NEWS OF THE SCHOOL
Fall 2016
2015-2016 Annual Report
P. 12
| Janet Flanner ’09: Tudor Hall’s Contribution to the “Lost Generation” P. 22 PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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Interim Head of School Peter Kraft Editor Cathy Yingling Chapelle ’87
From the Archive
Class Notes Cassie Dull Graphic Design/Photography Stefanie Dean ’05 Director of Strategic Communications Cathy Yingling Chapelle ’87 Director of Development and Alumni Relations Douglas Allen Assistant Director of Development, Alumni Gretchen Hueni
2016-17 Alumni Association Board President Joe Hawkins ’96 Vice President Beth Tolbert Johnson ’03 Secretary Zach Wills ’03 Treasurer Tony Holton ’06 Past President Lindsay Elder Thornton ’95 Alumni Association Directors Emily Bohn ’12 Courtney Maguire Day ’03 Kate Engle ’95 Katie McKown Feldman ’03 Katelyn Miner Fisher ’04 Maidena Manders Fulford ’89 Mallory Reider Inselberg ’98 Matt Kleymeyer ’00 Andy Marra ’06 Jonathan McDowell ’02 Ben Miner ’02 Reid Searles ’06 Natalie Mercho Taler ’96 Julianne Sicklesteel Brainard ’07 Kristi Kirles Walden ’98
On the Cover Samantha Hogshire as the White Witch in the fall play, The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe.
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Sports were a big part of life at Park School. This photo of a 50s-era Park School basketball team originally was published in the Indianapolis Times.
Park Tudor School Mission To create an inspiring college-preparatory learning environment, with exceptional educators and extraordinary opportunities, that prepares and motivates students to become balanced, confident, and resourceful lifelong learners.
NEWS OF THE SCHOOL
Contents Fall 2016 Features What Does “Doing Good” Have to do with a Good Education?
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Celebrating 40 Years of the Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium and Fine Arts Building
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Hip-Hopping through American History with Hamilton
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Janet Flanner ’09: Tudor Hall’s Contribution to the “Lost Generation”
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Departments From the Interim Head’s Desk 4 News of the School 6 Annual Report 18 Alumni News
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Class Notes
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The Phoenix is published three times annually for alumni, friends, and parents of Park Tudor School. We welcome your comments and suggestions. Please send them to: Cathy Yingling Chapelle ’87, Editor Park Tudor School 7200 N. College Ave. Indianapolis, IN 46240-3016 317/415-2870 cchapelle@parktudor.org
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Of Resilience and Opportunity By Peter A. Kraft, Interim Head of School Recently in our A.P. United States history class, we examined the many gales that blew through America during its “first Industrial Revolution.” Then, in the early 19th century, economic growth and dislocation accompanied changes in democratic politics, family structure, and even religion. That period gave rise to the raucous politics of Andrew Jackson; to the extraordinary technological breakthroughs of the steamboat, mechanical reaper, and textile mills; and, tragically, the expansion of chattel slavery. Not surprisingly, the early 19th century was also accompanied by marked national anxiety. As the nation transformed from an
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agrarian economy to one based more and more on urbanization and industry, the challenges of social stratification and hyper-partisanship strained both individuals and institutions. Importantly, though, the period from 1800-1850 also witnessed some of the most explosive growth in U.S. history. During those decades, GDP grew more than 4% annually, and despite growing social inequality, the standard of living for free Americans—men and women—rose dramatically. In short, both crises and opportunity knocked.
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“May you continue to shine no matter the storms you have been through…” -Ancient Mariners’ Blessing In many ways, today’s forces are similar. Globalization and the extraordinary developments in information technology have spawned their own host of challenges: economic uncertainty; populist political movements; and even terror. As the incomes of some have boomed, others have stagnated—leading to a pervasive angst that is both real and tangible. Yet it is in times like these that important strides can be made, particularly for schools, and especially for Park Tudor. Over the last ten months, our school—and our students, faculty and staff, parents, alumni and friends—have been buffeted by a storm unlike any the school has ever seen. But in this time of challenge, the institution has grown and has prospered. And now, as we get ready to welcome a new Head of School, Park Tudor emerges from our difficulties more prepared and resilient than ever. In the February 2016 edition of The New Yorker, author Marla Konnikova examined a seminal question: “How do people learn to be resilient?” As she noted, “resilience presents a challenge” for researchers, as it depends less on any formal instructure or measure and more on ‘the way your life unfolds.’ Going further, she wrote, “If you are lucky enough to never experience any sort of adversity, we won’t know how resilient you are. It’s only when you’re faced with obstacles, stress, and other environmental threats that resilience, or the lack of it, emerges: Do you succumb or do you surmount?” Park Tudor, and most critically our students, has surmounted. The question to ask, then, is how and why has this been the case? Interestingly, though our challenges were particular to Park Tudor, the elements that generated students’ and institutional resilience were hardly idiosyncratic. Instead, Konnikova explains the “roots of resilience” as being composed of a host of factors in young people: “Some elements had to do with luck: a resilient child might have a strong bond with a supportive caregiver, parent, teacher, or other mentor-like figure. But another, quite large set of
elements was psychological, and had to do with how the children responded to the environment. From a young age, resilient children tended to ‘meet the world on their own terms.’ They were autonomous and independent, would seek out new experiences, and had a ‘positive social orientation’… Perhaps most importantly, the resilient children had what psychologists call an ‘internal locus of control:’ they believed that they, and not their circumstances, affected their achievements. The resilient children saw themselves as the orchestrators of their own fates. In fact, on a scale that measured locus of control, they scored more than two standard deviations away from the standardization group.” In many ways, then, children internalized and embodied the very core values on which Park Tudor stands: integrity; intellectual engagement; respect; responsibility; and, perhaps most importantly, resourcefulness. Put differently, during a time of great stress, our entire community leaned on the foundations that make our school great. It is in this context, then, that Park Tudor has forged ahead. Our many accomplishments over the last few months include: *This year’s senior class boasts the most National Merit Semifinalists in more than five years. *This fall, we opened a brand new turf field, and a beautiful new playground for our youngest learners in the Hilbert Center. *The school opened at our targeted enrollment, and last year’s Annual Fund exceeded our budgeted amount. *We have completely overhauled our policies and procedures to ensure student safety and security, all the while maintaining the friendly, welcoming atmosphere that defines Park Tudor. *Our Middle School VEX robotics team continues to thrive, and throughout the school, innovative programs like iBlock and the summer Innovators Institute, as well as our new schedule, enable us to “test-drive” what is possible in education. *Lower School students have made Community Engaged Learning (CEL) a critical part of their learning, with each grade level designing programs integrated with their classroom study. *On the fields and in our galleries and theater, students continue to be the balanced “Renaissance men and women” that have always characterized Park Tudor. None of this is accidental, nor is it ephemeral. Like the tree in our crest, Park Tudor remains strong in the face of many challenges. And like that same tree, we have grown and prospered, in large part due to the resilience of those that make our school special.
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News of the School New Hilbert Center Playground Opens
The newly renovated Hilbert Center playground welcomed its first students on Tuesday, October 11. Thanks to a group of very generous Park Tudor families, this renovation will allow our youngest learners to develop social skills with elements providing activities for problem solving, creativity, cooperation, pretend and quiet time. Gross motor activities and skills like pedaling, climbing, kicking, balance and running will occur throughout the space in various forms. The playground will provide freedom for the children to explore and learn. Included in this renovation are: 1) A new bay of swings that will allow 4 children to swing at one time instead of the previous 2 2) An extended fence line in the grassy area for more free play
JK students enjoy the new Hilbert Center playground.
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3) An embankment slide in the expanded grassy area 4) Stump climbers 5) A playhouse for imaginative play 6) Poured-in-Place Soft Fall Surfacing throughout 7) A new basketball goal 8) Shade canopy covering much of the upper playground area 9) Expanded trike track The generosity of these donors will allow the school to enhance the experience of our youngest students for years to come. We thank all of our donors!
New Landscaping Projects Underway
We are pleased to announce that we have several new landscaping projects underway, which will greatly enhance several areas of campus, particularly around the Lower School.
·The drop-off area in front of the Hilbert Center will receive new trees, as well as a low, decorative wall around the interior of the circle. ·The area surrounding the flagpoles at the entrance of campus will be filled with colorful perennials. ·Behind the Lower School and around Foster Hall, we will plant boxwoods along with various perennials that will greatly beautify that space. ·The handicapped ramp in front of the Lower School will be enhanced. ·The area between the Middle School and the Upper School will also receive many new plants, without sacrificing the garden that currently exists. There will also be improvements to our irrigation system in several areas, which will help to keep our grassy areas looking their best. These landscaping projects have been made possible by an anonymous donor, and we are very appreciative of the generous gift.
Plans for new landscape updates around campus.
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Park Tudor Partners with Heartland Film Festival
Park Tudor has forged a partnership with the Heartland Film Festival, which allowed the PT community to screen some of the films from the festival and hear from a filmmaker. On Wednesday, October 26, Park Tudor seniors left campus in the afternoon to view a series of short films being screened at the Festival. Freshman, sophomores and juniors viewed two films, “Go Get Your Horn” and “Citizen Teklit,” and heard a presentation from Tim Taylor, the filmmaker. “Go Get Your Horn” is a celebration of mentorship, community and incredible music, centered around a monthly jam session at the Jazz Kitchen (view trailer at www.gogetyourhorn.com/bio/). “Citizen Teklit” tells the story of refugee Teklit Guzay and his quest for U.S. citizenship (view trailer at www.citizenteklit.com/bio).
Hilbert Center/Lower School Hosts the Maley Foundation for Disability Awareness Week
In late August the Lower School welcomed members from the Joseph Maley Foundation to our Hilbert Center and Lower School. The Joseph Maley Foundation’s mission is to “serve children of all abilities.” On Monday, students from JK-grade 5 enjoyed shows presented by “Kids on the Block Puppets” with students from Christ the King. On Tuesday, kindergarten and first grade students welcomed speaker Kim Isakson, who presented “Everybody is Different,” and the fourth and fifth graders learned about learning disabilities from mother and son speakers, Kristen and Sam Parmelee. On Thursday, second and third grade students heard from Dustin Hergert from the Joseph Maley Foundation along with Katie, Matthias and Magnus Vescelus to learn about living with visual impairment. All of the programming for the week was aimed at building acceptance, respect, and compassion for those who live with disabilities, both seen and unseen. Our Middle School has had a long-standing affiliation with the Maley Foundation and we are very excited about expanding this partnership and giving our Hilbert Center and Lower School students the opportunity to begin the school year focused on our core value of respect for all.
The senior class took over the AMC theater to view student shorts submitted to this year’s Heartland Film Festival. That evening, the full PT community was invited to meet Tim Taylor and Teklit Guzay as part of our annual “Visiting Artist Series.” Guests screened “Citizen Teklit,” at Park Tudor then received a complimentary ticket to the screening of “Go Get Your Horn” later that evening at the Traders Point Theater.
First graders learn what it’s like to do daily tasks with a disability.
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“They Call Me Genet” Premieres to an Enthusiastic Audience
“They Call Me Genet,” the one-woman show chronicling the fascinating life of Janet Flanner, Tudor Hall class of ’09 and Paris correspondent for the New Yorker from 1925-1975, made its world premiere in front of an enthusiastic audience on Friday, September 23. Starring Jen Johansen’91, and narrated by playwright D. Paul Thomas, “They Call Me Genet” showed Janet Flanner reminiscing about her life and many years in Paris, where she crossed paths with Ernest Hemingway, Picasso, F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, and even Hitler, whom she profiled in 1936 for the New Yorker. Prior to the show, attendees enjoyed a reception in the courtyard in front of Ayres Auditorium, and following the show Park Tudor Theatre Director Nicole Tremblay conducted a question-and-answer session with the artists. This event was the first in a year of celebration for the 40th anniversary of the Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium. Photos: Jen Johansen as Janet Flanner; a talk after the show with Jen Johansesn, Park Tudor Theater Director, Nicole Tremblay, and playwright, D. Paul Thomas; Pianist Sean Chen.
Pianist Sean Chen Performs for Upper School Orchestra & Band Students
On Friday, August 26, the Fine Arts Department welcomed the 2013 American Pianists Award winner, Sean Chen, to Park Tudor, sponsored by the American Pianists Association. He performed for Upper School Orchestra & Band students in Ayres Auditorium. Hailed as a charismatic rising star with “an exceptional ability to connect with an audience combined with an easy virtuosity” according to the Huffington Post, Sean Chen is a 27-year-old classical pianist who studied at Juilliard and Yale. Since winning the American Pianist Award, he has toured internationally, been lauded by media outlets including the New York Times and released a solo album on the Steinway Records label. An exceptional student, Sean had offers from MIT and Harvard and continues an interest in learning technology when away from the piano. Sean was recently named a 2015 fellow by the prestigious Leonore Annenberg Fellowship Fund for the Performing Arts. PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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PT Students Attend National Junior Classical League Convention
Three Park Tudor students gathered together with 1,800 other students from across the United States at the 63rd annual National Junior Classical League Convention held at Indiana University in Bloomington, Ind., from July 24 to July 30. Students competed in academic, graphic art, creative art, and athletic events. Additionally, students participated in daily spirit competitions. The Indiana delegation placed fourth in the nation for both T-shirt theme and the state publication contest and also placed third among large states on the “Indy 300” spirit day. Delegates attended colloquia covering a variety of topics focused on the classical world throughout the week, and they also participated in a community service blanket-making project to benefit the Linus Project, and created a large mosaic to be installed and displayed at the new Seven Oaks Classical School of Ellettsville. In addition, all three Park Tudor students represented the state of Indiana in the National Latin Certamen Tournament, a Jeopardy-like competition with questions covering a range of topics about the ancient world. Seniors Hannah Resnick and Fariya Shamrin competed as members of the advanced team, and sophomore Cy Orentlicher competed at the novice level.
Cy Orentlicher, Fariya Shamrin, and Hannah Resnik at the National Latin Certamen Tournament
All three students earned individual awards in the various competitions offered and earned sweepstakes points for the state. At the Latin I level, Cy placed 2nd in Greek derivatives, 5th in Latin vocabulary, 6th in ancient geography, 7th in reading comprehension, 7th in Roman life, and 8th in academic heptathlon (an “all-around” category consisting of seven topics). He also placed 2nd in sight Latin reading and 3rd in Latin oratory. At the junior level, Fariya placed 2nd in ink drawing and 3rd in acrylic/ oil painting. She also placed 5th in watercolor painting among both juniors and seniors. At the Latin IV level, Hannah placed 4th in reading comprehension and 8th in sight Latin reading. Latin Club and JCL sponsor Sarah McDaniels also attended through a grant from the National Junior Classical League Miller Fellowship, which covered the full cost of her registration.
Sangu Delle Speaks at the School and Visits Classes
Sangu Delle is an entrepreneur and clean water activist, and is the author of the upcoming book, Seeding Growth: Africa’s Youngest Entrepreneurs. Born in Ghana, Mr. Delle founded Golden Palm Investments in 2008 to fund promising startups that can have social impact and generate jobs in Africa. He was selected as a 2014 TEDGlobal Fellow, and was recognized by Forbes as one of the Top 30 Most Promising Entrepreneurs in Africa in both 2014 and 2015. Mr. Delle addressed “Education and Identity in an Increasingly Complex World” in his speech to the Park Tudor community on Thursday, September 8. Sangu Delle speaks to the economics class; Jeff Johnson, Sangu Delle, Chris Bates ’01, Joe Fumusa, and Margo MacAlear.
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NEWS OF THE SCHOOL
As part of Sangu Delle’s visit to Park Tudor for the Park Tudor Speaker Series Presented by The National Bank of Indianapolis, on Friday, September 9, Sangu visited several Park Tudor classes. Students in fifth grade enjoyed hearing from Mr. Delle, along with economics, US history, and international relations students in the Upper School.
We extend our gratitude to the families who support our language program and who open their homes to our overseas guests. Their stay in Indianapolis spanned 10 days and included daily field trips with Lower School students. Our Lower School children also had the opportunity to greet our visitors during their weekly Community Meeting.
Nine Seniors Named National Merit Semifinalists; Four Named Commended Students Nine members of the Park Tudor class of 2017 have been named as Seminfinalists in the 2017 National Merit Scholarship Program. Congratulations to: Christian Amstutz Trace Arbuckle Kendall Garner Adam Gottwald Elizabeth Niculescu Hannah Resnick Christopher Skalnik Rachel Thomas Michelle Zhu
These students have an opportunity to continue in the competition for some 7,500 National Merit Scholarships worth about $33 million that will be offered next spring. About 1.6 million juniors in more than 22,000 high schools entered the 2017 National Merit Scholarship Program by taking the 2015 Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test (PSAT/NMSQT). The nationwide pool of Semifinalists, representing less than one percent of U.S. high school seniors, includes the highest-scoring entrants in each state. Four members of the class of 2017 have been recognized by the National Merit Scholarship Program as Commended Students. Congratulations to: Annabella Helman Brian Li Alexander Schiffer Fariya Shamrin Although they will not continue in the 2017 competition for National Merit Scholarship awards, Commended Students placed among the top five percent of more than 1.6 million students who entered the 2017 competition.
Lower School Welcomes Visitors from Montevideo
In September, the Lower School welcomed 22 students and three teachers from Scuola Italiana de Montevideo back to our campus. Our partnership with this school in Montevideo has spanned over twenty years.
Lower School students welcome the students visiting from Montevideo. PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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Upper school students put in hard work to rehab this year’s Habitat for Humanity house.
Park Tudor Helps Build a House for Habitat for Humanity
The Park Tudor community once again joined together to help build a house for Habitat for Humanity. Located in the heart of the Haughville community, this year’s house was once a brand new Habitat home when it was built about thirty years ago.
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Work on this project has been going on for the past year. Juniors Beatrice Bowlby and Lily Erickson coordinated a mailing effort with Director of Development Doug Allen to ask for financial support from the Park Tudor community. They made presentations to school-related organizations and were supported generously by the PTPA and Booster Club. Treasurer John Davis helped keep track of donations and deposits. They have been able to raise about $20,000, approximately half of the finan-
cial commitment made to Habitat. They have learned marketing, communication and presentation skills in the process. Build coordinators Alexandra Klimek, Paul Miller and Claire O’Dell learned organizational skills to recruit volunteers and get them on the road and to the build. In addition to several days for students to volunteer at the build site, faculty, parents and alumni also participated. Thank you to all who volunteered!
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Two Park Tudor Students Study in Spoleto
Claire Azar and Lily Adams attended the Spoleto Study Abroad 2016 arts & humanities immersion program in the historic town of Spoleto, Italy this summer. This interdisciplinary program features a dynamic curriculum in the arts and humanities. Claire participated in photography and Lily participated in the creative writing program.
Fifth Grade Visits Indiana Seed Farm
On Thursday, October 6, fifth graders had the unique opportunity to visit an Indiana seed farm to enhance their studies of the ancient agricultural revolution in history, environmental studies in science, and their grade-level understanding of food production and sustainability. The students’ eyes were opened to the crucial importance of farming to our modern day food supply and to the complexities of farming success still reliant on Mother Nature and good, old hard work even with drones, combines, and amazing technology to help. We were grateful to Legg Seeds for generously hosting us and planning such meaningful activities for our students.
Lily Adams and Claire Azar in Spoleto, Italy.
Annual Halloween Parade and Pumpkin Carving Contest Was a Great Success
Two long-standing traditions were once again carried on in the Hilbert Center and Lower School this Halloween. On Halloween morning, Hilbert Center and Lower School students brought in their decorated and carved pumpkins to be judged, with awards given out for each grade in categories including Most Scary, Best Look-A-Like, Most Bling, and Most Creative Without Carving. Congratulations to the winners:
5th graders at Legg Seeds. PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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Most Creative without Carving: 1st: Giacomo Pili – Grade 4 2nd: Hope Christy – Grade 4 3rd (Tie): Chloe Ferreira- JK1; Xander Jordan and McCullough Jordan – Grade 1 and Grade 5 Most Bling: 1st: Lance Rogers - SK 2nd: Marlee and Mason Moorehead Grade 2 and Grade 4 3rd: Lauren Richer – Grade 3 Most Scary: 1st: Alexander and Lillian Walker Grade 2 and SK 2nd: Gianna Cooreman-Hood – Grade 2 3rd: Caroline Brundage – Grade 3 Best Look Alike: 1st: Lizzie Fisher – Grade 5 2nd: Max Lake – Grade 1 3rd (Tie): Ruth Faris - SK; Xander King Grade 5 On Halloween afternoon, Hilbert Center and Lower School faculty and students donned their creepiest and kookiest costumes for the annual Halloween Parade around the Fine Arts circle.
Students and Faculty in the News
* Sophomore Emily Sun was selected as a Regional Finalist for the prestigious Siemens Competition for Math, Science and Technology for the 2nd consecutive year. Emily is one of four students who was selected as a Regional Finalist from Indiana this year. The Siemens Competition is a prestigious science competition funded by the Siemens Foundation. Each year, five individuals and five teams are select-
Emily Sun
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Lower schoolers show off their Halloween costumes at this year’s parade.
ed as Regional Finalists in Region 3, which covers 13 states including Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas. It is extremely rare for a student to be selected twice as a Regional Finalist during their high school years. Emily will now compete for one of six National Finalist spots in November. Congratulations to Emily! * Junior Aidan Baker has been accepted into the Up-Next Business Academy.
Erika Isaacs
Through a competitive application process, the Up-Next Business Academy brings together selected Indiana high school students to the Kelley School of Business to introduce them to opportunities within the business world and educate them on the college admissions process. Aidan will spend one Saturday a month from October, 2016 through May, 2017, and will have the opportunity to network with professionals; make connections with new friends and Kelley staff and students; receive help with the
Tyra Rose Nibbs and Imani Kigamwa.
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college admissions process; participate in fun business activities; and learn more about IU and Kelley. * Imani Kigamwa and TyraRose Nibbs were awarded scholarships on Saturday, October 8 from the JLW Scholarship Foundation. The JLW Scholarship Foundation was created to honor the memory of Joi Warren. The Joi Warren Scholarship is to assist college-bound teenage girls who strive for academic excellence and who are dedicated to serving their communi-
Fall Play: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
This year’s fall production, The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, was a fastpaced ensemble performance in the style of Total Theatre, which includes theatre, music, dance, song, spectacle, and special effects. The cast and crew worked hard creating the world of Narnia, com-
ty. Imani was awarded 2nd place, and received a $2,000 scholarship and $150 book voucher; TyraRose was awarded 3rd place, receiving a $1,000 scholarship and $150 book voucher. * Erika Isaacs (9) attended Bella Moxie dance intensive classes this fall. She was awarded a full scholarship to attend one of their four national conventions. It was given by the faculty members to a dancer that the faculty felt embraced the best work ethic, skill, and attitude in their
classes. In addition, she was invited to compete in their regional competition in Chicago this spring. * Middle School French and Spanish teacher Laura Nagle performed with the Indianapolis Symphonic Choir at Carnegie Hall on October 16, in conjunction with their CD release. Freshman Nathan Roach and eighth grader Kyle Xu also performed as members of the Indianapolis Children’s Choir.
plete with a mystical unicorn, grumpy dwarves, a snarling wolf, and some feisty beavers as the Pevensie children make their epic journey through the magical land, searching for Aslan in their quest for good to overcome evil.
puppeteers). Patrick Weigand, an Indiana native and puppet director, ran a master class for the cast where they learned the principles of puppetry. Aslan even made an appearance during this year’s Halloween Parade!
The true spectacle was seeing Aslan as he helped the children fight the White Witch. Technical Theatre Director Nolan Brokamp and the technical theatre crew designed a giant puppet which came to life on stage (with the help of some talented
The play was performed on Saturday, November 5 and Sunday, November 6, with attendees at Sunday’s performance having the opportunity to meet the characters after the show.
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Sports News
Boys Tennis Makes it to State Tournament Semifinals Boys Tennis The Park Tudor boys tennis team had another great year, ending in the semifinals of the State Finals Tournament. Some of the other highlights of the 2016 season included winning the Indiana Crossroads Conference Tournament and also winning the Marion County Tournament with an epic come-from-behind win over rival North Central in the finals. The team finished #3 in the final rankings and was as high as #2 during the regular season with an overall record of 19-3. While every position received All-District awards, the team was also recognized with All-State Awards, with #1 singles player Aidan Harris earning 1st Team All-State and the #1 doubles team of Jaren Katz and Will Emhardt also earning 1st Team All-State honors. Honorable Mention All-State honors were given to #2 singles Drew Wiegel and #2 doubles team Alex Kim and Benton Wiegel. Senior Vijay Tewari finished with an undefeated dual match record of 19-0 at #3 singles. The doubles team of Katz/ Emhardt also finished as State Individual Doubles Finalists in the Individual State Tournament, losing a very close match in the finals to Carmel. Lastly, the team was recognized as an Academic All-State Team; to qualify, the team has to have an average GPA higher than 3.6 for varsity.
Boys Soccer Park Tudor had a good season finishing “joint top” of the division and reaching the sectional final. After a slow start to the season, the team put a nice run of wins together. One of the best and most competitive matches during the regular season was against ICC rival Cardinal Ritter. It was such a joy to watch the boys compete and play their best soccer and see the expression on their faces after the winning goal. Unfortunately though, all good things have to come to an end. During the sectional final against Heritage Christian and
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In addition to a successful season on the court, the boys tennis team was also named an Academic AllState Team going two goals down early in the match, the boys showed great character and fight to level the score at 2-2. After two overtimes they unfortunately came up short at the penalty shootout. It was a true heartbreaker and a tough way to lose, but the coaching staff could not have been more proud in the way the boys played and represented PT.
Girls Soccer Led by a talented group of seniors, the Park Tudor girls soccer team finished the season 11-5-1 overall and 5-1 in the conference. The Park Tudor Panthers advanced to Sectional Finals, but were bested by Heritage Christian, who fell to Lawrenceburg in the Semi-State Finals. Senior captains were Abbi Plewes, Aino Rahkonen, and Noelle Enkema. Senior leaders included Abbi Plewes, Aino Rahkonen, Noelle Enkema, Lindsay Williams, Julia Schacht, Ellie Dassow, and Natalie Odmark. Several players received season accolades: All-County: Aino Rahkonen and Abbi Plewes District and Conference Scholar Athletes: Natalie Odmark, Ellie Dassow, Aino Rahkonen, Lindsay Williams, Noelle Enkema and Abbi Plewes District Top Player: Shelby Hart All-Conference: Aino Rahkonen, Abbi Plewes and Shelby Hart
Football The Park Tudor football team continued their path of improvement in 2016, and the Panthers enjoyed their best season in several years with a 4-7 record. It was a season of firsts for the Panthers, as it was the team’s first season on the brand new football field. They recorded their first victory ever over Southern Wells (3514), and they had their first victory over Speedway in 19 years (38-36) in the Gridiron Classic at Victory Field. The team also won in the first round of sectional play by beating Broad Ripple (39-14). The season sadly ended in the second round of sectionals with a loss to Lapel (49-18). The Panthers were led this year by a strong senior class that included running back Ahrod Lloyd, wide receiver/linebacker Brent Brimmage, quarterback Joe Cheesebourough, and offensive/defensive linemen Bryson Pillow and Brian Li. Although the Panthers must replace 10 departing seniors, the future is bright as many seasoned players will be back next season.
Girls Golf Considering that two years ago, Park Tudor did not even have a girls golf team, this year’s team did an amazing job. The team was led by sophomore Alissa Honigford and Junior Hannah Markey, who carried the team’s lowest and second-lowest scoring average. Our most improved player was Olivia Murphy, who started the season with minimal golfing experience and ended the season cutting her
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18-hole stroke average by over 15 strokes. Highlights included winning the Indiana Crossroads Conference with three of the five players making the All-Conference team. As the season progressed, we set our sights on sectionals where we had a great showing. We did not make it out of sectionals as a team, but Hannah Markey and Alissa Honigford took two of the three individual regional qualifying spots. The team has made great strides and with the top seven golfers returning next year, we are positioned to experience continued success.
Cross Country Led by freshman Jaden Seymour and senior Haydon Betz, the boys cross country team ended 2016 as their most competitive season of the last few years. Jaden qualified for the Noblesville Regional Meet, and nearly the entire team set new
PT cheerleaders lead the crowd in a cheer.
personal bests by season’s end. The boys look to build on this success next season when they’ll return six of their top seven runners, and welcome in a talented freshmen class. The girls cross country team continued its recent run of strong performances during the 2016 season. Jenna Beagle, Riley Spitzenberger, and Hana Shafique earned All-Conference honors and all qualified for the Noblesville Regional Meet. This is the third consecutive year the girls cross country team has sent three runners to the Regional Meet. The 2017 season is shaping up to be equally successful as six of the top seven runners return, including all three Regional qualifiers.
Volleyball
course of the season, the team improved on their skills and team chemistry which led to a more successful season than last year. New addition to the team Lily Sumner forced a competitive offense by leading the team in kills and blocks. Senior captain Alyce Hammer proved to be a great leader with a positive attitude that was infectious on and off the court. Sally Root, Alyce Hammer, and Stephanie Vlahos all earned the honor of being named ICC Academic All-Conference. The team made it further in sectionals than it has in the past three years, proving that patience, hard work, and having fun make it all worth it! The Panthers will return an exciting and talented group of girls for their 2017 season and are looking forward to continue to improve as a team and make an even stronger post-season run.
The Panthers’ focus this season was to be “Better Today Than Yesterday.” Over the
PT seniors cheer on the football team at Homecoming.
Jolen Snow
Lily Sumner PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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ANNUAL REPORT
2015-2016
Annual Report
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PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
ANNUAL REPORT
Last year Park Tudor displayed in both public and quiet ways the strength and generosity of the school community. Community, one of the three pillars of the Strategic Plan along with Academics and Sustainability, remains at the heart of the school’s mission and supports the school in ways that are not always visible, but are always important. Another name for this idea of community is “Social Capital” and, along with intellectual capital and financial capital, are a way of understanding the school’s stable foundation and enduring value. Wikipedia defines Social Capital as [A] form of economic and cultural capital in which social networks are central, transactions are marked by reciprocity, trust, and cooperation, and market agents produce goods and services not mainly for themselves, but for a common good. Park Tudor strives to create a community that supports students, faculty, and teachers in exactly this way. The school fosters relationships among parents at social events and through volunteering. Parents, teachers and coaches cooperate through the PTPA, the Booster Club, Parent Council, and the Fine Arts Guild. The classes students take, the sports they play, and the music they perform are rarely ends in themselves, but instead serve the larger goal of graduating responsible citizens and moral leaders. These three forms of capital – intellectual, financial, and social – work together to make a successful school. Park Tudor’s intellectual capital undergirds the school’s academic reputation. This scholastic prowess is critical to the success of the admissions and college placement offices. Financial capital, in the form of the school’s endowment, physical plant, and culture of philanthropy, makes the school’s budget possible. This shared value of generosity to the school allows Park Tudor to attract and retain bright, motivated, and positive teachers and students through competitive salaries and affordable tuition. But it is social capital that sustains a community during difficult times. The contributions of time and talent by past faculty, past parents, and the larger community last January and February sustained everyone at the school. The outpouring of email and phone calls to the school reminded everyone of the connections we all share. Further, the increased number of donors to the Annual Fund and the continued growth in alumni participation was a testament to the high value and lasting impact of a Park Tudor education. There is much to celebrate in the year just finished: a common excitement about the students’ growth, accomplishments, and opportunities; a shared vision that turns ideas into architects’ plans and then into reality; and growing momentum coming from the Strategic Plan. However, as we look back on the year, what many will remember most vividly are times we were together and strengthening our connections to each other. The investment we made in the social capital of the school will pay dividends for many years to come. Sincerely,
How To Make a Gift to Park Tudor’s Annual Fund Outright Gift Gifts may be made by credit card or check, made payable to Park Tudor School. You may mail your gift in a pledge/gift envelope or visit www.parktudor.org/giveonline to make a secure online donation. Pledge Pledge your gift to the Annual Fund with a gift/pledge envelope indicating the amount of your contribution and make payments that are convenient for you. Whether you wish to make monthly payments or one payment at a later date, all pledges must be fulfilled by the end of our fiscal year, June 30. Securities You can make your Annual Fund donation with a gift of stock. A gift of appreciated securities may allow you to avoid capital gains on the increased value of the stock as well as a charitable deduction for the full market value when the gift is made. Check with your financial advisor for more details. Please contact the Development Office for assistance in this process. Memorial and Honorarium Gifts Your gift may be made in memory or in honor of a colleague, student, teacher, classmate or family member who is special to you. Please include this information in the appropriate area on the gift/pledge envelope or the notes section of the online donation form. The Development Office will notify the individual(s) or family of your tribute. Park Tudor greatly appreciates every gift to the school and proudly acknowledges each donor in the Annual Report. If you wish your gift to be anonymous, please indicate so in the appropriate area on the gift/pledge envelope or online donation form.
Doug Allen Director of Alumni Relations and Development Each year, Park Tudor School offers a variety of opportunities to support the school, both financially and through in-kind donations. Listed in these pages are the names of those who have made donations to one or more of the following: Annual Fund, capital campaign, endowed funds, estate gifts realized and restricted funds. We extend a warm thank you for their commitment to our students and our school. PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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ANNUAL REPORT
Initiatives and Programs Supported by Philanthropy in 2015-2016 Park Tudor is grateful to all of our donors who have assisted us in providing our students with extraordinary opportunities throughout 2015-16. Following is just a sample: • Hilbert Center Playground. A small group of parents organized and supported the renovation of the playground enjoyed by Junior and Senior Kindergarten students. • Science Department trip to the Galapagos Islands. A 12-day trip involving field work (Galapagos tortoise monitoring and highlands restoration), a cultural exchange with local students, and island exploration. • Ernst & Young Integrated Business Program. The program introduced students to critical aspects of business including strategy, finance, marketing, sales and operations, including presentations from prominent Indianapolis-area businesspeople and a visit to a local Fortune 500 company.
New Hilbert Center Playground
• Student Directed Theatrical Production. Supported by the friends and family of Valri Sandoe, Tudor Hall Class of 1952, Upper School students directed and produced “The Musical Comedy Murders of 1940,” a comedy by John Bishop. • Meet and Greet with peers from all over the world. Connecting Classroom, Campus, and Community, Park Tudor hosted exchange students from La Reúnion, Guatemala, Uruguay, and Spain. • Homecoming Family Day. Upper and Lower School students enjoyed a special “Family Day” and worked together to create t-shirts during Homecoming week.
Student Directed Play
• Community Engaged Learning Day. Parents, faculty, and students came together for Park Tudor’s first Community-Engaged Learning (CEL) Day to focus on the complex causes of poverty, as well as the many skills that people must develop to escape generational poverty. • Musical Theatre Class to Broadway. Upper School Musical Theatre students, Fine Arts faculty and parents traveled to New York City to attend Broadway musicals, workshops with teaching artists and professionals, and explore Times Square.
Homecoming Family Day
• Lower School Young Maker Lab. A space for students to engage in a variety of hands-on learning activities, including coding, origami, duct tape design, bookmarking, engineering, electronics, and other STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Art and Math) projects. • “Math in Focus” Curriculum Expanded to Middle School. Building on the success of the introduction of the “Math in Focus” curriculum in the Lower School, which has seen students make significant gains in math skills, the curriculum has now been expanded to the Middle School. “Math in Focus” is the American version of Singapore Math.
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PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
Musical Theatre Class in New York
ANNUAL REPORT
2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School Cornerstone Society: Gifts of $50,000 and Above Anonymous - 5 Eli Lilly & Company Foundation The Edward E. Ford Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Skjodt
Leadership Society: Gifts of $25,000 - $49,999 Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Brown (Rob ’79; Ruth Ellen Myrehn ’80) Mrs. Janet Carrington ’64 via the Janet A. Carrington Foundation The Irsay Family Mr. Tom Linebarger and Ms. Michele Janin The National Bank of Indianapolis William and Susan Ringo Dr. Marianne Williams Tobias ’58
Platinum: Gifts of $10,000 - $24,999
Anonymous - 3 The Honorable and Mrs. Alex Azar II Dr. John Bamforth and Dr. Susan Mahony Mr. Robert Bennett and Mrs. Deborah J. Bennett (Dob ’76) Steven S. Cagle ’71 Mr. and Mrs. Russell Fortune (Jock ’58) Anton and Laura George Gershman Boys (Eric ’98, Jason ’01, Ryan ’04) Dr. and Mrs. Joe Johnston Richard and Katie Kruse (Katharine Mothershead ’65) Mr. and Mrs. Jay C. Miller Mr. Myles O’Neill and Dr. Fionnuala Walsh Mr. Robert Rook and Dr. Adrien Sipos Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schacht via the Schacht Family Gift Fund of the AYCO Charitable Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Smith (Mike ’95; Katie Shoopman ’95) Jeffrey and Benita Thomasson Mr. and Mrs. Randall Tobias via the Tobias Family Foundation, Inc. Wells Fargo
Gold: Gifts of $5,000 - $9,999 Anonymous - 1 Dr. and Mrs. Alfonso J. Alanis Paige and Tim Button Mr. Bryan Chandler and Mrs. Mary Titsworth Chandler Kathleen and Enrique Conterno Mr. Ed and Dr. Marion Couch Ms. Margaret Coyle Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Duiser Dr. Dale Edgar and Ms. Michele Heinold Mr.and Mrs. David Eskenazi (David ’83) Mr. and Mrs. Fritz French Dr. and Mrs. Marc Gerdisch Tom and Mary Grein Ms. Amy Hamilton Hugh and Kristina Harlan Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Hasselbeck Mr. Arthur C. Hodges Dr. and Mrs. Tim Hupfer John and Christie Kelly Mr. Jeff ’89 and Dr. Jennifer Kittle Mr. and Mrs. Ted Kramer Mr. and Mrs. Philip Larman Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Lauth Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Dean Maar Dr. and Mrs. William W. McCutchen (Renie Lilly ’58) Drs. James McGill and Julie Fetters Mr. and Mrs. Greg McRoberts Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Mytelka
Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Norman Park Tudor Booster Club Mr. and Mrs. David Plimpton (Susan Batchelder ’61) Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Reilly Jr. Mr. Derica Rice and Mrs. Robin Nelson-Rice The Estate of Mrs. Natalie Griener Riddell ’45 Mr. and Mrs. Jim Schacht Craig and Amanda Skelton Mrs. Barbara Skillman Drs. Daniel and Mari Skovronsky Mr. and Mrs. William T. Stoops (Bill ’73) Dr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Stout The Toomey Family The Estate of Mrs. Barbara Martin Vonnegut ’39 Chris and Tara Warner Gene and Mary Ann Zink
Silver: Gifts of $2,500 - $4,999
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Allen (Doug* ) Mr. and Mrs. Don Aquilano AJ and Lynne Bir Mrs. Suzanne Brown Blakeman ’55 Ms. Sheryl Branson Mr. and Mrs. Scott M. Brown (Scott ’81) Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Buttrick Mr. and Mrs. William B. Carmichael Mr. and Mrs. Josh Carter Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Cassidy (Mary*) Mr. and Mrs. Joe Chapelle (Cathy Yingling ’87*) Alexander and Jill Christy Dr. and Mrs. Louis A. Coury Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Crossin (Heather Hanley ’84) Dr. and Mrs. Frank M. Deane Mr. and Mrs. Joseph DeVito Ryan and Anne Drook Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Dunn Jr. (Ted ’72; Julia Townsend ’72) Stephen and Julia Enkema Dr. and Mrs. William G. Enright Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Gershman Mr. and Mrs. Don Gottwald Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hanley Claude and Brenda Harrington Katz, Sapper & Miller, LLP Mr. Mark Kirschner Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kraft (Peter*) Mr. J. Scott and Dr. Julie Laughner Mr. and Mrs. Scott Law Dr. and Mrs. Mark E. Lawlor (Mark ’84) Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Lemen (Nick ’93) Lilly Endowment, Inc. Alexandra and Greg Loewen Mr. Terry Longworth and Mrs. Stephanie White-Longworth Mr. and Mrs. Alexander M. McVie (Sandy ’64) Dr. and Mrs. Matthew D. Miller (Matthew#) Dr. and Mrs. R. Christopher Miyamoto (Chris ’88) Jeffrey and Calise Mossler Mr. and Mrs. Patrick G. Murphy (Heather Reilly ’90) Mr. Michael and Dr. Amanda O’Mara Mr. and Mrs. Robert Palmer Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Polak Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Robertson Dr. and Mrs. Tim Root Dr. James Ruiz and Ms. Michelle Carnahan Edgar and Karin Sarratt Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Richard Scales Mr. Dan Strahl and Dr. Vasiliki Keramida James and Emily Sturman (Jim ’67; Emily Moore ’66) Mr. and Mrs. Jake Sturman (Jake ’98) Target Corporation Sidney Taurel
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016 Chris and Catherine Vlahos The Washington Post Company Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. West (Richard ’42) Mr. Richard D. Wood Mr. Guoxin Zhu and Mrs. Zhaogen Chen
Panther: Gifts of $1,000 - $2,499
Anonymous - 9 Mr. and Mrs. Brian Akins Mr. David and Dr. Karen Amstutz Mr. Viswanath and Dr. Vidya Sree Atluri Nancy Ayres ’60 Drs. Brian and Grace Badman Batt Family Foundation Mr. and Mrs. William G. Batt Dr. and Mrs. Jay Beagle Richard and Laurel Beattey Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Beesley Mr. and Mrs. Brent Benge Rocky and Jennifer Bloniarz Dan and Beth Bohn Dr. Christopher Bohyer and Dr. Wanita Kumar Mr. Martin Bott and Ms. Angelia Barnes Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bowlby Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Brady Mr. and Mrs. Aman Brar Mr. Ron Brock and Ms. Ann Thompson Brock Mr. Daniel and Dr. Katherine Brundage Donald W. Buttrey and Karen Lake Buttrey ’63# via the Saltsburg Fund Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Byrnes (Rebecca*) Mr. and Mrs. Craig Carpenter Central Indiana Community Foundation Church Family Fund Scott and Adriana Conner Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Creveling Donald P. Darbro ’62 Dr. and Mrs. John DePowell Mr. and Mrs. James Dora Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Melton Doxey Mrs. Nancy Hare Dunn ’45 Mr. Timothy P. Eckersley Faegre Baker Daniels LLC Jim and Gracia Floyd Mr. and Mrs. Zach Ford (Abby*) Mr. William L. Fortune Jr. and Mr. Joseph D. Blakley Dr. and Mrs. Edward T. Fry Mr. Henry Fu and Dr. Hillary Wu The Gardner Family Dan and Liliana Gehring Philip and Dorothea Genetos Dr. Juan Carlos Gomez and Dr. Maria Luisa Diez Jeffrey and Terri Grant Dr. William R. Grider Mr. Hurst Groves ’59 Mr. and Mrs. Jason Groves (Emily Hebert ’93*) Mr. and Mrs. Nikhil S. Gunale (Nikhil ’96) Drs. James and Doris Hardacker Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Harris III (Ed ’60) Mr. and Mrs. Shaun Hart (Shants*) Havel Saul and Jennifer Helman Mr. Fletcher Hodges III John and Ingola Hodges Mr. John Holliday ’42# Mr. Kevin Honigford and Ms. Kimberly Pohlman Dagoberto and Cecilia Hornedo Dr. and Mrs. BP House The House Family Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas F. Hrisomalos Mr. V. William Hunt and Mrs. Nancy Bergen Hunt Michael and Beth Irizarry
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Jessup (Jon ’86) Mr. and Mrs. Ronan Johnson (Beth Tolbert ’03) Johnson-Weaver Foundation Mr. and Mrs. James R. Keller Mr. Jeffrey ’82 and Dr. Linda Kimbell Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Klineman Drs. Alan and Beth Klotz Peter and Barbara Knapp Mr. Richard Kocerha and Mrs. Catherine Langham Mr. John Krull and Mrs. Jenny Labalme Dr. and Mrs. Mark Kyker Dr. and Mrs. Steven LaBarge Ms. Catherine LaCrosse ’85 Mr. and Mrs. James E. LaCrosse John Andre and Elizabeth Lacy Mr. and Mrs. Shing Lam Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Lathrop (Alma Taylor ’60) Plews, Shadley, Racher & Braun Mr. Baohui Li and Ms. Peiyi Yang Renhua and Chang Hong Li Mr. and Mrs. Eli Lilly II (Ted ’62) Stephanie Upham Lord ’68 Drs. Deshun Lu and Yan Jin Drs. Kandice and Aaron Ludwig Mr. and Mrs. William H. Main Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Marohn Mr. and Mrs. Peter D. Marshall (Melanie*) Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Martin Mr. and Mrs. Garth McClain Mr. William McFarlane ’61 and Ms. Constance Bloomfield Mr. H. Roll McLaughlin, FAIA Mr. and Mrs. Michael McManus Dr. Raghavendra Mirmira and Dr. Veena Rao-Mirmira Mr. and Mrs. Scott Moorehead Mr. and Mrs. Willliam I. Morton Dr. and Mrs. Ryan D. Nagy (Katherine Deane ’98) Dr. and Mrs. Gregg Ossip Drs. Rajesh and Valerie Pai Stephen and Elisabeth Paton Dr. James Perry and Dr. Nicole Perry Jeff and Andrea Pierson Ms. Myrta Pulliam ’65 Drs. James L. Qualkinbush and Brenda G. Barker Dr. and Mrs. Robert A. Quirey Mrs. Evaline Hitz Rhodehamel ’42 Mr. Thomas Rifleman Mr. and Mrs. Randall D. Rogers (Randy ’64; Mary Holliday ’65) Ruth Lilly Philanthropic Foundation Drs. Joel Scherer and Anna Maria Storniolo Mr. Richard C. Searles Anthony and Lynn Seymour Mr. Zuheir Shahwan and Mrs. Amy Green Jim and Betsy Smitherman Michael and Linda Sogard Jack and Susanne Sogard Maynard and Jessica Soukup Christopher and Ann Stack Mrs. Kim Stickney (Kim Smith ’74) Michael and Sharon Sullivan Dr. and Mrs. Nimu Surtani Charles ’77 and Peggy Sutphin Aneena and David Urbanek Mr. Dennis Voelkel and Dr. Sonja Voelkel Mr. Eric Wallentine W. Scott and Susan Webber Mr. and Mrs. Michael Webster (Mike*; Sarah*) Marty and Leslie Wessler Mrs. Lucy Holliday Wick ’44 Sam and Vanita Yadav
PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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ANNUAL REPORT 2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School Apple: Gifts of $250 - $999
Anonymous - 18 Dr. Kash Abdul-Rahman and Ms. Jamila Zafar C. Willis Adams III ’58 Mr. and Mrs. James S. Adams Mr. Thomas Adams ’59 Mr. Iñaki Alanis-Cue ’03 Mr. Jeffrey Aldridge Samer and Deliah Ali-Hasan Mrs. Janet Allen Mr. and Mrs. James Allen (Kim*) Mrs. Marilyn G. Altum Mr. John Amy ’09 Charles and Elizabeth Amy Mr. Samuel Amy ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Devin Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Robert Antrim (Laura Elder ’99) John and DeAnn Baker Mr. Theodore Baker and Mrs. Janet Campbell Baker Bank of America Mr. Bryan and Dr. Jacqueline Barrett Mrs. Patty J. Barth Susan Batt ’92 Mr. and Mrs. Mike Beesley William and Pamela Beeson Mr. and Mrs. Marc Behringer (Stephanie*) Dr. Edmond Bendaly and Dr. Zeina Nabhan Mr. and Mrs. Mark Benoit Mr. and Mrs. John Berry Kevin W. Betz and Holly Hapak Betz (Holly ’83) Betz+Blevins Mr. Carsten Bick ’06 Torrey M. and Lori E. Bievenour (Torrey ’96) Ms. Cynthia Bir Robert and Sandra Black Barb and Michael Blickman Mrs. Mary Beth Bloomfield Bradley and Catharine Bodell Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Bodell Christina Bodurow Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bragg (Carrie*) Mr. and Mrs. William H. Brainard (Will ’07; Julianne Sicklesteel ’07) Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bramhill Mr. and Mrs. B.A. Bridgewater Dr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Broadie Mr. and Mrs. Jason Brown BSN Sports Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Buckley Mr. and Mrs. David Burns Susan and Andy Buroker (Susan Novak ’84) Mr. and Mrs. Herbert G. Bussa (Nancy Kernahan ’56) Mr. and Mrs. Tim Caress Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Christie (Bernadette Gales ’61) Hea-Won Kim and Tae-Yon Chun Russell and Daphne Clark Mr. and Mrs. Peter D. Cleveland Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Clifford Mr. and Mrs. Michael Coble Mr. R. Michael Cournoyer ’06 Drs. Narsing and Sridevi Damera Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dassow Mr. and Mrs. Phil Dattilo Stephen E. and Mary O. DeVoe (Steve ’53) Dr. and Mrs. Darin Dill Mr. Bob A. Dominguez Mr. and Mrs. Clarence H. Doninger (Judith Lamb ’58) John and Rokson Drics Mr. Richard Duchossois Ms. Patti Duckworth* Mr. and Mrs. B. G. Dugan Mrs. Carol Duginske Duke Realty Corporation
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PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
Mr. Douglas Dunn ’74 Mr. and Mrs. Scott Dusko Mrs. H. Warren Earle (Constance Cadick ’49) Jason and Kimberly Eckerle Mr. Bowman Elder ’02 Mr. and Mrs. Shawn Ellsworth (Roberta Norris ’68) Mr. and Mrs. Frederick D. Emhardt (Fred ’78; Cynthia LaFollette ’79) Mr. and Mrs. Thomas English Charles and Judith Epperson Mr. and Ms. John C. Erickson III Janos and Julie Ertl Mr. and Mrs. Johnston Erwin Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Evans (Ben ’98) Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Everett (Debbie Stuart ’69*) Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Ferreira Mr. Giuseppe Firenze and Dr. Isabella Velona First Merchants Corporation Dr. and Mrs. Mark Fisch (Mark ’92; Jordan Paul ’95) Mr. and Mrs. Donald Fisher Mr. Eugene Fisher and Mrs. Angela McDonald-Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Art Fisher (Katelyn Miner ’04) Mr. and Mrs. Justin Fite Mr. and Mrs. Dan Fowler Walter and Laura Freihofer Karen H. French Dr. Matthew French ’87 Sheri French Jim and Cindy Freudenberg Darrin and Jessica Friskney Michael and Kristin Fruehwald Drs. Michael and Shirley Fry Mr. Joseph Fumusa* Mr. and Mrs. Ugender Gangireddy Mr. and Mrs. Mark George Dr. Renee Gill Rich and Susan Graffis Carolyn Schaefer and Jack Gray Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gregory Dr. Niraj Gupta and Dr. Parul Agarwal Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hammock (Chris*) Mrs. Ann Crapo Hannah ’43 Steven and Tracey Harbaugh Drs. Stanley and Jaime Harper Bradley and Melanie Harris Mr. Karl Hart Mr. Brian Hartman Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Hawkins (Joe ’96) Mr. and Mrs. Tucker Hawkins Mr. and Mrs. Samuel T. Hawkins (Sam ’94; Sarah Smith ’97) Mr. George Hayes and Dr. Lindiwee-Yaa Randall-Hayes H. Bradford and Laura Hays Larry and Frances Heck Mr. Matthew Henss and Mrs. Rana Fields Henss Mrs. Julia Pantzer Hess ’76 Charles and Jane Hessler Mr. and Mrs. Stephan Hodge (Elizabeth Elliott ’81) Mr. and Mrs. Alexander R. Holliday III (Alec ’75) Mr. Christopher Holt and Dr. Melissa Holt Bill and Tracy Holt (Bill ’76) Honigford/Pohlman Family Fund Ms. Donna Hopf Mr. Glenn Hoskin and Mrs. Lisa Hoskin Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Howard (Thomas ’54) Mr. Richard Howe Mr. Justin Hu ’18 Mr. Shengxi Hu and Ms. Jun Xing Mrs. Gretchen Hueni* Mr. Clifford A. Hull and Dr. Sara H. Murphy Greg and Kelly Huntington
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016 James and Maggie Hurst Mr. and Mrs. Robert Inselberg (Mallory Reider ’98) Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Iovino (Rebecca Pugh ’86) Mr. Zach Gordon and Mrs. Carlie Irsay Gordon ’99 Ivy Tech Foundation Janice Burtt Jacobsen ’66 Nolan and Sharon Jenkins John Rudolf Family Foundation Dr. and Mrs. Rick Johns (Jennifer Griggs ’85) Dennis and Brook Johnson Mrs. Sylvester Johnson Jr. (Elizabeth ’46) Mr. Clarke Kahlo ’66 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kahre (Inga*) Dr. William Kalsbeck ’81 Todd and Marlo Katz Mr. and Mrs. Scott Kelleher (Heather*) Dr. Frederick Kelvin Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kemper Ms. Monica Khurana ’00 Susan and James Kigamwa Mr. and Mrs. John Killacky Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kimmel John and Christina Kite Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Klapper Mr. and Mrs. Seth H. Kleiman (Seth ’94) Robert and Sandra Kleymeyer Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Knitter Olga and Gary Korne Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Koustenis Dr. and Mrs. Douglas A. Kuhn (Doug ’71) Mr. Jeffrey Lake and Mrs. Tanya Peterson Lake Mr. and Mrs. Kyle Lanham via the Lanham Family Foundation Mr. Kelly and Dr. Dana Lasek (Dana Giles ’83) William V. and Catherine W. Lawson (Cathy Wood ’72) Ellen Wardwell Lee ’67 and Stephen J. Dutton Mr. and Mrs. James R. Leffler Dr. and Mrs. Roger Lenke Mr. and Mrs. Michael S. Levine (Mike ’90) Ben and Yvonne Li Robert and Andrea Liebross Dr. Robert Lillo and Dr. Sarah Thomas Robert and Cynthia Lindeman Mr. Yun Ling and Dr. Minmin Wang Mr. Robert I. Lipp and Mrs. Martha Lasky Lipp ’57 Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Litz Yoko Lloyd Carlo and Joyce Lo Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Long (Christine Graffis ’88) Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lucas Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Lueck Dr. Mark Lybik and Ms. Leslie Joseph Mr. and Mrs. Christopher E. MacAllister (Chris ’74) Mr. and Mrs. Jason MacLean Dr. Raja Mahidhara and Dr. Geetha Rao Dr. and Mrs. Jon M. Maier Mr. and Mrs. Sanjay Malkani Mr. and Mrs. Jerry L. March (Debbie*) Bret and Polly Marsh Martha A. Norris Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Jeff McAteer Mrs. Juli McGarrah ’77 Ms. Mary McGonagle* Mr. and Mrs. Shawn McWilliams Mr. Anshuman Mehrotra and Mrs. Vatsala Dubey Tom and Leisa Merrell Mrs. Eleanor Miller ’65 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Miroff (Drew ’92)
Richard and Cynthia Miyamoto Jean-Pierre and Erica Mobasser Richard and Terry Mohs Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Morris Ms. Dhana Morris Mr. Kenton Morris and Mrs. Jennifer Morris Mr. William Morton Jr. and Dr. Rachael Morton Mr. and Mrs. Patrick L. Mosongo Daniel and Sherri Moyer Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Murphy (Molly*) Dr. Antonio Navarrete and Mrs. Jennifer Bailey Mr. Tor Even and Dr. Cecilie Nergard Mr. Kevin Nibbs and Mrs. Tangi Jackson-Nibbs Dr. Bob Niculescu and Dr. Helen Niculescu Rev. and Mrs. J. William Novak Dr. David Orentlicher and Mrs. Judy Failer Mr. and Mrs. Ersal Ozdemir Park Tudor Parents Association Mr. and Mrs. Tejashkumar Patel Mr. and Mrs. Gary Pellico (Karen*) Dr. Langu Peng and Dr. Jian Li Mr. Anthony and Dr. Lori Petrucciani Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Phillips (Leslie*) Dr. Roberto Pili and Dr. Joan Chang Ryan and Diane Piper Mr. Steven F. Pockrass ’83 and Mrs. Kathy Osborn Mr. and Mrs. Zeb Portanova Michael and Angeline Protogere Jim and Kim Purucker Gary and JoAnn Quinnette Dr. Omar Rahman and Dr. Fyeza Haider Rick Ranucci and Barb Burcope Dr. and Mrs. John G. Rapp Raytheon Corporation Dr. and Mrs. Ovais Raza Todd and Cortney Reiselman Kenneth and Debra Renkens Dr. and Mrs. Lance Rettig Mr. and Mrs. Steve Robbins Ms. Carole Diane Roe Reverend and Mrs. C. Davies Reed (Carol Cummings Rogers ’59*) Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Randall D. Rogers (Randall ’91) Mandy Moore and Neal Rothermel Kenton and Mary Alice Roush Dr. Eric Rubenstein and Mrs. Carly Sacher-Rubenstein Mrs. Patricia Carter Ruckelshaus ’48 John and Nancy Rudolf Mr. and Mrs. Jon Russell Mrs. Mary E. Schaff (Mary Elder ’77) Charles and Jenny Schalliol Mr. and Mrs. William Schaming Mr. and Mrs. Eric Scroggins James and Caroline Seymour Mitesh and Roopali Shah Mr. Dhruvajyoti Biswas and Mrs. Deblina Sharma Mr. Jared and Dr. Lori Shattuck Mr. and Mrs. Wei Shen Shiel Sexton Company, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas D. Shore (Heather Stewart ’90) Mr. Aqeel Siddiqui and Mrs. Samira Jamil Hardy and Kiran Sikand Mr. Wesley Sing and Mrs. Rossana Reyes-Quiroz Drs. Harpreetinder and Mona Singh Ms. Julia Sipes* Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Smith Damon and Kristin Smith The Reverend Jean M. Smith
ANNUAL REPORT
2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School Gregory and Brenda Snow Mr. and Mrs. J. Christopher Sogard (Chris ’84) Mr. and Mrs. Jason Spartz Dale and Kathleen St. Louis Mr. and Mrs. Robert Steinberger (Nancy Clarke ’61) Mr. Mark J. R. Merkle and Ms. Sue E. Stemen* Michael and Barbara Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Stokes (Jeannine Grinslade ’46) Jason F. Sturman and Molly Foglesong Sturman (Jason ’93; Molly ’93) Dr. and Mrs. Jeremy Sullivan Dr. Zhiqiang Sun and Dr. Tao Lu Ms. Patricia Tarzian ’65 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Teel (Tom ’61) Jonathan Teller ’89 and Kelly Lamm Teller ’87 Mr. Ken Templeton ’66 Mr. and Mrs. Mark Thomas The Verma Family Mr. Luca Visini and Mrs. Chiara Monzani Mrs. Patricia Vitali Dr. and Mrs. Kyle Vititoe (Sloane Ringo ’98) Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas Watson Crystal Weaver ’00 Mr. and Mrs. Brian E. West (Brian ’92, Carrie#) Mr. and Mrs. Richard White Mr. and Mrs. Tom White Brian and Claire Wiegel Jeff and Dawn Wiesinger Mr. and Mrs. Zachary Wills (Zach ’03) Gordon and Anne Emison Wishard (Gordon ’62) Mr. Ward and Dr. Betsy Witte Mr. Brian Wittler and Dr. Michelle Wittler Paul and Susan Wolfla Mr. and Mrs. Don Woods (Don#) Mr. and Mrs. James L. Worrall (Jim ’61) Ms. Mary Martha Wright ’52 Mr. Frank Wu and Ms. Julie Liu Mrs. Roberta Wurzman Jason and Carrie Xu Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey W. Yingling (Jeff ’78) Mr. Huaitao Zhang and Juan Li Dr. Min Zhao and Mrs. Annie Chen Amy and Marty Zimmerman Mr. Will Zink ’99
Red & White: Gifts Up To $249
Anonymous - 42 Mr. and Mrs. Larry K. Aagesen Jr. (Larry ’93) Leeta Albea* Mr. Johnny Alden ’03 Mrs. Karen Aldridge Dr. and Mrs. Vincent B. Alig (Mary Jean Milner ’47) Dr. and Mrs. David All (David ’80) Amazon Smile Mrs. Harold Amstutz Mr. Sam Anaokar ’97 and Dr. Jordan Mossler Anaokar ’97 Mrs. Mary Ann Antley Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Appel (Dan ’73; Kate Bowes ’73) Christopher and Katie Arbuckle Mr. Eric Armstrong ’10 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. Arnold (Christine Burton ’71) Drs. Gaurav and Rebecca Arora Mr. and Mrs. Steven Averyt (Shannon*) Mr. and Mrs. John Axe (Linda Sadlier ’56) Mr. Adam Ayres ’04 Mr. and Mrs. J. Michael Ayres (Mike*; Karen*)
Ms. Shari Bahleda Mr. and Mrs. John L. Ball (John ’81) Mr. Travis Ball Jr. Cols. Lyndi and Terry Balven (Lyndi Hutchison ’67) Ms. Yaprak Baran ’06 Mr. and Mrs. George Barbee (Molly Johnson ’66) Dr. and Mrs. Brian C. Barlow (Belinda*) Ms. Grace Barlow ’11 Ms. Brandi Barnett-Williams* Mr. and Mrs. Denny Barrett Ms. Susan Barrett Mr. Alexander and Mrs. Brooke E. Barrow (Brooke Steichen ’96) Mrs. Katherine Bartlett ’51 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baxter Mr. Richard Beaton ’10 Mr. and Mrs. James L. Beattey III (Jim ’50) Mr. and Mrs. Gary Bender (Gary*) Ms. Katherine L. Benedict ’67 Ms. Sarah Benish ’95 Mrs. Lizette Bennett ’69 Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Bennett (Robert ’88) Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Ms. Aunjalee Bhullar Ms. Kathryn K. Bihrle Ms. Jona Bishop Tom* and Joanne Black Mr. and Mrs. Logan S. Blackburn (Logan ’61) Dr. Cynthia Blasingham ’66 Blaze Midwest, Inc. Mr. Jeffrey Blickman ’04 Mrs. Sol Blickman (Toby Sachs ’39) Mr. Anatoliy Petrov and Mrs. Tracey Blum-Petrov* Mr. Andrew Bogan* Mr. and Mrs. William Bogle Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bohnert (Jesse*) Mr. Chad Bohren and Ms. Jeannie Paulsen Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Bohrer (Matt*) Mr. Sawyer Bonsib ’04 Mrs. Mary Bookwalter ’66 Ms. Judith C. Bowen ’55 Box Tops For Education Ms. Marie Brainard ’10 Jack and Ann Brake Ms. Rachel E. Braun ’08 Mr. Matt Bremner ’00 Mr. Barton Bridge ’04 John and Catherine Bridge Barbara Prentice Broad ’37 Mr. and Ms. Nolan Brokamp (Nolan*) Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Brooks (Claire Wilkinson ’52) Ms. Kirstin Brueckmann ’11 Miss Dana Marie Brunette ’06 Mr. and Mrs. Jack Burdette (Annette Trierweiler ’04) Ms. Jennifer C. Burns ’08 Mr. Stuart Burns Mr. Jamie Butler ’03 Richard and RoseMarie Butz John and Erin Byxbee Chelsea C. Cain ’08 Ms. Andrea Calderon ’02 Mrs. Ann Calkins ’45 Ms. Holly Callahan Mrs. Deb Camack David and Lolita Campbell Ms. Kathleen Campbell* Mr. and Mrs. Terry Carr (Susan Nunamaker ’69) Mr. and Mrs. Brian Carroll (Katie Martzolf ’01) Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carter (Carolyn Pearson ’03) Dr. Rev. Janet and Lawrence Casey-Allen Ms. Taylor Cassidy ’15 Roxane and Chad Cerda
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016 Mr. Christopher Chabenne ’03 Mr. Joseph Chamberlin* Mr. David Chambers ’58 Mr. Alex Markov and Mrs. Amber Chance* Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chapman (Mike ’61) Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cheesebourough Mr. Daniel W. Chin ’06 Ms. Ji-Sung Chong* Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carnicella (Anna ’01) Mr. and Mrs. Zachary J. Chubb (Laura Dick ’96) Mrs. Angela Ciccolo ’79 Gregory and Cathy Cislak Elizabeth Woodard Clark ’59 Mr. Hap Clemons* & Mr. Robert Gaskill-Clemons Ms. Mollie Cleveland* William and Barbara Clouse Ms. Leslie Clumb* Benjamin and Margaret Coe (Peggy Butler ’48) Maria Cohen ’97 Mr. Haldan Cohn and Ms. Phyllis Lugger Mr. and Mrs. J. Stephen Colwell (Steve ’51) Mr. Erik Comer ’10 Mr. and Mrs. David K. Comer (Pam Rauch ’64) Mr. Clay Conner ’66 Mr. Tristan Cork* Carolyn C. Coukos Ms. Ann Covalt ’68 Mr. and Mrs. Jacob R. Cox (Jessica Benson ’99) Mr. and Mrs. Clinton L. Crafton (Annie*) Mary M. Crevey Mr. Victor Cruz and Dr. Maria Rivera Dr. and Mrs. Derek Culnan Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Culp (Charles ’49) Ms. Catie Cunning ’03 Mr. Ross Cunning ’03 Chris and Emily Cunningham Dr. and Mrs. William B. Currie (William ’60) Mr. Stephen Curry* Dr. and Mrs. Gopi Dandamudi Mr. Jeff and Dr. Ann Daniel Grover and Angela Davis Mr. and Mrs. Zach Day (Courtney Maguire ’03) Mr. J.P. Day ’03 Dayton Foundation Dr. Alfonso de Dios and Mrs. Raquel Molina Ms. Stefanie Dean ’05* Bryan and Jessie Debshaw John and Ruth Denton John C. Deprez Mr. F. Cory Scott* and Ms. Julia C. DeVoe ’85 Mr. Graham Dewart ’10 Mr. Mark Dewart* and Ms. Margo McAlear* Ms. Nancy DeWitt Joseph and Cathy Dezelan Mr. and Mrs. Eric Dick (Whitney Ford ’99) Mr. David P. Dietz ’06 Mr. and Mrs. Mark Dinwiddie Ms. Nancy Dinwiddie Bailey A. Dominguez ’13 Ms. Tisha Doppler ’77 Mr. and Mrs. Ryan E. Dorris (Ryan ’96) Dr. Clarice Doucette* Mr. Michael Dougherty ’02 and Ms. Alex Penn ’03 Dr. and Mrs. Sven H. Dubie (Sven*; Cammy*) Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Dugandzic (Shauna Havercamp ’03) Mr. and Mrs. Chad Dull (Cassie*) Mrs. Virginia Obrecht Dulworth ’46 Miss Elizabeth Dunbar ’06 Ms. Lucia Dunbar ’59 Mr. Mark H. Dunbar ’08 Mr. Edward Dunn ’05 Mr. Wesley T. Dunn ’09 Robert and Ruth Ann Durbin
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Durbin (William ’96) Mrs. Caitlin Stanley Early ’07 Mr. Jeremy Eaton Garry and Mary Ewing Eckard Mr. and Mrs. Larry Eckel (Larry) Mr. and Mrs. Chris Eckerle Dr. Anna Edwards ’00 Mrs. Cynthia Eiteljorg* Ms. Liliana Eiteljorg ’09* Mr. and Mrs. Blake Elder (Blake ’03) Mr. Case W. Elder ’06 Miss Shanice L. Elder ’06 Mr. Steve Elliott and Ms. Vicky Prusinski Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Ellison (Ann*) Peter and Amy Emerson Ms. Kate Engle ’95 Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Eriksen Lucinda Lee Evans ’55 Miss Margaret Eveleigh ’02 Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Everett (Jamey*) Mr. and Mrs. Steven M. Falender (Steve ’67; Debra Dudenhoffer ’66) Mr. Jonathan Faris Mr. Justin Farlow ’03 Lorelei* and Thomas Farlow Ms. Jean Feit ’89 Mr. and Mrs. Alex Feldman (Alex ’03; Katie McKown ’03) Mr. and Mrs. Keenan Fennimore (Carolyn Edwards ’00) Ms. Pamela Fischer* Dr. and Mrs. Barry W. Fisher (Barry ’78) Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Rob Fitting (Siena*) Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fitzsimmons (Elizabeth Taggart ’62) Mr. and Mrs. Terry Fleck (Sylvia*) Mr. and Mrs. Stephen W. Fletcher (Steve ’65; Judy Brown ’67) Mr. and Mrs. Charles Flowers (Chuck*) Ms. Anne Forman ’98 Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Forrestal (Lily*) Mr. William Fosgate ’75 Mr. and Mrs. Justin Fox (Justin ’99) Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fox (Karlyn*) Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Fox (Krista*) Mr. Anthony Gaither and Mrs. Kaitlyn Fox-Gaither ’06 Ms. Patti Fralich Chad and Kim Franz Catherine T. Freebairn ’66 Mr. and Mrs. Chaelor Freeman Ms. Isabel Freihofer ’15 Mr. and Mrs. J. Peter Frenzel (Peter ’55) Thomas and Lisa Gabbert James and Denise Gallagher Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Garbowit (Wendy Mantel ’72) Mrs. Anne Street Gardner ’85 Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Gardner (Hunter ’03; Maggie Hilligoss ’03) Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Gates (Emily Wills ’98) Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey T. Gaughan (Shirley*) Ms. Laura Gellin* Ms. Helene Genetos ’05 Dr. and Mrs. Mark A. Gibson (Mark ’95; Hillary Lerch ’95) Mr. John Gilligan ’10 Drs. Carlos and Ruth Gimeno Mrs. Sally Glasel ’52 Mr. Jonathan Glassman ’99 and Ms. Guilianna Zamora Ms. Therese Glassmeyer* Global Atlantic Financial Group Mr. Luis Gomez and Mrs. Trish Dulmes-Gomez Ms. Lucy Gonso Mr. and Mrs. Fritz R. Gordner Mr. Alexander Gottwald ’15 Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Grant (Bryan ’96) PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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ANNUAL REPORT 2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School Ms. Shannon E. Gray ’11 Mr. Jerry Grayson* Ms. Ellen D. Gregory Andrew T. Grein ’07 Mr. Stephen Greiner* Mrs. Edith Greiwe Mr. and Mrs. William Scott Grider Mr. and Mrs. Gerald B. Grinkmeyer (Joan*) Mr. and Mrs. Rick Gross (Rick*) Ms. Elizabeth Groves* Edward and Pat Grubb Mr. and Mrs. David Guevara Dr. Jan Guffin Mrs. Barbara Sublett Guthery ’58 Mr. Mark Haddad ’03 Mr. Richard Hall ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Halperin Dr. and Mrs. Paul Hamer (Paul*) Mr. and Mrs. John Hammer Hillary L. Hammond ’08 Mr. and Mrs. James D. Hamstra (James ’96) Dr. and Ms. Richard C. Hancey (Susan Cadick ’51) Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hankey Ms. Emily Hankey ’03 Miss Ashley M. Hanson ’06 Mrs. Mary Pat Hanson ’67 Mr. August M. Hardee II (Chip ’85) Mr. and Mrs. David Harris (Marion*) Mr. Michael J. Harris ’07 Drs. Steven and Terri Harris Mr. and Mrs. Josh Hash (Josh ’02; Ashley Wick ’03) Mr. Jordan C. Havercamp ’06 Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Hebert Mr. Jaskaran Heir ’07 Ms. Lisa A. Hendrickson ’77 and Mr. John Whalen Mr. Hunter W. Heniser ’06 Richard and Martha Hennessey Mr. Evan M. Henricks ’06 Mrs. Claudia Herzog ’66 Mr. and Mrs. Brian E. Hicks (Brian ’88) Dr. Francisco Hidalgo* Ms. Deborah Hilburn Mr. and Mrs. Collin Hill Mr. Douglas Hill ’58 Ms. Alice Hillis Dr. and Mrs. Don Carlos Hines (Don ’56) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hoffbauer Mr. Anthony Holds ’93 Ms. Jessica Hollenbeck* Mr. Christopher Holobek* Mr. and Mrs. James D. Holton (Jim ’71) Ms. Nancy Honaker Mr. Joshua Hood and Ms. Nicole Cooreman* Mr. David P. Hoover ’08 Ms. Sarah Hoover ’02 and Mr. Tom Sachs Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Rex Hoppenworth (Claire Wishard ’88) Mrs. Reva Horine Mr. Nicolas D. Hornedo ’15 Michael and Mary Horvath Mr. and Mrs. Garry Howard (Garry*) Mr. Frank Hrisomalos ’02 Miss Kathryn B. Hubbard ’06 Miss Sara E. Hubbard ’06 Mr. William Hubbard ’04 Mrs. Rosemary Adams Huffman Ms. Joni W. Hughes ’75 Cheryl J. Hughes Jane Maxwell Hulbert ’71 Michael and Liane Hulka Dr. Elise Hurrell ’03 Mr. James H. Hurrell ’06 Dr. Rowan Hurrell ’04 Miss Erin G. Hutchinson ’06
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PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
Mr. and Mrs. Mark L. Hutchinson (Kathy*) Rosemary Bretzman Igney ’61 Mr. Chris Inman ’96 Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ireland Berkley and Pamela Isaac David and Karen Isaacs Mr. and Mrs. Adam Isaacson (Laura Buonanno ’02) Miss Pallavi Ivaturi ’06 John and Lizabeth Jackson Mr. Christian Jacobs* Ms. Alexandra L. Janin ’12 Ms. Emily Janin ’14 Dr. Elizabeth Jessup ’77 Mrs. Florence Jessup Mr. Yifei Jiang and Ms. Yewen Ge Miss Alexandra Johansen ’06 Miss Abbi Johnson ’06 Mr. Jeffrey R. Johnson* Ms. Kelsey Johnson ’13 Mr. and Mrs. Ron Johnson Ms. Marya E. Jones ’78 Mr. and Mrs. Weston Andrew Jones Timothy and Shannon Jordan Mr. William Julian ’66 Mr. and Mrs. Rajan Kapur Mr. and Mrs. John Katrus (Julia Badertscher ’99) Mr. and Mrs. Sean Kedrowski (Meg Bourdillon ’03) Mr. Paul Kelcourse and The Rev. Dr. Felicity Brock Kelcourse Mr. and Mrs. J. Scott Keller (Scott ’63) Mr. Bob Kennedy Ms. Hannah V. Kennedy ’08 Mr. and Mrs. John J. Kennedy (Jack ’47; Patricia Smith ’49) Ms. Melina Kennedy Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Kenny (Kelly Sheridan ’95) Mr. and Mrs. Steve Kerr (Amy*) Steven and Susan Kim Mr. Joseph A. Kimbell ’13 Ms. Anne Kimsey ’03 Ms. Carly Kincannon ’03 Mr. John Kincannon ’06 Jon and Mary King Mr. Royal King ’83 Amy and Bruce Kinon Joie Kipka Ms. Brigid Kirlin ’03 David and Mary Kivela Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kivett (Charles ’51) Mr. Joseph Kivett ’49 Mr. and Mrs. Bob Kizer (Ann*) Mrs. Barbara F. Klein Mr. Larry Klein and Ms. Carrie Klein Tidwell Ms. Heather Kleinschmidt* Mr. and Mrs. Matt Kleymeyer (Matt ’00) Mr. and Mrs. Chris Klocke (Kelly Marquart ’03) Ms. Laura Knapp ’02 Kevin and Mary Beth Kohart Mr. Mark C. Koivuniemi ’06 Mr. Daniel Komakech ’01 John and Marlene Kondelik Mr. Oleg Konev Ms. Marlina Koonce* John and Connie Kramer Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Kramer (Judith Hines ’61) Drs. Gopal and Lillie-Mae Krishna Ms. Grace Krouse* Ms. Heather Melissa Ann Kulwin ’92 Mr. Lamonte Kuskye* Mr. and Mrs. Andre Lacy Mr. Gerry and Mrs. Susanne LaFollette (Sue Eaglesfield ’54) Mrs. Sandra Lagoni ’62 Mrs. Rosalie Lange (Rosalie McKee ’47)
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016 Dr. Mark Langer and Dr. Elaine White Ms. Emma R. Lanham ’08 Mr. Henry C. Lanham ’08 Mr. Matthew Lanter ’07 Mr. and Mrs. Karl Lasseter (H. Margaret Fisher ’47) Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Laughner (Barb*) Miss Laura K. Lauth ’06 Ms. Michelle Lavoie Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Lazin (Allison Blickman ’02) Joann Pettit Leal ’58 Ms. Alexandria Lebovits ’14 Stephen and Debra Lebovits Mr. Donald Thompson and Dr. Li-Chun Caroline Lee-Thompson* Mr. and Mrs. P. Bradley Lennon (Brad*) Mr. and Mrs. Keith W. Lerch (Kathryn*) Mr. and Mrs. Eugene H. Leser (Geno ’79) Ms. Madeline Leslie* Mr. Kun Li and Ms. Wenqi You Mr. Patrick Lilly ’03 Mr. Gregory Linderman ’03 Ms. Ayana Lindsey ’12 Anthony and Kristy Lombardo John and Judy Lowe Mr. and Mrs. John W. Lowe (Laura*) Ms. Christine Lucas ’12 Ms. Michelle Lucas ’14 Miss Alexandria N. Lucchese ’06 Mr. and Mrs. William B. Lynch (William ’60) Reverend John Lynn ’61 Mr. Alexander E. MacAllister ’09 Ms. Laurel MacAllister ’12 Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Mace (Kay Marburger ’57) Ms. Wilma Mack Ms. Kathy Madren* Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Maginn Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 Mr. Brett Mahoney-Kiebach ’03 Mr. and Mrs. William H. Main (Bill ’87) Mr. and Mrs. David B. Malcom (David*) Mr. and Mrs. Darren Manning Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Mantel (Flo Mary Foreman ’46) Ms. Linda Maradol Ms. Susan Mark ’72 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond A. Marra (Andy ’06) Mr. Ryan Martin* Mr. and Mrs. Michael Massel (Michael ’07; Amanda Ranek ’06) Drs. Viney and Sonika Mathavan Howard and Susie Maxwell Mr. and Mrs. John F. McCauley (Lucy Bowen ’77) Mr. Jonathan M. McClure ’06 Penny Spencer McClure ’56 Dr. and Mrs. J. Allen McCutchan (Emily Klamer ’61) Ms. Sarah McDaniels* Dr. Scott McDougall* Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan McDowell (Jonathan ’02*) Ms. Meghan McGarvey* William and Janet McGarvey Ms. Morgan E. McGill Mr. and Mrs. A.J. McIntosh (A.J.*; Lori*) Mr. Matthew McLain ’99 Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. McLaughlin (Mac ’79; Margo Raikos ’81) Mr. Franҫois Médard* Mr. and Mrs. Serge Melki (Joëlle*) Mens Wearhouse Ms. Christine Mercho ’04 Mr. and Mrs. Ira Mercurio (Lisa*) Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Meyer Mrs. Susan Meyer Mr. Michael Albano and Mrs. Missy Michael-Albano
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93) Mr. and Mrs. Jack Miller (Sandy*) Mr. and Mrs. Toby Miller (Sharon Resener ’78) Mr. Ben Miner ’02 Mr. Franklin I. Miroff and Dr. Susan Maisel-Miroff Dr. Sanjay Mishra and Ms. Seema Verma Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Mitchell (Anne Rogers ’85) Ms. Hilary T. Mohs ’08 Mr. Jeffrey A. Mokaya and Mrs. Pamela Obegi Mr. Dontae D. Monday ’13 Bryan and Nancy Moore Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Moore Mr. and Mrs. Juan C. Morales (Lori*) Mr. and Mrs. David Morgan (David ’96) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Morgan Dr. and Mrs. John A. Morton Mr. J. David Mossler ’04 Mr. Joseph Moyer ’16 Mr. Mark Mulcahy ’03 Ms. Laura Nagle* F. Timothy and Nancy Nagler Mr. John Nagler ’03 Pamela Menzie Navarre ’73 Ms. Cassandra Neal* Mr. and Mrs. James T. Neal (Georgianne Davis ’47) Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Nelson (Bob ’59; Sandie ’59) Mrs. Kaarta Nemeth ’66 Drs. Blake L. and Carolyn Neubauer Mr. Christopher Neubauer ’06 Mr. Laurence Neuman and Ms. Julie Sommers Neuman Ms. Sally Hardgrove and Mr. Ron Newlin Mrs. Anita Mathur Nguyen ’03 Mr. Richard Ni ’11 Mr. and Mrs. David Nie (Jennifer*) Mr. Steven Nigh ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Joe Nixon (Erin*) Mr. and Mrs. James Noble Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Rick Nole (Claudia*) Mrs. Barbara Oberthur Ms. Joanna Oberthur Michael Oberthur Mr. Derek O’Dell David and Liz* Odmark Mrs. Donna O’Donnell Anthony Onstott Ms. Alexandra L. Oppelt ’06 Mr. Thomas Osborne ’96 Jeanne Linkholm Palleiko ’62 Jennifer L. Palmer (Jennifer Harris ’03*) Park Tudor Middle School William and Michelle Parrish Dr. Amir Pasic and Mrs. Sujata Chakrabarti Pasic David and Catherine Patterson Ms. Madeline A. Patterson ’08 Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Paugh Ms. Austin T. Paul ’06 Sandra Dunbar Paul Mr. Jim Pearl Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Pendexter (Mary*) Mr. Nikolajs Perdue ’06 Mr. Brandon Phillips ’96 Mr. Christopher Phillips ’02 Mrs. Susan Garrett Phillips ’71 Ms. Lisa Picha Stewart* William Pillow Mrs. Martha Platt ’49 Bob Pockrass ’87 Mrs. Mary Polk ’57 Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Pollnow Ms. Kelli Polzin ’02
ANNUAL REPORT
2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016
Mr. and Mrs. David S. Poston (David ’55; Susan Wishard ’56) David and Elizabeth Powers (David ’01; Lizzy Lauth ’03) Dr. Abigail Poyser ’01 Jeff and Emily Pressler Scott Preston Ms. Stacey Preston Mr. S. Duane Pritchett ’57 Ms. Jordan Pruis* Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Pumphrey (Adrian*) Mrs. Lindsay Pykosz ’03 Mr. David Quigley ’03 Mr. Andrew Ragsdale ’06 Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Raiser (Charles ’65) Ms. Jenna L. Ramsey ’06 Mr. Stephen Ransburg ’56 Dr. and Mrs. George Rapp Mr. Michael D. Rardon ’08 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew L. Rassi (Melissa Black ’89) Mr. and Mrs. Matt Raymond (Elizabeth Laughlin ’95) Ms. Dana Redmond ’04 Mr. Frank Regich* and Mrs. Concha Marin* Mr. Nicholas Reider ’03 Ms. Tennie L. Renkens ’06 Mr. Hugh Resnick and Professor Victoria Resnick Ms. Bonnie Rettig Mr. Alfred O. “Tod” Reynolds Jr. ’63 Mr. Geoffrey Reynolds ’69 Mr. and Mrs. George K. Reynolds (George ’65) Mr. John Reynolds ’67 Ms. Laura Reysz* Mr. Patrick Rezek ’11 Mr. and Mrs. William A. Rhodehamel (Will ’79; Megan Crowell ’79) Brent and Susan Richards Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Riddle (Sharon*) Ms. Mary Anne Riley Mr. and Mrs. David L. Ring (David ’72) Mr. Seth Risinger* Mr. Ben Holloway and Mrs. Emily C. Ristine Holloway ’94 Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Ritz (Ryan*) Ms. Jeanne Roberts Bowling* Joseph and Leanna Roberts Frederick and Patricia Robinson Mr. Alex Rogers ’61 Miss Helen E. Rogers ’46 Mr. and Mrs. Toby Rogers (Toby*; Sara*) Colonel Torrence and Dr. Lynette Rogers (Torry ’56) Mrs. Nancy Ross Mrs. Jane Rothbaum ’36 Michael and Karen Rothbaum Mr. Sam Rowe ’01 Mr. and Mrs. Tom Rush Mrs. Gloria C. Ryan Mr. Eric K. Sabandal ’09 Dr. Vani Sabesan ’95 Joel and Susan Sacher
Ms. Julia C. Sadove ’06 Ms. Tina Sahakian Miss Emily Saiter ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Eli Salatich (Eli*; Jamie*) Ms. Emily Samperi* Mr. Sterling Satterfield and Mrs. Sylvia Hernandez Mr. Floyd C. Satterlee and Ms. Michelle Stoneburner Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan R. Schalliol (Jon ’97) Mr. and Mrs. Alexander N. Scherer (Alex ’07; Kathryn Crabb ’07) Ms. Katherine M. Schier ’06 Todd and Amy Schmidt Mr. and Mrs. Rod Schroeder (Laura Kivela ’90*) Mr. and Mrs. Christian Schwery Mr. David C. Scofield ’09 Ms. Jillian Scott* Mr. and Mrs. Ryon Scott Mr. and Mrs. Eric Scotten (Alyssa*) SCRIP Mr. and Mrs. Richard Seamans Ms. Casey Searles ’03 Mr. Reid C. Searles ’06 Mr. David A. Sedgwick ’08 Ms. Beth Seger Ms. Emma K. Selm ’10 Mrs. Margaret Seroppian ’56 Mr. Christopher Setcos ’98 Mr. Kishan M. Shah ’10 Mr. Ravi Shah ’14 Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin D. Shane (Ben ’96) Anne and David Shane Dr. Geoffrey Sharpless* and Dr. Hilene Flanzbaum Ms. Phyllis Shea* Mr. and Mrs. Eric Shelley (Kathryn Wills ’96) Mr. Ian A. Shellman ’08 The Honorable Randall Shepard and Mrs. Amy MacDonell Shepard via The Dayton Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Shula (Gaye*) Jim and Bonnie Shute Mr. Michael Sanich and Ms. Jane Sidey* Dr. and Mrs. Peter M. Simmons (Peter ’94) Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sims (Jane Harper ’66) Drs. David Skalnik and Kristin Chun Ms. Barbara Skelton* Ms. Barbara Skinner* Ms. Hattie Small* Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Smith (Adrianne Glidewell ’98) Mr. Calvin R. Smith ’12 Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Smith (Chris Elliott ’96) Ms. Heather L. Smith ’89 Dr. and Mrs. Ian C. Smith Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Smith (Becky Sharp ’57) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Smith (Michael*) Mr. Peter F. Smith* Frederick Snoy ’71 Mr. Elliot Sosbey ’03 Mr. Carl Spilly ’03 Ms. Deborah Spoerner Mr. Taylor Spratt ’03
Ms. Amy Stacey Mr. Colin Stalnecker ’04 Mr. and Mrs. M. Cary Stalnecker (Cary ’98) Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Staubach (Joan Woodard ’66) Kate Lee Steele ’62 Mr. and Mrs. Austin Steele (Sarah*) Dr. Douglas Stemke and Dr. Lei Han Mrs. Sydney B. Stephenson Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Stewart (Bonnie*) Ms. Emily Stewart ’07 Ms. Elizabeth Stickney ’11 Ms. Elaine Stitle Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Stotts (Doug*) Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Stouder (Donna*) Mr. and Mrs. James S. Strickland (Jim ’92; Kathleen*) Ms. Susan Strobel* Mr. and Mrs. David L. Stump (David ’01) Mr. Mike McCraw and Dr. Amye Sukapdjo ’87 Ms. Michayla S. Sullivan ’06 Mr. Spencer Summerville ’06* Jim and Marge Sumner Ms. Shari Sutton* Ms. Allison J. Talbert ’10 Mr. and Mrs. John Talbert (John*) Ashley E. Tambunan ’09 David and Eileen Tambunan Mr. Dan Tapiero ’08 Ms. Mollie R. Tavel ’06 Mr. Bryan and Dr. Carmen* Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Mark Taylor (Susan*) Drs. Matthew Tector and Tracy Brenner Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Teets (Heather*) Mr. and Mrs. Kyle R. Thomas (Kyle ’06; Lisa Moran ’04) Mr. J. Elliott Thomasson ’07 Le-Angela Thompson Mr. Tyler Thompson ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Thompson (Vivian Alpert ’67) Mr. John R.Thornburgh II ’06 Mrs. Anne Throop Dr. Erik B. Throop ’84 and Dr. Suzette Broshears Mr. Royce D. Thrush* Dr. Jianmin Tian and Dr. Beili Dong Mr. and Mrs. David Todd (Ellen*) Mr. Alex Tolbert ’98 Brian ’00 and Amanda Tolbert Silas and Doris Tolliver Ms. Deborah Tompkins* Mr. and Mrs. Eric Toth (Karen*) Mr. Jonathan Toumey ’74 and Ms. Alison Jester Mr. William Ian Towler and Dr. Sherrine Ibrahim Mr. and Mrs. John F. Townsend III (John ’89) Ms. Starr Townsend ’66 Rebecca Garrison Tracy ’52 Mr. John Travis ’80 Mr. and Mrs. Richard Trimpe (Lisa*) Ms. Caroline Tucker ’13 Mrs. Joyce Tucker*
Ms. Tamara Tudor* United Way of Central Indiana Dr. and Mrs. Dario Untama (Dario*) Ms. Alaina C. Urbahns ’08 Ms. Cortney Vandebelt* Mr. Thyagarajan Venkatesan and Dr. Mythily Srinivasan Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. VonDerau (Kathy Broyles ’66) Drs. Raj and Shireesha Vuppalanchi Mr. Jimmy Waddell ’06 Mr. and Mrs. David M. Wade (David ’85) Mr. and Mrs. Josh Wakefield (Kasey Kruse ’00) Drs. Alex and Lauren Walker Smoke and Anitra Wallin Mr. Kevin Waltz ’03 Ms. Rusty Warren ’69 Mr. Scott Watanabe ’89 Mr. Lane Waters* Ms. Adrienne E. Watson ’06 Darah S. Watson Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Watson (Susan*) Miss Susan Watson ’03 Drs. Whitten and Susan Watson Mr. Tom Waymire ’61 Ms. Margaret Weeks Daniel and Judy Weiker Mr. and Mrs. John Weingardt (Tina*) Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Weir (Donald ’79) Ms. Marilyn Weiss* Mr. Adam D. Welsh ’06 Mrs. Angelica Were ’96 Ms. Lauren E. Wesley ’06 Michael and Angela Wessler Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Weymuth (D.J.*) Alex and Tammy White Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Whitehead (Courtney*) Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Whitesell (Philip ’53) Drs. Paul and Diane Whitney (Paul ’61) Jennifer Williams Nancy Nichols Williams ’73 Stephen and Ellen Williams Ms. Allyson Wills ’00 Mr. Duane Willsey ’82 Ms. Kelayne Wilson* Mr. William Kent Winingham ’08 Mr. R. Stewart and Ms. Kristin L. Wood (Kristin Miller ’51) Ms. Rhonda Wood Mr. Turner John Woodard ’06 Mr. and Mrs. C. Daniel Woodfin (Deborah Wasden ’69) Dr. Kenneth R. Woolling, M.D. Ms. Mary Woolling ’72 Ms. Christie Wright* Mr. Yixun Wu and Chuyun Huang Tom and Guihua Xiao Mr. Naidi Xu and Mrs. Xiaoqing Chen Ms. Mary Zajac* Mr. and Mrs. Gregory A. Zolezzi (Greg ’61)
In Honor Of
Charles Bodell ’16 Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Bodell
Class of 1947 Dr. and Mrs. Vincent B. Alig (Mary Jean Milner ’47)
Mrs. Deborah Stuart Everett ’69 Mr. V. William Hunt and Mrs. Nancy Bergen Hunt Anthony and Kristy Lombardo
Mrs. Barbara Beattie Mr. Anthony Gaither and Mrs. Kaitlyn Fox-Gaither ’06 Ms. Madeline A. Patterson ’08
Alexandria Bramhill Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bramhill
Alec J. Bloomfield ’19 Kenton and Mary Alice Roush
Luke Bramhill Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bramhill
Mr. Thomas E Black Jr. Reverend and Mrs. C. Davies Reed (Carol Cummings Rogers ’59*)
Mrs. Susan Buroker ’84 Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93) Michael and Karen Rothbaum
Antonio Dominguez ’18 Ms. Patti Fralich Mr. Bob A. Dominguez Ms. Patti Fralich Will Emhardt ’18 Mr. Gerry and Mrs. Susanne LaFollette (Sue Eaglesfield ’54)
Ruth Faris ’29 Dr. Anna Edwards ’00 Mr. and Mrs. Keenan Fennimore (Carolyn Edwards ’00) Bennett Ford ’27 Mr. and Mrs. Eric Dick (Whitney Ford ’99) PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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ANNUAL REPORT 2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School Elly Rose Ford ’29 Mr. and Mrs. Eric Dick (Whitney Ford ’99)
Oliver Scotten ’19 Mrs. Patty J. Barth
Mr. Colin M. Fry ’10 Drs. Michael and Shirley Fry
Mr. Nolan Smith ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kimmel
Mr. Ian Fry ’11 Drs. Michael and Shirley Fry
Caroline Sogard ’17 Michael and Linda Sogard
Mrs. Kathleen Fry Drs. Michael and Shirley Fry
Emily Sogard ’12 Michael and Linda Sogard
Mr. Sean Fry ’14 Drs. Michael and Shirley Fry
Lauren Sogard Michael and Linda Sogard
Dr. Jan Guffin Mr. and Mrs. Mark Albers (Alissa Remenschneider ’97) Mr. Jeffrey Blickman ’04 Barb and Michael Blickman Chelsea C. Cain ’08 Ms. Heidi I. Chen ’09 Mr. R. Michael Cournoyer ’06 Mr. Nicolas D. Hornedo ’15 Mitesh and Roopali Shah Mr. Christopher Neubauer ’06
Cameron Sumner ’17 Jim and Marge Sumner
Mr. Edward W. Harris, III ’60 Mr. Fritz R. Gordner Matthew Heck ’18 Larry and Frances Heck Mr. Clifford A Hull Mr. and Mrs. M. Cary Stalnecker (Cary ’98) Mr. David A. Kivela Mrs. Angela Ciccolo ’79 Ms. Alaina C. Urbahns ’08 Olivia Klein ’16 Mrs. Barbara F. Klein Nicholas Mack ’16 Ms. Wilma Mack Mrs. Suzanne Tardy Maxwell Jeffrey and Calise Mossler Mr. Bill N McKnight Mr. Ben Miner ’02
Mr. Zachary Wills ’03 Mr. Johnny Alden ’03 Mr. John R Williams Mr. Johnny Alden ’03 Ms. Shannon E. Gray ’11 Drs. Steven and Terri Harris Christopher and Ann Stack Mr. Tyler Thompson ’03 Mr. Gordon D. Wishard ’62 Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Rex Hoppenworth (Claire Wishard ’88) Alexandra S. Woods ’19 H. Bradford and Laura Hays Mr. and Mrs. Don Woods (Don#)
Thank a Teacher
Mrs. Leeta R. Albea Michael and Karen Rothbaum Mrs. Shannon Averyt Dr. Alfonso de Dios and Mrs. Raquel Molina Mrs. Karen Ayres Mr. and Mrs. Michael Massel (Michael ’07; Amanda Ranek ’06)
Mr. Paul D Nordby Michael and Barbara Stewart
Ms. Brandi Barnett Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93)
Bryson A. Pillow’17 William Pillow
Mrs. Jesse Bohnert Scott and Michelle Kanagy
Mrs. Susan Plimpton ’61 Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Christie (Bernadette Gales ’61) Rosemary Bretzman Igney ’61 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Steinberger (Nancy Clarke ’61)
Jeanne Roberts Bowling Drs. Steven and Terri Harris Mrs. Heather Carmody Dr. Alfonso de Dios and Mrs. Raquel Molina
Mr. David S Poston ’55 Gordon and Anne Emison Wishard (Gordon ’62)
Mr. Joseph Chamberlin Anonymous Mr. Jaskaran Heir ’07 Mr. Frank Hrisomalos ’02
Mrs. Susan Poston ’56 Gordon and Anne Emison Wishard (Gordon ’62)
Ms. Ji-Sung Chong Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93)
Mary H. Rogers Elizabeth Mann (Nicki Funk ’65)
Mrs. Anne Crafton Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93) Michael and Karen Rothbaum Mr. Stephen Curry Michael and Karen Rothbaum
Elliot Scotten ’25 Mrs. Patty J. Barth
26
Mary Vyverberg Mr. and Mrs. J. Scott Keller (Scott ’63)
PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016 Mark Dewart Mr. Samuel Amy ’11 Mr. and Mrs. Jack Burdette (Annette Trierweiler ’04) William and Barbara Clouse Ms. Emily Janin ’14 Mr. Christopher Neubauer ’06 Mrs. Cammy Dubie Mr. and Mrs. Craig Carpenter Peter and Amy Emerson Mr. Glenn Hoskin and Mrs. Lisa Hoskin Dr. Sven Dubie William and Barbara Clouse Mrs. Lorelei R. Farlow Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93) Mr. Christopher Neubauer ’06 Dr. Bob Niculescu and Dr. Helen Niculescu Ms. Pamela Fischer Mr. and Mrs. John Hammer Mrs. Sylvia Fleck Charles and Elizabeth Amy Mr. Charles Flowers Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93) Mr. Joseph K. Fumusa Mr. Robert Rook and Dr. Adrien Sipos Jim and Betsy Smitherman Ms. Therese Glassmeyer Dr. Mark Lybik and Ms. Leslie Joseph Mr. Christopher Neubauer ’06 Mr. Taylor Spratt ’03 Mr. Jerry Grayson Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Appel (Dan ’73) Mr. and Mrs. Stephen W. Fletcher (Steve ’65; Judy Brown ’67) Mr. and Mrs. Matt Raymond (Elizabeth Laughlin ’95) Ms. Casey Searles ’03 Mr. David A. Sedgwick ’08 Ms. Emma K. Selm ’10 Christopher and Ann Stack Dr. Paul Hamer Mr. Sawyer Bonsib ’04 Ms. Catie Cunning ’03 Mrs. Caitlin Stanley Early ’07 Mr. Frank Hrisomalos ’02 Miss Kathryn B. Hubbard ’06 Mr. William Hubbard ’04 Mr. and Mrs. Chris Klocke (Kelly Marquart ’03) Dr. Mark Lybik and Ms. Leslie Joseph Ms. Hilary T. Mohs ’08 Mr. and Mrs. Alexander N. Scherer (Alex ’07; Kathryn Crabb ’07) Ms. Alaina C. Urbahns ’08 Marion Harris Jason and Carrie Xu Christopher Holobek William and Barbara Clouse Mrs. Kathleen Hutchinson Jeffrey and Terri Grant Mr. Patrick Rezek ’11 Mr. Christian Jacobs Russell and Daphne Clark Mr. and Mrs. John Hammer
Mr. Jeffrey Johnson Mr. Richard Beaton ’10 William and Pamela Beeson Mrs. Inga Kahre Mr. Graham Dewart ’10 Mrs. Amy Kerr Mr. and Mrs. Craig Carpenter James and Denise Gallagher Mr. Peter Kraft Michael and Barbara Stewart Mr. Lamonte Kuskye William and Barbara Clouse Jannette K. and Richard R. Hogshire Dr. Li-Chun Caroline Lee-Thompson Anonymous Mrs. Laura Lowe Mr. and Mrs. Denny Barrett Ms. Susan Barrett Ms. Holly Callahan Ms. Nancy DeWitt Mr. and Mrs. Mark Dinwiddie Ms. Nancy Dinwiddie Ms. Lucy Gonso Mr. and Mrs. Tucker Hawkins Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Hebert Richard and Martha Hennessey Ms. Deborah Hilburn Ms. Alice Hillis Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ireland Ms. Kelsey Johnson ’13 Dr. and Mrs. John A. Morton Ms. Bonnie Rettig Ms. Beth Seger Dr. and Mrs. Nimu Surtani Mrs. Margo McAlear Anonymous Mr. John Amy ’09 Mr. Ross Cunning ’03 Miss Elizabeth Dunbar ’06 Mr. Mark Garrett and Ms. Domenica Bourus Ms. Alexandra L. Janin ’12 Mr. Henry C. Lanham ’08 Ms. Sarah McDaniels Mr. and Mrs. Craig Carpenter Mr. A.J. McIntosh Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Halperin Mrs. Lori McIntosh Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Halperin Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93) Mrs. Lori Morales Jason and Carrie Xu Mrs. Claudia Nole Michael and Karen Rothbaum Mrs. Elizabeth Odmark Jim and Bonnie Shute Mr. Ryan Ritz Mr. Alexander Gottwald ’15 Ms. Christine Lucas ’12 Mr. Frank Wu and Ms. Julie Liu Ms. Carol Cummings Rogers ’59 Mr. Haldan Cohn and Ms. Phyllis Lugger John C. Deprez Dr. Matthew French ’87 Ms. Helene Genetos ’05 Ms. Michelle Lucas ’14 Reverend C. Davies Reed
ANNUAL REPORT
2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School Mr. Toby Rogers Mr. David Quigley ’03 Cory Scott Mr. and Mrs. Fritz French Dr. Geoffrey Sharpless Anonymous Mr. and Mrs. Fritz French Mrs. Bonnie Stewart Mr. Glenn Hoskin and Mrs. Lisa Hoskin Ms. Shari Sutton Drs. Carlos and Ruth Gimeno Mr. John Talbert Anonymous Ms. Allison J. Talbert ’10 Mrs. Heather Teets Mr. and Mrs. John Hammer Mr. Royce D. Thrush Drs. Steven and Terri Harris Mr. Joseph Kivett ’49 Mrs. Ellen Todd Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93) Mrs. Sarah Webster Mr. Richard Beaton ’10 Drs. Steven and Terri Harris
In Memory of
Ms. Sally Adams ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 Mrs. Diana Hutchison Baker ’69 Cols. Lyndi and Terry Balven (Lyndi Hutchison ’67) Ms. Rusty Warren ’69 Miss Sally Beck ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 Mr. Lew Berkeley Mr. Clarke Kahlo ’66 Mr. and Mrs. James L. Worrall (James ’61) Mr. Walter Scott Blackburn Mrs. Sydney B. Stephenson Suzanne Ganter Burtt ’42 Janice Burtt Jacobsen ’66 Ms. Tessa E. Byers ’10 Ms. Marie Brainard ’10 Ms. Ellen L. Grein ’10 Mr. Clifford A. Hull and Dr. Sara H. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Richardson Mr. Tom Cochran ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 Mr. Casey Dawson-Fleming ’12 Mrs. Nancy Ross Mr. Barow Davidian Nancy Nichols Williams ’73
Mrs. Deborah M. Dominguez Dr. Edmond Bendaly and Dr. Zeina Nabhan Grover and Angela Davis Bailey A. Dominguez ’13 Ms. Patti Fralich John and Christina Kite Park Tudor Parents’ Association Mr. and Mrs. Lucien Dunbar Mr. Eduardo C. Ciannelli and Ms. Sandra Dunbar Paul ’54 Ms. Paula Eaton ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Mrs. Claudia Herzog ’66 Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 Mrs. Helen Ehrlich ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Catherine T. Freebairn ’66 Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 Mr. Nicholas Erpelding ’79 Dr. and Mrs. Barry W. Fisher (Barry ’78) Ms. Marya E. Jones ’78 Mrs. Juli McGarrah ’77 Mrs. Vena Geller Jeanne Linkholm Palleiko ’62 Dr. and Mrs. Harry L. Foreman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Mantel (Flo Mary Foreman ’46) Mr. Charles J. Foxlow Mr. and Mrs. Logan S. Blackburn (Logan ’61) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Chapman (Mike ’61) Mr. Terry Cline ’61 and Mrs. Tricia Sawyer Ms. Tisha Doppler ’77 Ms. Jean Feit ’89 Ms. Lisa A. Hendrickson ’77 and Mr. John Whalen Mr. Clarke Kahlo ’66 Mr. and Mrs. John F. McCauley (Lucy Bowen ’77) Penny Spencer McClure ’56 Mr. William McFarlane ’61 and Ms. Constance Bloomfield Mr. and Mrs. Harry R. McLaughlin (Mac ’79; Margo Raikos ’81) Mr. and Mrs. David S. Poston (David ’55; Susan Wishard ’56) Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Raiser (Charles ’65) Mr. and Mrs. David L. Ring (David ’72) Frederick and Patricia Robinson Ms. Carole Diane Roe Mr. Alex Rogers ’61 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Teel (Tom ’61) Mr. Ken Templeton ’66 Drs. Paul and Diane Whitney (Paul ’61) Gordon and Anne Emison Wishard (Gordon ’62) Mr. and Mrs. James L. Worrall (James ’61) Mr. and Mrs. Gregory A. Zolezzi (Greg ’61)
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016 Ms. Jeanne F. H. Herrick ’51 Cols. Lyndi and Terry Balven (Lyndi Hutchison ’67)
Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Raiser (Charles ’65) Ms. Paula Eaton ’66
Mrs. Phyllis Behringer Holliday ’42 Mr. and Mrs. Randall D. Rogers (Randall ’91)
Mr. Kenneth Reese ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66
Mrs. Jane H. Holt Bill and Tracy Holt (Bill ’76) Mr. Rob C. Hueni Tom* and Joanne Black Mr. John Gilligan ’10 Mr. Clifford A. Hull and Dr. Sara H. Murphy Ms. Anne Kimsey ’03 Mr. and Mrs. Raymond A. Marra (Andy ’06) Richard and Terry Mohs Mr. Christopher D Jones ’90 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew L. Rassi (Melissa Black ’89) Ms. Asha Joseph ’10 Mr. James Cameron Wallin ’10 Mrs. Eleanor Nonie Krauss ’67 Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Thompson (Vivian Alpert ’67) Mrs. Sara Adams Lentz-Crouse ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 Louise R. Levine Mr. and Mrs. Michael S. Levine (Mike ’90) Mrs. Barbara Menzie ’46 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Mantel (Flo Mary Foreman ’46) Mrs. Ann McKee ’46 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Mantel (Flo Mary Foreman ’46) Mrs. Linda Hamilton McLaughlin ’43 Mr. H. Roll McLaughlin, FAIA Dr. Matthew Miller Mrs. Janet Allen Mr. and Mrs. Robert Antrim (Laura Elder ’99) Mr. Jeffrey Blickman ’04 Ms. Rachel E. Braun ’08 Maria Cohen ’97 Ms. Isabel Freihofer ’15 Mr. and Mrs. Nikhil S. Gunale (Nikhil ’96) Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Hebert Mr. Clifford A. Hull and Dr. Sara H. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Jamie Lazin (Allison Blickman ’02) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Massel (Michael ’07; Amanda Ranek ’06) Ms. Dhana Morris Jeffrey and Calise Mossler Ms. Carole Diane Roe Michael and Barbara Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Teel (Tom ’61)
Mrs. Anne Reynolds ’34 Mr. and Mrs. David K. Comer (Pam Rauch ’64) Alfred O. Reynolds Jr. ‘63 Geoffrey M. Reynolds ‘69 John M. Reynolds ‘67 Mr. and Mrs. George K. Reynolds (George ’65) Mr. and Mrs. Richard Seamans Mr. Baxter S. Rogers ’59 Mr. and Mrs. Randall D. Rogers (Randy ’64; Mary Holliday ’65) Mrs. Barbara J Rominger Richard and Cynthia Miyamoto Mr. Mark Rominger ’88 Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Bennett (Robert ’88) Mr. and Mrs. Brian E. Hicks (Brian ’88) Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Rex Hoppenworth (Claire Wishard ’88) Mr. John Ruckelshaus ’48 Mrs. Patricia C. Ruckelshaus ’48 Mrs. Valri Philpott Sandoe ’52 Ms. Mary Martha Wright ’52 Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Brooks (Claire Wilkinson ’52) Rebecca Garrison Tracy ’52 Mr. Norb Schaefer Jr. ’48 Mr. and Mrs. Scott M. Brown (Scott ’81) Miss Suzanne Stafford ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 Mr. John Soper ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66 Miss Marilyn Mahoney ’66 I. Hilda Stewart Mrs. Natalie Greiner Riddell ’45# Mr. Douglas H. Stickney Ms. Elizabeth Stickney ’11 Mr. Humam Sukapdjo Mr. Mike McCraw and Dr. Amye Sukapdjo ’87 Mrs. Elise Noonan Surdakowski ’57 Mrs. Mary Polk ’57
Mrs. Virginia Freebairn ’39 Catherine T. Freebairn ’66
Mr. Charles Oberthur Mrs. Barbara Oberthur
Christopher Jacob Therber Rich and Susan Graffis
Rodney C. Frenzel Mr. and Mrs. J. Peter Frenzel (Peter ’55)
Mr. Andrew D. Ponader ’10 Mr. Erik Comer ’10 Ms. Ellen L. Grein ’10
Ms. Lynn Thomsen Mr. Clifford A. Hull and Dr. Sara H. Murphy
Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Hankey Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hankey Mary Jane Hanley Robert and Andrea Liebross
Mrs. Marie Pugh Ms. Carole Diane Roe Mrs. Jill Raiser ’66 Mrs. Judy Armstrong ’66 Ms. Beverly Berner ’66
Mrs. Barbara Martin Vonnegut ’39 Mrs. Sol Blickman (Toby Sachs ’39) Mr. and Mrs. David K. Comer (Pam Rauch ’64) Howard and Susie Maxwell PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
27
ANNUAL REPORT 2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School Mrs. Robert F. Walbridge (Joyce Amling ’52) Ms. Mary Martha Wright ’52 Mrs. Rachel Whittenbury ’52 Mrs. Tobie Calkins ’52 Mrs. Sally Glasel ’52 Ms. Rosanna Hall ’52 Ms. Heather Melissa Ann Kulwin ’92 Mr. and Mrs. John McGrath (Ann Mahaffey ’52) Mr. and Mrs. Frank O’Brien (Dee DeMotte ’52) Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Pennington (M.C. Swartz ’52)
2015-2016 Annual Fund Parent Participation Grade 12 – 79%
Anonymous - 1 Mr. and Mrs. Brian Akins Dr. and Mrs. Samer Ali-Hasan Mr. and Mrs. John Baker Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baxter Mr. Stephen and Dr. Lori Beck Bill and Tena Bishop (Bill*) Ms. Jona Bishop Mr. and Mrs. Rocky Bloniarz Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Bodell Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bowlby Mr. and Mrs. David Burns Mr. and Mrs. Jonn Byxbee Mr. and Mrs. Henry Camferdam Jr. Mr. Bryan Chandler and Ms. Mary Titsworth Chandler Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Crossin (Heather Hanley ’84) Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dassow Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Duiser Dr. Dale Edgar and Ms. Michele Heinold Mr. Steve Elliott and Ms. Vicky Prusinski Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Enkema Mr. and Mrs. Justin Fite Mr. and Mrs. Fritz French Mr. Mark Garrett and Ms. Domenica Bourus Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gehring Mr. and Mrs. Rick Gross (Rick*) Ms. Amy Hamilton Steven and Tracey Harbaugh Drs. James and Doris Hardacker Mr. and Mrs. Shaun Hart (Shants*) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hoffbauer Drs. April and David Hoffman Ms. Donna Hopf Dr. and Mrs. Tim Hupfer Dennis and Brook Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Joe Johnston Mr. and Mrs. James R. Keller Mr. Larry Klein and Ms. Carrie Klein Tidwell Drs. Alan and Beth Klotz Mr. and Mrs. John Andre Lacy Mr. and Mrs. Scott Law Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Lebovits Mr. Baohui Li and Ms. Peiyi Yang Mr. and Mrs. Renhua Li Dr. Lawrence E. Lloyd Mr. Terry Longworth and Mrs. Stephanie White-Longworth Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lucas Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Lueck Dr. Mark Lybik and Ms. Leslie Joseph Mr. and Mrs. Garth McClain Drs. James McGill and Julie Fetters Mr. and Mrs. Jay C. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Morris Mr. and Mrs. Patrick L. Mosongo
28
PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
Mrs. Amanda Lamb Wilson ’57 Mr. Robert I. Lipp and Mrs. Martha Lasky Lipp ’57 Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Mace (Kay Marburger ’57) Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Smith (Becky Sharp ’57) Mr. Joseph Wright ’88 Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Rex Hoppenworth (Claire Wishard ’88) Mr. David Yingling ’79 Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey W. Yingling (Jeffrey ’78)
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Moyer Ms. Joanna Oberthur Mr. Michael Oberthur Mr. and Mrs. Robert Palmer Mr. Anthony and Dr. Lori Petrucciani Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Polak Drs. James L. Qualkinbush and Brenda G. Barker Mr. and Mrs. Greg Rankin Mr. Robert Rook and Dr. Adrien Sipos Mr. Sterling Satterfield and Mrs. Sylvia Hernandez Betsy and Jim Smitherman Mr. and Mrs. J. Christopher Sogard (Chris ’84) Ms. Deborah Spoerner Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Stewart (Bonnie*) Dr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Stout Dr. and Mrs. David Tambunan Le-Angela Thompson The Toomey Family Dr. and Mrs. Dario Untama (Dario*) Mr. Thyagarajan Venkatesan and Dr. Mythily Srinivasan Marty and Amy Zimmerman
Grade 11 – 72%
Anonymous - 1 Mr. David and Dr. Karen Amstutz Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Arbuckle Dr. John Bamforth and Dr. Susan Mahony Mr. and Mrs. Mike Beesley Kevin W. Betz and Holly Hapak Betz (Holly ’83) Mr. Chad Bohren and Ms. Jeannie Paulsen Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Brown (Rob ’79; Ruth Ellen Myrehn ’80) Paige and Tim Button Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cheesebourough Mr. and Mrs. Russell Clark William and Barbara Clouse Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Creveling Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dassow Mr. and Mrs. Phil Dattilo Mr. and Mrs. James Dora Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jason Eckerle Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Enkema Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gabbert Dr. and Mrs. Marc Gerdisch Dr. Renee Gill Dr. Juan Carlos Gomez and Dr. Maria Luisa Diez Mr. and Mrs. Don Gottwald Mr. and Mrs. John Hammer Mr. Karl Hart Dr. and Mrs. Saul Helman Mr. and Mrs. Collin Hill Jannette K. and Richard R. Hogshire Mr. Kevin Honigford and Ms. Kimberly Pohlman Mr. and Mrs. Todd Katz Mr. and Mrs. James R. Keller Susan and James Kigamwa John Krull and Jenny Labalme
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016 Mrs. Joan Young Anonymous - 2 Mr. Travis Ball Jr. Tom and Joanne Black Richard and RoseMarie Butz Mrs. Deb Camack Stephen E. and Mary O. DeVoe (Steve ’53) Joseph and Cathy Dezelan Mrs. Reva Horine Mr. and Mrs. Andre Lacy Howard and Susie Maxwell Mr. and Mrs. James T. Neal (Georgianne Davis ’47)
Ms. Carole Diane Roe Mr. and Mrs. Tom Rush Jack and Susanne Sogard Ms. Elaine Stitle James and Emily Sturman (Jim ’67; Emily Moore ’66)
Steve and Leslie LaBarge Mr. and Mrs. Ben Li Dr. Robert Lillo and Dr. Sarah Thomas Drs. Deshun Lu and Yan Jin Dr. and Mrs. Dean Maar Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Maginn Dr. and Mrs. Bret Marsh Mr. and Mrs. Garth McClain Dr. and Mrs. Jean-Pierre Mobasser Mr. Laurence Neuman and Ms. Julie Sommers Neuman Mr. Kevin Nibbs and Mrs. Tangi Jackson-Nibbs Drs. Bob and Helen Niculescu David and Liz* Odmark Mr. Myles O’Neill and Dr. Fionnuala Walsh Dr. and Mrs. Gregg Ossip Dr. Amir Pasic and Mrs. Sujata Chakrabarti Pasic Mr. William Pillow Mr. Hugh Resnick and Professor Victoria Resnick Mr. Derica Rice and Mrs. Robin Nelson-Rice Mr. and Mrs. Jim Schacht Drs. Joel Scherer and Anna Maria Storniolo The Schiffer Family Mr. and Mrs. Hardy Sikand Mr. Wesley Sing and Mrs. Rossana Reyes-Quiroz Ms. Buffy Singleton Drs. David Skalnik and Kristin Chun Michael and Linda Sogard Mrs. Sydney B. Stephenson Chris and Catherine Vlahos Jeff and Dawn Wiesinger Mr. Guoxin Zhu and Mrs. Zhaogen Chen
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Crossin (Heather Hanley ’84) Mr. Bob A. Dominguez Mr. and Mrs. Frederick D. Emhardt (Fred ’78; Cynthia LaFollette ’79) Mr. and Ms. John C. Erickson III Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Eriksen Dr. and Mrs. Janos Ertl Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Charles Flowers (Chuck*) Jim and Cindy Freudenberg Ms. Ellen D. Gregory Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gregory Mr. and Mrs. Shaun Hart (Shants*) Mr. George Hayes and Dr. Lindiwee-Yaa Randall-Hayes Mr. and Mrs. Stephan Hodge (Elizabeth Elliott ’81) The House Family Mr. Shengxi Hu and Ms. Jun Xing Dr. and Mrs. Tim Hupfer Ramana and Suneetha Inguva Mr. and Mrs. John Jackson Dr. and Mrs. Steven Kim Mr. and Mrs. Jon E. King Drs. Alan and Beth Klotz Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Knitter Mr. Richard Kocerha and Mrs. Catherine Langham Ms. Catherine LaCrosse ’85 Bernard and Julie Lacy Mr. J. Scott and Dr. Julie Laughner Mr. and Mrs. Scott Law Dr. and Mrs. Mark E. Lawlor (Mark ’84) Mr. Kun Li and Ms. Wenqi You Carlo and Joyce Lo Dr. and Mrs. Anthony Lombardo Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Long (Christine Graffis ’88) Mr. Jay Lorentz and Mrs. Tina Kluemper Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Lueck Dr. and Mrs. Dean Maar Ms. Linda Maradol Ms. Mary McGonagle* Mr. and Mrs. Shawn McWilliams Mr. Anshuman Mehrotra and Mrs. Vatsala Dubey Mr. and Mrs. Tom Merrell Mr. and Mrs. Jay C. Miller Dr. Sanjay Mishra and Ms. Seema Verma Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Moore Ms. Dhana Morris Ms. Joanna Oberthur Mr. Michael Oberthur Mr. Derek O’Dell Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Osborne Mr. and Mrs. Robert Palmer Mr. Rick Ranucci and Ms. Barb Burcope Dr. and Mrs. Ovais Raza Mr. and Mrs. Todd Reiselman Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rogers Dr. and Mrs. Tim Root Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Saratt, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Scroggins
Grade 10 – 76%
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Brian Akins Mr. Jeffrey Aldridge Mrs. Karen Aldridge Mr. and Mrs. Don Aquilano The Honorable and Mrs. Alex Azar II Mr. Theodore Baker and Mrs. Janet Campbell Baker Dr. and Mrs. Jay Beagle Mr. and Mrs. William Bogle Jr. Dr. Christopher Bohyer and Dr. Wanita Kumar Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bowlby Mr. Ron Brock and Ms. Ann Thompson Brock Mr. and Mrs. Scott M. Brown (Scott ’81) Mr. and Mrs. David Burns Paige and Tim Button Mr. and Mrs. Tim Caress Mr. and Mrs. Craig Carpenter Mr. Bryan Chandler and Ms. Mary Titsworth Chandler Mr. and Mrs. Joe Chapelle (Cathy Yingling ’87*) Mr. and Mrs. Russell Clark Mr. Ed and Dr. Marion Couch Dr. and Mrs. Louis A. Coury Jr.
ANNUAL REPORT
2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School Mr. and Mrs. James Seymour Mr. and Mrs. Wei Shen Mr. and Mrs. Douglas D. Shore (Heather Stewart ’90) Dale and Kathleen St. Louis The Toomey Family Chris and Catherine Vlahos Mr. Dennis Voelkel and Dr. Sonja Voelkel Smoke and Anitra Wallin Alex and Tammy White Dr. and Mrs. Brian Wiegel Dr. Min Zhao and Mrs. Annie Chen
Grade 9 – 71%
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Allen (Doug* ) Mr. and Mrs. Devin Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Don Aquilano Mr. and Mrs. John Baker Dr. John Bamforth and Dr. Susan Mahony Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baxter Mr. and Mrs. Rocky Bloniarz Mrs. Mary Beth Bloomfield Mr. Martin Bott and Mrs. Angelia Barnes Mr. and Mrs. David Campbell Mr. and Mrs. William B. Carmichael Dr. Xiyun Chai and Dr. Yan Zhai Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Clifford Mr. and Mrs. Michael Coble Kathleen and Enrique Conterno Drs. Narsing and Sridevi Damera Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Enkema Mr. Giuseppe Firenze and Dr. Isabella Velona Mr. and Mrs. Chaelor Freeman Mr. Henry Fu and Dr. Hillary Wu Mr. and Mrs. James Gallagher Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Gershman Drs. Carlos and Ruth Gimeno Dr. Juan Carlos Gomez and Dr. Maria Luisa Diez Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Grant Mr. and Mrs. David Harris (Marion*) Dr. and Mrs. Saul Helman Mr. Matthew Henss and Mrs. Rana Fields Henss Mr. Kevin Honigford and Ms. Kimberly Pohlman Dr. and Mrs. BP House Dr. and Mrs. Joe Johnston Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Klapper Olga and Gary Korne Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Koustenis Steve and Leslie LaBarge Ms. Catherine LaCrosse ’85 Mr. and Mrs. Shing Lam Mr. and Mrs. Jason MacLean Dr. and Mrs. Jon M. Maier Mr. and Mrs. William H. Main (Bill ’87) Mr. and Mrs. Sanjay Malkani Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Martin Mr. and Mrs. Shawn McWilliams Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Meyer Dr. Raghavendra Mirmira and Dr. Veena Rao-Mirmira Dr. and Mrs. R. Christopher Miyamoto (Chris ’88) Dr. and Mrs. Jean-Pierre Mobasser Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Moore Mr. and Mrs. Michael Morgan Mr. and Mrs. Patrick G. Murphy (Heather Reilly ’90) Ms. Sally Hardgrove and Mr. Ron Newlin Mr. Kevin Nibbs and Mrs. Tangi Jackson-Nibbs Mr. James Noble Jr. and Mrs. Krista Noble Dr. David Orentlicher and Mrs. Judy Failer Dr. Amir Pasic and Mrs. Sujata Chakrabarti Pasic Dr. James Perry and Dr. Nicole Perry Dr. and Mrs. Ryan Piper Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Polak
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Protogere Mr. and Mrs. Eric Scotten (Alyssa*) Mr. Wesley Sing and Mrs. Rossana Reyes-Quiroz Drs. Daniel and Mari Skovronsky Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Smith (Mike ’95; Katie Shoopman ’95) Ms. Amy Stacey Bill ’73 and Lynda Stoops Dr. Zhiqiang Sun and Dr. Tao Lu Mr. and Mrs. Mark Thomas Dr. Jianmin Tian and Dr. Beili Dong Drs. Raj and Shireesha Vuppalanchi Mr. Eric Wallentine Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Weiker Dr. and Mrs. Brian Wiegel Mr. Brian Wittler and Dr. Michelle Wittler Mr. and Mrs. Don Woods (Don#) Mr. Frank Wu and Ms. Julie Liu Mr. Yixun Wu and Chuyun Huang Mr. Naidi Xu and Ms. Xiaoqing Chen Mr. Huaitao Zhang and Ms. Juan Li
Grade 8 – 68%
Steve and Sherry Aaholm Mr. Jeffrey Aldridge Mrs. Karen Aldridge Mr. and Mrs. Devin Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Gary Bender (Gary*) AJ and Lynne Bir Mr. and Mrs. Robert Black Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Burlison Mr. and Mrs. Craig Carpenter David and Julie Eskenazi (David ’83) Mr. and Mrs. Chad Franz The Gardner Family Alfonza and Nicole Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hanley Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Hasselbeck Ms. Sara Hirst Ms. Nancy Honaker Mr. and Mrs. Berkley Isaac Dr. and Mrs. David Isaacs Mr. and Mrs. Todd Katz Mr. and Mrs. John A. Kite John Krull and Jenny Labalme Mr. J. Scott and Dr. Julie Laughner Ms. Michelle Lavoie Dr. and Mrs. Robert Liebross Mr. Yun Ling and Dr. Minmin Wang Alexandra and Greg Loewen Mr. and Mrs. William H. Main (Bill ’87) Mr. and Mrs. Greg McRoberts Mr. Michael Albano and Mrs. Missy Michael-Albano Mr. Kenton Morris and Mrs. Jennifer Morris Mr. and Mrs. William Parrish Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Paugh Dr. Omar Rahman and Dr. Fyeza Haider Mr. and Mrs. Greg Rankin Mr. and Mrs. Steve Robbins Mr. and Mrs. Randall D. Rogers (Randall ’91) Dr. and Mrs. Michael Rothbaum Mr. Neal Rothermel and Mrs. Mandy Moore Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Seymour Mr. and Mrs. James Seymour Craig and Amanda Skelton Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Smith (Mike ’95; Katie Shoopman ’95) Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Snow Dr. and Mrs. Nimu Surtani Drs. Matthew Tector and Tracy Brenner Dr. and Mrs. Dario Untama (Dario*) Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Weymuth (D.J.*)
Grade 7 – 78%
Anonymous - 1 The Honorable and Mrs. Alex Azar II Kevin W. Betz and Holly Hapak Betz (Holly ’83)
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016 Mr. Anatoliy Petrov and Mrs. Tracey Blum-Petrov* Paige and Tim Button Hea-Won Kim and Tae-Yon Chun Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Crossin (Heather Hanley ’84) Dr. Alfonso de Dios and Mrs. Raquel Molina Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Debshaw Dr. and Mrs. Darin Dill John and Rokson Drics Mr. and Mrs. Dan Fowler Walter and Laura Freihofer Mr. and Mrs. James Gallagher Dr. Juan Carlos Gomez and Dr. Maria Luisa Diez Dr. William R. Grider Mr. and Mrs. William Scott Grider Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Hasselbeck Mr. Matthew Henss and Mrs. Rana Fields Henss Philip and Pamela Hess Mr. and Mrs. James Hurst Mr. and Mrs. Ron Johnson Susan and James Kigamwa Dr. and Mrs. Steven Kim Mr. Jeff ’89 and Dr. Jennifer Kittle Mr. and Mrs. Chandrashekhar Kubal Dr. and Mrs. Robert Lindeman Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Long (Christine Graffis ’88) Mr. and Mrs. Jason MacLean Dr. and Mrs. Jon M. Maier Mr. and Mrs. Garth McClain Ms. Mary McGonagle* Dr. and Mrs. Matthew Miller (Matthew#) Dr. and Mrs. Jean-Pierre Mobasser Mr. and Mrs. Patrick L. Mosongo Mr. and Mrs. Patrick G. Murphy (Heather Reilly ’90) Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Murphy (Molly*) Dr. and Mrs. Gregg Ossip Dr. James Ruiz and Ms. Michelle Carnahan Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Saratt, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas D. Shore (Heather Stewart ’90) Craig and Amanda Skelton Dr. and Mrs. Nimu Surtani Dr. Jianmin Tian and Dr. Beili Dong Mr. and Mrs. John F. Townsend III (John ’89) Mr. Dennis Voelkel and Dr. Sonja Voelkel Mr. and Mrs. Marty Wessler Mr. and Mrs. Richard White Dr. and Mrs. Brian Wiegel Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wolfla Mr. Guoxin Zhu and Mrs. Zhaogen Chen
Grade 6 – 74%
Dr. Brian Badman and Dr. Grace Badman Mr. and Mrs. Mark Benoit Dr. Christina Bodurow Mr. and Mrs. Henry Camferdam Mr. Bryan Chandler and Ms. Mary Titsworth Chandler Mr. and Mrs. Grover B. Davis Dr. and Mrs. Sven H. Dubie (Sven*; Cammy*) Mr. and Mrs. Peter Emerson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas English Mr. and Mrs. Johnston Erwin Mr. and Mrs. Darrin Friskney Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Gershman Dr. Renee Gill Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hanley Mr. and Mrs. David Harris (Marion*) Mr. George Hayes and Dr. Lindiwee-Yaa Randall-Hayes Mr. Glenn Hoskin and Mrs. Lisa Hoskin Mr. and Mrs. Berkley Isaac Ms. Marya E. Jones ’78 Mr. Paul and Reverend Dr. Felicity Brock Kelcourse
Mr. Mark Kirschner Mr. Jeff ’89 and Dr. Jennifer Kittle Mr. and Mrs. Ted Kramer Mr. Kelly and Dr. Dana Lasek (Dana Giles ’83) Dr. and Mrs. Robert Liebross Drs. Viney and Sonika Mathavan Mr. and Mrs. Jay C. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Miroff (Drew ’92) Dr. and Mrs. R. Christopher Miyamoto (Chris ’88) Mr. Kenton Morris and Mrs. Jennifer Morris Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Murphy (Molly*) Mr. and Mrs. William Parrish Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Paugh Dr. and Mrs. Ovais Raza Dr. and Mrs. Lance Rettig Dr. and Mrs. Michael Rothbaum Mr. and Mrs. Jon Russell Mr. and Mrs. Douglas D. Shore (Heather Stewart ’90) Drs. Harpreetinder and Mona Singh Mr. Keerat Singh and Mrs. Harjeet Kaur Drs. Daniel and Mari Skovronsky Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Smith (Mike ’95; Katie Shoopman ’95) Dr. Douglas Stemke and Dr. Lei Han Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Stotts (Doug*) Ms. Sara Zidal
Grade 5 – 86%
Mr. and Mrs. Devin Anderson Drs. Gaurav and Rebecca Arora Mr. and Mrs. Gary Bender (Gary*) AJ and Lynne Bir Mr. Ron Brock and Ms. Ann Thompson Brock Mr. and Mrs. Craig Carpenter Roxane and Chad Cerda Mr. and Mrs. Clinton L. Crafton (Annie*) Mr. Victor Cruz and Dr. Maria Rivera Dr. and Mrs. Gopi Dandamudi Mr. and Mrs. Donald Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Ugender Gangireddy Mr. Luis Gomez and Mrs. Trish Dulmes-Gomez Dr. and Mrs. Bradley Harris Mrs. Gretchen Hueni* Dr. and Mrs. Michael Irizarry Nolan and Sharon Jenkins Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kahre (Inga*) Mr. and Mrs. Rajan Kapur Mr. and Mrs. James R. Keller Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Kemper Mr. Bob Kennedy Melina Kennedy Mr. and Mrs. John Killacky Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Klineman Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kraft (Peter*) Dr. Mark Langer and Dr. Elaine White Mr. and Mrs. Philip Larman Alexandra and Greg Loewen Dr. Raja Mahidhara and Dr. Geetha Rao Mr. and Mrs. Sanjay Malkani Ms. Morgan E. McGill Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93) Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Miroff (Drew ’92) Mr. Jeffrey A. Mokaya and Mrs. Pamela Obegi Drs. Bob and Helen Niculescu Dr. Langu Peng and Dr. Jian Li Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Polak Mr. and Mrs. Steve Robbins Mr. and Mrs. Randall D. Rogers (Randall ’91) Mr. Syed Jawad and Dr. Asma Siddiqui Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Smith Mr. Jason Sturman and Dr. Molly Foglesong Sturman (Jason ’93; Molly Foglesong ’93) Dr. and Mrs. Jeremy Sullivan Drs. Matthew Tector and Tracy Brenner PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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ANNUAL REPORT 2015-2016 Annual Giving to the School Drs. Whitten and Susan Watson Mr. and Mrs. Marty Wessler Mr. and Mrs. Richard White
Grade 4 – 82%
Dr. Kash Abdul-Rahman and Ms. Jamila Zafar Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Allen (Doug* ) Mr. Viswanath and Dr. Vidya Sree Atluri Dr. Brian Badman and Dr. Grace Badman Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Beesley Mr. and Mrs. Marc Behringer (Stephanie*) Mr. and Mrs. William Bogle Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Burlison Mr. Eddie Cheever Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Chris Cunningham Dr. Alfonso de Dios and Mrs. Raquel Molina Mr. and Mrs. Jason Eckerle Ms. Laura Goodenow Alfonza and Nicole Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Hasselbeck Mr. and Mrs. Samuel T. Hawkins (Sam ’94; Sarah Smith ’97) Mr. and Mrs. Weston Andrew Jones Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Jordan Mr. and Mrs. Jon E. King Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Klineman Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Kohart Mr. and Mrs. Ted Kramer Mr. and Mrs. Philip Larman Mr. Kelly and Dr. Dana Lasek (Dana Giles ’83) Mr. and Mrs. A.J. McIntosh (A.J.*; Lori*) Mr. Anshuman Mehrotra and Mrs. Vatsala Dubey Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Mitchell (Anne Rogers ’85) Mr. and Mrs. Patrick G. Murphy (Heather Reilly ’90) Mr. Tor Even and Dr. Cecilie Nergard Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Norman Drs. Rajesh and Valerie Pai Mr. and Mrs. Tejashkumar Patel Mr. Jim Pearl Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Ritz (Ryan*) Mr. and Mrs. Steve Robbins Mr. and Mrs. Jon Russell Dr. and Mrs. Todd Schmidt Craig and Amanda Skelton Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Smith Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Smith (Mike ’95; Katie Shoopman ’95) Mr. and Mrs. Jason Spartz Silas and Doris Tolliver Mr. and Mrs. John F. Townsend III (John ’89) The Verma Family Ms. Darah S. Watson Mr. and Mrs. Michael Webster (Mike*; Sarah*) Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Whitehead (Courtney*)
Grade 3 – 89%
Mr. and Mrs. Devin Anderson Drs. Gaurav and Rebecca Arora Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Beesley Dr. Edmond Bendaly and Dr. Zeina Nabhan Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Burlison Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Buttrick Mr. and Mrs. Henry Camferdam Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Christy Mr. and Mrs. Clinton L. Crafton (Annie*) Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Debshaw Dr. and Mrs. Darin Dill Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Forrestal (Lily*) Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Grant Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hanley Dr. and Mrs. Bradley Harris
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PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
Mr. and Mrs. David Harris (Marion*) Mr. Joshua Hood and Ms. Nicole Cooreman* Mr. Glenn Hoskin and Mrs. Lisa Hoskin Dr. and Mrs. Michael Irizarry Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kahre (Inga*) Mr. and Mrs. John Killacky Mr. and Mrs. Darren Manning Mr. Jeffrey A. Mokaya and Mrs. Pamela Obegi Mr. and Mrs. Scott Moorehead Mr. and Mrs. William Parrish Mr. Roberto Pili and Dr. Joan Chang Mr. and Mrs. Scott Preston Dr. Omar Rahman and Dr. Fyeza Haider Mr. and Mrs. Brent Richards Dr. Eric Rubenstein and Mrs. Carly Sacher-Rubenstein Mr. and Mrs. William Schaming Mr. and Mrs. Eric Scotten (Alyssa*) Mr. Dhruvajyoti Biswas and Mrs. Deblina Sharma Dr. and Mrs. Peter M. Simmons (Peter ’94) Mr. and Mrs. J. Christopher Sogard (Chris ’84) Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Stotts (Doug*) Mr. Jason Sturman and Dr. Molly Foglesong Sturman (Jason ’93; Molly Foglesong ’93) Chris and Tara Warner Mr. and Mrs. Jason Xu
Grade 2 – 96%
Mr. Viswanath and Dr. Vidya Sree Atluri Mr. and Mrs. Marc Behringer (Stephanie*) Mr. and Mrs. Brent Benge Mr. and Mrs. John Berry Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Brady Mr. Daniel and Dr. Katherine Brundage Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Byrnes (Rebecca*) Mr. and Mrs. Jonn Byxbee Mr. and Mrs. Scott Conner Dr. and Mrs. Derek Culnan Dr. and Mrs. John DePowell Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Drook Mr. and Mrs. Thomas English Mr. and Mrs. Ugender Gangireddy Ms. Laura Goodenow Dr. Niraj Gupta and Dr. Parul Agarwal Mr. and Mrs. Samuel T. Hawkins (Sam ’94; Sarah Smith ’97) Mr. George Hayes and Dr. Lindiwee-Yaa Randall-Hayes Mr. Joshua Hood and Ms. Nicole Cooreman* Mrs. Gretchen Hueni* Mr. and Mrs. Weston Andrew Jones Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Klapper Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Klineman Mr. Aleksandr Krivozus and Mrs. Zina Gringauz Dr. Robert Lillo and Dr. Sarah Thomas Mr. Jay Lorentz and Mrs. Tina Kluemper Mr. and Mrs. Jason MacLean Mr. and Mrs. A.J. McIntosh (A.J.*; Lori*) Mr. and Mrs. Matthew W. Miller (Matthew ’93) Dr. Antonio Navarrete and Mrs. Jennifer Bailey Mr. Tor Even and Dr. Cecilie Nergard Mr. and Mrs. David Nie (Jennifer*) R.J. and Kate Pasquesi II Dr. and Mrs. Robert A. Quirey Dr. and Mrs. Michael Rothbaum The Schiffer Family Dr. and Mrs. Todd Schmidt Mr. Jared and Dr. Lori Shattuck Mr. and Mrs. Douglas D. Shore (Heather Stewart ’90) Mr. Michael Sanich and Ms. Jane Sidey* Dr. and Mrs. Ian Smith Mr. and Mrs. Michael T. Smith (Mike ’95; Katie Shoopman ’95)
July 1, 2015 - June 30, 2016 Mr. and Mrs. Jason Spartz Mr. Jason Sturman and Dr. Molly Foglesong Sturman (Jason ’93; Molly Foglesong ’93) Dr. and Mrs. Jeremy Sullivan Mr. Luca Visini and Mrs. Chiara Monzani
Grade 1 – 76%
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Brady Mr. and Mrs. Aman Brar Mr. and Mrs. Clinton L. Crafton (Annie*) Mr. Jeff and Dr. Ann Daniel Dr. and Mrs. John DePowell Dr. and Mrs. Sven H. Dubie (Sven*; Cammy*) Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Everett (Jamey*) Mr. and Mrs. Zach Ford (Abby*) Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Gershman Mr. and Mrs. Rick Gross (Rick*) Mr. and Mrs. David Guevara Alfonza and Nicole Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. J. Whipple Hazlewood (Whip ’95) Scott and Michelle Kanagy Mr. and Mrs. Seth H. Kleiman (Seth ’94) Mr. and Mrs. Michael McManus Mr. and Mrs. Scott Moorehead Mr. William Morton Jr. and Dr. Rachael Morton Dr. and Mrs. Ryan D. Nagy (Katherine Deane ’98) Drs. Rajesh and Valerie Pai Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Paton Mr. Roberto Pili and Dr. Joan Chang Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Pressler Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Ritz (Ryan*) Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Robertson Mr. and Mrs. Toby Rogers (Toby*; Sara*) Mr. and Mrs. Eli Salatich (Eli*; Jamie*) Mr. Jared and Dr. Lori Shattuck Mr. Bryan and Dr. Carmen* Taylor Mr. William Ian Towler and Dr. Sherrine Ibrahim Drs. Alex and Lauren Walker Mr. and Mrs. Michael Webster (Mike*; Sarah*) Mr. and Mrs. Courtney Whitehead (Courtney*) Ms. Rhonda Wood
Grade SK – 85%
Anonymous - 1 Dr. Brian Badman and Dr. Grace Badman Mr. and Mrs. Marc Behringer (Stephanie*) Mr. and Mrs. Brent Benge Mr. and Mrs. John Berry Ms. Aunjalee Bhullar Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bramhill Mr. Daniel and Dr. Katherine Brundage Mr. Stuart Burns Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Crismore Dr. and Mrs. Derek Culnan Mr. and Mrs. Chris Cunningham Dr. and Mrs. Melton Doxey Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Drook Mr. and Mrs. Thomas English Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Ferreira Dr. and Mrs. Mark Fisch (Mark ’92; Jordan Paul ’95) Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Harlan Dr. Stanley Harper and Dr. Jaime Harper Mr. and Mrs. J. Whipple Hazlewood (Whip ’95) Greg and Kelly Huntington Mr. Zach Gordon and Mrs. Carlie Irsay Gordon ’99 Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Jordan Mr. Jeffrey Lake and Mrs. Tanya Peterson Lake Mr. and Mrs. Jeff McAteer Mr. and Mrs. David Nie (Jennifer*)
R.J. and Kate Pasquesi II Mr. William Pillow Mr. and Mrs. Ryon Scott Mr. Michael Sanich and Ms. Jane Sidey* Dr. and Mrs. Peter M. Simmons (Peter ’94) Mr. Luca Visini and Mrs. Chiara Monzani Chris and Tara Warner Ms. Darah S. Watson William and Laura Weaver Ms. Rhonda Wood Mr. and Mrs. Jason Xu
Grade JK – 92%
Mr. Bryan and Dr. Jacqueline Barrett Mr. and Mrs. John Berry Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bramhill Mr. and Mrs. Jason Brown Paige and Tim Button Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Buttrick Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Byrnes (Rebecca*) Mr. and Mrs. Joby Carmody (Heather*) Roxane and Chad Cerda Mr. Alex Markov and Mrs. Amber Chance* Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Christy Dr. and Mrs. John DePowell Mr. and Mrs. Scott Dusko Mr. and Mrs. Chris Eckerle Dr. Anna Edwards ’00 Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Evans (Ben ’98) Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Everett (Jamey*) Mr. Jonathan Faris Mr. Eugene Fisher and Mrs. Angela McDonald-Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Zach Ford (Abby*) Dr. Matthew French ’87 Sheri French Mr. and Mrs. Ugender Gangireddy Mr. and Mrs. Tony George (Tony ’02) Mr. and Mrs. Jason Groves (Emily Hebert ’93*) Mr. and Mrs. J. Whipple Hazlewood (Whip ’95) Mr. Christopher Holt and Dr. Melissa Holt Mr. Joshua Hood and Ms. Nicole Cooreman* Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hulka Greg and Kelly Huntington Mr. Zach Gordon and Mrs. Carlie Irsay Gordon ’99 Mr. Yifei Jiang and Ms. Yewen Ge Mr. and Mrs. Rajan Kapur Mr. and Mrs. Seth H. Kleiman (Seth ’94) Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas B. Lemen (Nick ’93) Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Litz Drs. Kandice and Aaron Ludwig Mr. and Mrs. Jeff McAteer Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan McDowell (Jonathan ’02) Mr. and Mrs. Michael McManus Mr. William Morton Jr. and Dr. Rachael Morton Dr. and Mrs. Ryan D. Nagy (Katherine Deane ’98) Mr. Michael and Dr. Amanda O’Mara Mr. and Mrs. Ersal Ozdemir Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Paton Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Phillips (Leslie*) Dr. and Mrs. Jeff Pierson Mr. and Mrs. Zeb Portanova Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Ritz (Ryan*) Mr. and Mrs. Toby Rogers (Toby*; Sara*) Mr. and Mrs. Christian Schwery Mr. and Mrs. Damon Smith Mr. and Mrs. Scott Tarter Mr. Bryan and Dr. Carmen* Taylor Dr. and Mrs. Kyle Vititoe (Sloane Ringo ’98) Drs. Alex and Lauren Walker William and Laura Weaver Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wessler Mr. Ward and Dr. Betsy Witte
ANNUAL REPORT
Statement of Operations Year ending June 30, 2016
Revenues Tuition................................................................................................. $ 19,376,978 Annual Fund......................................................................................... $ 1,233,914 Other Revenues.................................................................................... $ 3,087,306 Grant from Trust................................................................................... $ 2,800,000 Total Revenues................................................................................... $ 26,498,198 Expenditures Salaries & Benefits.............................................................................. $ 15,377,100 Instructional Supplies............................................................................ $ 1,020,048 Plant Operations & Repairs................................................................... $ 2,211,847 General Operating Expenses................................................................ $ 1,074,625 Financial Aid......................................................................................... $ 3,324,252 Capital Expenditures............................................................................... $ 5 02,825 Other.................................................................................................... $ 1,854,582 Total Expenditures ............................................................................. $ 25,365,279 Net After Capital....................................................................................$1,132919v
Grant from Trust 10.6%
Other Revenues 11.7%
Annual Fund 4.7%
Revenues
Tuition 73.1%
Capital Expenditures 2.0%
Other 7.3%
Financial Aid 13.1% General Operating Expenses 4.2% Plant Operations & Repairs 8.7%
Expenditures
Instructional Supplies 4.0% Salaries and Benefits 60.6% PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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ANNUAL REPORT Park Tudor Endowment Society The Park Tudor Endowment Society was created in 1993 to honor those who have included Park Tudor in their wills, estate plans, or as a beneficiary designation. Park Tudor is deeply grateful for this support. + Charter member * Faculty members # Deceased Anonymous - 11 Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Allen (Doug*) Mrs. Doris Wilson Barr ’41# Mr.# and Mrs.# John R. Barrett Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Batt (Bob ’95) Mr. and Mrs. Brad Batt (Sheridan Nichols ’92) Susan Batt ’92+ Kevin W. Betz and Holly Hapak Betz (Holly ’83) Hayden Haddad Bishop Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Braun Mr. and Mrs. Jim D. Bremner Mr. and Mrs. John B. Bridge Dan and Betsy Brunette Mrs. Margaret Z. Zimmer Bryan ’30# Mr. and Mrs. Herbert G. Bussa (Nancy Kernahan ’56) Dr. and Mrs. David A. Bussard Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Byrnes (Rebecca*) Steven S. Cagle ’71 Mr. John Carmack ’43# Mr. and Mrs. Terry Carr (Susan Nunamaker ’69) Mr. and Mrs.# Alex S. Carroll ’35 Mr. Smiley Chambers ’44# Mr. Allen Clowes ’35# Ms. Alice Cohen# Mr. and Mrs. William E. Cooper Mrs. Madelaine Speers Cunning ’30# Mr. and Mrs. Joseph DeVito Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Dezelan Mr.# and Mrs. Patrick Duginske Mr. and Mrs. Shawn Ellsworth (Roberta Norris ’68) The Estate of James W. Emison Stephen and Julia Enkema Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Everett (Debbie Stuart ’69*) Mr. and Mrs. Steven M. Falender (Steve ’67; Debra Dudenhoffer ’66) Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fehsenfeld Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Ferrara Mrs. Janice Ball Fisher ’35# Mr. and Mrs. Zach Ford (Abby*) Mr. and Mrs. Fritz French Mr. and Mrs. Bruce W. Galbraith+ Estate of Barbara Kroeger Gamble ’36 # Richard and Nancy Gaynor Philip and Dorothea Genetos Ms. Josie George Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Goad Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Green Tom and Mary Grein Mrs. Edith Greiwe Ransom# and Mary Josephine Griffin Mr. and Mrs. Jason Groves (Emily Hebert ’93*) Mr.# and Mrs.# William Snyder Hall (William ’29)
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PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Hammock (Chris*)+ The Estate of Mrs. Sandra Dixon Hardee ’55 # Estate of Mrs. Mary “Punch” DePrez Harris ’33 # Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Hebert Mr.# and Mrs. Robert Henderson (Caroline Gray ’42) Ms. Lisa A. Hendrickson ’77 and Mr. John Whalen Mr. and Mrs. J Mark Hilligoss Mr. and Mrs. John H. Holliday (John ’42#, Phyllis Behringer ’42#) Mr. Dennis Hollings ’83# Mr.# and Mrs.# Philip S. Holton+ Mr. and Mrs. Daniel W. Homan Mr.# and Mrs. Rob C. Hueni (Gretchen*) Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas F. Hrisomalos Mr. Donald E. Hughes ’54# Ms. Joni W. Hughes ’75 Doug and Viveka Jennings Dr. Elizabeth Jessup ’77 Mr.# and Mrs. Robert L. Jessup Mr. and Mrs. Jon Jessup (Jon ’86) Dr. and Mrs. Rick Johns (Jennifer Griggs ’85) Miss Patricia Jones ’34# The Estate of Ellen Rogers Kahlo ’30# Dr. and Mrs. Jack L. Kane# Mr. and Mrs. Barton L. Kaufman+ Ms. Maria L. Kimsey Mr. Jeff ’89 and Dr. Jennifer Kittle John and Annie Kittle Mr. and Mrs. David W. Knall Miss Marjorie Kroeger ’44# Miss Barbara Kroger ’57 Mr. Matthew D. Larkin ’91 Mr. Kelly and Dr. Dana Lasek (Dana Giles ’83) William V. and Catherine W. Lawson (Cathy Wood ’72) Dr. and Mrs. Albert C. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Eric A. Lee (Holly Kuhn ’77) Dr. and Mrs. Roger Lenke Mr. Tom Linebarger and Ms. Michele Janin Mr. and Mrs. Christopher E. MacAllister (Chris ’74) Mr.# and Mrs. Xavier Maudlin+ Estate of Richard E. McCreary Jr # and Elizabeth Taggart McCreary ’31# Mr. Russell C. McDermott ’52+ Mr. and Mrs. H. Roll McLaughlin (Linda Hamilton ’43#) Mr. Rob Nash and Mrs. Mary Lea McTurnan-Nash ’83 Mr.# and Mrs.# William G. McWilliams (William ’42) Mr. and Mrs. Michael Merkel Dr. and Mrs. Matthew Miller (Matthew#) Dr. and Mrs. R. Christopher Miyamoto (Chris ’88) Mr. James Moss ’78 Mr. and Mrs. Patrick G. Murphy (Heather Reilly ’90) Mr. and Mrs. Gene Newcombe (Linda Barton ’55#) Mrs. Martha Adams Norris ’42# Dr.# and Mrs.# Harold Ochsner (Mary Evans ’20) Mrs. Phyllis Oldham+# Steven W. Palmer, M.D. ’86 Mr. Noel Piñero and Ms. Angi Parks
Ms. Jennifer L. Pettinga ’82 The Eugene S. Pulliam Trust# Ms. Myrta Pulliam ’65+ Dr. and Mrs. George F. Rapp Dr. and Mrs. John G. Rapp Estate of Miss Sally Reahard ’26# Mr. Robert B Rhoads ’32# Mr. and Mrs. William A. Rhodehamel (Will ’79; Megan Crowell ’79) Mr.# and Mrs.# Peter Richardson (Sophie Weiss ’42) Mrs. Natalie Griener Riddell ’45# Mr. Theodore M. Robinson ’85 Ms. Carole Diane Roe Reverend and Mrs. C. Davies Reed (Carol Cummings Rogers ’59*) Mr. Floyd C. Satterlee and Ms. Michelle Stoneburner Mr. Phil G.D. Schaefer ’76 Drs. Ullrich Schwertschlag and Teresa Alati+ Mrs. Helaine Borinstein Simon ’39 Ms. Julia Sipes Mr. and Mrs. Tyler Smith (Adrianne Glidewell ’98) Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Spafford Ann L. Spalding ’48# Dr. and Mrs. Michael C. Stalnecker (Julie Pettinga ’72) John and Mary Stanley Bill and Jennifer Stearman Mrs. Florence Barrett Stewart ’30# Mr. and Mrs. Michael Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Stewart Mr.# and Mrs. Doug Stickney (Kim Smith ’74) Mr. and Mrs. John T. Stiles Sr. (John ’56) Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Stokes (Jeannine Grinslade ’46) Estate of Mary F. Stone# Mrs. Mary Eleanor Fenstermaker Stuart ’39# James and Emily Sturman (Jim ’67; Emily Moore ’66) Jason F. Sturman and Molly Foglesong Sturman (Jason ’93; Molly ’93) Mrs. Anne Ayres Taylor ’28# Mr. and Mrs. Jim Toomey Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Tucker Mrs. Betty E. Vickery# Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Vonnegut (Richard ’32 #; Barbara Martin ’39#) Jan Weigle Mrs. Tina Mark Weldon ’69 Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. West (Dick ’42)+ Mr. and Mrs. Richard White Mrs. Jane Whitney#+ Mr.# and Mrs. William A. Wick (Lucy Holliday ’44) Gordon and Anne Emison Wishard (Gordon ’62) Mr. and Mrs. William N. Wishard (Bill ’59) Mr. and Mrs. James L. Worrall (Jim ’61) Mrs. Ann S. Wright Gene and Mary Ann Zink
2015-16 Planned Giving Council Mary Stanley, Co-Chair Mike Stewart, Co-Chair Steve Cagle ’71 Debbie Stuart Everett ’69 Lisa Hendrickson ’77 Mary Lea McTurnan-Nash ’83 William Rhodehamel ’79 Gordon Wishard ’62 Become a Member of the Park Tudor Endowment Society Gift planning allows you to align financial needs with your philanthropic goals. The process is very rewarding and in some cases, very easy to do. The following are examples of tools you can use to support the school and become a member of the Park Tudor Endowment Society: • Bequest Name Park Tudor in your will or living trust by designating a specific amount, percentage or share of your estate. • Retirement Plans Name Park Tudor as a beneficiary or make withdrawals to fund your charitable gifts. • Life Insurance Name Park Tudor as a beneficiary in an existing life insurance policy or purchase a new policy and designate Park Tudor as a beneficiary. • Real Estate or Personal Property Donate a property, collection or artwork to Park Tudor. • Life Income Gifts These gifts provide a stream of income to you or your designated beneficiary, as well as provide capital-gains and estate-tax benefits. - Charitable Gift Annuity - Charitable Remainder Trust - Charitable Lead Trust
West Clark, Ellie Dassow, and Rena Lee take a break from running Fall Family Festival booths to play some games.
8th grader Zayd Kahn reads to JK student, Reid Perry
4th graders Madeline Rubenstien, Jasmine Forrestal, and Pritkaa Biswas pose during the Halloween Parade.
Megan Chapelle, Maya Mishra, Hannah Wang, and Hannah Shafique during a Cyber Patriot meet.
Kamran Badman attempts to get a frog on the lily pads at the Fall Family Festival
Brooke Boschen gears up for the blacklight Homecoming dance. Families got together for a pumpkin carving party this year for Halloween.
Seniors gathered in the student parking lot for a very special senior breakfast.
Mayble Hazelwood shows off her folding skills in art class.
FEATURE
What Does “Doing Good” Have to do with a Good Education? By Luana Nissan, Director of Community Engaged Learning and Peter A. Kraft, Interim Head of School
Parents are naturally interested in the character of their children. Since their formal inception in the United States, schools have fostered character and values in myriad ways: character education, community service, environmental education, and philanthropy education, among others. But since a school’s primary work is academic engagement, how does teaching children about “doing good” fit into their education?
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PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
FEATURE
Christian Greenwalt works on putting up new siding on this year’s Habitat house. PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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FEATURE After the release of Park Tudor’s strategic plan (PT2020) in 2014, a large committee and working teams of faculty, staff, alumni, and school leadership went to work reimagining one of the vital levers to support the plan—how students engage with their broader community and world. Over two years, this committee adopted the framework of Community Engaged Learning and four key principles (student growth, mutual benefit, multiple lenses, and the common good). This framework acknowledges that a good education includes building opportunities for students both to connect with people and places outside our school and to help address issues in our community. “Education” lies at the center of Community Engaged Learning. The benefits of weaving Community Engaged Learning experiences into school life for students in their JK-12th grade path at Park Tudor are profound. Among them:
The community is a laboratory for applied learning. Renowned for his nuggets of wisdom, founding father Benjamin Franklin offered: “Tell me and I forget. Teach me and I remember. Involve me and I learn.” Franklin might as well have created a tagline for experiential education! Community settings offer a rich assortment of ways for students to apply concepts, knowledge and skills they have learned in the classroom. For example, waterways and community gardens are natural labs where students can use what they learn in biology or environmental education as they test water samples for pollutants or soil samples for nutrient quality and then educate community partners about their findings. Public places are a perfect learning ground to help fine and performing arts students feel what it’s like to exhibit their art pieces or perform for an audience while utilizing their talents for the pleasure of members of the broader community.
Community-based learning builds vital skills. The “21st century competencies” of the Asia Society (which has influenced thinking in education today) promotes three categories of skills – cognitive, interpersonal and intrapersonal competencies – that include creativity, collaboration, leadership, global awareness, and intrinsic motivation. Empathy, critical thinking, problem solving, adaptability, and an entrepreneurial mindset appear on other lists. Physiology and health students would use many skills including collaboration, creativity, problem solving, and critical thinking as they create exhibits and activities for a
health and wellness fair they sponsor at a local park. The utility of these skills is wide-ranging. When sociology students study the challenges of local public transportation and work with transportation officials to research potential solutions, they can apply critical thinking, problem solving, and an entrepreneurial perspective. In both experiences, students learn the subject’s content more deeply. Moreover, physiology and health students put similar skills to work when they learn about nutrition and calculating caloric intake or about the math and physics applied to physical activity (like shooting hoops). Community-based learning experiences naturally build the skills that are so valued by today’s leaders and growth industries.
Openness to diverse people and perspectives is essential in our connected world. As America becomes increasingly diverse, the opportunities for students to connect virtually and in-person with people around their city, country and world have expanded dramatically. Young people need a learning environment in which they can get to know different people and can develop their ability to work with people of different backgrounds and perspectives. Community-based learning experiences can be that place. For example, Spanish class students that regularly tutor younger children at another school can build relationships that help them learn more deeply about these children’s life experiences. While the students put into practice Spanish vocabulary and grammar rules, they get to know and care about these native speakers. As U.S. History students study the Civil Rights movement, they can conduct an oral history project with local community organizers to gather their perspectives and understand whether some of the movement’s principles are still in use today. These types of projects can provide new perspectives for students and also model for them how a citizen might address problems that affect other people in their community. All of these examples show strong links between foundational content and skills learned in the classroom and how students can address larger needs in the community. While independent schools should be engaged citizens of their communities, they must simultaneously prepare young people to be problem solvers and innovators who know how to utilize what they learn to work well with others. This preparation will lead to their own success as well as their ability to contribute to a good society and a better world.
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FEATURE
Celebrating 40 Years of the Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium and Fine Arts Building By Debbie Stuart Everett ’69, Park Tudor School Archivist PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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FEATURE
We are thrilled and a little incredulous to be marking the 40th anniversary of the Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium and Fine Arts Building. Has it really been 40 years? Throughout this school year, each performance in Ayres Auditorium will be an opportunity to celebrate this important milestone in our school’s history.
Our campus sits on property that was once a fruit tree farm and working apple orchard. For years, Indianapolis families made the trip to 71st and College to buy their cider and apples from Lilly Orchard’s cider barn. Park Tudor continues to honor our roots on this campus (pun intended) by providing apple cider and other apple products on site at the Lilly Orchard Café.
Since its dedication in 1976, Ayres Auditorium has served as a meeting place for the school, as well as a showcase for the performing arts at Park Tudor, hosting musicals, plays, vocal and instrumental performances. Many Park Tudor alumni who are now professional performers point to the Ayres Auditorium stage as the place where their love of the arts began.
Before the construction of the Ayres Auditorium, Park Tudor students performed their plays in that same cider barn, which was converted to a small theater and classroom spaces that were home to art classes. The cider barn sat on the site now occupied by the circle driveway next to the Auditorium; the barn was torn down once the Ayres Auditorium and Fine Arts Building was completed and ready to be occupied.
Construction of the Frederic M. Ayres Jr. Auditorium.
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Both Park School and Tudor Hall emphasized the fine and performing arts, and that tradition has continued at Park Tudor. The donors of the Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium supported the initiative to elevate the performing arts by building a beautiful space dedicated to facilitating high quality performances and by providing space for art, music and dance classes to carry on the tradition of arts education. In 1992, a major renovation added a studio theatre as well as updated and added classroom and studio space. As we celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Auditorium, the facilities continue to support our ability to present sophisticated productions with exceptional and professional set and lighting designs. Our Strategic Plan, PT2020, references our desire to “provide a broad, outstanding liberal arts experience – one that encourages a healthy balance between academics, arts, and athletics – while also giving our students the opportunity to dive deeply in an area of passion.” For many of our students, that means a deep dive into one of the arts.
A Timeline: 100 years of Cider and the Arts; 40 Years in the Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium 1800s: The property that Park Tudor calls home began as forest and farm land and was purchased in 1896 by J.K. Lilly, Sr. The family developed the land from a chicken farm into a fruit tree farm, which included a working cider press. For many years, Indianapolis families made the trip to 71st and College Avenue to purchase cider and apples from the Lilly Orchard. In 1965, Mr. Lilly’s sons deeded the property to Park School. 1960s:
When Park School moved to this property, the cider barn was just west of where Allen Clowes Commons was built, occupying the spot where the circle driveway eventually was placed. The barn was converted to a theatre in the round when Park School and Tudor Hall merged to form Park Tudor. Clowes Commons was also used for music performances. Small classroom spaces in the barn were home to art classes and even a typing classroom.
When the farm was first acquired, it was in deplorable shape. All hillsides…had been unevenly cultivated for inappropriate crops for such a rolling terrain…The saving grace was a large number of hard maple sugar trees. A sugar camp was almost immediately established with its row of three kettles…and as the boiling sap thickened, it was dipped from one kettle to the next. It took a barrel of sap to make a gallon of syrup. Maple syrup then retailed at $1.00 a gallon. Father had determined to make the place a fruit farm…and so he bought small fruit trees from the Bridgeport Nurseries…and began setting them out. Eli Lilly From Notes on the J. K. Lilly, Sr. Apple Farm Park Tudor Archives
the 425-seat auditorium was named for Frederic M. Ayres, Jr., a 1929 Park School graduate who had served as president of the Tudor Hall School Board of Trustees. The Ayres family has included Park School and Tudor Hall alumni since the 1920s. The Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium was dedicated in November 1976.
1976: The Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium and Fine Arts Building was dedicated and provided space for choral music, orchestra, lower school music, private lesson studios, Spanish, French, English and Speech classrooms as well as a dance studio, photography dark room, the well-equipped auditorium, and even a television studio! 1980s: This decade marked more growth in the arts. With nearly 75% of the student body involved in the arts, music, drama, and art classes occupied every possible space. In addition, a new curricular offering – computing – was making a splash and gaining more student interest. The television studio was converted to the school’s first computer lab to accommodate this emerging field.
1990s:
In 1999, a major renovation connected the Fine Arts Building to the Upper School building, added a studio theatre, more classrooms as well as ceramic, photography and art studios, providing even more space for students to experience their creative side. The Upper School building and the Fine Arts building were connected to accommodate student movement.
1970s: The emphasis that Park Tudor places on the arts stretch- 2016: es back to our two predecessor schools. When the schools merged, the arts held a prominent spot in the curriculum. Music classes were held in the Lecture Hall with performances in Clowes Commons. The Cider barn was converted to house drama and art. The arts solidified their spot in the curriculum and on our campus.
1975: Park Tudor received a bequest of $1 million from Nancy Noyes Ayres that, together with other gifts, elevated the performing arts by building a beautiful space dedicated to facilitating high-quality performances and providing space for art, music and dance classes to carry on the tradition of arts education. The Ayres family owned the city’s flagship department store and
As we celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium, the facilities continue to support our ability to present sophisticated arts programming. Our Strategic Plan, PT2020, specifically references our desire to “provide a broad, outstanding liberal arts experience – one that encourages a healthy balance between academics, arts, and athletics – while also giving students the opportunity to dive deeply in an area of passion.” Every year, approximately 80% of our students take that deep dive into one of the arts. Park Tudor School’s rich history creates this extraordinary opportunity to celebrate art and the human experience.
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Photo by Steve Jurvetson
Hip-Hopping through American History with Hamilton By Dr. Sven Dubie, Social Studies Department Chair
How did Hamilton, the story of the “ten-dollar founding father without a father” become a cultural phenomenon the likes of which have not been seen since Star Wars or the Beatles? As anyone familiar with Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Tony Award-winning hip-hop musical will tell you, if you listen to the soundtrack a few times, it seems impossible not to get hooked on the incredible story of Alexander Hamilton, with its irresistible mix of military heroism, love, political intrigue, the first major sex scandal in American history, and the tragic demise of the protagonist in a duel of honor. Yet, even with all this going for it, I have to admit I was initially somewhat skeptical of power of the story when some of my AP United States History students urged me to listen to it during the 2015-16 school year. However, during the summer of 2016, Park Tudor juniors Megan Chapelle and Katie Couch persuaded me to listen to the Hamilton soundtrack during long van rides that were part of the trip that concludes my Southern Studies summer course. After just a few hours, I was stricken with a full blown, incurable—and some might say, annoying— case of “Hamilaria:” an affliction whereby when one hears just a fragment of a line from the musical, the victim immediately has an almost irrepressible urge to break out into song.
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Recently, I gathered a group of Upper School students who are Hamilton fans to talk about what makes the production so compelling. It is impossible to overstate their enthusiasm for the musical or their willingness to talk about it, as they might be inclined to say, “non-stop!” I shared with them that what I found immediately compelling is how good the history is in the musical, which is based on Ron Chernow’s monumental biography of Hamilton, published in 2004. In fact, I noticed this fall that though I annually teach about Hamilton’s landmark financial plan and the debate over whether the United States should support France in the wars of the French Revolution, never have I had students come to my classes already well versed in some of the details and nuance that they have garnered by listening to “Cabinet Battles #1 & #2.” As senior Annie Dora affirmed, the musical is a great primer and study aid on early American history. Dora’s peers agreed, remarking that part of the appeal is that Hamilton presents history in a way that is accessible and highly entertaining. Chapelle added, “It also reminds us that the members of the Founding Generation were not infallible, and were shaped by very human qualities, emotions and shortcomings.” Junior Sally Root also pointed out that the plot is driven in part by a variation on a classic immigrant narrative—rising from rags
FEATURE to the seat of power—that is highly relatable to anyone familiar with the story of America. Other students were quick to add that, in addition to the good history Hamilton provides, the music, staging and casting are equally compelling. As junior Aidan Baker observed, “Never have I seen a work of art that so effortlessly entertains thespians and wows historians.” Senior Kylie Clouse agreed, arguing that Hamilton “dramatically redefines what a Broadway musical can be and do.” There is nothing saccharine or campy about the production. Indeed, many young people are drawn to it because of its intensity and blunt authenticity. It is the antidote to our sense of Founders as frozen in marble monuments or gazing vacantly and square-jawed from atop Mount Rushmore. Of course, one of the salient characteristics of the musical is its well-known and prominent embrace of hip-hop, including some political struggles recast as rap battles—such as the Cabinet fights between Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson. As Baker put it, “my newfound love for Hamilton lies in the music itself. In addition to the addictive sense of urgency rap adds to the production, the parallel drawn by Miranda, comparing colonial Americans with the rap artists of today’s society is truly amazing once you recognize it. As Alexander Hamilton started from nothing and worked his way to the top, many rap artists in today’s world are trying to do the same in the music industry.” But as Root adds, Hamilton “captures many different musical styles, reflecting the musical complexity and sophistication, as well as the multi-media environment of today.” In fact, in addition to the predominance of hip-hop, the musical has an operatic quality at times in terms of the intensity and raw emotions on display and the terrible tragedies that befall members of the Hamilton family. Appropriately, Miranda makes use of leitmotifs that recur throughout the drama, anticipating the appearance of a particular character or theme. Nevertheless, as junior Kamryn Sarratt contended, the musical complexity is juxtaposed with a very simple stage set, encouraging the audience to focus on the music and plot.
Photo by Steve Jurvetson In the recent PBS documentary on the making of the musical, “Hamilton’s America,” one of the commentators suggests that Miranda could possibly be the greatest playwright since Shakespeare. At first, the comparison seems absurd—if only because no one in the English language is allowed to rival Shakespeare. And yet, if one considers the skillful rhymes and rhythms, the witty wordplay, and the use of dramatic history to convey a sense of the human condition, the parallel might not be so off base. Indeed, it points to new ways in which Hamilton might be incorporated into the curriculum, as well as opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration—at the Upper School and even Middle School level. And given that the musical underscores how obsessed Hamilton was with leaving behind a legacy, one has to imagine he would be deeply “satisfied” to know the story of his life and works has found its way into the hearts and minds of a whole new generation of admiring students—and educators.
The students also are drawn to the casting, that, much like the outcome of the Battle of Yorktown, seems to leave the world turned upside-down. In the original New York production, people of color played the roles of all of the powerful white men and women—with the exception of King George III. Moreover, Miranda gives voice to the feminist aspirations of women such as the Schulyer sisters, whom history has all but forgotten but are moved to the center of the stage in Hamilton. Angelica Schulyer, for instance, announces that she has been reading Thomas Paine’s Common Sense, and that when she meets Thomas Jefferson she intends to “compel him to write a sequel” to the Declaration of Independence that would include the full equality of women. In Hamilton she finds “the feeling of freedom” in matching wits with someone who is her equal. Yet she is fully aware of the irony that society will give her—the daughter of a wealthy and powerful New York statesman—less freedom and equality than the penniless, illegitimate, immigrant Hamilton.
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Alumni Feature:
Janet Flanner ’09: Tudor Hall’s Contribution to the “Lost Generation” By Cathy Yingling Chapelle ’87
She might not be as well known as Ernest Hemingway or F. Scott Fitzgerald, but Tudor Hall alum Janet Flanner ’09 was a significant literary figure of the “Lost Generation,” chronicling life in Paris from 1925 – 1975 for The New Yorker, and writing several novels and many short stories and poems along the way.
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Janet Flanner with her friend, Ernest Hemingway PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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FEATURE drama and eventually film critic for the Indianapolis Star. In fact, she was the first serious critic of “the movies.” However, it was during her time in Chicago that she met the man who would become her husband, Lane Rehm. Janet rather unexpectedly married Lane just before the United States entered World War I. After Lane tried unsuccessfully to enlist in the military during the war, the couple moved to New York. In New York, Janet began socializing with a group of writers and was eventually welcomed by members of the famed Algonquin Roundtable group, admired for her personality and wit. New York was also where she met and fell in love with a fellow writer, Solita Solano. Realizing that she and Solita could not live as they wanted to in New York, particularly after her mother and sister moved to the city and were living close by, Janet and Solita left for Greece, where Solita had been assigned by National Geographic. Janet and Solita spent several months in Greece, and then traveled around Europe as Solita completed various travel writing assignments. In 1922 they landed in Paris, eventually taking a room at the Hotel St. Germain, where they lived for 16 years. Once in Paris, Janet and Solita began socializing with the many American expatriates who had moved to Paris to experience the Jazz Age. She frequented the American bookstore Shakespeare and Company and became friends with its proprietor Sylvia Beach, along with Gertrude Stein, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway, who called her “Jan.”
The Library of Congress Janet was born in Indianapolis in 1892 to Frank and Mary Flanner. Frank Flanner helped run Flanner and Buchanan mortuary, which he owned with his brother-in-law, Charles Buchanan. Mary Flanner was a writer and devotee of theater, and Janet and her two sisters grew up surrounded by an artistic sensibility. Her parents were also socially progressive, inviting Booker T. Washington to their home in 1896, when he was not welcome to stay anywhere else in Indianapolis. Janet later recalled sitting on Mr. Washington’s knee as a very young child; he asked her if she was afraid of him because he was black, to which she responded, “No, should I be?” Janet began attending Tudor Hall at age 11 in 1903, just after the school’s founding, and graduated in 1909. She began writing at Tudor Hall, contributing regularly to the school’s yearbook, The Chronicle. She was also elected president of her class for the 1905-06 school year. Following her graduation, she traveled with her family to Europe, where she first developed a fascination with life abroad and vowed to return. Soon after the Flanners returned from Europe, Janet’s father, Frank, committed suicide, an event that would forever alter Janet’s life and bond her with her good friend Ernest Hemingway, who also lost his father to suicide. Following her father’s death, Janet went to Chicago to attend college, but was an unenthusiastic student (except in her English classes), and she soon returned to Indianapolis, eventually taking her first writing job in 1917 as a
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In 1925, Janet took the job that would shape her life for the next 50 years. The job offer came through her friend Jane Grant, a journalist for The New York Times, who was married to Harold Ross, the founder of The New Yorker. The New Yorker published its first issue in February 1925, and soon after Jane approached Janet to take over the “Letter from Paris,” which was originally written by a contributor who, in Jane’s opinion, didn’t really know Paris. Jane wrote to Janet, “He (Ross) wants anecdotal and incidental stuff on places familiar to Americans and on people of note whether they are Americans or internationally prominent – dope on fields of the arts and a little on fashions, perhaps…” Initially, Harold Ross wanted all of the writers who contributed to The New Yorker to remain anonymous, and gave Janet the nom de plume, “Genêt.” Janet’s columns were well received, and soon “Genêt” was something of a celebrity, known for covering the most fashionable people, events, restaurants, and trends in Paris. Eager to earn more money, Janet began writing a second feature for The New Yorker, called “Profile,” which would document the most fascinating personalities of the era. The first “Profile” was of the dancer Isadora Duncan, and appeared in the January 1, 1927 issue. Other notables profiled by Janet in the late twenties included the fashion designer Paul Poiret and the writer Edith Wharton. Perhaps Janet’s most notable profile was a three-part series about Adolf Hitler, written in 1935 and entitled “Fuehrer.” Janet wanted to write about Hitler the man, using his quirky habits, dress, diet and private life to paint a picture. She deliberately avoided taking a political stand, which was appreciated by some but criticized by others. Janet tried to remain optimistic that war could
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be avoided in the years leading up to World War II, but eventually sailed for the United States on October 5, 1939, just over a month after France and Britain declared war on Germany. During World War II, Janet and Solita lived in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, which was close enough to be accessible to Manhattan but much less expensive. Janet continued to gather news from France and contribute to The New Yorker, writing stories about the German occupation of France, but with a much more somber tone than “Genêt” typically employed. She wrote an article about the French Resistance entitled “Soldats de France, Debout,” which examined Charles de Gaulle and the Free French; this article was written under her own name, and “Genêt” disappeared for the next four years. In October 1944, Janet decided to return to France, and flew to London as an official war correspondent for The New Yorker. By the end of November, she was back in Paris and in December “Genêt” was back and submitted her first new “Letter from Paris,” although this one documented the terrible conditions in wartime Paris. She rejoined her friend, Ernest Hemingway, who was also serving as a war correspondent. After the war, Janet continued to write for The New Yorker, covering topics like the Nuremburg Trials and the recovery of artworks stolen by the Nazis. She traveled around Europe and reported from Vienna, Prague and Warsaw, documenting the plight of
Polish Jews and the persistent anti-Semitism. Janet remained connected to The New Yorker and worked regularly through 1971, when she was 78 years old. Eventually her health began to fail and her work became more sporadic, although even in 1975, after suffering a seizure during a trip to America, she still planned to return to Paris and write more “Letters from Paris.” She did return, and in late August dispatched her final letter covering politics, the arts, fashion and the local scene, written as a farewell to her readers. Janet Flanner passed away on November 7, 1978, and her funeral was attended by more than 200 luminaries including Jackie Onassis, the actress Celeste Holm, and Mary Hemingway, Ernest Hemingway’s widow. Janet was recently celebrated at Park Tudor with a performance of excerpts from the new one-woman show, “They Call Me Genet.” Written by playwright D. Paul Thomas and performed by Jen Johansen ’91, the show delighted the audience with scenes from Janet’s remarkable life. Prior to the show, attendees enjoyed a reception in the courtyard in front of Ayres Auditorium, which was generously underwritten by Janet’s relatives Bruce Buchanan ’73 and Scott Keller ’63.
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ALUMNI NEWS
Alumni News Greetings from your Alumni Board President Your Alumni Association Board of Directors hit the ground running this past summer and has already hosted a number of exciting events. Despite the extreme heat, our annual picnic and Indians Game attracted a record number of alumni and family members. In October, we provided volunteers to help build our Park Tudor Habit for Humanity house, and hosted our first-ever combined alumni/parent family event, a pumpkin carving activity at the Lilly Orchard Cafe. You can best support us by becoming involved in the life of the school! Our involvement will have an immediate impact upon the success of our alma mater, its current students and our alumni community. I would like to encourage all alumni to stay connected: • Follow Park Tudor on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram. In addition, Park Tudor has a LinkedIn group specifically for alumni. This is a great way to learn about upcoming events and school news. • Become a member of our online alumni community. For iPhone and Android users, search for “EverTrue” and install the free app in the iTunes or Google Play store. Once you are approved, you can access an alumni directory, maps showing where nearby alums are, classmate information and much more.
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• Keep your contact information current and submit news to the school. New Job…moved…promotion…new baby? Go to parktudor.org and click on the alumni tab to keep the school updated on your life. Make sure you mark your calendars for Alumni Weekend, April 28-29, 2017! The alumni board is working to make some enhancements to the Saturday evening reception – you won’t want to miss it! I look forward to seeing you then! Joe Hawkins ’96
ALUMNI NEWS
Reunion Giving Provides Special Tributes Reunions are a wonderful way to reconnect with classmates and in some cases rekindle friendships. The Tudor Hall Class of 1966 and the Park School Class of 1961 enjoy a close camaraderie, and wanted to use the occasion of their 50th and 55th reunions to remember special people who are no longer here to take part in the celebration. The Tudor Hall Class of 1966 chose to make their Reunion Class Gifts in memory of their deceased classmates: Sally Adams, Sally Beck, Paula Eaton, Helen Williams Ehrlich, Sally Adams LentzCrouse, Jill Mountain Raiser and Suzanne Stafford.
Tudor Hall Class of 1966
The participating members of the Tudor Hall Class of 1966 include: Janice Burtt Jacobsen Judy Baker Armstrong Marilyn Mahoney Molly Johnson Barbee Jane Harper Sims Beverly Berner Starr Townsend Cynthia Blasingham Emily Moore Sturman Mary Bookwalter Joan Woodard Staubach Debra Dudenhoffer Falender Kaarta Woolling Nemeth Catherine Freebairn Kathy VonDerau Claudia Haslauer Herzog Members of the Park School Class of 1961 made their Reunion Class Gift in memory of Mr. Jim Foxlow: Tom Teel Logan Blackburn Paul Whitney Mike Chapman Jim Worrall Terry Cline Greg Zolezzi Bill McFarlane Alex Rogers
Park School Class of 1961
For a complete listing of honorary and memorial gifts made between July 1, 2015 and June 30, 2016, please turn to page 25.
Correction In the summer issue of The Phoenix, the Park School classes of 1956 and 1966 were transposed. Following are the correct pho-
tos. In addition, in the Tudor Hall Class of 1961 photo, Rosemary Bretzman Igney was misidentified as Alice Stiles Burgess. We regret the errors.
Park School Class of 1966 Back Row (l-r): Larry Turnbull, Ken Templeton, Bill Julian. Front Row (l-r): Steve Judson, Clay Conner, Pat Stamper, Rodney Linkous.
Park School Class of 1956 Back Row (l-r): Tom Kirby, Torry Rogers, Courtenay Weldon. Front Row (l-r): John Stiles, Steve Ransburg, Don Hines. PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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ALUMNI NEWS
The school is celebrating two significant milestones this year, and we will commemorate both events over Alumni Weekend. Stay tuned for additional information as plans come together for the following:
Friday, April 28 • Distinguished Alumni Dinner – Woodstock Club, 6 p.m. Saturday, April 29 • 5K Scholarship Run – 8:30 a.m., Park Tudor Campus Join current students, alumni, current and past parents, and other friends of Park Tudor for a friendly event to benefit Park Tudor scholarships. • Fifty-Year Club Lunch (for Classes of 1967 and earlier) – Woodstock Club, 11:00 a.m. Classes of 1942, 1947, 1952, 1957, 1962 and 1967 will have their class photo taken immediately following the luncheon. • Alumni Celebration (for all alumni) – Clowes Commons, 4:30 – 7:00 p.m. Classes of 1972, 1977, 1982, 1987, 1992, 1997, 2002, 2007 and 2012 will have their class photo taken during the reception. Exact times will be published in registration information to be included in the Spring issue of the Phoenix.
• Celebrating Park School: The Pre-Merger Years From 1946-1967, Park School for boys was located on Cold Springs Road, which now serves as home to Marian University. The Park School Class of 1967 was the last class to graduate from this location, as the school relocated to our current campus in the fall of 1967 and merged with Tudor Hall in 1970. We will celebrate this 50th anniversary during the afternoon of Saturday, April 29th. • 40 Years: Frederic M. Ayres, Jr. Auditorium In the spring of 1975, the school received a bequest of $1 million from the Ayres family, who owned the city’s flagship department store. A 425-seat auditorium was constructed and named for Frederic M. Ayres, Jr., a 1929 Park School graduate. The Ayres Auditorium and Fine Arts Building opened in 1976, and thousands of students over the last 40 years developed a love and appreciation for performing arts on its stage. We will celebrate the role the Arts have played at Park Tudor School during the afternoon of Saturday, April 29th. Alumni Weekend event details will be available in the spring issue of the Phoenix, the Alumni Weekend brochure and the Park Tudor website. If you have questions or would like to volunteer, please contact your class representative (listed below) or Gretchen Hueni at ghueni@parktudor.org or 317-415-2766.
Reunion Class Representatives Richard West ’42 Rosalie McKee Lange ’47 Jody Thomas Martin ’47 M.C. Swartz Pennington ’52 Barbara Kroger ’57 Margaret Spiegel Dawson ’62 Gordon Wishard ’62 Ellen Lee ’67 James Sturman ’67
Sarah Young Powers ’77 Pamela Robertson ’82 Valerie Ferguson Stewart ’87 Becky Cochran Ullyot ’87 Holly Wilson Cole ’92 Kate Bannister Gorman ’92 Jim Strickland ’92 Sam Anaokar ’97 Sarah Smith Hawkins ’97
Amy Kleymeyer Stevens ’97 Jonathan McDowell ’02 Yara Najjar Sabga ’02 Courtney Cantor ’07 Elliott Thomasson ’07 Reilly Martin ’12 Scott Meyer ’12
Alumni – we need your e-mail address to keep you up-to-date regarding alumni events and activities! Please send your contact information to ghueni@parktudor.org.
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ALUMNI NEWS
Park Tudor Alumni Association Board of Directors The Park Tudor Alumni Association Board of Directors welcomes five new members: Maidena Manders Fulford ’89 is an attorney with Fulford & Fulford. She graduated from Randolph College with a B.A. in Communications and from the Indiana University McKinney School of Law in Indianapolis. She is committed to causes supporting economic empowerment, poverty alleviation, and children. She and her husband Wade have two daughters. Natalie Mercho Taler ’96 received her BA in Psychology and French from Indiana University and graduated from the University of Maryland Dental School with a Doctor of Dental Surgery. She is employed with Every and Mercho Dental in Carmel, Indiana. Natalie is married to David and they have two boys, Jackson (6) and Hudson (3 ½). In her free time, Natalie enjoys cooking, baking, hiking, skiing and SCUBA.
Alumni Board: Back: Zach Wills ’03, Beth Tolbert Johnson ’03, Kate Engle ’95, Matt Kleymeyer ’00, Joe Hawkins ’96, Ben Miner ’02, Emily Bohn ’12, Natalie Marcho Taler ’96, Katelyn Miner Fisher ’04, Kristi Kirles Walden ’98 Front: Courtney Maguire Day ’03, Andy Marra ’06, Tony Holton ’06, Julianne Sicklesteel Brainard ’07, Maidena Manders Fulford ’89, Mallory Reider Inselberg ’98
Kristi Kirles Walden ’98 graduated from Indiana University with a degree in Informatics and a minor in Journalism. She works for her third-generation owned family business, Kirles Jewelers, located in Indianapolis. She is married to Nick and they enjoy travel and their two dogs, Mazey and Dutchess. Kristi serves on the Orchard School Alumni Board and Kappa Kappa Gamma Association. In addition, she has volunteered every Friday for the past 13 years in her mom’s Kindergarten class in the Indianapolis Public Schools district. Ben Miner ’02 graduated from Indiana University and is employed with Extremity Solutions, where he serves as a Territory Sales Manager in the Orthopedic Trauma unit. He joins his sister, Katelyn Fisher ’04, on the board which may very well be our first brother/sister duo to serve. In his free time, he enjoys golfing, duck hunting and water skiing. Ben is an enthusiastic supporter of Park Tudor. Emily Bohn ’12 graduated from Butler University with a BA in Theatre and a minor in Marketing. She was recognized by Butler in 2016 as a top 100 student. Emily is a freelance actor, and also volunteers for Ovar’Coming Together. She enjoys theatre, the Arts, and travel and her interests include social media marketing and reading. Each year, two students are selected from the senior class to serve as senior class representatives. They spend their senior year as ad-hoc members of the Alumni Board of Directors, and make presentations at each board meeting. After graduation, they will serve as their class representatives. Our 2017 representatives are: TyraRose Nibbs ’17 is a leader among her class. She serves as president of the Cultural Acceptance Club and is the Diversity Chair for the Upper School. She is the captain of the track team and received a Varsity letter each of her four years on the girls’ basketball team. TyraRose is an Honor Thespian and serves as secretary of the society. She received the Jill Blair Voice Scholarship and the Joi Lynne Warner Scholarship for community service and leadership.
Trace Arbuckle and TyraRose Nibbs Trace Arbuckle ’17 Trace is a National Merit Semifinalist, a Cum Laude Commendee and an AP Scholar with Distinction. He received the Joe Dezelan Scholarship his sophomore, junior and senior year, and also received the Freshman Honor Scholarship. Outside the classroom, Trace plays basketball and was a member of the 2015 state championship team. He also plays varsity baseball, sings in Madrigals and is an active member of Student Council.
Calendar of Events
Park School Night at the PT Basketball Game Tuesday, January 17, 2017 Panther Room in the PT Gym 6:00 p.m. - JV Game 7:30 p.m. - Varsity Game RSVP to Gretchen Hueni, ghueni@parktudor.org
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ALUMNI NEWS
Endowment Society Members Supporters of Park Tudor School who have included the school as a beneficiary designation or in their will or other estate plans are recognized in our Endowment Society. We welcome and thank our newest members: Fritz and Shele French Nick and Joni Hrisomalos Tina Mark Weldon ’69
“Why We Became Members of the Park Tudor Endowment Society” Dr. Nick and Mrs. Joni Hrisomalos, parents of Frank ’02 and Emily ’04 Nick and Joni Hrisomalos were raised to appreciate the value of hard work, service to others and education – ideals that they have worked hard to instill in their own children. Nick’s great-grandfather immigrated to the United States from Greece at age 14. After serving in both the Greek and U.S. armies, he opened a tiny shop in Bloomington, Indiana and worked day and night in pursuit of the American Dream. His wife and son worked alongside him as they opened the iconic Nick’s English Hut, located on Kirkwood Avenue, in 1927. Knowing that education was imperative to a successful future, Nick’s father attended IU and studied medicine as a means of serving others. That tra-
dition has now spanned three generations as Nick and his two children, Frank and Emily, have pursued careers in the medical field as well. Joni has a heart for service and her work has supported and strengthened the Indianapolis community. She has been a member of the American Pianists Association since its inception and has served on its board for the past six years. While her children were at Park Tudor, Joni served on the Mother’s Council and was a substitute French teacher. According to Joni, the opportunity enabled her to see first-hand the dedication of the Park Tudor faculty. Park Tudor’s strong academic program and committed, caring teachers drew the Hrisomalos family to the school. “Our children will tell you that our sending them to Park Tudor was the most significant event in their upbringing,” explains Joni. “Nick and I feel strongly that our children thrived academically in college and medical school because of the tremendous education they received from their Park Tudor teachers.” Nick also agrees, “Park Tudor has been a wonderful part of our children’s lives. Their amazing teachers and mentors helped build a solid foundation for their future endeavors - providing them with the skills to successfully navigate life’s obstacles. Park Tudor and its teachers are positive and uplifting and see each student’s special needs and attributes; thus allowing them to realize their highest potential.” As a sign of gratitude, Nick and Joni decided to include Park Tudor School in their will. “We cannot think of any other place that has had such a positive effect on our family. Joni and I want to support the school so it will prosper and succeed and continue to be there for future generations of families like ours.” If you would like to consider including Park Tudor in your financial plans, please contact Gretchen Hueni, Assistant Director of Development, at 317-415-2766.
London, Normandy and Paris Trip for Adults: July 2017 Upper School Social Studies teacher Kathryn Lerch has organized a trip to London, Normandy and Paris tentatively scheduled for July 5-14, 2017. The trip is primarily designed for adults (Park Tudor parents, faculty, and alumni), and Upper School students may also join if space is available and their application is approved. Adult online registration will continue until December 1, 2016, or until the trip is full.
Nick, Joni, Emily ’04, and Frank ’02 Hrismalos.
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During the school year, there will be monthly evening discussions for travelers going on the trip, as well as a list of suggested readings for travelers. Please contact Kathryn Lerch at klerch@ parktudor.org if you would like more information about the trip.
ALUMNI NEWS
Lara Beeler Daniel ’87: Fighting for Quality Water in Flint By Nancy Canull, Retired Lower School Teacher
“I try not to cry actually because these children should not be going through all of this. This should not be part of their lives,” said Lara Beeler Daniel, Park Tudor class of ’87. “They should have a life full of fun and laughter and not be worried about their little brothers and little sisters and their dogs.” Lara Beeler Daniel ’87 is the principal of St. John Vianney, a parochial school of 150 students from 3 years old through 8th grade in Flint, Michigan. Lara and her entire school have been living through the water crisis in Flint and experiencing its devastating effects firsthand. It all began when a local pediatrician, Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha, became convinced that the puzzling and out-of-the-ordinary behavior and health of her young patients was due to the high lead levels in the water. She reported her hypothesis, and was proven to be correct. Lead poisoning affects “your cognition and your behavior. It actually drops your IQ,” she says. “The very next day I started our crusade to see if that lead in the water was getting into the bodies of children,” says the doctor-turned-campaigner who became the first to sound the alarm about the water crisis afflicting the struggling city. Once the newspapers and other media heard and broadcast it, the world changed for all those within the city limits, including St. John Vianney. What did this mean for Lara and the others in the school? Every student is still drinking bottled water all day, every day until the water is clean again. All students ages 3-6 will always drink bottled water at school, since any lead consumption in small children is detrimental to their development. The kitchen staff uses bottled water for cooking and cleaning every day. None of the water fountains can be used yet; last year, they had to be run daily so the pipes would not worsen. Lara has also helped to take up the fight for clean water in Flint, answering phone calls, writing articles for Catholic newspapers and Catholic church bulletins in the area, granting radio and TV interviews, and appearing in a documentary, all for the sake of letting people know how this condition affected her students and the school. It has been an opportunity to inform and educate people. Lara credits her Park Tudor experience for creating a poised, well-spoken adult who has the breadth of view to see a situation, tackle it, and help others to understand and appreciate it. Since the situation in Flint generated national and world-wide attention, there have been many heartwarming stories that have helped take the edge off a critical predicament: - A Catholic school in Traverse City, Michigan, called and said they wanted to adopt St. John Vianney and asked what they could they do to help. - A Catholic school in Florida with the same name called to say they were sending money from the children’s donations. - A school in Kansas City called and said they were studying water and realized they could help.
Lara Beeler Daniel with students. - A brewery in Colorado filled a semi-load of beer cans with water and had it delivered to Flint. - Movie stars and celebrities appeared in Flint and would accompany semi-loads of water to different schools. - An elderly lady stopped by the school and gave them a check. - At least three Catholic schools organized fundraisers and delivered checks for $1000 to $3000 to the school. It was a devastating year and took a toll on everyone, and it continues to be a challenge. Even with filters on the water fountains, children are not using them. They are refilling reusable water bottles from water coolers to cut down on the amount of plastic bottles. Last year, the bottles used at the school went to a local Catholic charity who filled the empty water bottles with Hope Soap, a homemade laundry detergent for their homeless clients. Enrollment at St. John Vianney is down, and their pipes are rusting from the inside, caused by the high levels of chemicals used to recoat the pipes so the lead does not continue to leach into the water. The school also has a nurse from the health department give each child flouride treatments once a week, because there is no flouride in the bottled water they are drinking. Fortunately, Congress just passed a bill for $170 billion dollars for aid to Flint and other communities where the president has declared a state of emergency. The money will be used to continue to address the needs of families and students at St. John Vianney, as well as Flint, giving the people of Flint a ray of hope.
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CLASS NOTES
1966 George B. Huff, Jr. was selected to the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) for NIST’s Community Resilience Program as the Disaster Resilience Fellow for Business Continuity. George founded and owns The Continuity Project, LLC, which provides Business Continuity Management consulting services to organizations of all types and sizes. This year, The Continuity Project, LLC, has assisted organizations with their alignment and accredited certification to ISO 22301, the global standard for business continuity management systems. George serves as Special Advisor, Standing Committee on Disaster Response and Preparedness for the American Bar Association and is an elected member of the Board of Directors of ANSI-ASQ National Accreditation Board. George is an ANSI-approved U.S. Delegate to the International Organization for Standardization’s Technical Committee 292, Security and Resilience, which is responsible for developing international standards in the area of business continuity management and organizational resilience.
1973 Bruce Buchanan recently presented an exhibit of photography entitled “10,000 Steps” at the Speedway Center for the Arts. Trained as a photojournalist, he worked for three U.S. daily newspapers and then spent ten years as a commercial photog-
Bruce Buchanan, Heather Teets, Andy Teets, and Gretchen Hueni.
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rapher in Milwaukee. He then sold his business in 1996 to work in his family’s funeral and cemetery operations in Indianapolis, Flanner and Buchanan. You can learn more about Bruce’s photography at buchananphotocelebrations.com.
1987 Kelly Lamm Teller recently attended the opening of the NAtional Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington D.C.
1999 Drew Elliott joined the panel of judges for VH1’s America’s Next Top Model. The show will debut on Monday, December 12, 2016. He is Chief Creative Officer for Paper Magazine in New York City.
2000 Laura Howard McHenry and her husband welcomed a son, Conor Keating McHenry, on June 29, 2016, joining big brother Jack William (2). They live in Raleigh, North Carolina, where she works as an attorney for the NC Department of Justice representing UNC.
2001 Richard Trierweiler is making a stop in New Zealand. After hiking the Pacific Crest Trail, working as a base physician at McMurdo research station in Antarctica for six months, traveling around the world, and bicycling from Seattle to Bar Harbor, ME
CLASS NOTES
Richard and Stephanie Trierweiler with his wife Stephanie, Richard is now working for a year as an emergency medicine consultant in Whanganui, New Zealand.
2002 Frank Hrisomalos married Janice Pascuzzi, a health care attorney, in May 2016. Frank received a combined MD-MBA degree from the Kelley School of Business and Indiana University School of Medicine in 2011. He is a Vitreoretinal Surgery Fellow at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis but he and Janice plan to reside in Carmel, Indiana.
2004 Emily Hrisomalos received her medical degree from the Indiana University School of Medicine in 2012. She is a Case Western University School of Medicine Otorhinolaryngology Surgical Resident and was recently matched for a Facial Plastic Surgery Fellowship to start in July 2017 in Miami, Florida.
2006 Adrienne Watson joined Hillary Clinton’s campaign as rapid response spokesperson.
2009
in 2:29.25, a personal record. Kyle lives in New York, where he works for the New York City Economic Development Corporation. He continues to run competitively with the Central Park Track Club.
2011 Lincoln Plews spent the summer in China on a fellowship from Princeton in Asia. He taught economics, history and geography at Y.K. Pao Secondary School in Shanghai. He also ran an environmental awareness program after school and coached basketball and cross country.
2012 / 2014 Emma Johnson ’12 and Keenan Lacy-Rhodes ’14 collaborated on a recent episode of Kite Line for Bloomington’s WFHBFM. Kite Line is a weekly radio program that focuses on prison issues. Emma, a recent graduate of Indiana University in Anthropology, is a co-host of Kite Line and also produced the episode. Keenan is a free-lance reporter for the show and provided voiceover for the writings of prisoners. He is a junior journalism major at Indiana University and will spend next semester studying in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil.
Kyle Marks placed 56th out of more than 37,000 participants in the 2016 Chicago Marathon. Kyle covered the 26.2 mile course PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL 2016
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CLASS NOTES
Samuel, Solomon, Eliana, and baby Silas D’Hue.
Arthur Beau Fisher
Marriages
• To Upper School French Teacher Christian Jacobs and his wife Brandy on the birth of Theodore Grayson Jacobs on July 4, 2016.
• Michael “Boomer” Wallace ’91 to Ali Bleecker on September 18, 2016. • Bill Nagler ’99 to Kirsten Lewis on September 17, 2016. • Chip Davis ’07 to Lauren Kracky on July 16, 2016.
Congratulations (Births, Adoptions) • To Jim Combs ’95 and Weezie Elder Combs ’97 on the birth of William Carter Combs on September 12, 2016. • To Zandra Buckley D’Hue ’96 and Cedric D’Hue on the birth of Silas David on January 18, 2016. Silas joined big brothers Samuel and Solomon and big sister Eliana. • To Laura Howard McHenry ’00 and her husband Neal on the birth of Conor Keating McHenry on June 29, 2016. Conor joins big brother Jack William (2). • To Katelyn Miner Fisher ’04 and her husband Art on the birth of Arthur Beau Fisher on October 19, 2016. • To Dr. Ken Randall ’04 and his wife Beth on the birth of Harrison Kenneth Randall on August 14, 2016.
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Deaths • Donald N. Test, Jr. ’36 on July 13, 2016. • Barbara Brown Hendrickson ’38 on February 28, 2015. • William Clark ’42 on November 16, 2016. • Elizabeth “Cristy” Christ Nicholson ’44 on March 5, 2016. • Walter I. Longsworth Jr. ’47 on October 4, 2016. • Joseph Lawton Kivett Jr. ’49 on August 27, 2016. • Rev. Michael K. Jones ’82 on July 26, 2016.
Condolences • To Ann Clark Calkins ’45 and Carol Lynn Blackburn Clark ’49 on the death of their brother and husband, William Clark ’42, on November 16, 2016. • To Georgianne Davis Neal ’47, Dede Neal Petri ’73 and Andrea Neal ’76 on the death of their husband and father, James Neal, on September 27, 2016. • To Marsha McCauley Donnelly ’69 on the death of her husband, Steve, on September 27, 2016. • To Tom Hicks ’77, Bob Hicks ’79, Doug Hicks ’86 and Brian Hicks ’88 on the death of their mother, Sue Hicks, on October 2, 2016.
CLASS NOTES
• To Owen McRoberts ’20 on the death of his grandfather, Chester Davis Jr., on August 18, 2016. • To former Middle School English teacher Marcia Ruch Belt on the death of her husband, Jim Belt, on August 5, 2016. • To retired Theatre Director Jerry Grayson on the death of his father, Cecil Edward Grayson, on September 16, 2016. • To Middle School Support Specialist Chris Hammock on the death of her mother, Phyllis Myers, on September 24, 2016. • To former English teacher Christina Van Riper McCoy on the death of her husband, Thomas McCoy Jr., on August 9, 2016.
A Note from Retired World Languages Teacher, David Malcom Mr. David Malcom retired at the end of the 2015-16 school year, after teaching at Park Tudor for 40 years. He wanted to share a final note to the Park Tudor community. To the Park Tudor Community:
Theodore Grayson Jacobs
• To Marya Jones ’78, Sam Jones Jr. ’79 and Joyce Overby ’22 on the death of their brother and uncle, Rev. Michael K. Jones ’82, on July 26, 2016. • To Don Weir Jr. ’79 on the death of his mother, Barbara Ellen Weir, on September 23, 2016. • To Amy Osborn ’83 on the death of her father, William Osborn, on October 26, 2016. • To Amy Russell ’84 on the death of her mother, Jane Russell, in May 2016. • To Brian West ’92 on the death of his wife, Carrie West, on June 7, 2016. • To Davis ’13, Margaret ’14 and Clayton House ’18 on the death of their grandmother, Norma Wilson French, on October 8, 2016. • To Kylie Clouse ’17 and Kara Clouse ’20 on the death of their grandmother, Sondrea Ozolins Bryan, on October 3, 2016.
As you all probably know by now, I retired at the end of the 20152016 academic year after teaching roughly 2800 students, tutoring dozens more, serving 6 headmasters, and working under 4 department heads - in all, 40 years of mostly happy work at Park Tudor. When you decide to walk out the door of a building you entered and exited for as many years as I have, there is no way you won’t upon your final exit leave a part of yourself there to remain imbedded in those limestone facades which are the signature identity of our great school. I have laughed a lot in the good times and cried my share in the fewer bad times. Most of all, I treasure the friendships and the community that is Park Tudor. There was a song we sang at a camp I once was the director of called “Ties that Bind.” And St. Exupery was right when he had the fox declare that society was based on “créer les liens” (creating relationships). As I drive homeward toward Zionsville, my eyes will mist over as the thought that I will not be seeing you as often as I would like sinks in, but I will never forget you because, as I said earlier, a part of me stays here, and that part is my memories of you. With affection, David Malcom
• To Jenna Beagle ’18 on the death of her grandmother, Norma Jean Beagle, on November 4, 2016.
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Grandparents and Special Friends Day
JK2 student Sierra Pierson and her grandfather enjoy an activity on Grandparents and Special Friends Day.
PARK TUDOR PHOENIX FALL ’16 ADDRESS CHANGE FORM NAME CLASS YEAR ADDRESS
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