund Sorensen TRIPs and Student Experience Fund Jeffrey Shank ’02 Endowed Scholarship Fund Walter R. Jones Trust Fund Charles Taber Memorial Fund The Silver-Haspel Family Scholarship Fund Malcolm Lipson Fund Stephen Toro Music Education Fund M. D. Slocomb Fund Moses Brown School Improvement Fund Truslow Fund Peter D. Smith ’88 Memorial Scholarship Fund Richard F. Richardson Fund Upper School Foreign Language Endowed Fund Sorensen Endowed Scholarship Fund H. D. Sharp Fund Upper School Fund for Senior Projects Evan B. Spirito ’06 Endowed Scholarship Fund A.J. Smiley Fund Dirk Stones ’82 Memorial Fund Rebecca Akin (Wing) Steere Fund Scholarship The Charles B. Stuart ’56 Endowed Scholarship Third Century Fund Andrew F. Anderson ’81 Endowed Scholarship Fund L. Ralston Thomas Scholarship Fund Frances E. Wheeler Fund The Jesse R. Baker ‘92 Endowed Scholarship Fund Tothy Family Endowed Scholarship Fund The Bianco Family Scholarship Fund Awards and Prizes Philip J. Tripp Fund Randall W. Bliss ’46 Alumni Scholarship Fund Hannah J. Bailey Fund Tucker Family Endowed Scholarship Fund Board Designated Fund for Financial Aid Thomas J. Battey Fund Edith C. Ware Endowed Scholarship Fund Laurie Center Endowed Scholarship Fund Obadiah Brown Fund Paul H. Welch ’53 Endowed Scholarship Fund The Class of 1972 Doc Odell Scholarship Fund Eugene Capotosto ’33 Latin Prize Fund Anonymous (4) The Class of 2015 Endowed Scholarship Class of ’48 Fund for Independent Study & Inquiry Coleman Family Endowed Scholarship John F. Kenney Prize Fund Creamer Family Scholarship Fund R. Morris Fund Nathaniel C. Earle ’70 Endowed Fund Carter Palmer ’38 Memorial Prize Fund N. A. Mark Estes ’67 Scholarship Fund John Milton Payne II Prize Fund Faculty Support The Earlene Perry Baker Science Fund for Teaching and Curricular Growth Rufus S. D. Bilodeau ’89 Fund Richard I. Burton ’54 and Margaret L. Burton Fellowship Fund for Excellence in Science Education Burton Fund for Faculty Enrichment The Russell Carpenter ’59 Program in Teaching Excellence Class of 1960 Master Teacher Development Fund Class of 2013 Team Teaching Fund Collins Family Fund The E. E. Ford Foundation Fund for Faculty Salaries Leonard Miller ’51 Fund for Travel/Study Levesque Family Fund for Teaching Excellence King B. “Doc” Odell Distinguished Teaching Chair Fund (PETER ‘67 AND CONSTANCE LACAILLADE) Joseph Olney ’32 Sabbatical Fund Pension Funds (3) Swan Fund for Faculty Enrichment World Class Teaching Endowment

David Earle Pearce ’46 Fund Sophia L. Pitman Book Prize Fund Susan M. Seabury Memorial Prize Fund Charles H. Smith Fund R. Thomas Fund Ben Tré Fund for the Visual Arts Howard Seth Young, Jr. ’42 Prize Fund Jim English Prize Fund

annual report 2017-18 | 37


A YEAR IN THE LIFE AT

Moses Brown A PHOTOGRAPH IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS.

November M 64 #TurkeyDrive #GobbleGobble

December M 77 #USChorus #RIStateHouse #HolidayConcert

March M 85 #USTextiles #FashionShow #StudentMade

April M 54 #TheHateUGive #MSEnglish #FieldTrip

38 | annual report 2017-18


September M 91 #StartofSchool #WelcomeBack

October M 72 #MiddleSchoolChamps #QuakerNation

January M 45 #FirstLSMusical #AnnieKids #TheSunWillComeOut

February M 72 #MakingDumplings #ChineseNewYear

May M 83 #ProvidenceProject #DelSesto #CommunityBuilding

June # WeD id It # G ra M 102 du at io n # C la ss of 2018 annual report 2017-18 | 39


Moses Brown School

250 Lloyd Avenue, Providence RI 02906

MB Believes A CAMPAIGN FOR LEARNING, PEOPLE, AND PLACE

Thank you! Questions or comments? Contact the MB Development/Alumni Relations office at 401.831.7350 x184. 40 | annual report 2017-18


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