Honoring a legend
2022
Mount Legacy 2022
The Mount Legacy is published by the Office of the President at Mount Saint Charles Academy, 800 Logee Street, Woonsocket, RI, 02895. Mount Saint Charles Academy is a private, Catholic, college-preparatory, 6th to 12th-grade academy in the tradition of the Brothers of the Sacred Heart, committed to academic excellence, moral values, and well-rounded students. Our commitment to caring means that each and every student is known, valued, and treasured.
Administration
President
Alan Tenreiro '92
Vice President
Jessie Butash
Principal
Julie Beauvais '96
Assistant Principal
Ed Burke
Office of Admissions
Susan Gasbarro, Director of Admissions gasbarros@mtstcharles.org
401-769-0310 ext. 177
Office of Advancement
Lisa Lydon, Director of Advancement lydonl@mtstcharles.org
401-769-0310 ext. 124
Office of Alumni Relations
Gail Bryson alumni@mtstcharles.org
401-769-0310 ext. 115
Board of Directors
Chairperson
Gerard R. Piette ‘76
Members
Br. Roy Pinette, SC
Alan Tenreiro ’92 – President
William Ryan, ’73
Amy Burke ‘95
Br. Robert G. Gagne, SC
Courtney Mungovan ‘92
David Soucy
Kevin Goffe
Thomas Ward, ’71
Matthew Jarret, ’95, Vice Chair
Hilary Stafford
Derek Collamati, ’95
2 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
Be a Mountie and you can be anything.
Message from the President
You don’t have to look at history for too long to see it isn’t a straight line. Historical threads begin, end, re-start, circle around, and in every way prove that George Santayana wasn’t being fanciful when he talked about history repeating itself.
In this year’s edition of Mount Legacy, history’s twists and turns feel especially prominent. We’ve been through a lot together, finding our equilibrium as we emerged from the COVID lockdown and piecing together whatever qualifies as our new normal. Along the way, new threads of Mount history started. Others ended and beget new beginnings. One re-emerged after it looked like it was snipped off.
In January, Mount said goodbye to legendary hockey coach Bill Belisle. Coach Belisle made an indelible mark on Mount for more than 40 years, 1,000-plus victories and 32 Rhode Island championships, but his legacy doesn’t end with his passing. Like all the true greats, he left something to build on. The reputation for excellence he established was the foundation for Mount Saint Charles Hockey Academy. This year, academy players opened a new chapter of success by winning the national USA Hockey U18 championship. One member of the team, Andrew Throndson, was the very first student to tour the hockey academy. He graduated from Mount last year and became part of Mount history.
Mount graduate Timothy Sheahan wrote himself into the historical event we lived with for almost two years – the pandemic – with his work on treatments. His work will carry ahead to treatments of similar illnesses.
A piece of Mount that had passed into history came back around. After a hiatus of several years, the Hilltopper newspaper is back as an online publication. A new generation of creative editors and writers are recording the news, events and ideas that energize life at Mount.
We launched a new tradition in the fall of 2021: the annual MountOberfest, which will welcome graduates and families of current students back to campus every fall. Another, the Freshman Institute, helps bring our new ninth graders together.
Which one of these stories and the others in this edition will become part of Mount history? That’s anyone’s guess. History doesn’t often tip its hand. A small moment can grow into lore, and a momentous event can fade from memory. All we can do is look back to help understand how we got where we are, then ahead, and hope to be a little wiser for what we’ve gone through.
Best regards,
Alan Tenreiro '92 President
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 3
In this Issue 5 Remembering Bill Belisle 8 Faith In Action 10 Legacies Past and Present 14 Graduation 16 Events 18 Campus News 24 Sur La Glace 26 In Memoriam 27 Annual Report Features 10 24 5 20
Richard
Lawrence remembers the impact of a friend
Remembering Bill Belisle - a coach, a teacher, and a friend
that this man carried throughout his life – devotion to his God, devotion to his wife and sons and devotion to the young men that came to him to learn the game of hockey.
And I do not use that word “devotion” lightly.
Yes, he did remain intense, focused and serious throughout his life, but there was another side of him that perhaps only those close to him witnessed.
Halfway down the corridor to Mount’s main office, on the left, is a photo of a classroom of boys taken some time in the mid 1940s. There, right up front, sits a teenage Bill Belisle. The face peers into the camera – intense, focused, and serious.
Who could have thought that this would be the beginning of something so special for Mount Saint Charles –something that would go on for nearly 70 years and that would extend far beyond the boundaries of this school.
Flash forward to the mid 1970’s and Bill was back at the Mount, employed as the ice rink manager and as an assistant coach to the boys’ hockey team. I had just been hired as the athletic director a few years earlier, and now Mount was looking to hire a varsity hockey coach.
The administration decided to turn the program over to Bill Belisle, a decision that would put the school on the track that would lead to amazing accomplishments and lead to the program gaining national attention.
A state championship win streak that would extend from the 1970s and into the 21st century, players being drafted into the National Hockey League, players going on to play in the Olympics, and teams that competed for the National High School Championship.
During that time I often wondered how all of this could be actually happening. I often wondered that there had to be some secret to this incredible success.
And always, as I searched for that key, I would fall back to some of the qualities
On the night when he would be honored for achieving the amazing plateau of 1,000 high school hockey game victories, I sat with him in his office that was tucked away in the corner of the locker room for about 30 minutes and listened as he spoke of some of the many memories he had experienced as coach. There were times during that talk when he choked on his words and tears welled up in his eyes.
I was at this moment when I discovered something that I had been searching for during the many decades that I had known him and worked with him.
That it was love that drove him. Love for his God, love for his family, love for his school, love for the game, and love for his many players. I feel fortunate to have witnessed the power of this love. I feel fortunate to be able to say that he was a dear friend and that I will miss his presence in my life.
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 5 Remembering Bill Belisle
A beginning of a legacy
Brother John Hebert Remembers Bill Belisle
Bill Belisle became Mount Saint Charles hockey’s head coach in the middle of a perfect storm. Multifaceted crises shaped the unexpected decision to offer him the job. Without them, that offer might not have been made.
Almost every issue Mount faced in 1974 could have been stamped “URGENT,” and the most critical of them was beyond the school's control. Prolonged recession with crippling inflation and unemployment hit Woonsocket with especial severity. Mount was hemorrhaging students whose parents had lost jobs.
That summer, the provincial of the Brothers of the Sacred Heart’s New England Province became distraught with the academy’s direction, both financially and academically – but especially in the finances. On the afternoon of July 26th, he approached me.
“We need to know if that place is even salvageable,” he said.
With that, he asked me to take over Mount’s leadership. I accepted, with trepidation, and with less than a month to prepare.
Hockey was not a worry. After a twoyear slump, the Mounties had a new, dynamic, and tactically innovative teacher/coach, Steve Shea, recently graduated from Brown University. He taught English, established a new training regimen for the Mounties, and “moonlighted” as a junior coach for Brown’s groundbreaking women’s hockey program, the Pandas.
In March, the end of hockey season landed with a “thud.” With a terrible
record, the team was discouraged, the fans were disappointed, and the “rink rats” were apoplectic. I met with Coach Shea, who had taken on a difficult task. He expressed confidence in the team, sure that the “Russian style” training program he introduced would bear fruit in the coming year.
I appreciated his stoicism and accepted his optimistic assessment. I cautioned him to encourage his players and to stay in touch with them over the summer.
Soon after, I met with the Woonsocket Call’s schoolboy sports columnist, Mike Szestak, who was hunting for a scoop. He asked whether there would be a change in Mount’s varsity hockey coaching staff.
None, I told him. I expressed confidence in Coach Shea, but my attention was focused elsewhere. In his March 25 column, Mr. Szestak quoted Coach Shea saying that the Mounties’ progress had been significant over the course of the season. They were “…learning to skate with power and finesse… I think the program speaks for itself, and gradually we’ll build up,” he’d said. I thought the column overstated our situation, but that was better than pessimism.
Once again, I was sure that hockey required no more of my attention. The next afternoon, Ash Wednesday, seven students – all hockey players –came to my office to prove me wrong. All but one of them hung back by the door. The tallest – their spokesman – stepped forward and addressed me with great seriousness.
“Brother John, if Mr. Shea is the
varsity hockey coach next year, we are transferring to Woonsocket High." Simple, direct, decisive.
Looking at the others, I said, "Is this where you all stand?" Murmurs of assent and affirmative bobbing heads were the answer.
I replied, “I hear you. I heard you and I understand. Thanks for coming." I pointed at the door. The boys left quietly.
With crystal clarity, I realized that Mr. Shea had to go, but I was determined that he would not leave that post in disgrace. When it came to a replacement, we had a good head start. Three unsolicited resumes of varsity coaches had come in, including an impressive one from Cumberland High’s coach, Serge Boudreault. Fortunately, there was to be an alumni executive board meeting that evening. They knew hockey better than I did. I asked board member Larry Tremblay to meet with me in my office. I summarized my dilemma: “Who is the very best person to be Mount’s varsity coach?”
He did not hesitate: “Brother, he is right here under your nose!”
I responded, “Bill Belisle?”
“Yes,” he said, and assured me that Bill’s position as Adelard Arena’s manager would not be a conflict of interest that could trigger a Principal’s Committee action.
“OK. I believe you, and I will take your advice, but please keep this conversation to yourself.” With that, in just 10 minutes, the decision was made.
6 | Mount Saint Charles Academy Remembering Bill Belisle
Besides Mr. Tremblay’s unswerving recommendation, Bill had a lot going for him. I knew him to be a devoted family man and a daily communicant at St. James Church. Perhaps most importantly, his devotion to Mount ran deep.
The next morning, before class, I met with Mr. Shea. He told me that he understood and that he mainly hoped to continue to teach English at Mount, which he loved doing (and which he did, for decades afterward). I said that he certainly could, and he said, “Then don’t worry about me.”
At 10 a.m. I met with Bill in his office at the arena. He welcomed me graciously. I complimented his exceptional management of the arena and asked whether he was willing to shoulder one more responsibility. He became very serious.
“Bill,” I said, “how would you react if I asked you to be Mount’s varsity coach?”
He lowered his head for a long moment. I could not see his face. When he looked up, with a little smile, he said, “I think I would like that.”
I would make no announcement yet. I asked Bill to tell only the boys he would be coaching and their parents, and, of course, his wife, Yvette. He should refer reporters to me.
“I know word will get out, but I don’t want this change to be seen as a repudiation of Mr. Shea. Please back me up on this, Bill.”
"I will do my best, Brother John – for the brothers and for Mount, my alma mater. I still have that ol' Mount spirit we had as a team back in the 50's.”
I believed, once again, that hockey no longer needed my attention. This time, I was right – more than I could have dreamed.
the media remembers a hockey legend
The legend of Mount hockey coach Bill Belisle was well established long before he passed away on Jan. 12, 2022. But the response to his death underscored the enormous respect Coach Belisle commanded in the schoolboy hockey world.
Newspapers across the United States and several in Canada carried Coach Belisle’s obituary, which included retrospectives of his career as schoolboy hockey’s all-time winningest coach and remembrances by former players, including Brian Lawton and Garth Snow.
News of Coach Belisle’s passing appeared in newspapers in Colorado, Connecticut, Iowa, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Washington, and Ontario, Canada. It also spread far beyond traditional hockey states to Alabama, California, Kentucky, Missouri, Mississippi and Nevada.
It was in local papers, major regional newspapers like the Albany Times Union, Boston Globe, Charlotte Observer, Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph and Toronto Star, and national hockey publications such as The Hockey News, the New England Hockey Journal, the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame website, Yahoo Sports, and MSN Sports.
Closer to home, Coach Belisle was the subject of extensive coverage in the Providence Journal, Woonsocket Call, Valley Breeze, Cranston Herald, Warwick Beacon, The Rhode Island Catholic, Rhode Island Public Radio, and on the Providence television stations. The Providence Bruins honored Coach Belisle before their January 14, 2022 game. The honors had started rolling in years before Coach Belisle’s death, however. In 1999, he was number six on Sports Illustrated magazine’s list of Rhode Island’s top 50 all-time sports figures. A year later, he was named to the National Federation of State High School Associations Hall of Fame. In 2016, he was inducted into the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame and was the subject of an in-depth New York Times profile.
COACH BELISLE, BY THE NUMBER S
Years coaching Mount – 1975-2019
Record – 1,000 wins, 187 losses, 40 ties. Holds the record for victories among high school coaches. State championships – 32 (26 consecutive)
Players sent to the National Hockey League – 23, including two number-one draft picks
A beginning of a legacy
New Values-Based Scholarship Program
Mount Saint Charles Academy launched a new scholarship program in 2022, awarding as much as $5,000 to students who exemplify values embodied by one Catholic priest and six saints.
The scholarships emphasize Mount’s commitment to Catholic values. They are awarded to applicants with demonstrated commitments to leadership, performing arts, community service, charitable acts, environmental awareness, and intellectual curiosity.
“Cultural and intellectual diversity make a more energetic learning environment,” said Mount Saint Charles President Alan Tenreiro. “The scholarships are our commitment to attracting students with passions, talents, and the desire to share them at Mount and in the community. Rewarding their commitment to the Catholic values central to a Mount education is further proof that we don’t just talk about values. We live them.”
The minimum scholarship award is $1,000. Current tuition at Mount Saint Charles is $11,000 for grades 6-8 and $16,050 for grades 9-12.
The inaugural class of 21 scholarship recipients include students in grades six, eight and nine.
The scholarships are:
Monsignor Charles Dauray Scholarship for academic achievement and problem-solving initiative.
St. Aloysius Gonzaga Leadership Scholarship for leadership qualities.
St. Catherine of Siena Scholarship for students who are active outside the classroom in Scouting, community service, sports, etc.
St. Francis of Assisi Scholarship for students interested in the environment.
St. Genesius Scholarship for Artistic Excellence for excellence in creative writing, dance, drama, music or visual art.
St. Vincent de Paul Scholarship for interest in charitable acts.
St. Martin de Porres Fund, named after the patron saint of the racial harmony and social justice, for a student or students of color.
Faith in Action
2022 Scholarship Recipients
St. Catherine of Siena Scholarship
Sixth Grade
Teagan Raspallo, Burrillville, RI
Jake Hammerschlag, Cumberland, RI
Avery Collins, Attleboro, MA
Nathan Braza, Woonsocket, RI
Ninth Grade
Kyla Smilevski, Cumberland, RI
Mikaela Ravaneles, Uxbridge, MA
Madelyn Iozzi, Warwick, RI
St. Aloysius Gonzaga Leadership Scholarship
Sixth Grade
Mason Mieczynski, Cumberland, RI
Ninth Grade
Addison Johnson, Cumberland, RI
Emily Russo, Cumberland, RI
Braden LaChance, Taunton, MA
Mikaela Ravaneles, Uxbridge, MA
Nicholas Chartier, Woonsocket, RI
St. Vincent de Paul Scholarship
Ninth Grade
Brooke Hogan, Cumberland, RI
Greta Colonero, Douglas, MA
Emma Hurley, Uxbridge, MA
Rita DeSouza, Woonsocket, RI
Abigail Lebond, Woonsocket, RI
Anthony Santangelo, North Smithfield, RI
St. Genesius Scholarships
Eighth Grade
Delaney Durkin, Scituate, RI
St. Francis of Assissi Scholarship
Ninth Grade
Emma Hurley, Uxbridge, MA
Monsignor Charles Dauray Scholarship
Ninth Grade
Charles King, Woonsocket, RI
A legacy of making a difference
Mount grad tackles covid-19
For someone who got a shaky start in science, Timothy Sheahan caught up fast.
Dr. Sheahan, a 1994 Mount Saint Charles graduate, is a viral disease researcher at the University of North Carolina who helped bring the first pill for treating COVID-19 to market. The pill, molnupiravir, is an effective, easily administered option for treating COVID victims when their infection is discovered.
“Anyone can start taking it as soon as they start feeling sick. If taken early
enough, it can prevent hospitalization and could limit transmission of the virus to other people in a household,” Dr. Sheahan said.
Dr. Sheahan’s years at Mount yielded few clues that he would become a highly regarded virologist contributing to medical science’s understanding of emerging viral diseases. Some of his science classes at Mount Saint Charles kindled a spark of interest, but for the most part he describes his science education as more of a sideshow than the main event – at least early on.
“I wasn’t super interested in science when I first got to Mount. I think I was on my way to getting a D in my first-quarter general science class in seventh grade. I remember sitting near my teacher with my parents at our class Mass, hoping she wouldn’t talk to them about how bad I was doing,” Dr. Sheahan said.
His interests ran more toward history, soccer, learning to play guitar, and performing in his cousin’s rock band. Teacher John Guevremont, himself a singer in a rock band, encouraged Dr.
10 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
Legacies: Past & Present
Sheahan’s pursuit of music.
“He really supported my musical interests. I wrote and recorded a song based on the book ‘Lord of the Flies,’ and he played it in class one day really loudly. The people in the classrooms that shared walls with ours must not have been super happy, but Mr. G. went to great lengths to spark interest in the books we were reading,” Dr. Sheahan recalls.
But while science wasn’t at the top of Dr. Sheahan’s list of interests, it was still on the list. He enjoyed and did well in biology and environmental science. When he graduated from Mount and went to the University of New Hampshire, he gravitated toward the life sciences.
“I knew I was interested in science, but I didn’t have any idea that I would turn it into a career,” Dr. Sheahan said. “I went to college to study natural resources; my original major was water resource management. As part of that I had to take microbiology, and that was the game changer. That’s when I got interested in viruses and infectious diseases, and decided I wanted to make a career of studying them.”
Dr. Sheahan is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the Gillings School of Global Public Health at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He earned a doctoral degree in microbiology and immunology at UNC after graduating from the University of New Hampshire with a bachelor’s degree in microbiology and water resource management. With years of experience studying coronaviruses before the pandemic, Dr. Sheahan was one of the first researchers to test the pill molnupiravir and
verify that it could effectively treat multiple different coronaviruses. He extended this work to the virus that causes COVID-19 early on in the pandemic. Manufacturers Merck and Ridgeback Biotherapeutics received approval from the U.S. Food and Drug administration to release molnupiravir in late 2021.
Prior to researching molnupiravir, Dr. Sheahan worked on the liquid medication remdesivir, which is also effective against COVID 19 but must be administered through an IV in a medical facility.
Now that there are effective vaccines and therapeutics to treat COVID-19, Dr. Sheahan has scaled back the extralong hours he spent addressing the pandemic. Nevertheless he plans to
continue working on new coronavirus treatments.
“There are currently two oral antiviral drugs available, but they aren’t awesome and could be improved on. We’re working on some new oral antivirals, some of which will be tested soon in people,” he said. “In the past 20 years, three new coronaviruses have jumped from animals into humans to cause new diseases. To be prepared for the next coronavirus, we want to work on medications that not only work against the coronaviruses we know about today, but also those that emerge in future. The global scientific community has come together to battle COVID-19. The hard work that’s been done should put us in a much better place to battle COVIDs of the future.
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 11
Two hundred years of faith and service
Brothers celebrate bicentennial
The Brothers of the Sacred Heart celebrated the 200th anniversary of their founding as a Catholic religious order on September 30, 2021. Mount Saint Charles Academy’s annual Foundation Day Mass on that day was the local celebration of this milestone.
The religious community, founded by Father Andre Coindre in Lyon, France, in 1821, is now a world-wide institute with over 1,000 Brothers in 33 countries.
Father Coindre envisioned a community of brothers trained to work with the poor through the establishment of schools. In 1821, that dream became a reality with the formation of the Brothers of the Sacred Heart.
After Father Coindre's death in 1826 and at the end of Father Francis Coindre's administration, Brother Polycarp, the first Brother Superior General, assumed leadership of the struggling community. His tenure was marked by a period of tremendous growth. By the time of his death in 1859, the institute had grown to over 400 Brothers in 70 schools.
In January of 1847, at the request of Bishop Portier, five missionary Brothers of the Sacred Heart arrived in Mobile, Alabama, to begin charitable and educational work. With a presence in the United States, the congregation began its transformation into a worldwide institute, spreading throughout North America in the South, New York, New England and into Canada.
Today, the Brothers of the Sacred Heart of the United States Province sponsor or work in 10 schools in the United States, one school in the United Kingdom, one school and college in the Philippines, and two missions –one on the Navajo nation in Klagetoh, Arizona, and the other in Amatongas, Mozambique.
The United States Province of the Brothers of the Sacred Heart celebrated this bicentennial with a two-day program held in late July, 2022 on the campus of Saint Stanislaus College, in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi because of COVID restrictions in the actual anniversary year.
12 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
Legacies: Past & Present
Pictured left to right: Mount President Alan Tenreiro, Brother Robert Croteau, Brother Clifford King, Mount Principal Julie Beauvais, and Brother Mark Hilton.
From freshman to scholar to hockey champion
First Hockey Prospect Graduates
“I’m taking a lot away from my experience at Mount. My hockey game has improved, but Mount also definitely shaped me as a young man. It taught me a lot about perseverance, being more self reliant, and having discipline,” he said.
Andrew grew up in Apex, North Carolina, in a hockey-playing family. His parents are Canadian, and his father taught the game to him and his older brothers Erik and Christopher.
Andrew, along with his Mount Hockey Academy teammates, played on the Rhode Island Saints team that won the USA Hockey Youth Tier 1 2022 18U national championship. He also played on the Division II state champion Mount boys lacrosse team and was named to the first team all-division team and first team all-academic.
It took a lot of imagination in September 2018 to see what Mount Saint Charles Hockey Academy would look like. The new coaching staff had just been announced, and the school still hadn’t decided where boarding students would live.
Nevertheless, Andrew Throndson and his parents, Maryanne and Ron, recognized the potential when they became the very first prospective hockey academy family to tour Mount.
“I saw the plans for where the dorm would be built, heard the plans for the team and met the coaches. I also learned what Mount did for Rhode Island hockey and its successes, and I could see a great future,” Andrew said.
He enrolled and arrived on campus in Sept. 2019. Three years later, in June 2022, Andrew graduated with academic honors, a national hockey championship, and a Rhode Island state lacrosse championship. He has signed to play in the Central Canada Hockey League (CCHL) for the 2022-23 season and credits his experience at Mount for making him better on and off the ice.
Though the metro Raleigh area has a strong youth hockey culture, playing at a high level meant looking for a school in the Northern hockey heartlands. After traveling and splitting his playing time between two Boston programs, Andrew researched prep schools with competitive hockey programs around the Northeast. Mount offered the right combination of hockey, strong academics, a supportive environment, and an on-campus ice rink he was looking for.
“I felt at home right away. Living in the dorm was like living with my best friends 24x7. Monthly activities brought us closer as a team. I got to experience a lot of Rhode Island, like Newport, Providence, and the beaches down in Narragansett,” he said. “The COVID lockdown was frustrating. We were in a bubble to keep us safe, but practicing constantly and having a lot of games canceled created a big obstacle. Overcoming obstacles made us stronger mentally and the Mount community was right there to help us – teachers, coaches, staff, the other students, they were like a second family.”
After graduation, Andrew spent the summer working in his family’s steel fabrication business while training for the upcoming hockey season. This fall, Andrew will travel to Brockville, Ontario, Canada to play for the Brockville Braves of the CCHL for the 2022-23 season. He plans to play for the year “then see what happens after that.”
In a graduation-day note to Mount President Alan Tenreiro, Andrew’s mother reflected back on the family’s first visit to the school and their confidence they made the right choice.
“We’ve come a long way from those early days, and the Brother Josephus Residence Hall has truly become Andrew’s home away from home. Today was a bittersweet experience of packing up and hearing that room door close one last time. We knew right from the beginning that Mount Saint Charles Hockey Academy was the place where Andrew could further his academic pursuits, continue his hockey development under the guidance of stellar coaches, and also be a nurturing environment where he could thrive and mature into the independent, compassionate and responsible young man that he has become,” she said.
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 13
Be a Mountie and you can be anything Class of 2022
As the historic school bell tower rang for the only the third time since they started school at Mount, the Class of 2022 processed to to the school s gymnasium, which had not hosted a graduation since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. As the soon-to-be-graduated prepared to enter a world monumentally changed by the events of the past two years, they also walked through halls steeps in nearly 100 years of tradition, offering them the opportunity to reflect on their own experiences.
The commencement, led by by master of ceremonies, Brian Giles, opened with greetings from President Alan Tenreiro
and a special achnowledgement of the Class of 1972, who were on hand to receive anniversary diplomas in celebration of their 50th anniversary of graduation from the school.
"The world feels alien and different since 1972. The good isn’t always easy to see … but it’s there. I see the good right now. It’s sitting right in front of me,” reflected Mr. Tenreiro. " Being good to people is a wonderful legacy to leave behind."
What followed was a return to much appreciated and much needed return to tradition, beginning with an address by salutatorian Olivia Antonelli. Ms. Antonelli took graduates and their gathered families and friends on a journey
14 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
2022 Commencement
from 6th grade through their senior year, highlighting her classes accomplishments, challenges, and triumphs. Ms. Antonelli also remembered valuable advice from her recently-passed grandmother. "Do your duty, do your best, leave unto the Lord the rest."
This advice led into similar and relatable guidance from valedictorian Chau Le. Ms. Le referenced her own favorite video game, Super Mario Bros.
“I have one final piece of advice and that is to approach life like it’s a video game," shared Ms. Le. She continued and explained that no matter how many times she fell in the video game, she continued to try.
"Sometimes you may need to try one or five or even 20 times and that’s okay. As long as you keep trying, you will continue to improve and will be able to conquer whatever level you set your minds to," shared Ms. Le.
Following the salutatory and valedictory speeches, Principal Julie Beauvais conferred and handed out the new graduate’s degrees.
Additionally top students were honored for exceptional contributions to the culture of excellence at Mount; the Excelsior award to Zachary Aben, the All Mountie award to Alex Gasbarro, and the Ametur Cor Jesu Award to Madision Cerda.
As the graduates transition into a world of amazing opportunities and change, all of them carry forward with them the powerful bonds of community and the sense of commitment to purpose that a Mount experience instills in every graduate.
CLASS OF 2022 By-the-numbers
The Class of 1972 celebrated the 50th anniversary of their graduation and received their Gold Diplomas alongside the Class of 2022.
Graduating Seniors
different colleges and universities graduates were admitted to
97 $22 million
in scholarship funds received
15 graduates
are their family's first generation to attend college
155 #MountPride
New Traditions
MountOberfest Brings a New Tradition to Mount
of fundraisers and studentoriented events like sports and performances, but we wanted to have a strictly social event, especially for adults.”
Such events provide parents of the residential students a chance to meet each other as well as day-student families. A Friday night family dinner was held to greet out-of-town visitors fresh off the road who were arriving for Saturday and Sunday hockey games.
MountOberFest, now in its second year, started as a fall evening of connecting with friends, old and new, as the community gathered together for the first time in several years.
The Columbus Day weekend celebrations attracted more than 150 parents, faculty and alumni. The Saturday evening Oktoberfest-style celebration was held on campus in the front circle. The event featured lawn games, raffles, food, beer and wine. Music was provided by The Good Living Band, which included Spency Soucy, ’12 & Adam Landry, ’12. A s’mores station was sponsored by City Bonfires, who also donated portable fire pits. Two local microbreweries owned by current Mount families –Lops Brewing of Woonsocket and Ravenous Brewing Company of Cumberland – served samples of their
specialty brews.
Now a recurring event, a bigger and better MountOberFest was celebrated on Columbus Day weekend in October 2022. A recurring event, MountOberfest gives new families a chance to make friends and for alumni to renew ties with Mount and their former schoolmates.
“It’s about being together as a community, celebrating and strengthening connections,” said Lisa Lydon, Director of Advancement.
“We have a pretty full calendar
“The Hockey Academy started in 2019 and the pandemic hit halfway through, so the students and parents didn’t have a lot of chances to connect,” Ms. Lydon said. “We plan to build out more activities for all of our families and alumni throughout the entire year now that we are on the other side of pandemic restrictions.”
16 | Mount Saint Charles Academy Events
Lights...Camera...Auction!
Our annual gala and auction was a great success, raising over $165,000 with 350 people in attendance.
2022 USA Hockey National Champions - Youth, Tier 1, 18U
Elite Dance Team among Top in Country at Disney
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 17
Building Connections From The Very First Day
Most people probably wouldn’t include the first week of high school freshman year in their lifetime highlights. As if high school’s bigger workload and higher academic pressure weren’t enough, the start of freshman year packs enough social awkwardness and anxiety to last until graduation –and beyond.
Mount Saint Charles created the Freshman Institute to make students’ first days at the school a fonder memory and the foundation for future success.
The Freshman Institute is a day-long program of ice breaking, team building and learning activities for incoming Mount ninth graders. The exercises are aimed at exorcizing freshman year anxiety and laying the groundwork for academic success.
Students have fun meeting each other, but also get some serious work done. They share their concerns and worries and thoughts on how to overcome them. They learn about social and emotional wellness, maximizing and balancing
academic opportunities and rigor, and the importance of getting involved in their school community.
The school counseling department started the Freshman Institute as a pilot program in 2021 in response to the pandemic lockdown. The pilot showed that the program had value beyond helping kids reconnect after nearly a year of isolation.
“It helps bring students together as a class by introducing them to people they might not meet otherwise. Even the freshman)who come over from Mount middle school need it because it helps break down barriers between them and new inbound students,” said Director of School Counseling Lisa Tenreiro. “We help the kids unpack their emotional burdens and explore questions like: ‘Who am I as a learner? What are my goals? How can Mount help me achieve them?’”
Those weighty goals are wrapped in team-building activities. Each incoming freshman is placed in a 10-student
18 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
Institute
Freshman
A Tradition of Academic Excellence
“pod” led by an upperclassman. Each pod creates its own mascot and dance. They compete in a pod “Olympics,” in events like relays and trivia competitions.
“The activities help everyone laugh and have fun while they get to know each other,” said Alexis Ells, a senior from Sutton, Mass., who volunteered as a Freshman Institute peer leader in ’21 and again as co-leader this year. “The teams develop a spirit of ‘this is my team, and I want to win.’ No one gets left behind; even the shy kids have a chance to find a group to belong to.”
The school counseling staff used feedback about 2021 to finetune the program for 2022. They made the institute one day instead of two because students didn’t want to be out of class twice so early in the year. They scheduled it at the beginning of the week so students could connect before classes started. The changes are aimed at creating as welcoming an environment as possible for Mount’s newest students. This year's program relied on veteran leaders like Alexis to not only work with the 9th grade students but to also mentor a new group of Institute leaders.
“I came to Mount as a new sophomore, so I was in the same situation as a new freshman,” Alexis said. “I wish I had done something like the institute. Most of the kids I’ve spoken to said it was a good thing to do. Many students said they made their best friends during the institute and met upperclassmen who could answer questions for them. It integrates the class.”
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 19
Expanding Opportunities Robotics Helps Grow Technology Program Into The Future
“When the tech program first started, it was like pulling teeth to get kids in because they didn’t understand what it was all about,” said computer science teacher Rick Simard, who founded the program in 2020. “This year, we have enough kids for seven full classes – more than I can teach. There are 40 kids who want to take our robotics class and another 40 to 50 who want to take a new drone class we’re doing in partnership with Brown University. The growth makes me excited about where we’re going. ” The after-school robotics program, which initially attracted four students to compete in national programs, now has 17 – enough for two teams. The Mount robotics program has excelled in the FIRST Robotics Competition, a national contest where it has placed finalists in the New England regional and national finals, and won the team spirit award in 2022.
Olivia Marcoux, ’24, one of Mount’s FIRST Competition finalists, takes over as captain of the robotics team for the 2022-23 season. Reaching the national competition in Houston in April 2022 inspired her to get there again – and bring more Mounties with her.
Mount’s technology education program had a lot of catching up to do when it emerged as the school’s newest academic discipline just a few years ago. Now, with graduates excelling at top engineering schools and new students pouring into the classes and extracurricular robotics program, it’s safe to say the catching-up phase is finished.
Olivia started in the tech program with the drone building course. Always mechanically inclined, she enjoyed soldering circuits, learning the drone’s components, and the principles of aerodynamics. Noticing her aptitude, Mr. Simard invited her to join the robotics team.
“I hadn’t done anything like robotics before I joined the team. It was challenging in a good way. Programming the robots was a whole different way of thinking – a language unto itself. The challenge was exhilarating,” she said.
20 | Mount Saint Charles Academy A Tradition of Academic Excellence
Before she joined the robotics team and despite her natural talent for mechanics, Olivia was “more of an arts kid. I didn’t realize technology was an option. Before I got into the tech program, I wasn’t sure whether I wanted to be a surgeon or an engineer. This has been a sign to go down the engineering path. I’d like to study mechanical engineering in college.”
Mr. Simard envisions the program inspiring other students like Olivia to pursue their interests in technology. Two have who already gone that route are 2020 graduate Shivaani Gopal and 2022 graduate Aryan Bhadouria.
Ms. Gopal is entering her junior year as a mechanical engineering major at Worcester Polytechnic Institute in Massachusetts. She was initiated into the WPI Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, the National Leadership Honor Society, in January 2022. She was also a NASA Mission Concept Academy Scholar in 2021 and a laboratory assistant in WPI’s Nano-Energy Lab.
2022 graduate Aryan Bhadouria entered the University of California Berkley this fall to study computer science. He is interested in decentralized “Web3” internet technologies such as crypto currency and block chain.
Mr. Bhadouria was already well on his way to pursuing technology when he started taking computer science courses at Mount and competing on the robotics team. He liked how his classes exposed him to new technology and what the robotics team taught him about working in a group.
“When I was named captain as a sophomore, it was a turning point in my computer science career. Being in a leadership position showed me about computer science, robotics and working on a team through a different lens. I would attribute a lot of foundational aspects of my character to being on the robotics team,” Mr. Bhadouria said. “I’m really hopeful for Mount’s tech curriculum and excited about what’s to come.”
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 21
Reviving The Hilltopper After 10+ Years
to appeal to a wide range of interests, from students to graduates.
“We get good reactions to our interviews because a lot our readers are alumni who like to hear about teachers and brothers they remember from Mount,” said Ms. Wirkus, a rising senior from Norfolk, Mass. “A lot of students also like Zephyr Tangri’s video blog about traveling with the hockey academy team because they don’t often hear about the team. And all of the lifestyle articles we do get good responses.”
Revived in 2019 after a hiatus of 10-plus years, the Mount Saint Charles Hilltopper newspaper has grown into a varied and lively record of all things Mount and many beyond.
Under the direction of co-editors
Amanda Thrul and Madigan Wirkus, and advisor Pam Desaulniers, a crew of student writers churns out a monthly stream of news, features and commentary published online for the Mount community.
Hit the Hilltopper home page and you might find a retrospective on Mount proms over the years next to an explanation of the Russian-Ukrainian war.
Turn the page (so to speak) and read what a Hilltopper writer found in three boxes of circa ‘30s-‘40s Mount photos and memorabilia. Move on to movie and play reviews, opinion pieces, interviews with teachers and students, and an exploration of COVID and prospective future pandemics. It’s a skillfully balanced stew of topics designed
Ms. Wirkus and Ms. Thrul meet with their writing staff once a month to plan the month’s articles. They get ideas from the writers, their own interests and life experiences, and occasionally unexpected sources.
“Mr. Tenreiro asked us to go through a box of alumni memorabilia and write about what we found. I was afraid I’d break some of the stuff because it was so old,” Ms. Thrul said. “It was the period from 1941 to 1945, and it was interesting because World War II was going on. You could see a big shift from everything before to how everything after was focused on the war.”
Ms. Thrul found some old math workbooks particularly interesting. “I looked through one algebra II workbook, and I didn’t understand a thing in it. I couldn’t have done any of the problems to save my life!” she said.
22 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
“We get good reactions to our interviews because a lot our readers are alumni who like to hear about teachers and brothers they remember from Mount."
A Tradition of Academic Excellence
Read The Mount Saint Charles Hilltopper by scanning here or visit: mountsaintcharleshilltopper. weebly.com
Mount of the Past (1931-1944) - Amanda Thrul, '23
For photos referenced in these stories, please visit The Hilltopper at mountsaintcharleshilltopper.weebly.com/ spotlight-stories.html or by using the QR code on the previous page.
As members of the Mount community, we all know of the importance and emphasis placed on the unique qualities of all Mounties, both past and present. We are connected with our past in so many amazing and historic ways. One of which is through alumni from years prior and their Mount experiences. Below is a collection of various pictures and supplies from Mounties of the past, opening the door for those of us
today to explore the school’s history. The first box is from the early 1930’s, the second is from the early 1940’s, and the third contained sports photos and memorabilia from both time periods. alumnus and humbled to say that I was a Mountie.
Located above (left) are two examples of address cards that would’ve been used by students and families to send packages to and from students at school. The left would’ve been attached to send the mail to the someone at the school, in this case Ernest, and the one to the right would’ve been sent from Mount itself. On the right is an example of a postcard
Mr. Guev: Mount's Most "Sic" Storyteller
Through many generations, Mr. Guevermont has brought life to English classes at Mount. He is renowned for elaborately engaging tales from his life starting from when he was in grammar school all the way to “borrowing” reading glasses from his church’s lost and found. Each previous student that has had Mr. Guev has offered the phrase “has he told you that one yet?” to a current student in reference to a particular story they might have recalled. Though I have only been in his class for a little under two months, one story had particularly struck me as a melancholic yet touchingly meaningful account presented to his students.
For four years, the Mount community was aware of Mr. Guev’s wife, Donna’s battle with ALS. The community was deeply saddened over her passing in August of 2020, and continues to cherish her memory.
Mr. Guev has never, at least in my
experiences, painted her as nothing less than an extraordinary person by filling his lessons with side bits of information regarding their lives. In class on a late September day, Mr. Guev let us know he wasn’t like most teachers: He is a “sic” teacher.
In the final years of Donna’s life, they spent most of their time cherishing each other’s company. Mr. Guev prefaced a particular story regarding them by stating he was against tattoos. He later explained to me that he viewed tattoos differently as it wasn’t something “commonly accepted in my [his] generation.” Gen Z and even millennials see tattoos now as a form of self expression or obtaining a greater meaning rather than a mark against professionalism or good judgment.
However, like most modern turmoil, this dispute is a case of generational differences.
from Mount that could be bought to send a short message home rather than a package.
The images above will most likely be of interest to many present-day Mount students and alumni as they capture an old hockey program with the MSC team and schedule for the 1937-38 season. The left is the back and front covers, indicating the players and their positions, those who ran the program2 and where one would have purchased game tickets. The right is the inside information, with the schedule on the left page and the various fan cheers (team and individual player alike) located on the right page.
About two years before her passing, Mr. Guev and his wife went to a friend’s lake house. As they sat together one night, she spontaneously said that the two of them should get tattoos.
Through his shock he simply asked “why?” Her response truly touched me: “Because I still can.”
The next day the two went to the tattoo parlor. They received each other’s initials in black outlined hearts. Mr. Guev’s is placed at the top of his right arm. His personal favorite part of the “inked up” experience was when another tattoo artist looked over the one who was working’s shoulder to ask what it was he was doing. He told him it was an initialed heart which was met with an enthusiastic response of “SIC!”
That is why Mr. Guev has been deemed Mount sickest storyteller at his request.
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 23
A trip not easily forgotten
Sur La Glace Skaters Continue to Shine On And Off The Ice
Just one year after Mount Saint Charles launched the Sur La Glace figure skating program in 2019, program director and coach Sarah DiNardo predicted the program was reaching its maximum capacity. It did. But instead of limiting enrollment, Mount is expanding the program to bring in more aspiring skaters.
Starting in the fall of 2022, the Sur la Glace will offer two classes: the current program, renamed the “Elite” class, and a new “Debut” class. The Elite class is full for next school year at 15 skaters, and the Debut class adds 10 slots to Sur la Glace, increasing its possible maximum enrollment to 25 students. The program accepts Mount Saint Charles students grades 6-12.
“Opening up a second class allows us
to build our program, group skaters by the appropriate level, and differentiate instruction. It will also help grow our U.S. Figure Skating High School team and allow all figure skaters at Mount to have the opportunity to get to know each other,” Ms. DiNardo said. “We only had three unfilled slots in the Elite program for 2022, and we were getting an influx of inquiries from more students than we could accept. We wanted to give more skaters opportunities.”
Steady growth and success
New students will be joining a program that has grown steadily since it was launched with six skaters in 2018. In 2022, Sur La Glace hosted its first U.S. Figure Skating competition in December and participating in the
Providence Tree Lighting show with several Olympians.
Students have received advice from Olympic medalists Michelle Kwan, Nancy Kerrigan, Jason Brown, and Ashley Wagner. They have also participated in on-ice clinics with Olympic medalist Mirai Nagasu, national and world champion Kimmie Meissner, U.S. junior bronze medalist Colin Grafton, and professional show skater and coach Nobahar Dadui.
As part of the Rhode Island Northern Mounties co-op team, Sur La Glace finished third in the U.S. Figure Skating competition it hosted on December 18 at Adelard Arena.
Students pose in front of the Roman Colosseum
“Having the opportunity to host a U.S. Figure Skating event was a great sign to
24 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
Athletics
us that we had ‘arrived’ as a program,” Ms. DiNardo said. “We are looking forward to hosting more events in the future, along with providing our skaters with more opportunities to gain experience performing and competing.”
In addition to the success of the high school team, many of the program's skaters accomplished personal goals in 2021-22. Two skaters, Alexis Ells and Caelan Hurley, have earned USFS Gold medals by passing tests. Two others, Mia Rocco and Sasha Streeter, medaled at the USFS Championship Series this past fall, facing particularly challenging competition.
“I am so proud of what our Mount skaters are accomplishing while training in a positive and healthy environment,” said Ms. DiNardo. “I can’t wait to see what the future holds.”
Life on and off the ice
Unlike conventional programs, Sur la Glace is integrated into a full academic and extracurricular program. Skating training is part of the curriculum as students’ physical education requirement. Eliminating travel time between school and training gives skaters time to participate in activities such as music, arts, clubs and afterschool sports.
Sur La Glace skaters train before and during school on the ice of Mount Saint Charles’ Adelard Arena, and also in the school weight room and dance studio. In addition to coaching and physical training, skaters receive mental training, working together on goal setting and strategies to overcome obstacles.
Mount Saint Charles sophomore Cristian McKnight-Ide has been skating seriously for over seven years. While skating is a huge part of his
life – “I want to be an international skater,” he says firmly – he also enjoys camping and Boy Scouts. His mother, Chasity Chatham, said Sur La Glace puts enough time back into the day for Cristian to pursue those interests, plus cheerleading and tennis.
“The first year was a big ‘wow,’” Ms. Chatham said. “I would take him to school, and he could do everything right there. Plus, he got more ice time with Sur la Glace than we could find or afford anywhere else.”
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 25
Brother Robert Marcotte, S.C., a former Mount Saint Charles teacher, passed away on February 24, 2022, at the age of 80. He was a resident of the Brothers of the Sacred Heart’s retirement community in Pascoag.
Also known as Brother Randal, Brother Robert taught math, science, social studies and religion for 23 years at schools in Maine, Massachusetts, and Vermont operated by the Brothers of the Sacred Heart: St. Dominic High School in Lewiston, Maine; Sacred Heart School in Andover, Mass.; Sacred Heart School in Sharon, Mass.; Christ the King School in Burlington, Vermont; and Christ the King School in Williston, Vermont, and Mount Saint Charles. He was known for his even temper and patience with students who struggled to learn. After retiring from the classroom, Brother Robert spent 22 years as an assistant librarian, tutor, and member of the maintenance crew at the Pascoag retirement community, where he moved in 2006.
Brother Robert was born in Fitchburg, Mass., one of seven children of Richard and Rita (Beauchemin) Marcotte. He graduated from the Brothers’ Notre Dame High School then earned a bachelor’s degree in history from St. Michael’s College in Winooski, Vermont. Brother Robert entered the formation program for the Brothers of the Sacred Heart on Sept. 28, 1959, at Pomfret Formation Center in Connecticut. He became a novice on Aug. 15, 1960, at the Brothers’ novitiate in Harrisville and professed his first vows there on Aug. 24, 1961. He celebrated the 60th anniversary of his initial profession last August.
Following a Mass of Christian Burial in the chapel at the Brothers’ Harrisville residence on March 12, Brother Robert was interred in the cemetery on the residence grounds. He is survived by three sisters: Rachel Hopkins of Milford, New Hampshire; Ruth Pollentier of Schertz, Texas; and Rosalind Marcotte Gregory of Mooreboro, North Carolina, and a brother, Roger Marcotte of Boston. Two sisters, Ruby Marcotte Amidon and Rena Marcotte Loughlin, predeceased him.
Brother Louis Joseph Laperle, S.C., also remembered as Brother Phillip, died Oct. 7, 2021 at Overlook Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Pascoag, Rhode Island at age 93. He was a brother of the Sacred Heart from 1948 until his death, professing his final vows in 1954 at Mount Saint Charles, and built a 65-year ministry of service.
Brother Louis was a teacher and principal in Catholic schools in Andover, Mass.; Pomfret, Conn.; Lewiston, Maine; Fitchburg, Mass.; and Woonsocket. He was especially proud of his service on the boards of directors of Mount Saint Charles, Bishop Guertin High School in Nashua, N.H., and Notre Dame High School, Fitchburg, Mass. Brother Louis was well known for his expertise in accounting and finance. That knowledge served him during the latter part of his career in the administration of the Brothers of the Sacred Heart’s New England Province. In that capacity, he helped put the province and several Catholic dioceses on firmer financial footings. He retired in 2010, but remained active in the order with the Association for Prayer and in the cause of sainthood for Brothers Polycarp and Norbert.
Brother Louis was born in Worcester, Mass., May 23, 1928, one of six children of the late Hector Joseph Laperle and Mary Alphonsine Hedge. He entered religious life from Holy Name of Jesus School in Worcester in 1946, and professed his first vows as a Brother of the Sacred Heart in 1948. He earned a bachelor’s degree in history and English from Spring Hill College in Mobile, Alabama in 1951, a master’s degree in teaching chemistry from St. Michael’s College in Winooski, Vermont in 1958, and a master’s degree in administration from the University of Notre Dame in 1977. Brother Louis also received a certificate of canon law from the University of San Francisco in 1969 and pursued advanced studies in physics, calculus, music education, and education throughout his career.
Brother Louis is survived by his sister, Claire Laperle Halvey of Auburn, Mass.; two brothers, Paul Laperle of Spencer, Mass. and Rev. Theodore Laperle, a priest in the Diocese of Worcester, and many nieces, nephews, and cousins. He was interred in the brothers’ cemetery in Pascoag.
26 | Mount Saint Charles Academy In Memoriam
Brother Louis Joseph Laperle, S.C.
Brother Robert Marcotte, S.C.
2021-2022 Annual Report
Summary of Gift Income
2021-2022
A Century of Mount Tradition
We are excited to announce that Mount is embarking on an oral history project to celebrate our centennial in 2024! You will be receiving postcards and emails, potentially phone calls about this project directly from PCI to gather the school stories over the decades, as well as update your personal record.
The result will be a beautiful coffee-table book that will tell the Mount story from 1924 to 2024! Please answer the call to participate with your Mount memories! More information will be available on the website soon.
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 27
Unrestricted Gifts $204,865.24 Auction (Net) $105,740.24 Walk-a-Thon $58,268.50 Restricted Hockey Fund $38,700.00 Brother Michael Scholarship $8,280.00 Scholarships $64,191.18 Restricted Use $150,047.05 TOTAL: $630,092.21
Summary of Cumulative Giving Societies
28 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
1924-present XAVIER
Parents' Council
of the Sacred Heart JOSEPHUS
of William Latraverse 1934
Cadden Family ADELARD
Br. Raymond Reinsant
Integration Gerald and Georgia Knueven Robert and Annette Loiselle Diocese of Providence Mr. Albert Fuchs 1935 Jacques Dubois, Jr. Walter, ’41, and Bettie Morris Marc, ’70, & Stephanie Hebert Edward M. Larkin Gerald and Gloria Barrett $690,400.00 $575,800.00 $331,512.13 $250,000.00 $227,186.42 $197,500.00 $195,000.00 $178,180.00 $175,393.00 $161,600.00 $157,600.00 $149,200.00 $128,473.69 $125,000.00 $100,886.00
($500,000.00+) MSC
Brothers
($250,000.00+) Estate
The
($100,000.00+)
EzeCastle
Donor Category Report of Giving 2021-2022
SACRED HEART COUNCIL ($25,000.00+)
George, '59 and Kathy Buteau
Norman Cantin, '71
Robert & Annette Loiselle
Normand Parenteau, '72
Nelson & Claudia Peltz
Brad & Melissa Somma
PROVINCIAL CIRCLE
($10,000.00+)
Atlas Medical, Inc.
Catholic Foundation of Rhode Island
David, '87 & Heather Celona
The Claire Friedlander Family Foundation
Carol Waddington
FOUNDER'S CLUB
($5,000.00+)
Robert, '55 & Judith Ayotte
Larry & Kimberly Berger
Matt Cedor, '88 & Cynthia Moser
Philippe, '71 & Ellen Cote
Gary, '71 & Monette Denis
Stephen & Kim Grimes
Roland & Billiegene Lavallee
Geoffrey, '94 & Melanie, '94
Mongeon
Denis, '71 & Denise Plouffe
Alan, '92 & Lisa Tenreiro
Robert & Brenda Yates *
DIRECTOR'S CLUB
($2,500.00+)
Gerald & Gloria Barrett
The Barry Family Scholarship
Fund
Ryan & Brenda, '96 Marcotte
Danielle Georgaklis
Keith & Rebecca Christensen
David & Ann-Marie Fontaine
Thomas, '71 & Carol Ward
Alan, '71 & Michaela Jolly
Keith, '88 & Amy Carney
David Soucy
Bristol County Savings Bank
Deslandes Construction, Inc.
Dunkin' - PC #340585
Loiselle Insurance Agency
Richard, '71 & Barbara Marquis
New England Environmental & Consulting
Stanley Tree Service
EXCELSIOR
($1,000.00+)
Scott & Sarah Bielecki
James & Kathy Brennan Broadcom Inc.
Paul, '71 & Denise Brodeur
Neil & Amy Cameron
Sean, '88 & Kimberly Carney
Richard & Louise Carriere
Paul, '65 & Mildred Collamati
Brendan Corey, '10
John, '66 & Jane Crook
David Darlington & Erin Carroll
Donnelly's Inc. of Rhode Island
Darren & Lori Elkerton *
Mark & Susan, '93 Gasbarro
Robert, '60 & Lorraine Godin
Richard, '71 & Janice Gosselin
Marc, '70 & Stephanie Hebert
Ronald & Megan Hovsepian
J. McHale & Sons, Inc.
Jim & Wendy Krayer
Donald, '69 & Elizabeth Lucchesi
Vito & Janet Luciano
Christopher & Lisa Lydon
Gregory & Michelle Lynch
Gregory Marcoux & Tina Pare
Antonio & Debbie Miguel
Stphen & Donna Moran
MSCA Parents' Council
David & Courtney, '92 Mungovan
Navigant Credit Union
Rev. Msgr. Ronald Newland, USAF
Ret., '59
Dermod Norton, '61
O'Reilly Family Fund
Gerald, '76 & Denise Piette
Paul & Christine Quistberg *
Richard & Keri Rainone
David & Christine Roy
William, '73 & Cecile Ryan
Gary Schoumaker
Sodexo, Inc. & Affiliates
Marc, '71 & Claire Staelen
Hilary Stafford
Joseph & Sharon Tardie
Steven & Kathryn, '87 Tillinghast
Brian & Aimee Tortolano
Gerald, '63 & Sandra Ventre
Jeffery & Jodi Whitehead
Eric, '90 & Lori Wirkus
EXCELSIOR CLUB
($500.00+)
Christopher Almon, '82
George Barnett
James Baxter
Daniel & Jennifer Belvin
Greg & Katy Berard
John Bermel
John Bissonnette, '91
Albert & Linda Cournoyer
Creative Signals
Richard Cribb, '86*
Herb & Chantelle Curtis
Rick & Kirsten Daly
David Gutwirth, DDS
Dean Bank
Mary Dumouchel
Pete & Dee Emond
Maj. Thomas Fitzgerald, '71
Stephen Gingras, '82
Kevin & Krissy Giroux
David Goryl, '91
Dan & Kimberly Goulet
Roger & Lucille Greenough
Joel Guay, 80
John, '64 & Sheila Guerin
Jame & Claire Hall
John Haran & Francesca Beaudoin
Michael & Denise Hebert
High Performance Skills LLC
Neil Hunt, '00
Tammy-Rae Kennedy
Rev. Robert Lacombe
Michel & Erika Lee
Michael & Nicole Letendre
William & Robyn Link
Greg & Tonya Lombardo
Lops Brewing
Joseph Luca
Robert, '59 & Maureen Marrah
Jane McAuliffe, '91
Joseph & Lauren McGrail
Philip McHugh
Xavier & Natasha Mimaud
Daniel & Sara, '96 Monaco
Peter & Paula Montaldo
Bruce Monty, '71
Daniel & Mariette Morelli
Robert & Diane Morissette
Walter Morris, '41
New England Linen
PHD Leasing, LLC
Roland Picard
Louis & Janet Piccolo
Prime Home Delivery, Inc.
Mia Proli
Edward & Meliss Quinn
Rhode Island Restoration
Martha Roberts, '76
Michael & Ingrid Rooney
Rotary Club of Woonsocket
Benjamin Rouleau, '09
Marc, '78 & Gigi Sarazin
Lionel Savaria, '81
John, '70 & Patricia Scibak
Michael St. Andre, '88
Adam & Michelle Stone
Shawn & Gretchen Streeter*
Matthew & Jennifer Sylvestre
William & Tricia Winiker
LEADERSHIP CLUB ($250.00+)
Amica Mutual Insurance
Company
Christopher & Lauren Andreach
Rex & Maria Appenfeller
Kenneth & Sharon Badeau
Marc, '74 & Carol Barnabe
Marc & Michelle Beauchemin
Mike & Bethan Bedrossian
David Belisle, '77
Peter, '90 & Carrie Belisle
Roland, '62 & Suzanne Bouchard
Jeff, '94 & Lisa Bradley
William & Judith Brennan
Amy Brothers, '84
David & Amy, '95 Burke
Matthew & Beth Campanelli
Barbi Carignan, '80
John & Faith Cartier
Tim & Cheryl Casserly
Gerard, '70 & Gail Cayer
Jean Cedor
Neil & Felicia Chinchio
Carlo & Lori Cioffi
Steven & Michelle, '85 Ciullo
Jane Clarke, '80
John, '83 & Giuseppina Clarke
Benjamin & Amy Cogan
Jeff & Lisa Constance
Robert & Helene Cooney
George DaCosta
Fernando DaCosta
Robert & Mary Dash
Paul, '67 & Catherine Desjardins
Mark & Debra Dunleavy
East Greenwich Dental Associates, Inc.
Andrew & Kathleen Ells
David Emond, '92
Frank Fede, '93
Steve & Melissa, '84 Fernandes
Jay & Christine Fitzgerald
Chay and Susan, '92 Foxon
Edward Gauthier, '52
Michael & Leslie Giles
Amy Glaude-Marcos
Alexander, '56 & Joanne Gonsalves
Bruce, '70 & Christine Gouin
Douglas & Wendy, '90 Gray
David & Lisa Gutwirth
Frank and Kathleen Hall
Rene Hamel, '49
Richard & Sheila Hawes
Justin & Beth Hollander
Holliston Sand Company, Inc.
Damian & Eileen, '81 Horbury
GOLD
Stephen, '82 & Susan Adamo*
Daniel, '10 & Alyson Aharonian*
James & Paulette Allaire
Bally's Twin River Lincoln
Christopher Berry & Michelle
Randall-Berry
Donald Bibeault, Ph.D., '59
Paul, '71 & Betty Blais
James Buchanan & Gail Panzetta
Guy, '78 & Mary Buckley
Eric & Jessie Butash
Joe & Jaclyn Casali
Michael, '71 & Alexis Casey
Catholic Financial Life
Peter & Catherine Certo
Derek, '89 & Nicole Chauvette
Paul & Eliane Check
Complete Site Solutions
John & Jill, '91 Teixeira
Jorge & Dorothea Tenreiro
Andrew, '65 & Cheryl Trottier
Claude, '56 & Janice Trottier
The Valley Breeze
Valley Falls Flower Shop Inc.
Deborah Viscogliosi
Jill Votta
Justin & Amy Wasnewsky
Robin Wilson
Francis & Marian Hynes
Jay Jerrier
Kunal & Rachelle Joarder
June Keller
John & Kathryn Kelly
Timothy Kerrigan, '88
Stacey Kurbiec
Stephen & Jennicer LaBrecque
Paul & Lynne Lamarre
Eugene Lessart, '51
Louis Liotta & Sheila Adamus
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 29 Giving Report
Elaine Longton
Stephen, '98 & Kateri Maddern
Kevin & Susan Magaletta
Pasquale, '79 & Deborah
Mannocchia
Christopher McCobb, '92
Erin McHale
Robert McLane
Richard Minot, '65
Daniel & Jennifer Morrison
James, '61 & Cynthia Mullin
Jason & Nyssa Mundy
Greg & Jodi Murphy
Jordan & Nicole Musser
Eugene & Marie O'Brien
Louise O'Neill
Joseph & Lee-Ann Parrillo
Richard & Lisa Peck
Gerald, '63 & Cheryl Pelletier
Brian & Kerry, '92 Pepin
Leo & Ashley Phenix
John '80 & Maureen Picone
Alexendre & Stacey Pinto
Priority Automotive, LLC
Robert & Kelli Proia
Devin Rask
Ravenous Brewing
Nicholas & Jane Reggio
Gayle Robidoux
Glenn & Maura Rouleau
Ronald & Ann Rys
Robert, '85 & Grace Sammartino
Robert, '88, & Karen, '95, Sclama
Edward & Nicole Shannon
William, '81 & Alyson Slaney
Brian & Kristen, '00 Snow
Janeen Stone
Failautusi Tautolo
Raymond Tiberio, '92
Verizon Foundation
Jocelynn White, '96
Walkter, '83 & Allison Wilk
CENTURY CLUB
($100.00+)
Alarm-Tech, Inc.
Albertsons Safeway
Roger & Jeannine Allard
John & Kelly Amato
Amazon Smile
Warren Anastasia
Lewis, '60 & Susan Andrews
Angelo Salon Di Milano
Anonymous
Ketih Archambault & Janice
Bigelow-Archambault
Atlantic Elevator South Co., Inc.
Jean, '78 & Janice Auger
Pierre, '76 & Jill Auger
Linda Bagley, '82
Joseph & Carol Baldassari
James Barbour, '20
Fred, '80 & Valerie Barker
Mark Barrett, '90
Nancy Barrett
Richard & Michelle Barrette
Lori Barrone
Christopher & Sharon Baryluk
James & Ruth Bascombe
Cory & Josee Bayers
Paul & Joanne Benoit
Pauline Benvenuto
Sheila Bermel
Marcel, '62 & Christian Blain
Ronald, '70 & Janet Blais
Robert, '59 & Mary Blanchette
Charles Boddy & Anne Donahue-
Boddy, '86
Charles, '60 & Constance Boisvert
Robert & Carolyn Boisvert
Constance Bozzine
Ross & Dianne Bradley
The Breakfast Group
Matthew, '95 & Deborah Bria
Ronald Brodeur, '50
Roger, '73 & Joyce Brouillard
Paul & Lois Brown
William Brown
Lise Brule, '79
Karen Brunelle
Gail Bryson
Renee Buisson
Robert Bultot
Michael & Mary Burns
Paul, '61 & Carol Buteau
Joseph, '68 & Pamela Butera
Peter & Elizabeth Butz
Thomas & Michelle Cabral
Jerome Cahill, '05
Joseph, '71 & Holly Cahill
John Caito
Joseph & Michele Calabrese
Brian Callahan
James Callinan, Jr.
Sherry Campanelli
Arthos Canestrari
William Cantrell, '64
Peter, '77 & Yvonne Cappelano
Lisa Carbone, '85
Joseph Cardillo, '98
Wilfred, '58 & Sheila Cardin
Jack & Dolores Carney
George, '66 & Lucille Caron
Julie Carvalho
Joseph & Jaclyn Casali
Susan Cataldo
Bryan & Pamela Champagne
Evelyn Charlette
Leon Chase
Peter & Peg Chatellier
Peter & Cecilia Chow
John Chuang & Lynn McCabe-
Chuang
Erica Coelho
Roger Collamati
Sarah Collins, '92
John Condon
Larry & Anita Condon
James & Ann Coone
Michell Constantini
Marc, '70 & Suzanne Cote
Crystal Couture
Daniel & June Couture
Debbie Cox
Jim Creamer
John, '78 & Kelley Csizmesia
John Cummings
Anne Curran
D. H. Keene Septic Services, Inc.
Eileen Dabolt Loveless
Brett & Joanne Davenport
Scott & Diane Davenport
Thomas & Kristen Dee
Robert & Shannon Delmore
Dennis Seashores
Stefanie Descoteaux
Robert DiBiase, '60
Gaetano Diciocco
David & Kendra DiMino
Tom & Adelaide Donahue
Paul & Denise, '76 Doran
Nelson dos Santos
Stephanie Dudek
Roger, '64 & Jacqueline Dufresne
Jeannine Dugas
Alexander Dumas, '20
Marcel & Michelle Dumas
Michael Dumas, Jr., '17
Annmarie Dunican
Steven & Virginia Eberling
Paul & Elizabeth Egan
David & Lana Erickson
Anthony & Jodi Esposito
Esten & Richard Agency
Charles, '48 & Edith Fafard
Jonathan, '90 & Margaret Fagan
Glen Fandetti, '92
Jo-Ann Fede
James Feig & Jill Catalano Feig,
MD
Debra Fernandes
Paul & Michelle Fitzgerald
Anne Flood
Kerry Foley, "87
John, '04 & Susanne Fontaine
Francolini Remillard Charitable
Fund
Tim Fuller
Lawrence Furey
Matthew Gaffney
Charles Gagne, '65
Scott Gainey
Brandon & Ashley Gallagher
James Gardner, '43 & Rose
Gardner
Ricahrd & Margaret Garland
Wesley & Caroll, '03 Gee
Anthony, '82 & Cynthia Geruso
Rob & Anne Gilberti
John, '64 & Mary Gill
Daniel Gilpin, '08
Steven & Linda Girouard
Michael Giroux
Mark & Robin Glaude
Kevin & Kathleen Goffe
William & Patricia Gorman
Andrew Goulet, '68
Michael, '95 & Tamra Goulet
Michael, '51 & Vicki Goulet
David Grieve
Nancy Grochowski, '78
Marc & Mary Ann Guerin
Edward & Donna Guilbert
Conrad & Lucille Hamel
Karen Hamel-Donnelly
George, '10 & Molly Hanna
Brian, '84 & Eileen Harvey
Robert Heanue, '70
Andrea Henault, '88
Adam & Melissa Hendricks
Henry, '69 & Martha Heroux
Richard Hickey
Donald, '68 & Rachel Hoard
William Hockenberger
John, '83 & Tammy Hodgens
Daniel Hogan & Kristen Berkos
Raymond, '64 & Susan Hunt
Steven, '84 & Sandra Hurteau
Richard Hynes, '84
Martha Irwin
Ronald & Mary Janosko
Manish Jariwala*
Matthew Jarret, '95
Jeffrey, '87 & Kerry Jerrier
Richard Jerrier, '86
Joe Casli Engineering, Inc.
Rene, '53 & Jocelyn Joyal
Kristen Kane, '09
Jonathan & Melissa Kaplan
Diand Karolyshyn
The Kelly Family
Amy Kennedy
Jurty & Rosanne Kern
Eugene, '64 & Julie Kessler
Molly Kilburn
Jillian Kincaid, '99
John Kun, '71
Normand, '57 & Georgette Lafleur
Ronald & Cecile Lafond
David, '95 & Lynn Laforest
Chandan & Harshita Lakhiani
Andre Lamoureux, '70
Jason & Susan Lamoureux
Michael & Christine Lamoureux
Raymond Lamoureux, '55
John & Tara Lamphier
Gail Landry
Edouard, '62 & Eileen Laplante
Robert, '56 & Claire Latour
Richard, '51 & Margo Lawless
Leo & Denise Legare
Peter & Kathleen Lemay
Paul & Ruth Lepre
Paul, '62 & Diane L'Esperance
Marc Levesque
Ronald, '59 & Nancy L'Heureux
Bob & Donna Lincourt
Edward & Lisa Livingstone
Susan Lombardi
Paul & Shirely Lombardozzi
Sean & Sarah Lopolito
Kristen Lundgren
M & N Laundromat
Raymond Magnan, '68
Barry & Kara Maguire
Albert & Madelyn Mainelli
Manchaug Mills, Inc.
Christopher, '81 & Cynthia
Manocchia
Robert Marchand, '64
Jonathan, '94 & Danielle Marland
Anthony, '83 & Kris Marotti
Emily Martineau, '96
Michael & Andrea Masse
Ursula Matola
Keith & Jamie Maurice
Stephen McCabe
Michael & Lorraine McCarthy
Alfred, '74 & Marie McCooey
Steven McDaniel, '87
Michael, '90 & Amanda McGlynn
Brian & Errion McGrath
Linda McGrath
Matthew & Karen McGrath
Jack, '64 & Tedra McGuire
Medtronic Matching Gift
Foundation
Mesolella & Associates LLC
David Miale
Kim Miale
Dolores Milligan
30 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
Giving Report
Giving Report
Vincent, '64 & Beverly Minchillo
Michael & Catherine Mitchell
John, '54 & Irene Monahan
Mark & Claire Mongeon
John & Brenda Montague
Karen Montaldo
Raymond Morris & Kelley
Salvatore Morris
Bob & Patricia Morse
Anthony & Robin Moy
James Mullin, III, '94
Frank & Donna Murano
Adam & Cynthia Murphy
Christopher Murphy, '92
Bob & Lorraine Murphy
Mike Murray
Robert & Eileen Murray
Raphael Musher
David & Rachel Narodowy
Linda Nastasi
Peter & Marissa Nastasi
Michael, '66 & Joyce Neville
Amy Noble, '99
John & amy Noecker
Jamie & Lisa Noon
Raymond & Ellen Norris
Michael & Kimberly O'Connell
John O'Connor
Matthew Oliver
Alex, '93 & Jennifer Omar
Joseph O'Neill
O'Reilly Family Fund
Rob & Katie O'Riordan
Kate O'Sullivan
George & Carlene Page
Derek Parfitt
Diane Parke-Potter
Paul Bertrand, Jr., '62
Donna Pauley
Herve, '59 & Therese Pelland
William & Alexandra Pepin
Christopher, '93 &Tracy Perron
Melissa Petrocchi, '07
Pfizer Foundation
Phillips Iron Works
Thomas & Jeanne Philo
Marguerite Pierel
Brandon Pinette, '96
Matthew Plante
Carol Pleau, '84
Michael, '01 & Alison Poirier
Leo, '59 & Pauline Pontbriand
Sherri Provencal
James, '56 & Vivian Quinn
Kenneth Rainone, '64
RJ & Lisa Rataic
Richard, '58 & Carol Rease
Bernadette Rebola
Amy Reyes
Kyle Richard, '02
Peter Riley, '77
John & Vera Ring
Bonny Rizzo
Raymond & Marie Roberge
Andrea Roberto
Joseph & Lisa, '94 Roberts
Arthur & Jane Robison
Robert, '66 & Kathryn Robitaille
Richard & Ann Rochette
Vilma Rodriguez
Cody & Chelsea Rose
Kenneth, '68 & Janice Rose
Jerry, '56 & Madeline Rousseau
Justin Routhier, '00
Seth & April Rowley
Mindy Russell
Joanne Ryan
Bill, '97 & Kerry Saltzman
Roberta Schmidt
Robert Schumacher & Laura
Knight Schumacher
Raymond & Patricia Scully
Matt Shane & Erica Schoch-Shane
Shaw's Star Markets
Marc & Jennifer Sheytanian
Joshua Silva & Stephen Waldeck
Daniel Skqyra, '57
Jason & Susan Solecki
Richard & Kristen Sousa
Jamison & Jennifer Souza
Matt & Janet Spillance
St. Albans City Firefighters Association, Inc.
Richard & Gina St. Sauveur
Raymond & Carol Stark
Allen Stefanek & Elmina Reyes
Steven D Girouard Building and Remodeling, LLC
William, '72 & Karent Sutherland
Joseph & Susan Sweet
Shiraz Tangri & Chi-Chi Tse*
Sonya Tautolo
Steven & Amy Thibault
Denis, '60 & Dianne Thibeault
Michael & Jacqueline Thibodeau
Kevin Thomas
Cassandra Thrul
Mary Gay Tobin
Louise Tokman
Towne Glass & Aluminum, Inc.
Matthew Trottier, '87
Brett Tulacro
Amy Tuttel
Jeannine Vachon
Jules Vachon
Charles & Kavita Vansant
Keith & Natalie Vercauteren
Frank, '98 & Elaine Veto
Ray & Stacy Viens
Scott & Elaine Virzi
VMWare Foundation
John, '63 & Linda Walsh
David, '79 & Michelle Ward
Emily Webber
Rebecca Webber
Todd Whiteley
June Wiehn
Donald Wood
Greta Wright, '92
Richard & Pamela Wyatt
Edward Yazbek
Aldredo Zagaroli
John Zannini
Marc & Amy Zarrella
Irina Zhuravleva
LOYALTY CLUB ($1.00+)
Jason & Carolyn Aben
Zachary Aben, '22
Thomas & Erin Acker
John, '71 & Martha Acquisto
Abner Albeno
Arthur Alves
Luis & Kimberly Alves
Dorothy Amore
Linda Andrade
Susan Angel-Boutin
Shahrzad Ansari
Olivia Antonelli, '22
Marilyn Askevold
Eleanor Auger
Ann Augustine
John Autio
Alexander & Jessica Badeau
Lisa Badeau
Lisa Baillargeon
Christine Baker
Christina Bapties
Edmund Bard
Carol Ann Barnett
Crista Barrasso
Gerard & Claudia Barsalou
Stanley & Mary Barszcz
Joseph & Tiffany Baxter
Philip & Dolores Bayer
Arthur & Barbara Baynes
Beth Beane
John Beauchamp, '69
Paul, '63 & Rachel Beausoleil
Daniel & Catherine Belisle
Ireneusz Bendza & Alicia MeleBendza
Elizabeth Benson
Linda Benway
Wallace & Pam Berard
Joelle Bergeron
Kendra Berlinger
Paul & Deborah Bermal
Robert & Rebecca Beveridge
Conrad, '57 & Eileen Bibeault
Marianne Bicoy
Anne Bigelow
Roger, '65 & Lorraine Blais
Kenneth, '05 & Cara, '05
Blanchette
Richard Bocchicchio
Anthony & Lisa Bogner
Diane Boisselle
David & Patricia Bolduc
Andrew Bonichi
Br. Carl Bouchereau, SC
Ann Boulet
Kristen Bourque
Gary & Monique Bowen
Mark & Robin Boyle
Ramona Braza
Jeffrey & Catherine, '08 Breault
Timothy & Lynn Breitenbach
Matthew, '95 & Deborah Bria
Peter & Elizabeth Bria
Leo, '62 & Michelle Brodeur
Roger, '67 & Therese Brodeur
Brook-Lea Women's Association
Stephen Brothers
Jacob Brown
Marilyn Brown
Tim Brown & Tracy Eales-Brown
Walt Brown
Ken & Jean Budnick
Chris Burke
Edwin & Angela, '96 Burke
MaryPat Burke
Jamie Burnett
Meghan McCooey Burton, '06
Wesley & Pia Bushika
Mariah Callahan, '10
Kevin & Sheila Calnan
Michael Calvani
David Caparelli, '15
Jim & Linn Caparella
Christopher & Lisa Carcifero
Thomas & Carolyn Carey
Peter Caro
James & Christie-Ann Carr
James, '77 & Rebecca Cartier
Jessica Casale
John & Mary Ann Casale
John & Michelle Casale
Amy Cataudella
Mark & Diane Cataudella
Marco & Connie Cerda
Alan Chaharyn, '68
Abigail Champagne, '22
David & Linda Chamapgne
Frank & Harriet Champi
Richard , '62 & Jeannine
Champoux
Paul, '60 & Ellen Chandler
Christopher & Becky Chartier
Chasity Chatham
Tammy Chauvette
Stephen & joanne Chauvin
Tammy Ciavarini
Joseph Cirelli
Amanda Clarke
Gina Clarke
Thomas & Lisette Clem
Kristen Collins
Steven & Debora Combes
Gina Maria Conti
Rosemarie Conti
Kazmirz, '71 & Lainee Contre
Edward, '49 Coogan
David Copperwheat
Nicole Corliss-Judson
Louis & Heather Costa
Caren Cote
Gary, '70 & Anne Cournoyer
Robert & Jacqueline Cournoyer
Eric & Aimee Covino
Eldon & Christine Crawford
Ronald Crepeau, '65
Peter Cronin
Matthew Crowshaw
Edward & Jennifer Cunanan
Thomas & Anna Curry
Tonya Curt
Henri & Lucille Cyr
Jozef & Teresa Czado
Kirk Dahl, '77
Arthur Dahl
Gary Dahrooge
Florent Dalpe, '46
Kathleen Damish
Dan Couture's Trophy Hutch
Gerard Dault, '56
Brent Davenport
Douglas & Jean David
Manuel & Kristen DeAmaral
Norman & Michele Decelles
Deanna DeFalco
Alfred & Pamela Degen
David & Darci Delleo
Richard, '68 & Susan Delorme
John & Phyllis DeMaio
Lauren DeMarco
Linda Demers
Ricardo & Renata DeOliveira
Tonya DePalma
David Desjardins
Rafael & Janaina DeSousa
Gabriel & Christine Dias
Thomas Dickinson, '06
Vernice DiMatteo
Richard & Barbara Dipardo
Steven & Karen DiSpirito
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 31
Charles & Lisa Doherty
Ed & Jeanne Doherty
Charlotte Dominique
James & Jean Donohoe
Virginia Dube
Carol Duhamel
Steven Duhamel
Craig & Judy Dumas
Amy Dupont
Erik Eckilson & Michelle Martin-
Eckilson
Thomas & Danielle Ehrhard
Derek Emery, '90
Patricia Emidy
W. Casey & Jo-Ann Erven
Esdras & Fran Esquite
James & Shirley Fadden
Kenneth Fargnoli, '79
Michael & Valerie Farnesi
Brian, & Carmell Farrell
Heather Feeney, '84
Sylvester Fernandes
Lawrence, '61 & Kathy Ferrari
Janet Ferreira
Henry & Vivian Ferry
Robert & Patricia Fitzgerald
Edmund & Bridget Fitzgibbon
George & Joan Fleming
James Flood
Mitchell & Donna Foresti
Raymond, '64 & Lorraine Forget
Robert, '61 & Denise Forget
Todd & Sherrie Forget
Sarah Fox
Seth & Kimberly, '91 Francis
Elizabeth Furey
Anthony Gagliani
Clarence & Lorraine Gallagher
George, '61 & Diane Gamache
Roger, '52 & Joan Garceau
Linda Garnett
Seth & Emily Garthee
Alex Gasbarro, '22
Carol Gaspar
Nicholas, '81 & Georgeta Gassey
Roger Gaulin, '57
Gerry & Linda Gaylor
Donna George
Kelly George
Roula Germanos
Jana Giaquinto
Herve & Helen Giguere
Paulette Giguere
Gary & Jennifer Gill
Michael & Nancy Gillardi
Gregory & Nanci Gilmore
Lynne Girouard
Matthew Glance
Robert & Barbara Gold
Yumery Gomez
Christopher Goodison, '07
Linda Goodison
Timothy & Diana Gormley
Audra Gouin, '92
Lucy Goulet
Sarah Grandfield
John & Michelle Gray
Lisa Gray
Frank Grenkiewicz
Rebecca Grenkiewicz
Linda Griffin
Glenn & Karen Grilli
Traci Gruning
Ali Guerin
Roland & Jennie Guilmette
Jeffrey Haas
Michael & Kristine Hagens
Susan Hall
Mark Hamel, '71
William H Hanna, Jr.
Kenneth & Sarah Happenny
Darlene Harding
Jennifer Harig, '88
William & Kathleen Harig
Philip Harnois
Scott Harnois
Efren & Jennifer Hidalgo
Anissa Hoard
Timothy Hoard & Adriana Garcia
Hoard
Michael & Kristen Hoffman
Sean & Leah Hogan
Adam Hogue, '07
Donald & Paula Hogue
Laura Honea
Steven & Doreen Hudson
Lisa Hynes, '04
Deborah Iacoi
Marc & Kim Innis
Steven & Ann Marie Ipri
Ronald Jacobson
Aram Jarret
Jennifer Jarret
Carla Jarvis
Elizabeth Jerrier, '19
Kathleen Jerrier, '16
Karen Johns
Aimee Johnson
Gary & Lisa Johnson
Lisa Johnson, '97
Erin Jolicoeur
Tanya Jollie
Neil & Stephanie Jones
Mike Jusczyszyn
Candace Kaloostian
Noora Kamal
Alayna Kaplan, '14
Sheba Karter
Kieran & Linda Keating
Rosemarie Keefe
Robert Keith, '69
Brendan & Courtney Kelly
Maureen Kelly
Kevin & Heather Kempskie
Nealia Khan
Joshua & Caitlin Kickham
Jennifer Kinder
Christopher & Diane King
Steven & Christine King
Michael & Kara Kirby
Amy Knight
Greg Knight
Michael & Andi Kodsi
Muhammad & Sara Kouki
Anna Kuperman
John Lahar, '92
Cindy Lancaster
Jennifer Lance
Christopher & Nicole Lanctot
Kristy Lanctot
Pauline Lanctot
Terri-Lyn Lanctot
Geoffrey, '66 & Kathy Langelier
Lynn Langelier, '86
Elise Lanzi
Marc & Tammy Laquerre
Odillon Laroche, '53
Dawn Larochelle
Meryl Lawrence, '11
Matthew & Coleen LeBlanc
Ryan, '89 & Allana Leclair
Matthew & Kara Lefebvre
Dwight & Debbie Leigh
Jack & Jennifer Leighton
Lisa Leite
Gary & Kerry Lemieux
Lionel & Lynn Lemos
Tom & Laura Leonard
Joseph & Judith Lepre
Brian & Kathleen Lewis
Valerie Lincourt
Jane Link
Mark & Eva Lizak
Kenneth & Lynn Lizotte
Janet Lockhart
Catherine Lombardo
Marilyn Lombardo
Robin Lombari
Mark & Pauline Lotito
Devin Luckie
Emily Luong
Mark & Natalia MacCartney
Meghan MacDonald, '94
David Machado
Ann Macko
Alfred & Elaine Mactavish
Peter & Stefanie Mahon
Charlie, '68 & Deborah Mandeville
Alysson Mantilla
Jason & Ronda, '92 Marino
Robert, '64 & Kathleen Martineau
Bill Martineli
Robert, '85 & Maria Martufi
MSCA Math & Science Department
Josh Matusow
Bob & Jane Maurice
Linus & Patricia Maxcy
George Mayette
Marie Mazzarella
Jack & Jeanne McCarthy
Kim McCarthy
Matt & Tina McCue
Abre & Jennifer McDonald
Michael, '66 & Martha McGahan
Elizabeth McGarry
Timothy McGee, '64
Jen McGuire
William & William McHale
Sheila McKenna
John & Kraen McLaughlin
Craig & Gayle McMahon
Michael & Karen Medici
Carla Meehan
Christopher & Carolyn Meisner
Robert & Linda Melanson
Darlene Menard
Minerva Merritt
Jason & Minday Mertz
Jodi Mesolella, '97
Michael & Debra Mesolella
Ellen Metcalfe
Martin & Adrienne Meyer
Thomas & Dawn Michael
Ann Miller
Erica Millette
Anna Moalli
Mallory Mongeon, '22
David & Christine Monteiro
Stephen & Bryna Morehouse
Marguerite Morel
Catherine Moretta
Raymond, '70 & Joan Morin
Tim & Heather Morison
Michelle Morissette, '91
Susan Morrison
Christopher Mosca
Terry Mossey
Mount Saint Charles SLA
Deke & Allison Mousseau
Matthew & Jill, '95 Moylan
Edward & Tracy Mulligan
Carolyn Murphy
Lisa Murphy
Elizabeth Murray
Hannah & David Murray
Peter & Jennifer Murray
William Murray
Paula Musto
Ravikanth Muthyala & Sangeetha
Emmedishetty
Michael & Jennifer Narducci
Michael Nichola
Cynthia Noble
David Noble, '95
Christine Norwood
Amy O'Brien
Ryan O'Connell, '22
Annie O'Malley
Rebecca O'Malley
Lance Oakley
Colleen O'Brien, '92
Edward & Joanne O'Brien
Michael Oliver, '95
Karen O'Neil
William, '56 & Marolyn O'Neill
Jessica O'Rourke
John & Kelly O'Rourke
Rene, '70 & Katie Ouellet
Stephanie Owens
John & Lisa Pallof
Susan Palmieri
Melissa Palumbo
Philip Paquet, '60
Kristen Paquette
Roger, '63 & Marilyn Parent
Danny Parenteau
Diane Parillo
Lincoln Parrott & Jennifer
MacNeill
Anne Pate
Jodi Paterson
Miriam Patterson, '75
Robert, '59 & Maria Paulhus
Melissa Paulin
Bernie & Rita Pavao
Russell & Sharon Pavao
Diane Pearson
George Pedro
Nelson Pedro
Edward Pelletier
Richard & Jeanne Pelletier
Andre Peloquin, '58
Eugene Peloquin, '50
Christopher & Jennifer Pelosi
Kelly Petherick
Sengthiene Phannavong
James & Alicia Pierce
Bruce Piette & Rosemarie Martin
Dena Pilla
Bernard Pinette
Lisa Pinkes
Adrian & Roxana Pirvu
Stephanie Pitassi, '06
Marissa Pitrone-Marsh, '94
James Plamondon
32 | Mount Saint Charles Academy
Report
Giving
Giving Report
Mary Plamondon
Robert & Tammi Plamondon
Timothy Plante, '79
Michael Plouffe
Kevin Poirier, '08
Lawrence & Elizabeth Pointras
Christine Policano
Frederick & Kristin Polseno
Sue Pontbriand
John & Elise Potter
John, '63 & Elizabeth Poulin
Gianna Prata, '08
Michael Prazma
Steve Prickett
Henry & Karen Pristawa
Fran & Janet Provino
Wilfrid Provost, '62
Diane Racine
Jo-Anne Rainone, '92
Lewis & Christine Ramla
Daniele Ramos
Marielle Rando
David Rapko
Michael, '67 & Renee Rapko
Stephen Rapko, '60
James Raspallo
Pop & Nana Rataic
Nichole Rave
Suzanne Rave
Adam & Kristen Ray
Monique Renaud
Christopher Ricci
Lisa Ricci
Nadine Richer
Robin Riel
Alan Riendeau
Emile, '95 & Celine Riendeau
Jerilyn Riendeau
Carolyn Ritter, '79
Mark & Christine Rizoli
Jeffrey Robbins
Christina Robbio, '99
Raymond, '56 & Paulette Robert
Evelyn Roberts
Scott & Elizabeth Robillard
Sharon Rocha
Teri Romano
Bob & Lynne Roy
Michele Roy
Connie Ruggieri
Daniel & Judith Russell
Peter & Frances Ryan
Richard & Sharon Ryan
Robert & Jane Ryan
Shawn & Jillian Ryan
Stephen Ryan
Donald & Carrie Saladin
Alan Sandruck
Sueli Santos
Janice Sarni
Laura Saucier, '06
Michael Scales
Guy Shaffer, '97
John & Erin Shea
Haein Shin, '15
Glen & Barbara Simmons
Caroline Simpson, '82
James & Cynthia Simpson
Robert & Judy Sisti
Robyn Sisti Devine
Harvey Slater
Thomas Slater
Annette Smith
Gregory & Kimberly Smolan
Stephen Solon
Adrien & Mary-Elizabeth Sosa
Dennis & Maureen Sousa
Jamie & Lori Sousa
Theodore, '61 & Jean Spas
Carla Spremulli
Beth Stanfa
Francis Sterling
Marshall & Antoinette Stores
Paul Sullivan, '22
Paul & Kerri Sullivan
Robert & Cndy Sutherland
Gail Svendsen
Jane Swift
Marcia Sylvestre
Mark Sylvestre
Joseph, '68 & Margaret Szlosek
Bruce & Michelle Tessier
Richard & Anita Teto
Stephan, '73 & Mary Tetreault
The Salon on Mendon
Allen Thomas
George, '05 & Christine Thomas
Robert Thrul
Ivan Tiger
Mary Tobin
Nicholas Tokman
Michael, '76 & Lynne Toupin
Lucia Tracy Trimna Capital
Ronald, '63 & Adrienne Trottier
Debra Trudeau
Jennifer Tule
Emilie Turcotte
Barbara Vassallo
Mario & Jessica Vendittelli
Charles & Sharon Venticinque
David Vescera
Courtney Vidal, '06
Monica Villarroel
Allan & Virginia Villatoro
Emmanuel Vitale
Stephanie Vitale
Denise Volatile
Camille Votta
Vern & Nancy Wallace
Lisa Walsh
Claire Warner
Sara-Beth Warner
Tia Washington
Paul & Lynn Wasnewsky
Erick & Erick Wesenhagen
Richard & Kathleen Whalen
Teresa Whitcomb
Roger Williams
Robert, '65 & Maureen Wood
Michael Wrona
Derek & Rebecca Young
Richard, '90 & Tara, '90 Zinno
Jennifer Zogg
Edmond & Karen Zuromski
*Executed a gift match in additional to a personal gift
GIFTS-IN-KIND
Lisa DeSante, ‘86
Pamela Desaulniers
Robert Greco
Justin Hollander
J.H. Lynch & Sons
Christopher & Lisa Lydon
Paulette Metivier
Skylar Nelson
Matthew Plante
Jennifer Sylvestre
Legacy: 2021-2022 | 33
If you are interested in supporting scholarships, please contact Lisa Lydon in the Office of Advancement by emailing lydonl@mtstcharles.org
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June 2 - 4, 2023 50TH REUNION WEEKEND CLASS OF 1973
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