Finding a Balance:
Erika Freeman
Finding a Balance:
Erika Freeman
Susan Beiles: 43 Years of History
The
LOWER SCHOOL
50 Prospect Park West Brooklyn, NY 11215
MIDDLE AND UPPER SCHOOLS
1 Poly Prep Drive Brooklyn, NY 11228
OFFICERS
Andrew Foote P’27, ’29
Chair
Michael A. Correra ’87
Vice Chair
Kareem Raymond P’31, ’33 Treasurer
Jennifer Powers P’26, ’28 Secretary
TRUSTEES
Indhira Arrington P’29, ’31
John P. Foley P’26
Nicholas Gravante, Esq. ’78, P’20, ’23
Hans Humes P’12, ’15, ’21, ’35
Thomas Iannelli ’82, P’18, ’19, ’24
Taek-Geun Kwon P’32
Sang Lee P’22, ’23
Michael Liburd P’21
John D. McPheters P’33
Cassandra Metz
Kareem Raymond P’31, ’33
Laurie Rosenblatt P’23, ’26
Elizabeth R. Schlesinger P’28, ’30, ’32
Irwin Simon P’18, ’22
Daniela Vitale-Howell P’20, ’23, ’25
Elizabeth R. Wiatt
Maxwell T. Wiley P’18, ’21
BOARD MEMBER, NON-TRUSTEE
Qadir Forbes ’11 (Pres. Alumni Board of Governors)
TRUSTEES EMERITI
Dr. Karen Burke Goulandris P’15
Harry J. Petchesky, Esq. ’55
ON THE COVERS:
In Studio Art 7 and 8, Uzochi Onunaku ’27 (cover) and Lauren Pauls ’27 (back cover) explored color within traditional portraiture in their project, Faces. Teacher Helena Elko explained that by juxtaposing the bright soft colors with the structured dark lines, the classical portrait takes on an expressive feel and possibly a new understanding of the sitter. The 3/4 pose was traditionally used for portraits of kings, queens, and other significant people. The viewer can only see a portion of the face and body, inviting them to create their own interpretations of what the sitter may be thinking or trying to express.
Lauren and Uzochi incorporated a dynamic use of color for their skin and hair creating a self portrait connected more to their internal feelings or expressive mood than a traditional painting of their likeness.
INSIDE FRONT COVER :
Erika Freeman P’24, ’26, ’28, ’32 and daughter Krystal ’32 examine one of the Belonging Quilts students created for PolyCultura, an annual diversity and inclusion celebration hosted and sponsored by the Lower School Parents’ Association. For the quilts at the May 2022 event, each child made a panel sharing what belonging means to them. Freeman is the subject of a feature profile in this issue.
4
Found Sound: Angélica Negrón
Jordan Millar ’24, herself an accomplished composer, profiles Negrón, a native of Puerto Rico, about being a woman composer of color in a white, male-dominated field.
8
Finding a Balance:
Erika Freeman
Jess Dosik ’24 interviews Erika Freeman about how she balances her work as a Poly science teacher with raising a family of four energetic children, all Poly students.
11
Not Just in Your Head: Anxiety
Julia Reyfman ’23 provides an inside look at how a fellow Poly student dealt with anxiety at a time when mental health issues are plaguing many teens.
14
He Was Introduced to Queens Hip Hop When He Was in Fourth Grade. The Rest is History.
Lucas Basham ’24 profiles English teacher Paolo Javier, a poet, filmmaker, musician, and artist, who talks about the early influence of the hip hop music of Run-DMC on his comics and poetry.
18
Susan Beiles: 43 Years of History
For 43 years, AP U.S. History teacher Susan Beiles trained students to think as historians, while serving as an inspiring role model for young women and a cherished mentor and friend to colleagues.
20
Celebrating Identity:
The “My Story” Project
Latinx, Asian Pacific Islander, and Black families share their rich cultural identities, histories, and family traditions with the community in a photo and art project.
40
Donor Roll 2021-2022
We recognize the contributions of the Poly community members who help to make sure students have an extraordinary education.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Jennifer Slomack
STAFF WRITER
Linda Busetti
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS
Lucas Basham ’24
Jess Dosik ’24
Jordan Millar ’24
Julia Reyfman ’23
COPY EDITOR
Linda Busetti
DESIGN
Joseph Inglis
DESIGN (DONOR ROLL)
Erbach Communications
PHOTOGRAPHY
Linda Busetti
Martine Fiore ’22
Matt Simpkins Photography
Rob Tringali Poly Archives
THE BLUE & THE GRAY is published by Poly’s Engagement & Communications Office. It features news from the Poly community of alumni, faculty, and students. Inquiries and submissions are welcome. Contact communications@polyprep.org.
For more information about Poly Prep, visit polyprep.org.
Found Sound: Angélica Negrón
P. 4
An accomplished composer, Millar was selected as a Kaufman Music Center Luna Composition Lab Fellow, and her piece “Masquerade” premiered as part of a Luna Composition Lab concert. She co-hosted the NY Philharmonic 25th Anniversary of the Very Young Composers in March 2022. She was a National Spring 2022 Bespoken Fellow. Millar is also a Managing Editor of The Polygon
The profiles selected for this issue were originally written by Poly Prep students for their Upper School Journalism class and first published online in “The Prep.” This class debuted in the 2021–22 academic year and is taught by Rachael Allen.
Finding a Balance: Erika Freeman
P. 8
A Deputy News Editor for The Polygon, Dosik shines in both her humanities and her STEM-based classes, excelling in accelerated and advanced courses in several different disciplines. She is also an accomplished musician and athlete. Dosik is very much looking forward to moving into her second year of our highly selective three-year Science Research course as a Grade 11 student this fall.
Not Just in Your Head: Anxiety
P. 11
As Editor-in-Chief of the Polyglot, Reyfman is used to looking at Poly through a storytelling lens. She is a record-breaking member of Poly’s Track & Field team and in 2022 earned the number one spot in NY State for Javelin Throw. Reyfman was a dedicated member of the student volunteer corps for COVID testing in 2021. She was elected Secretary for Student Government for the 2022–23 school year.
He Was Introduced to Queens Hip Hop
P. 14
A regular writer for The Polygon, Basham was also a featured Advanced Strings violinist in the Spring Instrumental Concert and is a starter on the Varsity Lacrosse team. He was a valued participant in last year’s Summer Service Learning Team, where he volunteered at Harlem Grown. Currently in Spain, Basham is studying abroad this year.
Photographer
P. 1, 2, 5, 9, 12, 15
Fiore won a Scholastic Art and Writing Gold Key award for her photography for “Seeping Through,” and a Silver Key for both “An Organized Mess” and “Driftwood.” As a result Fiore got to see her photograph exhibited at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She was the recipient of the 2022 Photography Award at Poly. Martine is also a poet and the Poly community enjoyed her original work at our Coffeehouses. She is attending Skidmore this fall.
Connection with others is a fundamental aspect of the human experience; we seek, nurture, and protect it. We call it family, tribe, nation, community. In this issue of The Blue & The Gray —our profile issue—we shine a light on a few of the individuals who enrich our school community in myriad ways. Poly people are as diverse and multifaceted as Brooklyn itself. They bring their passions, perspectives, dedication, and their dreams to our campuses each and every day. They are thinkers and creators. They are doers. They are more comfortable with difference than similarity. All that makes Poly such a unique community.
As a young composer herself, Jordan Millar ’24 had a unique perspective when she interviewed Angélica Negrón , a female composer of color. Millar paints a portrait of the classical artist, who expanded “the boundaries of music as a whole by freely sharing her own creative voice, even if it doesn’t always fulfill the expectations of others.” In a timely look at teen mental health issues, Julia Reyfman ’23 takes us into the mind of a fellow student who has dealt with anxiety. Jess Dosik ’24 visits the science classroom of Erika Freeman P’24, ’26, ’28, ’32 , for insight into how she balances all her students, including the four with whom she lives. We also learn about Paolo Javier, a poet, filmmaker, musician, artist, and English teacher, who tells Lucas Basham ’24 about the Queens hip hop that influenced him as a young boy. Photographer Martine Fiore ’22 shot the portraits for our feature stories, as well as those of our student contributors. On the covers, we feature the arresting work of Middle School student artists Uzochi Onunaku ’27 (front) and Lauren Pauls ’27 (back) who created their self portraits in the project Faces. At the Lower School, Poly’s Black, Latinx, and API families share their families, in their own words, through the My Story project.
We also celebrate Susan Beilies P’88, ’90, ’95 , who illuminated the wonder of the Federalist Papers for her students years before Lin Manuel Miranda had the world rapping/singing about them. After 43 years of teaching history, Susan embarks on a new role at Poly. This issue also includes our annual recognition and gratitude to those who help to give our students an extraordinary education.
It’s going to be a fantastic year at Poly. I hope you will join me at community events when we recognize and celebrate the people of Poly. From our intimate gatherings with the Alumni in Film series to school-wide Blue Devil Nights and student-led Coffeehouses to Lower School’s PolyCultura, it’s our wonderful community that makes Poly the special place it is and the place we want to be.
I look forward to connecting with you
Sincerely,
Audrius Barzdukas P’20 Head of SchoolJuggling being a female composer of color in a white, male-dominated field, composer Angélica Negrón finds her own voice while simultaneously tuning out the voices of others.
Deep in Bushwick, Brooklyn, New York, Angélica Negrón sits in her small home recording studio. Blue post-it notes with musical ideas cover nearly every inch of her desk, leaving room for only her mini keyboard. Resting comfortably in her large black desk chair, the 40-year-old composer and multi-instrumentalist pulls up her latest project: “Fractile Isles,” a new piece written for the Louisville Orchestra, on her impressive dual screen computer set up.
It’s about how others view Puerto Rico and other islands as something very exotic. “As I was working and experimenting with the different sounds, I realized it felt like a fantasy, and that it could have other layers of meaning. Eventually I came to the conclusion that it could be a commentary on how tourism can have a dangerous side to it, and this idea that there is a sense of complexity that comes with living there,” she says thoughtfully as her eyes glance at the bright screen displaying her expertly notated score.
Negrón is also working on a piece for the Seattle Symphony, then right after that one for the Los Angeles Philharmonic. She is also scoring an HBO documentary series, though she can’t say much about it yet. Negrón shares “It’s a lot
of orchestral pieces back to back, but I’m really excited about them all.” Her busy schedule does not come as a surprise. After all, Angélica Negrón has become one the 21st century’s most prominent young female composers: a remarkable feat. Negrón continues to make strides as a woman of color in an industry that has long been dominated by white males. While the music industry has already begun faring in the fight for gender and racial equality among composers, there is still a long way to go. According to an article published in 2021 by Classical FM , “A new study looking at the world’s top orchestras has found that only five percent of the music scheduled in their concerts is composed by women.”
It is true that Negrón is constantly challenged within a field that has not historically recognized or celebrated the work of women, and even more so women of color. But more importantly, she is helping to expand the boundaries of music as a whole by freely sharing her own creative voice, even if it doesn’t always fulfill the expectations of others.
The path to becoming a successful composer was not necessarily an easy one. In fact, it was not until later in her life that she realized music composition was even a
possibility. Born and raised in Puerto Rico, Negrón, an only child, grew up in a small town called Carolina, known for being very close to the airport and the birthplace of reggaeton. “Growing up on the island I was exposed to lots of different vibrant sounds and music genres. But in terms of new music and concert music, it was old fashioned at the time. If you wanted to go to a classical concert, you would hear music by dead white men.”
Negrón started playing piano when she was about seven. Then, she began studying violin at the Conservatory of Music in Puerto Rico, where she played mostly classical music. “I liked the community effort of making music with other people and being in different orchestras throughout my childhood and teen years, but I didn’t really connect with the music I was playing. I had no idea that composition was even an option at the time because we would never get to play any music by living composers.”
This would all change when Negrón entered college. Though she continued playing the violin seriously, she knew deep down that it wasn’t enough for her. She was really curious about film music, but in Puerto Rico there was no school that offered that major, so she came to New York to study at New York University. It was in university that she began freely experimenting with different sounds and working alongside other musicians, especially in bands. “I was all over the place — teaching myself to play the accordion, taking cello lessons, and even took two years of harp. I was really interested in instruments, but I didn’t know what that meant at the time so I just kept trying different things thinking that one would stick,” Negrón recalls.
It was through this exploration that Negrón stumbled upon the world of composers. She then realized that she loved all instruments and that she wanted to write for them
instead of solely being a performer. This defining moment would mark the beginning of her journey from musician to composer. “I had to really see that composing was a possibility for me, which was very challenging because I never saw it represented anywhere. Once I discovered composing, everything seemed to make sense,” Negrón says.
Growing up in a conservatory environment with classical training, Negrón would struggle greatly with both finding and accepting her own voice as a composer. In her spare time, she would experiment with electronic music and compose for her band Sinesthesia, but often felt pressured to keep these entities separate. “When you’re in academia and in school there’s this historical baggage that is mostly white and dead males. That weight of ‘this is strictly what it means to be a composer’ and having to listen to works that I didn’t feel had any connection to my own reality was challenging.”
Being a woman of color in such a field, also contributed to her struggle. “I felt like I was constantly trying to prove myself, because in classical music, women and Latinas are definitely not well-represented.” On top of that, she felt the need to clearly define her music and identity early on. “I struggled a lot because my professor at the time kept saying ‘But aren’t you from Puerto Rico? Where are you in your music? What is the focus here?’” She paused briefly to gather her thoughts. “I still think about that from time to time… for a long time, it made me feel bad.”
Negrón remembers “There was a time that I was writing music that fit in with the traditional standard, or that showed classical compositional techniques that maybe looked good on paper, but it wasn’t necessarily me and it wasn’t exciting either.”
In 2009, everything changed. Negrón took a year off between her master’s and doctorate studies, and during that year, wrote a piece titled “Drawings for Meyoko” for the Janus Trio. “This piece was really important to me in terms of my development, since I decided to approach it in a different way.” Negrón experimented with the piece as if it were one of the projects she would do in her spare time. “It was then that everything clicked for me. I stopped caring about trying to fit into the institutions of classical or new music, and instead let my own voice speak.” In doing so, Negrón became more passionate about what she was interested in soundwise, even if it meant that it looked less
“I felt like I was constantly trying to prove myself, because in classical music, women and Latinas are definitely not well-represented.”
impressive on the physical page. Ignoring the white history of the music industry and the pressure to define herself changed the way that Negrón approached her own music.
“It was actually super liberating. It’s allowed me to come to a place where I feel like I sound like myself, and I feel like I am writing the things that I am excited about, which is more than enough for me.”
Today, Négron acknowledges that she does not fit the traditional mold for a composer. Unlike her white male counterparts, she is a 4’11” Latina with bright purple hair. Similar to her identity, Negrón’s music is not clear-cut. Some days, she writes for orchestras, choirs, and chamber ensembles, while on others she creates music with electronic softwares, fruits, vegetables, small toys, and even plants. However, there is always a specific sensibility for textures, melodies, lofi sounds and unusual sounds and objects that is found in any work she creates. Her sounds range from soothing melodies and harmonies to dissonant notes and beats, and distorted electronics and voices. Reflecting on her process, Negrón says, “Sometimes I’m like, all over the place, but I just keep coming back to if it feels right, then it doesn’t matter.” She also acknowledges that critics may also describe her music as childish or simple. Years ago, that would have rattled her, but since then her outlook has changed.
“I know that I’m small and I like colors so it’s very easy to over infantilize me. I always try to make it a point to show that I may use toys or strange objects, but it’s really in service of this deeper concept.”
Negrón adds, “I also know that I juggle multiple different identities in my work, but it just feels so genuine. We’re all multiplicities of identities, and I see music and sound as a way to have those coexist in a way that they might not have been able to in real life.”
Despite being somewhat underestimated by those around her for her tiny stature, Negrón’s achievements speak volumes. Her music has been described as “wistfully idiosyncratic and contemplative” (WQXR/Q2) and “mesmerizing and affecting” (Feast of Music) while The New York Times noted her “capacity to surprise” and her “quirky approach to scoring.” She’s been commissioned by several different famous ensembles and orchestras, composed film scores, written operas for drag queens, and even taught at the New York Philharmonic’s Very Young Composers Program.
Her close friend, Gabriela Benedit from Puerto Rico, whom she met eight years ago, says, “She is incredibly talented and super perceptive… She’s done so much from small ensembles to orchestras or her one-woman productions – it’s been such an incremental process, but she’s been rising up and it’s truly amazing to see,” Benedit says warmly.
Now, Negrón’s next goal is to hopefully witness a much needed change in the industry of musical composition itself. She acknowledges that although progress is being made, it is not enough and it’s long overdue. While composers of color may be met with some resistance, Negrón says, “We’ve been here forever and it’s finally time.” Negrón also believes that while it’s crucial to highlight women and composers of color, she also wants it to be normalized within the industry. “It’s also important that we don’t always keep treating female composers and composers of color as some incomprehensible thing…,” she says. “Being a female composer of color in itself is somehow revolutionary, even though it is not my intention. Yet, I’m definitely interested in finding more opportunities in my music to have these important conversations.”
As she sits in her black desk chair, she contemplates for a brief moment on the message that she hopes audiences will take away from listening to her work. “I want them to be excited and curious about sounds and hear their environment in a different way rather than just take things for granted. I hope it also opens up new possibilities and questions and allows them to express themselves freely, without feeling the pressure to ever limit their hopes and aspirations.”
“We’re all multiplicities of identities, and I see music and sound as a way to have those coexist in a way that they might not have been able to in real life.”
It’s 3:40 PM on a Wednesday afternoon at Poly Prep and there are still three students in Lab 4 of the science building. Microscopes are out and the students are making sketches of plant cells on their assigned worksheets. Erika Freeman sits at the table next to them, answering questions, all while speaking to a student from another class about a different assignment. Looking in at this classroom, one would think that the room was at its full capacity, especially this far along after school hours. Then in come four more people, smaller than the ones already taking up the room. Multiple mini Freemans walk one by one into the office right next door. Their laughter and bubbly energy after a long day at the Poly Prep Lower and Middle Schools are slowly calming down now that they have returned to their temporary home after school: their mother’s classroom.
Freeman was born into a family of teachers. Her mother, grandmother, stepmother, and even cousins are involved with education, so it’s no surprise that Freeman is the accomplished teacher that she is today. Her educational life first began with her enrollment in Horace Mann from nursery school all the way up to eighth grade. From there she transferred over to one of New York’s specialized public high schools, Bronx Science. At this point, 13-year-old Freeman had very few ideas as to what she wanted to do as a career. She said, “I thought I wanted to be like my uncle,” an engineer who has always been very much like Freeman. With their similar ways of thinking, growing up, Freeman thought this was where her life was headed. Little did she know, that during her senior year at Wesleyan University she would teach her first biology demo lesson at Poly Prep, ultimately changing the course of her life forever. It’s late in the 1990s and the first time Freeman would be
addressing a full class all on her own. Her outfit, which had been picked out the night before, looked exactly how she had imagined it. Inside room 216 of the Poly Prep main building sat the class that she was about to teach. All of their tenth-grade eyes focused on her, along with the eyes of many important figures at the school; the dean of faculty, chair of the science department, and the teacher of the class. To Freeman, the lesson came naturally and within no time there was rapid engagement and admiring stares. But little did she know she was teaching the students the wrong thing. Quickly fixing the miscalculation on the board, Freeman feared it was too late and that she had lost her first chance at a job by inaccurately teaching the material. However, this mistake is what she continues to think led her to receive her job as the, “correction was better than the thing [I] was trying to do.” It was not the actual mistake that was important, as she cannot even remember what exactly it was, but the importance was in its correction. Freeman learned that sometimes owning a mistake and fixing it is more important than being one hundred percent correct all the time. Looking back, she is, “glad I caught my mistake because I don’t think I would have gotten the job if I had let the mistake go.”
Even after she was hired, Freeman’s life wasn’t what she had planned it out to be. With dreams of going to med school and becoming a nurse, teaching at Poly Prep was just a way to fill a gap between what she thought she wanted to do. The American Association of University Women (AAUW) states that, “About one-in-five working parents… have turned down a promotion because they were balancing work and parenting responsibilities.” Similar to Freeman, who even though she is happy with her life as a teacher, had an opportunity to pursue a different path. However, things did
not play out this way because when she arrived at Poly she met her husband: Khari Freeman, former English teacher, and wrestling coach. They worked together at the school for four years and after that, there was no way that Freeman would leave. Looking back on her life, she freely admits that, “I wouldn’t change teaching here,” but someday she might still choose to pursue a medical path and become a nurse.
Freeman clearly has strong aspirations and even with everything she is doing now, there is still that search and wonder for more. From the moment Freeman met her husband at Poly, family had become a big part of her work life. All four of their children, Khari, Kaya, Kiana, and Krystal, attend Poly Prep, in the Lower, Middle, and Upper Schools, allowing them to always stop by their mother’s classroom after school, where at 4:00 PM there are still students working. School had ended fifteen minutes earlier and Freeman’s daughters’ voices in the office next door were slowly rising. Their patience wouldn’t last forever. Khari Freeman, sophomore, the oldest and only son of the Freeman household walks in, surrounded by the laughter of three or four friends. Freeman embraces her son and gives him a quick kiss, the interaction they have every day before he heads off to lacrosse practice. The sound of the door shutting behind him resonates throughout the room, as the students continue to work on their lab and other various activities. When little footsteps approach, Krystal appears next to her mother. Krystal hands her mother a large book and a stuffed animal. Freeman has only enough time to glance at her and say, “Thank you” before refocusing her attention on the student in front of her. When asked when it becomes hard to maintain that balance, the answer was simply, “You just saw it.” Explaining this experience to her student she says, “it’s a tension for time and a battle for priority at the moment.” Freeman can recognize the difficulty in maintaining balance between work and family, especially since they are so closely connected. After school, it’s a constant collision of: should she be watching her kids, or should she be paying attention to her students? Even outside of school this issue is quite prevalent. “During school breaks I have to create
family time… [then]I am only a mom and a wife, I’m not Mrs. Freeman,” she says, all while looking down at the stuffed animal in her hands. Her arm reaches out for Krystal and finds that she’s already gone. Her work continues.
“When I’m at work, work is my priority,” said Freeman. Throughout all of the struggles, Freeman continues to be a very admirable teacher and role model at Poly Prep. Current sophomore, William Ling-Regan ’24 remarks on how “she’s really passionate about biology and inspires us to have that same passion that she does.” These accomplishments were acknowledged when she won the Poly Spirit Award in 2018. This award is one that Poly presents to one faculty member a year, who demonstrates the values and spirit that the school wishes to represent and encourage within its institution and its students. Looking back on this moment, Freeman begins to well up, and her eyes shine with clear gratitude and astonishment at the way the school recognized her. Freeman notes that, “the people who’ve won it before me are people who I’ve learned to teach from,” making the award a very humbling experience. Colleagues, former students, and family all gathered to enjoy a beautiful meal and ceremony dedicated to Freeman and everything she had accomplished.
In another study by the AAUW, they found, “23% of working parents say they’ve been treated as if they aren’t committed to their work because they have kids.” Clearly, with Freeman, this is not the case as this award demonstrated and acknowledged people’s view of her and her work, with the highest respect. Freeman’s son Khari makes it abundantly clear that his mother is deserving of this award. “She’s just great,” he says. Meanwhile, the qualities of a Spirit Award winner are still evident in the ways that Freeman teaches. When thinking of Freeman, the word, “passion” is one that can most accurately sum her up. Whether it be for her students, her children, her colleagues, or biology itself, Freeman is passionate about whoever she is helping and whatever she is doing. However, it can still be hard to maintain a balance between family and work. For now, Freeman continues to create a family both within her classroom and at home. Throughout her life, things didn’t always go to plan, but through hard work and dedication, Freeman has found her way around many of the things standing in between her career and her family. Many experiences ultimately shaped the course of her life in order to reach where she is now. Meanwhile, her accomplishments continue to grow despite the struggles of maintaining a good work-life balance. This fall, Freeman takes on a new role at Poly, Interim Chair of the Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging Department.
“About one-in-five working parents… have turned down a promotion because they were balancing work and parenting responsibilities.”
Hannah Gross, 17, has gotten the same Starbucks coffee for the past five years. “A blonde vanilla latte, a blonde vanilla latte, a blonde vanilla latte…” she repeats continuously in her head as she waits in line. She plans what she is going to say meticulously, but then the barista asks her a question, “What milk do you want?” She knows she wants regular milk, but at that moment she questions absolutely everything she knows. She freezes.
She walks onto her yellow school bus every morning like she has for almost her entire life. Her bus driver asks her name as she gets on and she panics. She knows her name. She forgets if he knows her by only her first name or her first and last name. What if he says something if she says the wrong thing? What will he think of her?
She arrives at school promptly at 8:30 AM every day, her Starbucks coffee in a thermos in her bag. She feels her bag every two minutes checking if it spilled. She is not afraid if the coffee spills and gets her books wet, but what if someone says something to her about it? What will they think of her? Will they forever think of her as the girl that spilled coffee in her bag?
She diligently completed all her homework on time and knows that she is prepared for class. But what if she isn’t? What if she forgot to answer a homework problem? Did she bring her calculator? Panic invades her mind as she searches her bag frantically for something she knows is there as she saw it minutes prior.
She sits in class paying attention and she knows what is going on nearly 100 percent of the time. Her teacher calls on her when she didn’t raise her hand. She freezes even though she knows the answer perfectly. Hannah’s eyes and mind look blank from the outside, but inside her head she is thinking at a million miles per minute. She stutters as she says, ‘I don’t know,’ but she knows the answer perfectly. What if she said it wrong? What would everyone think?
She has a test later that day that she studied weeks for. The exam is placed in front of her. She stares at it drawing her pencil to the first question. She knows the answer right away and writes it down. She reads her answer over and erases it. She then rewrites it the same as before. However, she still isn’t pleased. She continues the rewriting and erasing process until her paper has a hole in it. Pieces of her eraser cover her desk as she starts breathing heavily as her leg shakes profusely under the table. Her teacher comes over and asks if she is OK, but she is unable to answer.
Hannah Gross suffers from several anxiety disorders including general anxiety, social anxiety, and a panic disorder. She recalls her anxiety issues starting in early childhood. “I would be in normal situations as a little kid and I would just get panicked. I wouldn’t let my mom talk in situations because I found it embarrassing. At first, I was like ‘Oh, I was just a kid that was embarrassed,’ but looking back, I was just so anxious. I would get panic attacks about really normal things. Before any change or transition I would get a crying, panic attack.” She went through the years of her
childhood and early teen years constantly anxious with no explanation. Gross was diagnosed with her disorders at age 15, during the peak of the COVID-19 pandemic. To Gross, getting diagnosed, “was very validating. When I realized I had an anxiety problem and an actual disorder that I could be medicated for and treated for and that other people had, too, it was very validating and not just in my head. It validated my feelings that they were more than just a casual nervousness.”
Gross is not only facing anxiety, but people not believing that it is a real disorder. “It is just in your head,” and “just relax” are phrases that haunt her on a daily basis. People fail to recognize that an anxiety disorder is very real and does not compare to “casual nervousness” as Gross said. The feeling of being anxious or occasional anxiety is something everyone feels; it can be anxiety about a test or an interview, but overall it is explained by one specific thing happening. Anxiety disorder is an unexplained anxiety not relating to a specific event as described in an article by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).
Anxiety disorders are also on the rise, especially in teens, as recent studies show. A study in 2019 by the NIMH showed, “that nearly 1 in 3 adolescents between ages 13 and 18 will experience an anxiety disorder.” The study also showed that in the five years between 2007 and 2012, anxiety disorders in teens increased by 20 percent.
One of the possible explanations for this recent rise is social media. Gross notices the mental toll social media has on her saying, “There is this reaction that people get with social media and you expect yourself to look a certain way and want to change yourself to be perfect under social media standards.” The bright light of her phone hurts her eyes, as she sits at night scrolling through Instagram and Tik Tok in a stream of what seems to be endless content, comparing herself to everyone. In a study by the Pew Research Center, it was found that, “45% of teens aged 13 to 17 said they use the
internet ‘almost constantly.’” Gross believes the pressure to be perfect is elevated by social media making teens believe that they have to look a certain way and live up to a certain standard that is continually being raised by influencers. The other theories for increases in anxiety include an overall increased pressure to succeed among teens, especially when it comes to school work.
Gross doesn’t believe that her anxiety is completely due to school, but she did notice something about it this summer. She says, “When I go to sleepaway camp away from everything, it’s not nearly as bad. Now I find myself the most stressed and focused with school work and I have been having the worst and most frequent panic attacks I have ever had in my life.” At school, she feels the pressure to be perfect, especially in her academics and she is willing to do anything to get better. She states, “If it means getting four hours of sleep to be the best, I will do it.”
Gross is not the only one facing this severe perfectionism, which in her case, is worsened by her medically diagnosed anxiety. A recent study done by the American Psychological Association found that, “recent generations of young people perceive that others are more demanding of them, are more demanding of others, and are more demanding of themselves.” The scientists behind this study reviewed and collected 41,641 responses among American, Canadian, and British college students who all completed the same test between the years of 1989 and 2016. The scientists found, “that levels of self oriented perfectionism, socially prescribed perfectionism, and other-oriented perfectionism have linearly increased.” This increased pressure is scientifically proven to be on a rise and is negatively impacting teens like Gross.
The mental health epidemic among Gen Z/teenagers today is not one to be taken lightly. Gross is one case among the masses and too many other teens can relate to her. She goes through every day wanting to be flawless and seen as flawless, whether it be saying the perfect thing to the Starbucks barista or acing every assessment.
Gross lays in bed every night, meticulously reflecting on everything she did that day. The hum of her heater and the sound of David Bowie’s voice fill the void of silence that exists in her bedroom. She thinks of the math test she had earlier, going over every question on the exam, her mind spinning into oblivion. Her cream colored ceiling fades away as her eyes shut for a mere five hours of sleep. She soon wakes up to do it all over again.
“If it means getting four hours of sleep to be the best, I will do it.”
Paolo Javier is a poet, a filmmaker, a musician, and an artist of all trades. But back in fourth grade, he wasn’t any of those things. Living in a small town in the Philippines on the outskirts of Manila, he was unenthused by school, and couldn’t seem to find his passion. Until one day, a friend of his introduced him to the music of Queens hip hop group Run-DMC, putting his life on a course defined by growth, adversity, and art.
Today, Javier lives halfway around the globe in Queens, New York, and teaches English at Poly Prep. As well as being a husband and a father, Javier is a published experimental poet, former poet laureate of his borough, and immigrant. He lived in Katonah, NY, Cairo, Egypt, and Vancouver, Canada before settling in Queens, a place he loves for its openness, diversity, and community.
Having lived around the world, as a Filipino person of color, Javier has been forced to face countless acts of racism, which, he said, have shaped the person he is today.
Recently, Javier published a book O.B.B. a.k.a. The Original Brown Boy, which is, at the surface, a collection of comics and poetry inspired by his life as an immigrant and his love for Filipino culture and art. Below the surface, it’s a lot more than just that.
Javier didn’t construct this unique work of art out of thin air. For better and for worse, he encountered adversity, lived around the world, and drew inspiration from the people he learned about and met along the way, beginning as a nineyear-old in the Philippines.
When Javier’s white friend, who lived on the other side of Las Piñas, Metro Manila, introduced him to Run-DMC in fourth grade, Javier recalled that he probably said something like, “What is this unbelievable music?” For fun, Javier, wrote a poem mimicking the flow of Run-DMC. From there, there was no turning back.
Already a huge fan of comic books, the combination of rap and comics led to Javier’s growing love for art. Javier
A profile of Paolo Javier, a Filipino immigrant and former Queens Poet Laureate who has shattered walls of adversity to have his voice heard through almost every form of art you can think of.Photography by Martine Fiore ’22
said that the introduction of Run-DMC was important “for someone [like him] at nine years old who loves English and suddenly you can set a beat to it and then you can rhyme.” The incredibly influential ’80s hip hop group, best known by today’s younger generations for their hit “It’s Tricky,” inspired Javier’s original passion for art.
After Cairo, Javier traveled back to the Americas, and then north to attend the University of British Columbia (UBC) in Vancouver, Canada. There, he struggled severely with racism and adversity. Nonetheless, Javier really began to find his voice in poetry in college. He called it “a way for me to survive.”
“I didn’t feel like I got support from faculty in terms of steering me in the direction that was truthful to my interests, to who I was as a person,” he said, “ … and we’re not even talking about exploring other types of literature and experimental exploration with identity, gender, sexuality, ethnicity.”
He recalled feeling “erased” and “institutionally invisible,” as well as experiencing countless microaggressions. When he applied for graduate school at UBC, the head of the program turned him down and said, “I feel you’ll do better elsewhere.”
Javier recalled being attacked physically by neonazis in Vancouver, but was hesitant to talk more about it.
“In middle school,” he said, “I just started writing poems instinctively.” When Javier was 12 years old he moved to Katonah, New York, a small suburb almost 40 miles north of New York City. There, he recalled, “the suburban life drove me nuts.”
Beginning to write poetry more consistently as he entered eighth grade, Javier remembered a poem he wrote for his eighth grade English class. It was a monologue for Logan from the Wolverine comics he was reading. “I just started writing in the voice of Logan,” he said, “it looked like a poem.”
Javier’s memories of his short time in Katonah are mostly of his visits to Queens, where his aunt and his godmother lived. Immediately, he noticed and grew attached to the queer Filipino community in Queens. “I grew up in a very queer place [in the Philippines] and it felt like home to me,” he said.
Soon after Javier’s move to Westchester, he and his family moved to Cairo, Egypt because of his father’s job. There, he attended high school at Cairo American College, where a teacher introduced him to the work of Robert Frost. This experience in Cairo was one of Javier’s several encounters with different cultures and languages, which have certainly influenced his poetry and art.
Vancouver, which has so much “unacknowledged racism in its history,” was named the most anti-Asian city in North America, according to a May 2021 Bloomberg study on the case as reported by Natalie Obiko Pearson. COVID-19 issues have brought the worst out in anti-Asian hate crimes all over the world, but clearly revealed the racist nature of Vancouver that Javier referenced.
According to Bloomberg, “more anti-Asian hate crimes were reported to police in Vancouver, a city of 700,000 people, than in the top 10 most populous U.S. cities combined.” Furthermore, “almost 1 out of every 2 residents of Asian descent in British Columbia [experienced] a hate incident in the past year, [and] the region is confronting an undercurrent of racism that runs as long and deep as the historical links stretching across the Pacific.”
However, in Vancouver, Javier discovered poetry in a particular way. “I was depressed,” he recalled, “I was unsure of where I wanted to be, unsure of my identity, and poetry really filled my life with so much meaning.”
In order to overcome the adversity, well, he packed up his bags at age 24 and went to New York City.
“I was unsure of where I wanted to be, unsure of my identity, and poetry really filled my life with so much meaning.”
In NYC, Javier spent a few years focusing on his own poetry before applying to be the poet laureate of Queens in 2010. He had no expectations of getting the role, but had the opportunity and said to himself, ‘Hey, why not?’ To Javier’s surprise, he was appointed as the poet laureate, a position where he found himself really able to interact with the Queens community.
Javier recalls that one of the most notable events he put on during his time as laureate was at the end of his tenure in 2014. He organized a program called ETERNiDAY where he filled the Queens Museum with “experimental poetry and artists performing all at once… no hierarchy, no main stage.” There were also workshops and a book fair.
Stephen Motika, Javier’s publisher, notes that there is very little documentation of the event online. He, along with many others, wish there was. It was an incredible showcase of the capabilities and diversity of the Queens community. He called it “wonderful” and “fun.”
Now, Javier works at Poly Prep, where he teaches English. As one of his students, I can attest that he is open and empathetic and puts the health of his students first. Javier teaches passionately and encourages his students to think about what lies far below the surface of the literature they study in his class.
Javier comes from a family of educators, and finds joy in teaching despite often finding it “exhausting,” especially with COVID. Nonetheless, he puts a smile on his face every day of the week, happy to be in a city and a school where he is surrounded by diversity and community.
Just like he grew attached to the welcoming Queer Filipino community in Queens when he visited as a kid, Javier loves the city now for its diverse and open communities — the opposite of the racist communities he fell victim to in places like Vancouver.
Having written five full-length books of poetry and an accompanying 10 chapbooks (small books of short poems), Javier doesn’t “have the same urge to publish” as he used to. Nonetheless, he just recently published O.B.B. a.k.a. The Original Brown Boy. A work more than 20 years in the making with many identities, O.B.B . is a collection of comics, illustrations, sonnets, and poems. The book uniquely represents and explains his experiences as an immigrant and person of color, as well as the place in his heart for Filipino art and culture.
Javier’s publishing company, Nightboat Books, explains on its website that the comics poem is an “homage to the Mimeo Revolution, weird fiction, Kamishibai, the political cartoon, Pilipinx komiks history, and the poet bpNichol.” Further, “Javier deconstructs a post-9/11 Pilipinx identity amid the lasting fog of the Philippine American War.”
Initially, Motika (Javier’s publisher), was hesitant about the book. He said that his original image of the book was “a crazy comic book with all these different kinds of art, and all these different modes, and all these different origin stories.” He wasn’t sure how “it would work as a book,” and it felt like it would need to be multiple volumes.
In the afterword of O.B.B. , Javier explains his thought process on the combination of comics and poetry: “Perhaps poetry and comics offer such an appealing hybrid language art to explore because of its potentially rich, as [the poet bpNichol] put it, ‘means by which to reach out and touch the other.’”
Now, sitting on a small wooden bench and observing the nature of Poly’s pond on a chilly and windy November afternoon, Javier welcomes the bitterness, recognizing that he’s come a long way from his days in Vancouver. In a long black overcoat, dark black RayBan sunglasses that completely shade over his eyes and a brimmed black hat, he absorbs the light that is left, always finding the optimism in things.
“He’ll do better elsewhere,” they said in Vancouver. “Hey, maybe they were right,” Javier said.
“more anti-Asian hate crimes were reported to police in Vancouver, a city of 700,000 people, than in the top 10 most populous U.S. cities combined.”
Without question, Susan Beiles P’88, ’90, ’95 has made an enduring impact on countless students and colleagues over the 43 years she taught history at Poly. In the coming year, she will chart a new course at our school.
“I still have my notebook from Mrs. Beiles’ AP U.S. History class,” said Stellene Volandes ’89 , Editor-in-Chief of Town & Country, “and I’m sure I’m not alone. I refer to it whenever I am about to write anything remotely related. I always say that some may have learned about the Federalist Papers via Lin Manuel Miranda, but I knew about them because of Susan Beiles.”
“For several generations,” says longtime English teacher John Rankin , “our most accomplished graduates speak only of her course for their time at Poly, where they experienced a grand survey of American political history, with serious rigor and a teacher who believed learning to read and understand complex historical arguments, with intelligence, critical insight, and steely clarity are exactly what teaching should faciltitate.”
Susan, who grew up on Staten Island, came to Poly in January 1979 for what was supposed to be a temporary position teaching AP U.S. History. At the time, she and her husband, Arnie, were raising three young daughters. Poly had gone coed only two years earlier. Susan became one of a few female teachers in the Upper School and a teacher and role model to the dozen or so girls.
Poly became a “home for the whole family.” Susan’s eldest daughter came to Poly in fifth grade in 1980, followed by her sisters. Four granddaughters now attend Poly. Susan’s youngest daughter, Laura Coppola ’95, P’29, ’35, is Charles and Valerie Diker Chair of Visual Arts.
to incorporate expert opinions and alternate ideas, and to look at any question and think about what they were really asking. And the DBQs!” DBQs, Susan explained, are document-based questions that require a student to use historical documents in responding to AP exam questions.
Asked her favorite eras in American history, Susan responded, “Reconstruction, which is pivotal to our understanding of America today.” Then, the Progressive era and New Deal, which changed the relationship between government and the people, and the 1920s “with its social and cultural intersections.”
“History isn’t static,” Susan stresses. “There can be new interpretations, new information that will change the ways we look at the past.”
Susan’s goal was to “help students treasure the life of the mind” and to develop the skills of a historian. “You have to use the documents to support or refute an argument,” she explained. Students learned to read critically, understanding the personal views or bias of an author. Her students had to have evidence to support a viewpoint. They considered, “What has the author not spoken about?” “What questions would you ask the author?” “What is presented and what is not presented.”
Poly has been Susan’s “professional home” all these years because it was not only a “wonderful opportunity,” but also because she felt respected, in high regard, and that her voice was heard.
Over the years, in addition to AP U.S. History, Susan taught U.S. History, World History, 20th-Century History, and an elective in sociology. When the former dean system was established, she became ninth grade dean. Beiles also served as Dean of Faculty. But, AP U.S. History was her great love.
“I am a writer by profession,” Volandes said, “and I learned how to do it in that class. Mrs. Beiles taught me how to craft an argument— whether that be on Manifest Destiny or the Hope Diamond—how
“Here was this brilliant, strong, no nonsense woman who seemed to know literally everything,” Madeleine Perez ’93 recalls. “But not only was that my absolute favorite class at Poly because of her amazing ability to teach and make it compelling and fun, but also because she really brought me out of my shell in the classroom.” Perez added, “Thanks to her, I learned about Wesleyan. If it wasn’t for her and her faith in me, I wouldn’t have landed at such a great university.”
“She was a huge role model,” Perez said.” She may not know it, but we all looked up to her. Beneath that tough exterior lies a great educator and advocate—especially for women. We were lucky to have her.”
“Earning a spot in her AP class was a challenge,” said Rebecca Goldfarb Terry ’15 , “keeping it was even harder. Mrs. Beiles always demanded the best from her students. She expected us to excel on each test and paper, remain present in class, and be
responsible for the rigorous workload. However, the dedication that she asked from us was always reciprocated through engaging lectures, an open door, and a genuine love of history and teaching. She set high expectations for each of us, and this always made me want to do my best in her class.”
“Mrs. Beiles inspired me to continue my study of history at the collegiate level,” Goldfarb Terry said. “When I matriculated at Wesleyan University, I immediately began to take courses in U.S. history. I eventually declared history as one of my majors and went on to concentrate on the history of feminism, gender, and sexuality in the United States.”
“Everyone knew Ms. Beiles for the high standards to which she held her students,” said Rolanda Evelyn ’12 . “This I can confirm is true, but in the end, it’s all for the best of her students. I went off to college at UPenn and not only was I ready for the challenge because of the diligence that Poly taught me, but also because of the work ethic Ms. Beiles instilled in me.”
Susan’s granddaughter, June Dorsch ’23 , is a budding historian. This year, Dorsch placed first in the NY State History Day competition and advanced to the national competition for a paper about the sterilization of indigenous women. “For as long as I can remember,” Dorsch said, “my grandmother has always encouraged my intellectual curiosity even when I didn’t know where it would take me. She would tell me about our family history, forward me online newsletters from places like the Gilder Lehrman Institute about the history of inaugurations or American xenophobia, and she would give me notebooks to encourage my writing. When I learned something I found exciting, I couldn’t wait to tell her. Our discussions, combined with her support of my curiosity, motivated me to continue to explore subjects that captured my interest.”
Among her favorite memories at Poly, Susan said, were the “times of celebration” such as Teaching & Service and 25 Years of Teaching celebrations. In 2014, her whole family came to Homecoming to see her honored with the Spirit Award.
When her husband, Arnie, passed away in February 2021, Susan was extremely touched by the beautiful notes she received from her students. She holds these very close and says it “symbolizes the best in us as a community.”
“I met Susan when I applied to become chair of Poly’s History Department and quickly discovered why students found her both formidable and inspiring,” said Michal Hershkovitz, P’16, ’18 , Assistant Head of School, Academics. “Susan served as my first and most important mentor; she guided me, as she did her students, by setting high standards of excellence and providing sage advice and unwavering support for meeting them. A stalwart friend, she helped me and others become better. Susan was and remains clear-eyed about what she cherishes most about Poly: our warm community, devotion to our students’ intellectual and personal growth, and the unique role we play in ensuring that students leave school with high standards of their own.”
“I met Susan Beiles in 1990, the year I became part of the “Poly Family,” recalls former English teacher Gail Karpf P’06 . “Susan introduced herself to me at one of our opening meetings. She let me know that she would be available to answer any questions I had, and that she looked forward to getting to know me.” Over the course of 27 years, Susan and Gail got to know each other well. “In fact,” Karpf said, “I often said that I wanted to be like Susan in years to come: I wanted to be a role model for students, I wanted to become an expert in my craft, and I wanted to be a mentor for future Poly teachers. Susan was always there to listen, to comfort, and to guide. I became a stronger, more confident teacher with her as a role model.”
“In addition to all that I learned from Susan about teaching, learning, and my role as chair,” Hershkovitz said. “Susan and I have met for lunch almost every summer, and spent those hours appreciating how lucky we are to work together at the school we love. It is a joy and not a little comfort to know that Susan may be stepping away from teaching but not from Poly, which would never be the same without her.”
“Teaching is a strange endeavor,” Rankin said, “often quite isolating, just the teacher and the students. Susan always reminds us that we have a powerful institution with a credible history and tradition that is far more meaningful than most of what is out there. And that in and of itself forms a community of like thinkers. We cannot be everything to everyone, but we can be who we are and deliver on the promise to prepare for a life of conviction and purpose…”
“I recently saw Ms. Beiles at Reunion and gave her a huge hug,” said Evelyn. “It brought such a smile to my face to know that Poly students today have someone like Ms. Beiles on campus, but also, after so many years, to get to thank her for all that she did for high school me.”
In the fall, Susan will begin part-time work as a writing specialist at Poly. In the future, she would like to do volunteer work, perhaps with caregivers, drawing on her own experience, or as a docent in a museum
When asked what advice she would offer a young colleague, Susan said, “I would urge that they be the best version of themselves that is possible. As a teacher, scholar, hard-working and involved member of the community, they model for their students what excellence looks like. I would—and I tried to—hold students to stretch themselves, too, to high standards, to be the best they can.”
“There is a piece of advice Mrs. Beiles gave us as we were all studying for the AP test that I repeat to myself often,” Volandes said. “We must have been complaining about the study schedule or who knows what else and Mrs. Beiles reminded us of the test date. And of the idea that as long as there is a clear end in sight you can pretty much get through anything. Yes, she was tough. She is excellent and wanted the same from us. AP U.S. History was one of the classes that changed the way I thought, and perhaps most importantly, it changed the way I thought about myself. When Mrs. Beiles is telling you you can do it, who would dare argue?”
Since 2018, Lower School students and their families have shared their family stories with the community through the My Story project. This activity “is meant to be fun, affirming, and celebratory in nature, so encourage your child to create something that is unique to them and your family,” Kimberly Davis Rivizzigno P’35 , Director of Community Life and Family Engagement, conveyed in instructions for this past year’s projects.
There are currently three My Story activities each year for Latinx, Asian Pacific Islander (API), and Black History Month. “The goal is for students to celebrate identity,” Davis Rivizzigno explained. “It is important for children to see themselves reflected in the day to day at school.”
“Each year, students are excited to participate,” Kindergarten Head Teacher Kim Davis said. “They get to share their stories, rich cultural identities, histories, and family traditions with the entire school community. They present their posters in the classroom. Many teachers take their children on ‘museum walks’ to see the display and learn a bit more about their fellow students and teachers.
In 2022, students created 11” x 17” posters celebrating their family identity. Directions for the project included sentence starters and prompts to guide this process. Prompts included: “I love to,” “My family is from,” “My ancestors are from,” “A cultural tradition that is important to my family is,” “Name one person who has enriched your family, community, or country,” and “I love my skin color because” or “My heritage is important to me because…”
Families were invited to include as much or as little information as they wished. It becomes a family activity with gathering photos and sharing stories. In this way, children learn more about their families. Older children hand write their responses or complete the template digitally. Grown-ups may record younger children’s responses. Students add photographs or drawings on their posters and may use materials such as stickers, stamps, markers, color pencils, etc. The posters were laminated before they were displayed.
For her API My Story project, Mila A. ’35 displayed photos of her family, who are originally from Pakistan, in traditional dress. We learn that her favorite API dish is seviyan, a vermicelli pudding, which is a sweet that is eaten every Eid. Her favorite place to eat it is at home with her family. Like many children, Mila likes the film Moana . Mila says that her API role model is Nano, her grandmother.
In a past Latinx My Story project display, Sofia D. ’32 included a photo of a happy gathering of her relatives and explained that her family comes from Trenton, NJ and her ancestors from Kentucky, Virginia, and Puerto Rico. We learned she loves to draw. A cultural tradition that Sofia enjoys is listening to music and this was illustrated with an acoustic guitar. For the final prompt, “I love my skin color because,” Sofia wrote, “Mommy and Daddy made me.”
Standing near the My Story display, Kaia P. ’35 pointed to her red poster on the wall. Nearby, another poster told the story of a family who is from Indiana and Haiti with ancestors from West Africa, France, Germany, Italy, and Portugal. Stars decorated Aarav M.’s ’36 poster with photos of his family who are from “India, Scotland, and the U.S.A.” with ancestors from Mexico.
“I love my skin color because I love myself,” he had written. He is inspired by his mom. On a poster titled “Easton’s Story,” photos told the story of a family from North Carolina and Washington, D.C. and an image of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr, an inspiring figure.
Onher yellow poster, Ariana S. ’32 had written, “I am Iranian and Black. A cultural tradition in my family is Nowruz and Yalda. I love to draw and read.”
Lucia R. ’35 included many family photos on her poster and wrote, “My ancestors are from Jamaica, Cuba, Italy, and Africa.” She wrote, “A cultural tradition that is important to our family is sharing stories and delicious food.”
Lucia added, “I love my skin color because it reminds me of dulce de leche.”
Next to family photos, Noah P. ’36 had written, “I am brave.” “I love to play and explore outside.” “I love my skin color because of me and also because of mommy!”
On her poster, Sanaya M. ’33 recorded: “My family is from India, Scotland, and the U.S. My ancestors are from Italy, Ireland, and Africa too.” She loves to play piano, basketball, and board games and to play with her brother. My heritage is important to me because of my role models—men and women like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Rosa Parks, Ruby Bridges, and Harriet Tubman, who changed the world and inspire me today.”
Camden R.’s ’33 poster declared, “Proudly African American.” He loves to play basketball and lacrosse. Amid the family photos, we learned that Camden’s grandparents are from Barbados and the U.S. and his ancestors are from Africa. “A cultural tradition that is important to our family is celebrating Kwanzaa together and with friends.” He added, “My African ancestors fought for their civil rights so I could live a better life. I love them!”
Many family photos decorated Liam R.-J.’s ’30 My Story poster. His family is from the Caribbean from the island of St. Vincent & The Grenadines and from St. Lucia and his ancestors are from Africa. Their family traditions include baking rum cake for the holidays while listening to Caribbean music and dressing in West Indian costumes for a carnival parade. “My heritage is important to me because I love learning about my parents’ and my grandparents’ childhood experiences. One day I hope to pass on these traditions to my future family and generations to come.”
In his My Story poster, John W. ’32 includes a lovely family photo and explains, “A cultural tradition that is important to our family is eating Southern foods on Christmas.” He shares some family history: “My great-granddaddy Goodrich saved 25 cents per day until he earned enough to buy land in Virginia and build our family’s farm. This was in 1936 when it was very difficult for Black people to buy property. We still visit the farm today!”
The display included Grade 4B Head Teacher Aiyana Parker’s story. All her grandparents came from North and South Carolina, but her ancestors are from Nigeria, Cameroon, Benin, Togo, and Mali. She added that her grandmother Jacqueline, a.k.a. Miss Jackie, “taught us to be strong, proud, smart, and to stand up for what’s right!”
Poly celebrated our 165th Commencement ceremony on June 3, 2022. Head of School Audrius Barzdukas P’20 welcomed proud families of the Class of 2022, friends, faculty, and trustees. Soph Cimmino ’22, on electric guitar, led the community in singing “America the Beautiful.”
Barzdukas noted that at Poly our Commencement speakers are students. Ryantony Exuma ’22, who was awarded the Poly Cup for the senior who has stood for most in the school, served as Student Speaker, chosen by the Class
of 2022. Senior Singers and members of Advanced Concert Choir were led by Director of Music Dan Doughty in singing the Beatles’ “In My Life,” selected as the Class of 2022 Senior Song. Our other speaker, Jake Zrihen ’22, was winner of the Joseph Dana Allen Award, presented for the highest scholarship combined with commensurate character. After Barzdukas wished them farewell, a jubilant Class of 2022 tossed their caps in the air in a final celebration.
Upper School deans Jamie Nestor, Douglas Wong, Alexis Perez, and Kane Willis smile broadly as they successfully launch a new class of Poly graduates including Zoe Feuer ’22, Carly Pyles ’22, and Francesca Corsalini ’22.
Joseph Dana Allen Award winner Jake Zrihen ’22 (above) presents his Commencement speech. The JDA Award recognizes the highest scholarship, combined with commensurate character. Poly Cup winner and Senior Speaker Ryantony Exuma (left) flawlessly executes the diploma transfer-handshakesmile with Head of School Audrius Barzdukas P’20.
Jon Sanger ’61, producer of the film Marshall , was a featured panelist for a segment of Poly on Film. The film starred Chadwick Boseman portraying a young Thurgood Marshall facing one of his greatest challenges as a lawyer for the NAACP.
Ha rold Theurer, Jr. ’75 is thrilled to share his Mom’s Choice Award winning children’s book, Hey Dad, Let’s Have a Catch!, has been embraced by the Aaron Judge All Rise Foundation. The book’s message of parental involvement in a child’s life is the inspiration for Aaron’s “Just Five Minutes” initiative. 80
Ben Stewart ’87 says, “I am living in the North Bay Area in CA with my wife Chaela, stepson Zane (15), Olive (11), a one-eyed tabby cat Ginger, and our chocolate lab Shiloh. My son Payton (20) left the nest last year. He’s at Santa Clara U. We love it out here. Just went to our first ‘Pink’ party at a great winery out this way, had a good ski season, and am getting back into golf. In the financial advice business, that’s been rewarding in many ways.” Ben planned a trip back for the 2022 Reunion. “Been a long time. Will be good to come back!”
Stellene Volandes ’89, a n internationally renowned expert on jewelry, who is editor-in-chief of Town and Country and editorial director of Elle Decor, discussed researching and writing her book, The Jewels That Made History: 101 Stones, Myths, and Legends at Poly Context, the in-person speaker series that brings experts, notable authors, and professionals to our campus to talk about events and issues through a historical lens. (P ictured above with Michael S. Robinson, Poly’s Head of Arts) 90
Diahann Billings-Burford ’90 was profiled in Sports Illustrated about her work to promote equality in sports. Sports Illustrated and Empower Onyx spotlighted the diverse journeys of Black women across sports—from veteran athletes to up-and-coming stars, coaches, executives, and more—in the series, Elle-evate: 100 Influential Black Women in Sports
Kate Zinsser ’01 is starting her 10th year on the faculty in the Department of Psychology at the University of Illinois at Chicago where she conducts research on early childhood education systems and prevention programs. This fall also marks the release of her first book, No Longer Welcome: The Epidemic of Expulsion from Early Childhood Education, available from Oxford University Press.
Ka zmira Pytlak Nedeau ’03 lives on Cape Cod with husband Jonathan and children Walter (4) and Hazel (1). “I love living close to the ocean and we have a big garden and chickens. Jonathan and I also opened an independent bookstore during the pandemic, right on the main street in our town. If you are ever on the Cape, stop in and say hello!” That’s the Sea Howl Bookshop, 46 Main Street, Orleans, MA.
Olujimi Akili
Tommasino ’05 and wife Dr. Amanda Herrera Tommasino are proud to announce the birth of their daughter, Amaya Merit Tommasino, on June 14, 2022. Also of note, Akili was one of five curators featured by Frieze as providing “new leadership to some of New York’s
most influential and beloved cultural institutions, at a time when the public discourse about injustice and the need for social change means the role of museums and arts spaces is being profoundly reframed.” Akili’s tenure as Associate Curator at The Metropolitan Museum of Art began in 2021.
Poly Arts celebrated the tenth anniversary of the Blue Notes, the a cappella group, which made its debut performance at the 2012 Spring Concert and has been a much-loved feature of all Poly vocal performances since. Original members of the Blue Notes included: Ben Smith ’12, Anthony Vaccaro ’12, Phillip Lawson ’13, Kuvonn Richardson ’13, Nick Safian ’13, Harold Theurer ’13, Youssef Ben-Farhat ’14, Connor Pisano ’14, Andrew Giurleo ’15, and Billy Langdon ’15.
Emily Giurleo ’13 married Jon Samp on July 30, 2022 at the Brooklyn Botanical Garden in Brooklyn, NY. The couple met while working as software engineers at Codecademy in 2017.
Caroline Coyer ’18 graduated from NYU Journalism Magna Cum Laude and started graduate school at University College London for her MFA in Creative Documentary!
Ja mes Decker ’18 gr aduated from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) in December 2021. He declared his major as computer science and minored in economics and management. He currently works for Hyannis Port Research, which is a financial technology company that does risk checking for high frequency trading.
Lotoya Francis ’18 wa s the student speaker at the Senior Convocation at Cornell University. The Senior Convocation Ceremony is a Cornell tradition that takes place during the Senior Days leading up to Commencement Weekend. Congratulations, Lotoya!
Tara Muoio ’13 ma rried Steven Holzer on June 25, 2022 at the Queens Botanical Garden in Flushing, NY. The two met while studying abroad at NYU Prague in 2015.
Maddie Winter ’18 wa s selected to be a herald during Class Day, one of Princeton University’s major graduation ceremonies. As a key speaker, she delivered a funny, moving, and spicy reflection on behalf of the Class of 2022. Congratulations, Maddie!
Sa m Collier ’21 is currently in his first year at Abertay University “in Scotland’s sunniest city, Dundee.”
“The course I’m on is called Computer Games Technology. It’s a very specific four-year degree, which goes in depth on how to create the tools necessary to make and render video games.”
Read and submit Class Notes online polyprep.org/classnotes WHAT’S NEW WITH YOU?
Read and submit Class Notes online: polyprep.org/classnotes
William “Bill” Easton ’42 passed away on November 27, 2021 at home in Bonita Springs, FL at age 96. He was born William Lewis Epstein. His father, Bernard, ran the clothing manufacturer Voguester Jr. His mother, Minnie (Cohen) Epstein, was a homemaker. Bill grew up in Brooklyn. After the war, he graduated from Cornell. Bill changed his surname to avoid antiSemitism in his career. He took over Voguester Jr. and eventually closed it down. He and Joan (Katz) Easton were married from 1953 to the late ‘70s. He met Margarita Bailey thanks to a buddy from Hobson’s Choice, a pub. They married in 1994. Margarita died in March 2021. Bill could narrate a play from a high school football game eight decades ago. His memories of the military, where he served in Patton’s army, remained vivid. Yet he also delighted in abstract painting, collecting work by figures such as Jasper Johns before they gained fame. In Bill’s spare time, he wrote poems. Talking to him, you got the poetry of the one-liner, not the prose of conversation. In “Hobson’s Choice or Nothing,” a 1987 poem published in The East Hampton Star, Bill celebrated a family that owned a bar he loved with a tribute to their collective unconscious—how they were “not aware they fill a destiny/ more than just a hunger/a few hours old.” On Bill’s 91st birthday, he hit a hole in one. Until the end, he carried a martini glass to his lips without spilling a drop. Bill is survived by a son, Tom; a daughter, Elizabeth Easton; two grandsons, Isaac Easton and Alex Traub; and a greatgrandson, Charles Easton.
William E. Stoney Jr. ’43, an aeronautical engineer who made important contributions to NASA’s mission during the space race as a developer of early rockets and a lead engineer on the Apollo program, died May 28, 2022 in Ashburn, VA. He was 96. Bill was born in 1925, in Terre Haute, IN, and grew up in Charleston, SC, and in Brooklyn. His father was a civil engineer who worked on the Panama Canal, and his mother was a homemaker.
Observing her young son’s interest in flight, she once accompanied Bill to an airfield where he flew aboard an airplane piloted by pioneering aviator Clarence D. Chamberlin. After Army Air Forces service in the Pacific during World War II, Bill received a bachelor’s degree in aeronautical engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1949. He received two master’s degrees, one in aeronautical engineering from the University of Virginia in 1951 and another in industrial management from MIT in 1962. Bill was in his early 20s, fresh out of MIT following service as an airplane mechanic during World War II, when he joined NASA’s predecessor agency, the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, in 1949. Working at Langley Research Center in Hampton, VA, he joined a group of engineers renowned for their imaginative work on pilotless aircraft and rocket technology. Bill was in a key position when the space race began in the 1950s, pitting the two Cold War superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union, in a contest to reach what was seen as the final frontier. A critical moment—and an embarrassing setback for the United States—came in 1957 with the successful Soviet launch of Sputnik 1, the first artificial satellite. “We were disappointed we weren’t the first,” Bill said, “but in another sense it reassured us that
we were really on the right track—that, boy, we really could get supported from now on, because this was important that the U.S. continue to try to catch up, and we were part of that game.” Bill became the program manager overseeing the development of the solid-propellant rocket known as Scout. In the 1960s, as ambitions shifted to manned spaceflight, he was appointed chief of advanced space vehicle concepts at NASA’s Washington headquarters and led the advanced spacecraft technology division in Houston. He served in top engineering roles during the Apollo program, whose signal accomplishment was the moon landing in 1969. That year, Bill Stoney received the NASA Exceptional Service Medal for his work on the Apollo mission. Bill became director of NASA’s earth observations programs in 1973, leading the development of satellites for meteorological purposes as well as the monitoring of atmospheric pollution and earth resources. He retired from NASA in 1978 and later worked in the private sector, including with the RCA Corp. on advanced robotics and with Noblis, a nonprofit technology company. Bill’s first marriage, to Roberta Beckner, ended in divorce. His second wife, Joy Scafard Stoney, died in 2016 after 51 years of marriage. Survivors include three stepchildren from his second marriage whom he adopted, Catherine Stoney of
Vienna, VA, Jeanne Stoney-Disston of Weston, CT, and Robert Stoney of Herndon, VA; a son from his second marriage, John Stoney of Austin, TX; seven grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren.
Edward Leonard Marcus ’44 passed away on May 5, 2022, in New Haven, CT, a month shy of his 95th birthday. Edward was born in Brooklyn, NY, the son of the late Dr. Isadore Marcus and Dorothy (Kirchstein) Marcus. At Poly, he not only excelled in the classroom, but also on the Varsity Football and Baseball teams. He received his BA from Yale, excelling in academics, and on the football, baseball, and basketball teams, and as manager of the wrestling team. Ed graduated from the Yale University School of Law in 1950. He ran for the Board of Alders (Alderman) in the early 1950s and was successful in his first attempt and was thereafter a majority leader on the Board of Alders 1951. He began The Marcus Law Firm upon his graduation from Yale. Ed went on to run for State Senate where he served six terms as Majority Leader and then served as Democratic State Chairman beginning in 1992. Ed was preceded in death by his parents and his brother, Mortimer Bennett. He is survived by his wife, Jill (Surprenant) Marcus. Jill and Ed were married for 33 years. Ed is also survived by three daughters: The Honorable Judge Shelley A. Marcus (Edward Burke); Susan Marcus; and Nicole Marcus (Lucia Rivera); great-niece of Ed’s wife Jill Marcus, who became his adopted daughter in 1996 when she was 12. Ed is also survived by former wife, Phyllis Marcus. Ed and Phyllis met while he was in Yale; they married in 1948 and had two daughters, Shelley and Susan.
Kenneth John Jabara ’47 passed away on July 30, 2022 at the age of 92. He was born in Brooklyn, NY on January 20, 1930 and has been a lifelong resident of Bay Ridge, Brooklyn. He was the son of Aref Jabara and Mary Massad and was married to Gloria Helen (Nafash) Jabara. Kenny attended Poly and graduated from New York University with a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration. He briefly worked for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York before joining his
family’s import business of fine linens from Portugal and then Brazil. He subsequently became comptroller of a marble and granite import company. He was the type of person you wanted in your corner. There was nothing he would not do for his family. His lifelong friends were from the neighborhood, many of whom were the pillars of St. Mary’s Orthodox Church. Their weekly card game remains infamous among family and friends. He spent summers and the last few years of his life in the Pocono Mountains, and enjoyed his time spent at Lake Naomi Club. Kenny loved history and to read. He enjoyed classic movies and could always be counted on to tear up at the end of Casablanca . He loved football, tennis, and baseball, especially the Yankees. His wife often said his true calling might have been as coach. Kenny leaves behind his loving wife of 59 years, Gloria Helen (Nafash) Jabara of Brooklyn, NY and Pocono Pines, PA; their daughter, Jacqueline Mary (Jabara) Robinson of Summit, NJ, his sonin-law, William Carleton Robinson, and his grandchildren, Linda (Lynn) Winter Robinson and William Kenneth Robinson, as well as extended family.
Richard A. Markell ’49 of New Rochelle, NY, passed away on October 10, 2021 at the age of 89.
John F. Raycroft, MD ’49 passed away on July 25, 2022 at the age of 91. Born in Brooklyn, Jack was the son of the late John F. and Ruth (Sherin) Raycroft. Jack’s father was Chief of Surgery at Kings County Hospital in Brooklyn and a significant influence in his life. Jack attended Poly and went on to Syracuse University where he made many lifelong friends and met the love of his life, Elizabeth (Betsy). He graduated in 1953 with a major in geography. After graduation, he entered the U.S. Navy’s Officer Candidate School and was assigned to the U.S.S. Haynsworth. He spent four years in the Navy rising to a Lieutenant, JG, an experience that, as Betsy says, made him more mature. He then attended medical school at SUNY Downstate and graduated in 1961. Jack’s career in orthopedic surgery began with an internship and residency at Yale New
Haven Hospital (1961-63) and further training at Newington Children’s Hospital (1963-66). Soon after, Jack helped found a fledgling group of orthopedic surgeons working out of Hartford Hospital, the Orthopedic Associates of Hartford. Jack remained part of OAH and Hartford Hospital for over 50 years. He also continued his association with Newington Children’s and spent time educating the next generation of surgeons at University of Connecticut and Yale University. Jack’s membership and leadership within the New England Orthopedic Society, and the Yale Orthopedic Association, were major highlights of his professional life. Jack and Betsy were married in 1956 in Syracuse, NY. They had four children while Jack’s career developed and they moved around Connecticut at that time. It wasn’t until they settled in South Glastonbury in 1967 that they found their home. Outside of hospital hours and town activities, Jack was generous with his time and knowledge. For years he would perform off-hours house calls, heading out with his black doctor’s bag like a scene out of an old western, to check on a neighborhood kid’s swollen knee or a family friend’s sore shoulder. For many summers, Jack would take his doctor bag up to Camp Dudley in Westport, NY, serving as camp
doctor for a period. The Thanksgiving Road Race in Manchester, CT, was never missed. Jack ran it with friends, children, and grandchildren beginning in the late1970s. Jack was also an avid golfer and tennis player, enjoyed the theater, birding, summers in the Adirondacks, and sharing a good, long story. He will be deeply missed by Betsy, his children, grandchildren, and many dear friends. Besides his wife, he is survived by his children and their spouses, John F. Raycroft, Jr. and Laurie Souza of Swampscott, MA; Kathleen B. Raycroft-Meyer and Peter Meyer of Bristol, VT; Theodore S. and Audrey Raycroft of Sherborn, MA; Timothy W. Raycroft and Noelle Cocoros of Boston, MA; and eight grandchildren, Harrison, Oliver, John, Emma, Willard, Charles, M. Eleanor, and Cameron. Jack’s only sibling, David, passed away in 1982.
Walter P. Frey ’52 of Hingham and Oak Bluffs died on April 15, 2022 at Massachusetts General Hospital at age 86. He was born in Brooklyn, NY and spent much of his childhood helping out Opa and Oma in the family delicatessen,
where he discovered a love of potato salad and chocolate pudding. After Poly, he graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1956 with a degree in aeronautical engineering. He also played lacrosse at MIT. His career took him to Grumman Aerospace, Pan American World Airways, and Mobil Oil. While at PanAm, Walter was the project engineer from conception through first flight of the monumental 747 aircraft. His career at Mobil took him all over the world, providing technical service to national and private airlines. While traveling for Mobil, Walter attended religious services on Sundays, regardless of the language, and he never met a local beer he did not like, always asserting that “beer is safer than water.” In 1956, he married Beryl Schelhorn, a graduate of Lasell Women’s College. Together they raised three children— Tabetha, Karl, and Tammy—in Garden City, NY. The family took frequent trips to their summer cottage at the Martha’s Vineyard Camp Meeting Association in Oak Bluffs, where they hosted many croquet matches and cribbage games, and welcomed friends and family during the 50 years that Walter summered there. After his retirement from Mobil, Walter took a summer job working for the Steamship Authority, where he was always recognizable with his bright red shirt and enormous six foot, six inch stature. His grandchildren loved spending the summer months at the cottage, jumping off his shoulders in the water and listening to him sing “Sing Your Way Home” at the weekly community sings—always entirely out of key. His daughter, Tammy, died in 2004 and was unfortunately soon followed by Walter’s wife, Beryl, who died in 2010. Walter loved his family, which includes Tabetha’s husband Lee McCartney and Karl’s wife, Patty Cullen. He adored his grandchildren: Kyla McCartney and spouse Elizabeth Wiesner, Kaitlyn Tradd and spouse Benjamin Tradd, Xavier Frey, Aigneis Frey, Augustine Frey, and his great-grandchildren, Natalie Tradd and Wren McCartney Wiesner.
Howard Jaffe ’53, DDS, of Mt. Pleasant, SC passed away on February 2, 2022 at age 86. He is survived by his wife, Sondra, and two children.
Bruce Denmark ’56 passed away on January 26, 2021.
Eric David Nielsen ’56 passed away on June 10, 2021. Eric was born October 15, 1938 in Brooklyn, NY to the late Herman Emil Nielsen and Evelyn Ottersen Nielsen, who both immigrated from Norway. He received bachelor’s and master’s degrees in electrical engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Eric worked for IBM for 34 years as an engineering manager in Poughkeepsie, NY. For nearly 40 years, he had a vacation home in the Adirondack Mountains, where he had lifelong friends and enjoyed the ministries of Camp of the Woods. In 2004, he and his wife retired to Southport, NC, where he was active in his church, attended multiple Bible studies, and sang in the choir. He enjoyed boating, skiing, and being a handyman around the house. He also loved to give advice! He had a strong faith in God and was a true family man. Survivors include his wife of 53 years, Joyce Nielsen; three daughters, Julie Nielsen Lindsey, Emily Nielsen Jones, and Audrey Nielsen; five grandchildren, Erik Jones, Luke Jones, Mia Lindsey, Lexi Jones, and Garrett Lindsey; sons-in-law, Tony Lindsey and Ross Jones; a brother, Robert Nielsen, and wife, Linda; a sister, Carolyn Collins; and several nieces and nephews.
Dr. Anthony Purpura ’56, a pillar in Staten Island’s swimming community and one of the borough’s most successful coaches of all time in any sport, passed away on September 18, 2021. The former, longtime Notre Dame Academy mentor, who was affectionately known as ‘Doc’ by his swimmers, peers, and the like, was 82. Doc, a former Staten Island Advance Service Award winner, who was honored during NDA’s Alumnae Association’s inaugural Recognition of Excellence Celebration, is survived by his children, John and Prin. He was predeceased by his beloved wife, Julia—a former Advance Women of Achievement Award winner—nearly 10 years ago. The Purpuras were married for 51 years as of her death in September 2011.
John Brancato ’61 passed away on February 12, 2022. John retired as an AVP with NY Life and taught business courses at Brooklyn College and St. John’s University. He was a Deputy Inspector with the NYPD Auxiliary Unit and was a member of the Auxiliary Band. John was also a member of the US Coast Guard Auxiliary and taught boat safety courses. He is survived by his wife, Joan.
Ken Duberstein ’61, former White House Chief of Staff under President Ronald Reagan, passed away on March 2, 2022 in Washington, DC, at age 77. Kenneth Marc Duberstein was born on April 21, 1944, the son of Aaron Duberstein, a fund-raiser for the Boy Scouts of America, and Jewel (Falb) Duberstein, a teacher. He grew up loving New York hot dogs and Broadway shows, often paying for standing-roomonly tickets, his wife said. After Poly, he attended Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, PA, graduating in 1965. He earned a master’s degree in political science at The American University in Washington, DC the following year. There, he had his first taste of Capitol politics—as an intern for Senator Jacob Javits, (RNY). Ken was a consummate Washington insider and institutionalist, a big man with an easy smile and a generous laugh, who could be hard-nosed, loved gossiping with reporters, believed in bipartisanship, and offered his advice to anyone who asked—especially those who succeeded him in the chief of staff job, which he often described as being a “reality therapist” for the president. Ken joined the Reagan White House in 1981 as the president’s liaison to the House of Representatives, where he helped push through an extensive tax cut by getting conservative Democrats, known as blue dogs, to break with their party. His dogged ways earned him a nickname from Senator Howard H. Baker Jr., then the majority leader: Duberdog. He later left the White House to work as a lobbyist, but at the entreaty of Mr. Baker, who had become the chief of staff, Ken returned in 1987 to help “rescue Reagan in his time of trouble,”
as Lou Cannon of The Washington Post wrote at the time. The Reagan presidency was floundering, in part because of public backlash over the Iran-Contra scandal, the administration’s clandestine scheme to sell weapons to Iran at inflated prices and use the profits to supply Nicaraguan rebels, or Contras. Ken helped persuade Mr. Reagan to give a “mea culpa” speech that helped turn the presidency around. He was later named chief of staff in July 1988, and served until the end of the Reagan presidency. He later founded and ran the Duberstein Group, a boutique lobbying firm whose clients included United Airlines, Goldman Sachs, and Major League Baseball. But, at heart, Ken was a White House staffer. He helped shepherd the Supreme Court nominations of David Souter and Clarence Thomas through the Senate during the presidency of George H. W. Bush, Mr. Reagan’s vice president, whom Ken worked hard to elect. Justice Souter later presided over Ken’s 2003 wedding to Jacquelyn Fain Duberstein, then a television producer. Ken was also a close adviser to Colin Powell, one of his dearest friends, when the retired general was secretary of state to President George W. Bush. Ken endorsed Barack Obama for president in 2008 after Senator John McCain, the Republican nominee, picked Sarah Palin, then the governor of Alaska, as his running mate. In Washington, Ken was active in civic life. In addition to being a Kennedy Center trustee, he served on the board of the Brookings Institution and the board of the Council on Foreign Relations.
At lunchtime, he could often be spotted at Equinox, a restaurant down the block from the White House, dining on his favorite meal: scallops. “There are many so-called ‘wise men’ in Washington, but Ken was the real deal—not only because of his wisdom, but because he always delivered it with a smile and an encouraging pat on the back,” said Ron Klain, President Biden’s chief of staff. Referring to his own administration, he added, “I felt like he was rooting for us to succeed.” In addition to his wife, Ken is survived by four children, Jennifer, Jeffrey, Andrew, and Samantha Duberstein; and three grandchildren. He was divorced from his first wife, Marjorie Duberstein, and from his second, Sydney Duberstein, who predeceased him.
Allan M. Rosenbloom ’61, son of the late Mary (Dombroff) and David Rosenbloom, passed away on February 5, 2022. His family were members of the Brooklyn Jewish Center, and it was in that special atmosphere that Allan was nurtured surrounded with a loving extended family, Jewish traditions, and culture. In Allan’s later years, he reconnected with his Brooklyn past and community, thus completing a full circle of his life. Allan was an accomplished international tax attorney, who began his career with the Rubin, Baum and Levin law firm, and later became a partner with Dentons Law Firm. He is survived by his wife, Kelly Fleischmann, son, Daniel (Randi), and his grandson, Andrew.
Joel Pensley ’62 died on September 29, 2021. At Poly, Joel was a varsity athlete in soccer, rifle, and tennis. He spent summers at Buck’s Rock Camp in New Milford, CT, learning radio, woodwork, and shooting. At Princeton, Joel was a Keyceptor, a clarinetist in the Marching Band, and the host of a show on WPRB, the “Pensl Point.” Joel debated for Whig-Clio, participated in the Flying Club and Yacht Club, and belonged to Court Club. He earned his J.D. from Columbia University. He began his career in the Maritime Administration, but soon joined an admiralty law firm. His legal work progressed from ship finance, to venture capital, and finally to securities law. A natural teacher, Joel taught business
law at New York Law School and in the paralegal program at Nassau Community College. Except for two years in London, Joel remained in New York City, which he loved in so many ways. He could often be found playing squash or backgammon at the Princeton Club. Joel is survived by a daughter and two grandchildren.
Edwin, “Ted,” Beery ’63 of Craftsbury, VT died on April 1, 2022 at age 76. He was born in Brooklyn to Evelyn Onken Beery and Lt. Col. Edwin Beery, MD. Ted attended Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn through the fourth grade. He then attended Poly where he played football and lacrosse until graduating in 1963. He received his undergraduate degree from Wofford College in South Carolina in 1967. His life’s journey led him to be a social worker in Morrisville, VT for his entire career. He first worked for the State of Vermont doing child abuse investigations and later
at the Lamoille Family Center working with youths who had been in the foster care system. Ted also was a board member of Laraway Youth and Family Services and later president of that board. Ted acted as supervisor to several Lamoille Family Center staff and developed close relationships with all he met. Ted shared many laughs, understanding, and problemsolving with many. He enjoyed learning from Vermonters and living a life as a “Vermonter.” The stories are many. He liked to sharpen knives for friends, drop by for a visit, and listen to music, and above all lift weights. His strength helped so many people including stopping to help people who had gone off the road. His passion and study of weight lifting were shared with all those who listened. His robust laughter or the many quick witted puns will never be forgotten. Ted is survived by his wife, Kathy McArdle Beery, and daughter Brittany Pecoriello and her
husband Anthony and two grandchildren John and Nicholas of Fallston, MD; and son Benjamin Moffatt and his wife Danielle and grandchildren, Gracelyn and Connor of Williamstown, VT.
Dr. John Bendo ’63 passed away on April 9, 2022. After John attended Poly, he graduated from Columbia University in 1967, and earned a medical degree from New York University in 1971. He spent two years as a U.S. Navy doctor early in his career. John practiced medicine for 39 years and specialized in urology. He retired in 2010, but continued to keep his medical license active until he passed away.
Dr. Mark Allan Oliver ’63, a primary care physician in Randolph, NJ, died on May 16, 2022 at age 75. Mark was born and grew up in Brooklyn, NY, the son of a primary care doctor and art teacher. After Poly, he received his undergraduate
degree in mathematics from the University of Vermont, where he was a brother of the Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity and a clarinetist in the marching band. He followed in his father’s physician footsteps and enrolled in Chicago Medical School where he earned his doctor of medicine degree. He began his internal medicine residency at Saint Vincent’s in New York, but paused to join the U.S. Air Force at Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho. He became chief resident upon his return. Mark also played jazz professionally in the Catskill Mountains, both clarinet and saxophone. He played clarinet in the A.O.K. trio for many years in New Jersey. After residency, he opened a private practice in Morristown, NJ, where he worked full-time for more than 40 years. He co-founded the vascular lab at Morristown Medical Center; spearheaded an Eliquis drug trial; gave countless lectures on deep vein thrombosis; and contributed to textbooks. Decades later, he became an Atlantic Health physician in 2015. He loved practicing medicine and caring for his patients, and always had a silly joke at the ready. When not working, Mark could frequently be found busting a move on the dance floor or practicing his golf swing while grilling dinner. He also enjoyed skiing, tennis, baseball, theater, photography, and music. Mark was a devoted husband, father, brother, friend, and physician. He is survived by his wife, Elise Oliver, also of Randolph, and four children: Mia of Morristown, NJ; A.J., also of Morristown; David of Washington, DC; and Jenny Oliver of New York. He also leaves behind a brother, Jon Oliver, of Ventura, CA, and many brothers and sisters-in-law, nephews, nieces, cousins, and friends.
Ed Schoenfeld ’67, who was chosen as one of Poly’s 2022 Distinguished Alumni, passed away on January 14, 2022 at age 72. Ed, who was known as Impresario of Chinese Cuisine, helped introduce New Yorkers to the breadth of Chinese regional food with a series of top-rated Manhattan restaurants in the 1970s and ’80s, notably Uncle Tai’s Hunan Yuan, Auntie Yuan, and Pig Heaven. Edward Lawrence Schoenfeld was born on Sept. 19, 1949 in Jersey City, NJ, the only child of Theodore and Lillian
(Pesses) Schoenfeld. He grew up in the Clinton Hill neighborhood of Brooklyn. His father was an industrial engineer with the George S. May management consultancy. His mother, known as Lila, was an office manager for a department store and later for the City of New York. Ed attended the Woodward School in Clinton Hill, a progressive private institution, and later Poly. At 15, he spent a summer studying social issues with the farm labor leader Cesar Chavez at the Encampment for Citizenship in Berkeley, CA. When school let out early on Friday afternoons, and his parents were still at work, Ed would spend time in the kitchen of his maternal grandmother, Goldie Pesses, helping her make chicken soup, kreplach, kishke, and blintzes. In his 20s, Ed, who looked like a roadie for the Grateful Dead, seemed an unlikely ambassador for Chinese cuisine. But his expertise, earned through years of study with top immigrant chefs, made him an invaluable partner for restaurateurs like David Keh and Michael Tong. Operating as “consultant, talent scout, taster, manager and public relations man,” as New York magazine described him in 1984, he helped bring the cooking of Szechuan, Hunan, and Shanghai to a city that had subsisted for decades on Cantonese-derived favorites like sweet and sour pork, egg rolls, and egg foo young. Uncle Tai’s, a showcase for Hunanese cuisine, opened in 1973, with Ed, as assistant to Mr. Keh, running the front of the house, on Third Avenue near
East 62nd Street. The restaurant earned a four-star rating from Raymond Sokolov in The New York Times , making it only the second Chinese restaurant, after Shun Lee Dynasty, to achieve that rating. Ed, a voluble, hyper-articulate speaker, became a highly visible interpreter and spokesman for the food culture of China, terra incognita for most Americans at the time. He solidified his reputation working with Mr. Tong at Shun Lee Dynasty (on Second Avenue at East 48th Street), and Shun Lee West (West 65th Street). And in the 1980s he joined forces once again with Mr. Keh, helping to create two of New York’s most celebrated Chinese restaurants, Auntie Yuan (First Avenue near East 64th) and Pig Heaven (Second Avenue near 80th). An early marriage ended in divorce. Ed is survived by his wife, Elisa Herr; two sons, Eric and Adam; and four grandchildren.
Kenneth Hall ’87 passed away on February 15, 2022.
Brian Pariente ’00 passed away on January 9, 2022. After graduating from Poly Prep, Brian attended New York University earning B.A. and M.A. degrees in psychology. He worked as a school psychologist for the New York City D.O.E. helping children with special needs. He kept his friends laughing with his jokes and funny stories, which brought smiles to their faces. He is survived by his parents, Eli and Suzann Pariente, and his son, Rafael.
Brendan McVeigh ’12, an NYPD detective, passed away on July 31, 2022.
Doug Solomon ’14 passed away on July 19, 2022.
Thanks to the philanthropic support of parents, alumni, alumni parents, faculty and staff, trustees, and friends, Poly Prep made great progress in 20212022. Annual Giving grew for the third consecutive year and the amount raised has nearly doubled in five years. Construction of the new Poly Arts Center is underway with more than 80 percent of the capital budget raised. The Poly community celebrated the dedication of a new baseball field, Matt Roventini Field, while progress continued on a new softball field that will be ready this fall.
These investments certainly move the institution forward. Generosity is also a demonstration of belief in the promise of Poly students and an education that encourages them to take great leaps forward.
2021-2022 IMPACT REPORT“Individually, we are one drop. Together, we are an ocean,” wrote Japanese poet Ryūnosuke Akutagawa. Without drops there is no ocean; each of us makes our community.
You did that at Poly this year. Through gifts of all sizes, you contributed $2.9 million to Annual Giving. Even more remarkable, the amount raised has nearly doubled over the past five years—an ocean that has rippled across our campus to make a meaningful difference in the lives and futures of our students.
Investments in academics, the arts, athletics, extracurriculars, faculty development, and financial assistance are essential to create the dynamic learning environment that prepares Poly graduates to lead in a world that continues to evolve.
Poly’s tradition of pursuing excellence inspires us to reach higher. This year, let’s come together as a community to increase participation in Annual Giving among alumni, families, faculty, staff, and friends of Poly. Your gift, no matter the size, demonstrates your belief in our school’s
As I walk around Poly’s two campuses, the power of your generosity is evident everywhere. This spring, we dedicated a beautiful new baseball and softball complex and broke ground for a new 10,000-square-foot Arts Center. In our classrooms, students are challenged by teachers who emphasize intellectual and moral courage. Poly also continues to provide many of our families with the financial assistance necessary to foster a diverse community of learners.
We can and should be proud of our accomplishments. Yet, there’s more to do.
power to nurture the human spirit and empower every Poly student to make better our world.
Every drop matters. Thank you for your support.
Audrius Barzdukas P’20 Head of SchoolPoly’s tradition of pursuing excellence inspires us to reach higher. This year, let’s come together as a community to increase participation in Annual Giving among alumni, families, faculty, staff, and friends of Poly.
Poly Prep is comprised of a wonderful mosaic of people, creating a school that is immensely fertile, creative, and interesting. Having completed my first year as chair of the school’s Board of Trustees, I’m grateful for those who step up every day to help weave the colorful tapestry that is Poly Prep: passionate teachers, visionary administrators, involved parents, supportive benefactors— and, of course, Poly students, the beneficiaries of this incredible learning environment.
We are all fortunate to be part of this welcoming and inspiring community. Whether we have contributed our time, talents, or financial resources, we all play a part in advancing the mission of a school that is truly a beacon of learning for students from Brooklyn and beyond. Like me, I’m sure that you are grateful to be part of this special community.
As chair of the school’s Board of Trustees, one of my goals is to foster a culture of gratitude at Poly that is very much a reciprocal undertaking. We are grateful for the pivotal role Poly plays in shaping the minds and character of Poly students. In return, we participate in Annual Giving to support and expand the school’s mission.
Annual Giving supports the day-to-day operations of our school, making a direct impact on the daily experiences of current Poly students. This generosity of spirit is a central part of Poly’s culture, and it is growing. The donors recognized in this Impact Report drove a $300,000 increase in Annual Giving, bringing the total raised to $2.9 million for 2021-2022, a new record. The rate of participation also made progress. Now, imagine how much more we could accomplish if everyone increased their level of engagement with a gift to Poly.
The Board of Trustees is confident in the vision of our administrative team, the dedication and talent of our teachers, and the promise of our students. We pledge to join you in providing every resource to strengthen our diverse community, pursue excellence, and achieve the school’s strategic goals. Thank you for your support this year. My wife, Blake, and I look forward to seeing you at Poly this fall.
Andrew Foote Chair Board of TrusteesP’27, ’29
We pledge to join you in providing every resource to strengthen our diverse community, pursue excellence, and achieve the school’s strategic goals
The final numbers for Annual Giving tell a bigger story about the generosity of the Poly Prep community. Thank you for your support in 2021-2022. Every gift really did make a difference. COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
100% BOARD PARTICIPATION
79% FACULTY AND STAFF PARTICIPATION
53% UPPER SCHOOL PARTICIPATION
66% MIDDLE SCHOOL PARTICIPATION
74% LOWER SCHOOL PARTICIPATION
9% ALUMNI PARTICIPATION
Our donor community impacts Annual Giving in many ways!
THE THREE CORE PILLARS that define a Poly Prep education are supported by Annual Giving.
172 FIRST-TIME DONORS
307 Donors INCREASED THEIR ANNUAL GIFT over the previous year.
MATCHING DONORS
55
30% more donors had their gift increase in matched gifts.
$118,400 IN MATCHED GIFTS, a 57% increase.
Advancing the Arts at Poly Prep took a monumental leap in 2021-22 and the momentum has created even greater opportunities for the current academic year and beyond. At the close of the 2022 fiscal year, 80 percent, or approximately $10 million of the $12 million capital budget to modernize and transform the Poly Arts Center was secured. In the current fiscal year, more members of our community—parents, alumni, and friends—have played their part in bringing the 10,000-square-foot arts space to fruition.
The impact of the Arts Center campaign is multi-fold. Donors are nurturing the talents and promise of present and future generations of student-artists. They are propelling Poly Arts to next level excellence, and creating a hub for creativity, innovation, and deeper arts partnerships in Brooklyn.
FEBRUARY 2022
Campaign secures 80% of the $12 million capital budget to construct the Poly Arts Center. By the end of the fiscal year, the total reached approximately $10 million with more donors committing to the campaign in 2022-23.
Site preparation of the expanded Poly Arts Center begins during Spring Break.
With the demolition of the lobby adjacent to the Richard Perry Theatre, construction of the new Poly Arts Center was underway in June. The project is overseen by New York City’s leading architects, project management, and construction firms.
You’re invited! The official groundbreaking and communitywide celebration of the forthcoming Poly Arts Center will kick off on October 6 and continue throughout the week. Students in the visual arts will facilitate a mural project that will be developed with communitywide participation. Also, a showcase of dance, instrumental music, and theater is planned. Students, faculty, alumni, and friends are invited to sign their names to the steel beams and become a permanent part of the exciting new facility.
Support of the Arts Center campaign will make the following possible:
10,000 square feet of additional space for Dance, Instrumental Music, and Art Exhibition.
1,250square-foot Instrumental Music Room, nearly double the space of the existing Band Room.
Theater and Dance Studio to keep pace with expanding curriculum.
20+ partnerships and collaborations with leading artists and arts organizations in New York City will be strengthened in the theater, visual arts, and music.
When 80 percent of students are involved in athletics, investments in facilities and programs that enhance physical education and team sports are a necessity. The Athletic Fields renovation—a $7 million project that impacts baseball, softball, soccer, and lacrosse— made big strides in 2021-22, with more to come in the current academic year.
or $5.8 million of the $7 million capital project budget was secured in 2021-22. The project has inspired new gifts from Poly parents, alumni, and friends in 2022-23.
The new baseball field, named in honor of Poly’s Head Baseball Coach Matt Roventini ’92, P ’21, P ’25, who brought the program to national prominence, was dedicated on April 30, 2022.
The renovation for the new softball field will be completed and the official dedication for the field will be held this fall.
The outfield of Matt Roventini Field does double duty in the off season. The Soccer and Lacrosse teams will train on a new practice field, located in the outfield.
The world-class athletic complex was made possible by a $5 million lead gift from a private family foundation. The project encompassed the installation of artificial turf, a comprehensive storm water management system, baseball and softball diamonds, dugouts for the baseball and softball fields, scoreboards, batting cages and bullpens, bleachers and a press box, and fencing and paved pathways.
Annual Giving is Poly’s most essential fundraising effort and involves the entire Poly community—parents, alumni, faculty and staff, and friends. We are grateful for the contributions of our donors for making Poly a philanthropic priority. A special thank you to the members of Poly’s Tower Society who donate at the Tower Level and above.
$100,000 TO $499,999
John Foley and Jill Foley
Scott Rofey and Olivia Song
David Rosenblatt and Laurie Rosenblatt
Adam Schlesinger and Elizabeth Schlesinger
Irwin Simon and Daryl Simon
THE 1854 SOCIETY
$50,000 TO $99,999
Anson Beard and Veronica Beard
Andrew Foote and Blake Foote
Qiang Fu and Xun Yao
John McPheters and Minya Oh
Rui Song and Hongyu Zhang
The Ziff Family
BLUE & GRAY
$25,000 TO $49,999
Anonymous (2)
Enrico Corsalini and Flavia Corsalini
Mark Dehnert and Mindy Dehnert
John Elefterakis ’02 and Kirsten Elefterakis
Sandi Feinberg
Tara Lipton
Lawrence Playford, Jr. and Ellen Playford
Daniel Rice and Christina Rice
James Sinclair and Larkyn Sinclair
Christopher Taendler and Stephanie Taendler
Matthew Warwick and Lauren Tese Warwick
BLUE DEVILS
$10,000 TO $24,999
Anonymous (3)
Amir Akhavan and Karin Akhavan
Adam Ames and Elissa Levy
Cameron Arrington and Indhira Arrington
Gilbert Baird and Jaimie Baird
Charles Barbiere and Rosalie Castano-Barbiere
Ira Bogner and Jennifer Bogner
Kevin Brandmeyer and Susan Brandmeyer
Marco Caffuzzi and Nicole Gagnon
Jason Caloras and Chloe Frank
Michael Correra ’87
Donald Demay, Jr. and Miyoko Demay
Stuart Downing and Melissa Downing
George Evans
Joseph Finnerty III
Eric Frank and Lisa Frank
Anthony Frempong-Boadu and Gwendolyn Frempong-Boadu
Alexander Garner and Emma Garner
Peter Genatt and Tasha Genatt
Michael Gerling and Tina Petridis-Gerling
Bethany Gilmore
Yi Gong
Allen Grubman and Deborah Grubman
Jennifer Grubman
Tim Hill and Jenny Hill
Josh Ho-Walker and Lillian Goldenthal
Timothy Howell and Elizabeth Howell
Thomas Iannelli ’82 and Barbara Iannelli ’85
Douglas Jaffe and Kristin Heavey
Charles Jigarjian and Michi Jigarjian
Daniel Kim and Shihan Liu
John Kolz and Amy Kolz
Andre Kursancew and Dalit Paradis
Steve Levitan ’78
Michael Lippert and Sarah Pearsall
Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez
Stephen Maharam and Camila Pastor
Christopher Mansfield and Sang Lee
Meredith Marshall and Yolonda Marshall
Arnold Mascali ’84 and Elizabeth Mascali
Lloyd Metz and Cassandra Metz
Matthew Nemeth and Tricia Kissinger
Michael Novogratz and Sukey Novogratz
Brian Nowakowski and Natalia Artemyeva
Tony Pasquariello and Amy Pasquariello
Jackson Phillips, Jr. and Cristine Phillips
Michael Price ’70
Julian Rampelmann and Lorena Ramirez Zapata
Ken Rapp and Michelle Rapp
Kareem Raymond and Tene Raymond
Mark Reed and Daria Ilunga
Leon Reyfman and Natalie Esterman
JP Rorech and Lucy Rorech
Jeremy Rosenberg and Cristina Rosenberg
James Ryan III and Lauren Sands
Robert Sabbagh ’87 and Dorotea Sabbagh
David Smetana and Lauren Smetana
The Stegich Family
Armin Tehrany ’87 and Valerie Tehrany
Lu-Shawn Thompson
Marc Triola and Dushana Triola
Mark Van Zandt and Lindsay Van Zandt
Henry Warshaw ’72 and Susan Warshaw
Elizabeth Wiatt
William Williams and Mollie Williams
Bradd Williamson and Amerika Williamson
Jacek Wojtowicz and Jennifer Powers
John Zaremba ’95 and Nancy Zaremba
$5,500 TO $9,999
Paula Abreu and Bernardo Piquet
Douglas Arbuckle
Walter Chamorro and Alice Neumann de Chamorro
Robert China and Tia Breakley-China
Peter Cohen and Ellen Cohen
Anthony Contessa and Molly Choi
Robert Cort ’64
Daniel Crowley and Heather Crowley
Sean Desmond and Susan Cordaro
Olivier D’Meza and Bethany D’Meza
Lev Falikman and Irina Falikman
Robin Gray and Nancy Labiner
Alex Greenbaum and Rose Greenbaum
Donald Heiliger and Shannon Heiliger
John Hill and Shanna Hill
Jason Howell and Daniela Vitale-Howell
Earl Hunt II and Kristina Hunt
Marc James and Melissa James
Stephen Kempf and Mary Dixie Carter
Daniel Korich and Vivian Korich
Morgan Lawrence III and Nicole Lawrence
Richard Louis ’51
John Mann and Elizabeth Tuttle
Barbara Marino
Andrew McDonald and Sarah Zuercher
Ackneil Muldrow III and Dana Muldrow
John Niccolai and Maria Gea Arredondo
David Pauls and Jane Pauls
Antony Pfaffle ’81 and Linda Pfaffle
John Plym, Jr. and Kristin Plym
Steffen Reichold and Riham Shendy
Anthony Robles and Eden Lopez-Robles
Richard Saltzman ’73 and Bette Saltzman
Anand Sankaranarayanan and Nithya
Venkatachalam
John Saunders, Jr. and Elizabeth Nevins
Sunil Savkar and Stefanie Birkmann
Jim Schoenburg and Laurie Schoenburg
Seong Pan Si
Howard Smith, Jr. ’76 and Pamela Smith
Winston Song and Amy Hsieh
Chandragupta Sooran and Angie Karna
Michael Terrin ’66
St. John Walshe and Pamela Walshe
Peiying Xiao and Yanqiong Liu
TOWER LEVEL
$3,500 TO $5,499
Anonymous (3)
Allyn Arden and Alison Besunder
Brian Azara ’99 and Alexandra Azara ’00
Daniel Baranovsky and Yelena Baranovsky
Audrius Barzdukas
Kate Bernstein ’95
Christine Buckley
JinE Chen
David Chitayat and Xhingyu Chen
Jay Clayton and Gretchen Clayton
John Cochran IV and Danielle Cochran
John Cochran III and Patricia Cochran
Simon Collier and Sarah Collier
Charles Cook and Peggy Cook
Stephen Dembitzer and Sarah Maher
Wassim Diab and Sara Ahmed
Thomas Fahy and Tatyana Tsinberg
Cameron Fairall and Jeehyun Yeo
Christopher Filburn and Jenny Filburn
Stefano Filippazzo and Camille Fortunato
Eric Freedgood ’99 and Rachael Freedgood
Erik Geisler and Rachel Geisler
Michael Gold ’55
Brad Goldberg and Nicole Goldberg
Kyle Graham and Daryl Getman
Nicholas Gravante, Jr. ’78 and Jacqueline Gravante
James Harris and Rachel Fishman
Betsy Humes
Peter Hungerford and Danielle Hungerford
Ankit Jain and Rupal Jain
Arun Jayaram and Shashi Kumara
Chiwoniso Kaitano
Howard Kaye and Wilma Kaye
Kevin King and Lindsey King
Jonathan Krasner ’95 and Dana Pagar
Jamie Lawson and Wendy Lawson
Gwen Libstag
Michael Liburd and Jeanine Liburd ’88
Morris Macleod and Susan Macleod
John Madden, Jr. ’72 and Liz Cooke
Antonio Magliocco, Jr. ’70
Joshua Margolin and Raji Margolin
Kristerfor Mastronardi ’95 and Darya Mastronardi
Tom McAdam and Jill Schwartz
John Merchant and Suzanna Baird
Roland Merchant, Jr. and Jennifer Merchant
Michael Miarmi and Tatiana Rodriguez
Steve Mierisch and Anita Foden
Fausto Monacelli and Sarah Grayson
Darren Moore and Uma Mantravadi
Loren Munk and Kate Munk
Michael Neamonitakis and Meropi Neamonitakis
Guy Nesdale and Melissa Bullen
Jerrold Newman ’72
Constantine Nikitiades and Sophia Nikitiades ’95
Joseph Palladino and Kerry Blum
Stephen Paluszek and Violeta Paluszek
Jeffrey Panzo and Kersten Stannard
Brooks Perlin and Marion Leydier
Gregory Pessin and Jaime Pessin
Christopher Poindexter and Carletta Higginson
Yvonne Pollack
Afshin Rafaat and Yasamin Shahamiri
Leland Richards, Jr. and LaTasha Richards
James Roberts and Lisa Starr
Dan Rootenberg and Shelby Rootenberg
Todd Rose and Jill Rose
Lucas Rosen and Jennifer Kutsher Rosen
Wade Saadi, Jr. ’95 and Andrea Saadi
Craig Sabal and Jennifer Sabal
Ryan Schafer and Hadley Schafer
Richard Schneider and Amy Tully
Jason Scott and Kippy Joseph
Scott Sergeant and Cristina Soto
Jeremy Shamos and Nina Hellman
Timothy Shey and Rachel Garcia
Russell Smith and Maria Guedes Smith
Susan Solomon
Robert Stamicar and Mona Thong
David Stein and Jill Stein
Derek Stoldt and Amy Stoldt
Ben Sykes and Christine Han
Matthew Tartaglia and April Tartaglia
James Thompson and Stephanie Unwin
Douglas Tiesi and Elissa Tiesi
Matthew Tilove and Leslie Dubeck
Anthony Tortora ’95
Ime Udoka and Nia Long
Andrew Waldman and Kathleen Madden
Thomas Walker III and Danielle Walker
Joseph Ward and Mireia Perez
John Wells and Joo-Yung Lee
Anthony Williams and Chrystal Williams
Feng Yao and Xiaopin Chen
Xiao Zhang and Jun Kang
$1,000 TO $3,499
Anonymous (7)
Marc Aberle and Theresa Aberle
Noah Aberlin ’00
Paata Abjandadze and Maka Gogilashvili
Mark Abramowitz ’53 and Joan Abramowitz
Harsh Agarwal and Kathryn Jaxheimer
Jonathan Aibel
Vincent Arzouian and Florence Liu
Vadim Avdeychik and Marina Treybick
Peter Bakst
Serdjan Balach and Laura Balach
William Barrett and Sarah Barrett
Jennifer Bartels
Lorie Bartley
Arvydas Barzdukas and Daiva Barzdukas
Bruce Bernstein ’53 and Lita Moses Bernstein
Mitchell Bernstein ’66
Warren Bieler and Ilene Fiszel Bieler
Brandon Birdwell and Emma Vadehra
Peter Bogaty and Erin Bogaty
Stanley Bogen ’54 and Roberta Bogen
John Brooks and Michelle Brooks
Sylvia Buono
William Burdick ’44
Ana Calle ’01
Richard Campbell and Alix Campbell
Russell Capone and Courtney Dankworth
Michele Caro
Lynda Casarella
Francisco Javier Caselles and Silvia Fernandez
Sean Casey and Emelie Kihlstrom
Johnny Cavaliero and Mindy Wigutow
Alice Cheng
Matthew Chyra and Hedy Peng
Colin Clarke and Yifan Clarke
Glenn Cochon and Nicole Cochon
Howard Cohen ’53
Lee Cohen ’90
Matthew Cohen and Julie Cohen
Joshua Coleman and Carey Macaleer
Richard Corso and Catherine Corso
Paul Crath and Sarah Robertson
John Culmine ’85 and Louise Fasano-Culmine
Joe Daniels and Naomi Daniels
Richard Debs ’48 and Barbara Debs
Rafael de Luque and Claudia Arango
Howard Dicker ’80
Laurence Doty IV and Constance Doty
Matthew Dresher ’03
Antoine Drye and Jacqueline Moline
Stephen Durso and Barrie Ringelheim
Leonard Ellis and Nicky Ellis
Ramon Estevanell and Katrin Wachs
Michael Farkas and Laura Farkas
Joseph Farris II and Julie Farris
Henry Fayne ’63
Zachary Fisher and Haley Fisher
Cliff Fonstein and Nadia Burgard
Robert Fraiman ’47
Christopher French and Mary Carroll French
Kiera French ’13
Lisa Friel
Frank Fusaro and Dori Raskin
Drausio Giacomelli and Fernanda Giacomelli
Michael Giles and Nanette Giles
James Glancy and Chantal Glancy
Scott Glass and JJ Ramberg
Thomas Goddard ’59 and Laura Goddard
Tal Golomb and Ariella Golomb
Andrew Gordon and Jennifer Gordon
Jeffrey Gural and Paula Gural
Eric Gural ’86 and Nancy Gural
Steven Herman ’78
Robert Hillman ’52
Mayin Hinduja ’18
Jared Hoffman and Cynthia Hoffman
Brandon Hornbeck and Yvonne Lee
Andrew Hughes ’94 and Sarah Hughes
Hans Humes
Daniel Hunter and Dana Rathkopf
Travis Hutchinson ’11
Ben Igoe and Heidi Igoe
Rei Inamoto and Amy Inamoto
Sven Jacobson and Sonia Jacobson
Edward Jeffer ’58
Sujay Jhaveri and Margo Flug Jhaveri
Marcus Jones and Francis Yasharian
Alexander Kagen and Susan Hashemi
Ravi Kamble, MD and Prabha Bhandari
Richard Kando ’97 and Tara Anant Kando ’97
Kenneth Kasses ’62
William Kelly and Nicole Kelly
Markus Kiersztan and Madeleine Kiersztan
Bruce Kimmelman and Amy Kimmelman
Matt Kovaleski and Sarah Habibi
Nils Krahe and Jennie Kim
Milan Krainchich and Gina Krainchich
Stephen Krass ’56
Paul Krieger and Christine Magdo
Ajit Kumar and Jennifer Ecclestone
Taek-Geun Kwon
Sumit Laddha and Hansika Malkani
James Landis ’43
Joseph Lattinelli and Lauren Lattinelli ’97
Eric Leong and Shirley Leong
Jeffrey Lewis and Lisa Fields
Warner Lewis and Christina Porter
Brian Ling and Annisea Wong
Stuart Mackler ’55 and Judy Mackler
Peter Madden ’74
Mary Malhame
George Malin ’57
Gregory Maltzman and Sandra Maltzman
William Manny and Jill Manny
Richard Marlin ’51 and Caroline Marlin
Joseph McCusker and Frances McCusker
Jeff Melcer and Jodi Hecht
Richard Merhige ’53 and Jacqueline Merhige
Manny Miravete and Amy Givens
Adrian Mondesir* and Venice Mondesir
Andrew Morse and Ana Morse
Bradford Mulder and Marisa Marinelli
Fraser and Allison Musmand
David Neibart and Emma Murphy
David Neigus ’67
Francesco Noero and Juliana Obregon
Courtney Nolan ’08
Matthew Novogratz and Nadean Novogratz
David Nuzum and Olivia Herman
Elie Pariente and Suzann Pariente
Daniel Pelson and Jenny Pelson
Joseph Penachio and Robyn Mazur
Craig Perkins and Sharon Perkins
Ambiorix Pimentel and Yahaira Rodriguez
Bruce Pindyck ’63 and Mary Ellen Pindyck
Robert Potter, Jr. and Lauren Leyden
Seth Pouwels and Dana Pouwels
Jennifer Pulidore ’96
Michael Reddy and Jennifer May-Reddy
James Regan ’91 and Tamara Ling
Edward Reiss ’58
Jennifer Rice ’92
David Rich
Michael Ritter and Diana Breen
William Rodino and Jeanette Rodino
Steven Rodriguez and Natasha Rodriguez
Joshua Rosenberg and Karine Rosenberg
James Rossman and Eliza Rossman
Gregg Rothkin and Jennifer Rothkin
Todd Rubin and Nicole Rubin
Michael Saivetz and Amy Saivetz
Matthew Scharff ’50
Harry Schessel and Risa Schessel
Andrew Schilling and Margaret Schilling
David Schoenberger and Stacy Fischer
Andrew Scholz and Lisa Wall ’88
Daniel Schwartz ’56
Michael Segal
Amit Sethi and Judith Sethi
Chad Slawner and Hyo Yeon
Adam Smith
Edward Smith and Alison Smith
Mark Smith, Jr. and Valerie Smith
Scott Smith ’75 and Heidi Smith
George Smyth, Jr. ’48
Joseph Sollitto and Rebekah Sollitto
Robert Spatt ’73 and Lisa Spatt
Daniel Spillane and Margaret Spillane
Renato Stabile ’88 and Magali Goossens
Joe Steele and Niloo Steele
Alexander Stein and Helayne Schiff
Edward Stein and Victoria Misrock-Stein
Niles Stewart and Robin Bramwell-Stewart ’86
Michael Sussman ’55
Justin Swartz and Joanna Weiner
David Taub and Leigh Taub
Dina Thakarar
Bill Thanopoulos and Anastasia Thanopoulos
Bijan Treister and Negar Treister
Marcus Trent and Cyntra Trani
Geoffrey Troy and Jane Troy
Marc Turkewitz and Melissa Danenberg
John Verzosa ’00
Vincent Vigorita ’68 and Patricia Vigorita
Todd Vitolo ’92 and Diana Gutierrez Vitolo
James Wallick and Catherine Wallick
Harley Weber and Heather Weber
Paul Weinstein and Michal Hershkovitz
Gihan Wickramaratne and Tammy Tieu
Yan Feng Wu and Jinhuan Yu
Kenneth Yaffe and Susan Hitzig
Baolin Yan and Ting Zhang
Christian Zebicoff and Elizabeth Mulholland
Xianjin Zhou and Juan Hu
Lorenz Zimmerman, Jr. and Anne Zimmerman
Philippe Zrihen and Melanie Zrihen
Up to $999
Anonymous (38)
Hekmat Abdelrahim
Victoria Abdulahad
Karim Abouelnaga and Kadaicia-Loi Abouelnaga ’11
Grace Accetta ’15
Michelle Adams and Laura Nelsen
Michael Adesman ’75
Brad Agate and Christine Agate
Jorge Aguilo and Alejandra Gonzalez
Eileen Ahasic ’01
David Akselrad and Jacqueline Akselrad
Richard Alberino
Heath Aldridge James Allen ’72
Lauren Allen
David Alperin ’97
Alana Althans ’10
Angel Alvarado
Ira Ames ’54
Adeola Amory Spencer
Christopher Andrade ’12
Gaudencio Andrade and Laura Andrade
Andre Antoine and Rachel Antoine
Alicia Antonelli
Warren Appleman ’63
Robert Arcaro ’70
Dwayne Archbold and Kyona Wilson-Archbold
Courtney Archer-Buckmire ’98
Luigi Arlia and Cynthia Arlia
Maxine Armstrong
Konstantinos Arniotis and Catherine Arrieta
Paul Arnsten and Pamela Arnsten
Joceline Arseneault and Carol Fiore
Johnson Asamoah and Cindy McField-Asamoah
Robert Aston
Marie August
Reginald Auguste and Danielle Turner
Jason Augustine and Shakellia Augustine
Konstantin Avdeev and Maria Avdeev
Jonathan Axelrod ’64
Mark Baillie
Denise Baker ’98
Jennifer Baker ’86
M. Anthony Baker and Diana Baker
Sefer Balikci and Kesha Crichlow Balikci
Bradley Balliet
Jeffrey Baloutine ’67
Jeffrey Bamonte ’79
Peter Barber and Meredeth Quick
Headen Bartholomew and Michele Elliott
Bartholomew
Seth Basham
Sarah Bates
Stephen Bates
The Rev. William Baum and The Rev. Brooke Swertfager
Renae Beauchman
Marissa Beck ’01
Elizabeth Becker Schires ’03
Susan Beiles
Ron Beit and Nicole Beit
Matthew Belford and Jean Belford
David Bell ’51
Lisa Beltramello
Deana Belvedere ’07
Adam Benay
Andrew Benjamin ’66
Elizabeth Bennett and Chaelon Costello
Fern Berenberg
Richard Berg ’47
Roger Bermas ’57
Frank Bernieri ’74
Anthony Besthoff ’52
Raoul and Savitha Bhavnani
Burkhard Bilger and Jennifer Nelson
Charles Birenbaum ’75 and Janet Birenbaum
Adam Bisceglia and Juliet Moretti
John Bissell ’52
George Bittar ’75
Jaime Blanc ’94
AJ Blandford
David Blechman and Charlotte Blechman
Amelia Blissett
Edgar Blohm ’52
Peter Bloom ’61
James Blumstein ’62
James Blundell, Jr. ’47
Russell Boardman and Lynn Boardman
Matthew Bogdanos and Claudia Bogdanos
Jim Boland and Fran Boland
Lauren Bonaventura
Salvatore Bonaventura
Sarah Bond
Carol Bongiorni
Karl Boulware ’97
Monique Boston
Lawrence Brandman ’78 and Deborah Brandman
Alleen Bratton
Keith Brenner and Jennifer Brenner
Steven Brescia and Ilene Shaw-Brescia
Kevin Briskey and Sameer Advani
Robert Briskman ’50 and Lenore H. Briskman
Alyssa Brown ’15
Faith Brown
Jennifer Brown and Noelle Leonard
Margaret Brown
Paul Brown ’55
Peter Brown and Monica McKain-Brown
Shanell Bryan ’03
Patrick Burger ’65
Donald Burke and Heidi Burke
Linda Busetti
Kevin Byrne and Heidi Byrne
Michael Cagan ’60
Wilson Calle ’00
Teresa Calvo
Karim Camara and Orelia Camara
Jose Camargo and Teresa Camargo
Dexter Campbell and Anyely Campbell
Rosalind Campbell
Louis Candel
Kristin Cannon
Renee Cantave and Herve Cantave
Vanessa Cantave
Brian Cantor ’00
Joseph Capone and Cynthia Capone
Alia Carponter-Walker
Dustin Carr
Juan Carrillo
Kurt Carrington and Denee Carrington
Alex Carter
John Carty and Jane Carty
Tommaso Cascella and Kathryn Matt
Carolyn Castellano
James Catapano
Anastasia Cembrovska ’07
Hin Chan and Wing Chan
Keath Chan and Cathy Wong
Thana-Ashley Charles ’07
Ira Checkla ’76
Steve Chiaino and Angela Chiaino
Yi-Jen Chiang and Sophie Hsu
Michael Chirdo and Catherine Chirdo
Robert Chiteman ’61
Pasquale Cioffi
Annette Clarke
Lola Clarke
Jeanne Cloppse ’84
Marvin Cochrane and Jeanette Cochrane
Julio Colon
John Commaratto and Louise Commaratto
Courtney Cooke
Joseph Coplin and Jenna Coplin
Mario Coppola and Laura Coppola ’95
Daniel Costello
Cristina Cote ’05
Edwin Craig
Christine Croasdaile ’13
David Cruz
Zoi Cuko and Lindita Cuko
Salvatore Cumella ’69
Catherine Curley Lee ’87
Justin Curtis ’10
John Cuti and Sarah Netburn
Thomas Cutler and Deborah Cutler
Richard Daidone ’70
Jason Daras ’97
Kenneth Dashow ’76
Alan Davidson ’54
Andrew Davis ’50
Kim Davis
Wilbur Davis ’46
Wesley Dayes and Shirley Dayes
Olympia De Castro
Marcel Deans and Sherrie Deans
Helen Delamarter
André Del Valle and Andrea Del Valle
Arthur Delmhorst ’56
Jenna Denaver ’20
Jordan Denaver ’20
Larry Denmark ’63
J. Stratford Dennis and Ashley Alston
Dennis DePietro
Lawrence Dessi
Guy Devyatkin and Natalia Devyatkin
Steven DiBlasio and Donna DiBlasio
Maria DiCarlo
Alfred DiGrazia and Alison Morea
Virginia Dillon
David Dixon ’16
Justus Doenecke ’56
Kevin Doherty* and Peggy Doherty
Bruce Doll ’72
Justin Dorazio and Samantha Dunham
Daniel Doughty and Ryan Rumage
Abbygale Dove
Carrie Dowell
John Dreyer and Carmen Dreyer
James Dreyfus ’70
John Dubeck and Susan Hotine
Bruce Ducker ’56
Steven Ducker ’54
Ken Dupee ’83
Matthew Durando ’96 and Tina Durando
Paul Durando and Marie Durando
Homer Eckerson ’49
David Edwards
Eric Edwards, Sr. and Delia Edwards
Jason Edwards and Terell Cooper-Edwards
Daniel Ehrenhaft and Jessica Wollman
Dave Elligers ’58
Sarah Ely
Pearce Erensel ’09
Mark Evans ’69
Frank Exline, Jr. ’52
Tony Exuma and Rolande Exuma
Robert Falotico and Catherine Burgos
Thomas Fanta ’63
Peter Fauci, Jr. ’49
Jonathan Feinberg ’04
Barbara B. Feldman
Ira Feldman and Marianne Feldman
Fernando Ferre and Dana Ferre
Justin Ferrelli ’94
Jean Paul Fils-Aime and Jacqueline Celestin FilsAime
John Finley and Jamie Nestor
Nathan Finkel ’96
Brian Fitzgerald and Erin Patton
Edward Fitzgerald
James Fitzpatrick and Melissa Fitzpatrick
Eugene Flamm ’54
Jeffrey Fleishhacker and Jennifer Fleishhacker
Stewart Fleisig ’69
Charles Fleming
Allen Flores ’75
David Flumenbaum and Anna Dubenko
Phil Foote and Mary Foote
Qadir Forbes ’11 and Imani Forbes
Fredrica Ford
Lloyd Ford and Jacqueline Ford
John Forsythe and Noellene Richards Forsythe
Keith Foss ’97
Lecia Foster
Denise Fraifeld
Melvin Fraiman ’42
Haden Francis
Jase Franklyn
Edward Freedgood and Electra Freedgood
Lynda Freeman
Michael Freund ’56
Steven Froot ’75
Jacob Furst and Kate Furst
Demetrios Gabriel II ’85 and Kalitsa Gabriel
Ellen Gaffney ’18
Frank Galtieri ’78
Bernard Gancarz ’85
Leopold Garcia, Jr. and Nilmeyda Fulgencio
Raymundo Garcia and Rosa Garcia
Henry Gardstein, Jr. ’62
Rajeev Garg and Maria Garg ’97
Janet Garnjost
Adam Garson ’05
Brit Geiger
Michael Gentile
Gigi Georges ’84
William Gershell ’53
David Giancola ’99
Joseph Giardina ’58
Keane Gibson
Josh Gilbert and Ileane Santana-Gilbert
Jesse Gill and Marisa Yeres
Paul Gilson ’72
Anthony Gini and Catherine Torigian
Kristin Ginty-Parra
Darren Gitelman ’77
Glenn Gittens, Jr. and Angela Gittens
Dennis Glass and Shani Fielder-Glass
Kayla Glemaud ’17
Michael Glick ’53
Mervyn Goddard and Natasha Goddard
Andrew Goldfarb ’07
David Goldman ’56
Peter Gorman
Michael Goslar
Andrew Gowa ’67
Kathleen Graf
Mitchel Gray and Kathleen Gray
John Grayzel ’61
Eustace Greaves, Jr.
Arthur Greco and Allene Chung
Alexander Greeley ’04
Joel Greeley ’54
Kenneth Green and Shamier Green
Joshua Greenberg and Mindy Greenberg
Marjorie Greenberg
Richard Greenberg ’49
Katherine Greig ’94
Katherine Greissman ’10
Jason Griffiths ’10
Laura Grimm
Leslie Grinage ’99
Michael Groothuis ’60
Mark Groothuis ’58
Ralph Groskoph ’54
Judette Guerrier
Runako Gulstone ’04
M. Robert Gumer ’72
Kristen Guynn
Janine Guzzone
Ashley Hacker and Devon Whalen
Frederick Haddad ’66
Michelle Haire
Kenneth Hamilton, Jr.
Joseph Hanson ’68
Amy Hao
Roshan Hariharan and Karen Hariharan
David Harman and Kristin Harman
Pat Harrigan
Nicholas Harris ’74
Robert Harwood ’53 and Gwendolyn Harwood
Zia Hassan and Jurate Hassan
Jamal Hayden ’87
Jared Hedglin ’09
Milton Hedglin and Denise Hedglin
James Hennessy, Jr. ’67
Bruce Henry and Patricia Henry
Keith Hernandez ’05
Benjamin Herzog and Emily Gardiner Herzog
Roger Heymann ’65
David Hicks and Kim Hicks
Judy Hicks
David Higham and Toni-Leslie James
Owen Hoberman ’54
William Hochman ’10
Alan Hoffman ’62
Julian Holder ’01
Malory Hom
Dan Horan and Julie Beglin
Gail Horowitz
Peter Hort and Jamie Hort
Jerome Howie ’56
Ken Hudes and Hiroko Otani
Erin Hughes
Griffin Humphreys ’05 and Yin He ’06
Noel Humphreys
Elicia Hunter
John Hunter and Jayne Hunter
Stacy Hunter
Thomas Hunter ’57
Kameron Hutchinson ’13
Ryan Hyland ’07
Terrence Hyland ’10
Jack Hyman
Sheldon Hyndman and Helen Khan-Hyndman
George Incata and Elizabeth Incata
Maite Iracheta
Delmont Irving ’62
Teyana Irving
Kazuomi Iwai and Natsue Iwai
Steven Izzo and Rosemarie Izzo
Byron Jackson and Jennifer Jackson
Robert Jacob ’68
Johannes Jacobs and Amber Jacobs
Richard James and Nakia Serrant-James
German Jaramillo and Paola Mejia
Richelet Jean and Nathalie Jean
Gordon Jensen ’84
Richard Jensen ’62
Suli Jiang and Jenna Anilee
Bruce Johannessen ’68
Timothy Johnson ’70
Bradley Johnson and Jennifer Johnson
David Johnson III ’66
Michael Junsch ’71 and Adrienne Junsch
Charles Kalina ’50
Charles Kalison ’55
Kai Kang
Neeta Kantu Smith ’87
Jane Karlin
Edward Katz ’77
Reed Katz ’06
Seth Kaufman ’60
Nels Kauppila and Pamela Kauppila
Michael Kay ’58
John Kefer ’05
Paul Kefer and Patricia Sullivan
Nadine Kennedy ’82
John Kenney and Lissa Kenney
Brandon Kessler
Anik Khambhla and Angela Ortiz
Majid Khan
Yonghwi Kim and Bokyoung Kim
Brian Kinnane and Ellen Kinnane
William Klein and Michele Klein
Dimitrios Klonis and Mary Klonis
Geoffrey Kloske and Jennifer Braunschweiger
Stephen Kochman ’79
Mark Kozinn ’62
Karina Krainchich ’10
David Kramer ’49
William Kramer ’46
Ladislav Kravar and Viera Kravar
Charles Kreines ’76 and Rosanne DiFazio
Michael Krinsky ’63
Lester Kritzer ’69
Christine Kromer-Bennett
Jason Kubica and Rosamund Green-Kubica
Kwokhung Kwan and Jiwen Chen
Greg Labuda and Sarah Labuda
Marrisa Lall
Michael Lamm ’51
Kevin Langlais and Kerri Langlais
Opeyemi Laniyonu
Catherine LaRocca ’06
Carmelo Larose
Peter Latson ’78
Henry Lau ’96
Ramesh Laungani
Khieng Lay and Milagros Tantoco-Lay
Derek Lee ’97
Julie Lee
Stephen Lee ’95
Kent Leeklymenko
Steven Lefkowitz and Jacqueline Bausch
Robert Lehrman ’51
Marvin Lerman ’58
Nicholas Lettieri
Howard Levine ’69
Mark Levine ’79
Deirdre Lewis
Drew Lewis ’14
Jeremi Lewis
Diane Leyden and Brian Leyden
Scott Leyton and Erin Leyton
Emily Liao
Michael Licata and Catherine Licata
Vincent Licata ’11
David Lichtman ’59
Paola Ligonde
Christopher Lindquist and Proshat Mahjoubie
David Lindsay-Abaire and Christine Lindsay-Abaire
Mark Liss ’69
Matthew Lissak and Zanthe Taylor
Vivian Liu
Wayne Lizzi and Kristen Lizzi
Daniel Lobo-Berg
Caitlin Loi
Bob Lonshein ’50
Frank Lopez
Nicolas Lopez-Muniz and Jeane Lopez-Muniz
Anthony Lorenzo and Karen Lorenzo
Stephen LoRusso ’71
Francis Love ’61
Peter Love ’63
John Lowe and Marissa Alperin
Yao Lu and Michelle Xie
Scott Luksh and Sofia Haberman
Ariana Luksh ’15
Alexander Lyubarov and Susanna Chan
Arthur Magnus and Caroline Magnus
Robert Magnus, Jr. ’49
William Mahoney and Adrienne Saldana
Suleman Malik and Shabari Nayak
James Malley and Laura Torrado-Malley ’86
Ken Mandelbaum and Susie Mandelbaum
Nancy Mangus
David Mansfield and Elisabeth Mansfield
Lee Marcus
Vincent Margiotta
Wayne Margolies and Ann Palmer
Andrew Marinos
Florentina Mark
George Marks ’56
Hamede Martin and Petrice Leben-Martin
Jose Martinez and Ellen Martinez
Ronald Mason ’65
Joseph McElroy ’47
Michael McGovern and Joyce McGovern
Samuel McGovern and Elizabeth McGovern
Alissa McGrisken ’02
Donald McHugh and Jean McHugh
Ayisha McHugh ’12
Carol McLaughlin
William McNally
Rebecca McPheters
James Megahan
Mark Melamed and Helen Melamed
Gideon Mendelson and Tom Tomeo
Marc Mendelson and Tara Mendelson
Devon Mennella
Bruce Merhige ’64
John Merhige ’90
Robert Meringolo ’61
Ira Merritt ’55
Robert Messina ’74
Daniel Messing ’02
John Meyer and Nina Harkrader
Jerry Miko, Jr. and Anindya Basu
Alex Millan and Olga Millan
Alfred Miller ’07
Douglas Miller ’72
Lewis Miller ’45
Rodney Miller, Jr. ’15
Robert Minutello ’87
Chris Mischler and Juliane Kim
Richard Mizrack ’60
Corey Modeste ’92
Andrew Mogelof ’65
Lennox Montrose ’70
Kyle Mooney ’17
Claire Moore
Christian Morehouse
Cassie Moriarty ’15
John Morris, Jr. ’74
Richard Morris and Jessica Morris
Cliff Morrison
Margaret Moslander
Philip Moyles ’50
Sean Mullin
Laura Mumm ’05
Eric Muoio ’17
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
Tara Muoio ’13
Patrick Murray and Sanaa Rahman
Richard Naddeo ’92
Landy Nelson ’56
Benjamin Neulander
Alan Newman ’58
Wing Ng and Siu Fun Chu - Ng
Dinah Nissen and Elizabeth Apelles
Albert Nocella III and Tina Georgoulakos
Richard Nolan and Eileen Nolan
Peter Nowakoski
Ronny Nunez
Alyssa O’Reilly
Theresa O’Sullivan
James Ogilvie
Rachel Olinyk
Clarence Olmstead and Kathleen Heenan
Refael Olya and Teresa Olya
Ozodiukwe Onunaku and Chinyere Onunaku
Nnamdi Orakwue ’91
Rowland Orakwue and Pearl Orakwue
Michael Osso ’84
Courtney Ozer
Joseph Pabon ’94
Justin Pagan ’98
Manos Paidarakis and Julie Paidarakis
Brenton Palmer and Jacqueline Palmer
Russell Panetta ’68
Juliette Pannone ’05
Kelly Papa ’86
Donna Paparella
Kirk Parks and Dina Paul-Parks
Jason Parrish
Scott Parson and Lisa Parson
Christopher Patacsil ’12
Jodie Patterson
James Pattison and Katherine Pattison
Stephen Pearlman ’61
Otis Pearsall ’49
Jenna Peet
Marissa Pennington
Alexis Perez
Samuel Perlman ’87
Richard Perlman ’55
Harry Petchesky ’55 and Jill Petchesky
Robert Pickens ’57
Rosemarie Pico
Lawrence Pincus ’67
Daniel Pipitone and Melissa Pipitone
Steven Pisano and Lisa Meyer
Joel Pokorny ’58
Samuel Polifka ’06
Charles Polizano and Dianna Polizano
David Pollack ’71
Gayle Pollack
Michael Pollack ’89
Ronald Pope and Annunciate Hopkins-Pope
Oleg Povetko and Deborah Cavalcante
Kevin Power and Margo Rivera Power ’01
Todd Prager ’88
Michael Press ’53
Richard Press ’56
David Price
Emily Prior
Mark Prutsalis and Maria D’Albert
Peter Puleo and Lisa Puleo
Fredrick Pytlak and Edna Pytlak
Tom Quigley and Carolyn Quigley
Lee Quinones and Tamara Warren
Ruba Rabah
Michael Rabbino ’52
Morgan Raff ’10
Yusimir Ramirez
John Rankin and Joyce Murty
Ganesh Rao and Patrick Campbell
Paul Raso
Richard Ratzan ’63
Danielle Rauch
Carolyn Razzano ’99
John Rearick, Jr. and Elizabeth Schnee
Arthur Rebell ’58 and Susan Rebell
Michael Rebell ’61 and Sharon Rebell
Peter Redell and Lori Redell
David Reid
Jesse Reiner
Edward Reitler and Joyce Reitler
Andrew Rendeiro and Marty Lentz
Daniel Ricciardi ’04
Daniel Ricciardi and Peggy Ricciardi
John Rice and Mary Rice
Victor Rich ’57
Mario Richards
Anecia Richards ’11
Christopher Richardson ’89
Karen Richardson
Arthur Richman ’63
Peter Richtmyer ’61
Leonard Rienzi and Kathleen Rienzi
Roy Rifkin ’70
Jeffrey Rifkin ’73
Briana Riley ’16
Jasmin Rivera ’00
Gianluca Rivizzigno and Kimberly Davis Rivizzigno
Richard Rizzo and Louise Rizzo
Andrew Robb and Kristen Robb
Michael Robinson
Peter Rocco ’03
Johanna Rodriguez ’00
Micaela Rodriguez ’16
Frank Rogers
Michael Rogers ’69
Alan Roland ’48
Joseph Roller and Holly Williams-Roller
Albert Rosano and Josepha Kaufman
Richard Rosario and Haley Meade-Rosario
William Rosario and Amy Wong
Amanda Rose
Hal Rose ’74 and Lisa Rose
Michael Rosen ’56
Amerigo and Monica Rossi
Matthew Roventini ’92 and Kathy Roventini
Eric Ruby ’64
Edward Ruck and Diane Ruck
Jill Rudnick ’97
Joseph Ruggie and Elizabeth Ruggie
John Ruocco and Eileen Reilly
Joel Rush ’72
Thomas Russo and Linda Russo
Vincent Rutuelo and Adrienne Rutuelo
Matthew Sagotsky
Aminta Salmeron
Lee Saltzman ’66
John Sands ’58
Vanessa Santana
Epiphania Santana
Hector Santiago ’01
Christina Sapega ’07
Ronald Sarcos and Soraya Sarcos
John Sarubbi and Catherine Sharkey
Jason Savarese
Marc Savino ’92 and Hillary Savino
Philip Sawyer ’82
Leonard Sayles ’59
Gabrielle Scarpaci ’86
Rob Schenck ’64
Adina Scherer
David Schlecker ’75
Addie Schoenberger
Robert Schoenemann ’56
Robert Schoepflin ’49
David Scott and Judith Scott
Joseph Seggio ’00
Clare Seidel
Jane Selzer
Arka Sengupta and Sohini Das
Peter Sessa ’68
Anthony Sgarlato ’74
Robert Shack ’62
Josslyn Shapiro
Richard Shapiro ’73
Gyanesh Sharma
Timothy Shea and Marcela Guerrero
Colin Sheridan ’10
David Sherman ’57
Donald Shields and Raluca Shields
James Signorelli and Patricia Smith
Norman Silberdick, Jr. ’59
Alan Silver and Charlotte Jett
Andrew Silverman ’10
Laurie Silverman
Aaron Silverstein and Kiera Gans
Jordyn Silverstein ’12
Leslie Silverstein ’54
Genel Simeon
Demond Simmons and Kaaryn Nailor Simmons
Greg Simpson and Elaine Simpson
Carla Sinatra ’86
Frank Sinatra ’76
Alexander Sion and Larisa Layug
Anthony Sirianni ’59
Peter Siviglia ’57
Elijah Sivin
Reid Skibell and Tugba Colpan
Robert Slack ’70
Marc Sloane and Linda Sloane
Jennifer Slomack
Alexander Slotwiner and Rachel Stevens
Gregory Smith and Ana Nieto
Lourdes Smith
Nikole Smith
Phillip Smith and Kristin Smith
Shania Smith ’19
Mark Smoller ’49
Pamela Smyth
Frank Snider and Amy Fusselman
Yaroslav Sochynsky ’63
Anthony Sollitto and Dolores Sollitto
Peter Soto ’01 and Elizabeth Soto
Bernard Spence, Jr. ’45
Neil Sperling and Rose Sperling
Richard Spiegel ’62
Kingsley Stanley and Onyinyechi Stanley
Victoria Stawowy-Mokos
Gillian Steele
Gayle Steinhacker ’87
Matthew Stelluto
Michael Stelzer and Natalie Stelzer
Don Stephenson IV and Emily Stephenson
Robert Stern ’51
James Stirn ’70
Goodrich Stokes and Joyce Stokes
Peter G. Stone ’55
Chloe Sun ’19
Keyonte Sutherland ’03
Bobbie Swain
Stephen Swanson and Carina Hueber
Paul Sylvain and Sabrina Bonne-Annee
Gerald Taylor and Melanie Wilson-Taylor
Orlando Taylor and Ashley Taylor
Alexander Tejani ’99 and Jillianne Tejani
Bruce Terrin ’70
Alfred Terry III and Leslie Goldfarb Terry
Caleb Terry and Sherri-Ann Terry
Jerome Thomas and Cindy Brea
Arnold Tolkin ’50
Akili Tommasino ’05
Stephanie Tooman-Dieme
Page Travelstead ’96
Michael Troncale and Harriet Troncale
David Troyansky ’72
Ira Turret ’68
Christopher Tutolo
Douglas Unis and Julia Jordan
Richard Usher, Jr. and Raymi Ramseur-Usher
Martin Valk ’81
Stefanus Van De Gevel and Daniella Olibrice
Debbie Van Ryn
Christina VanBrakle and Bryant VanBrakle
Wendye VanBrakle
Jose Velazquez, Sr. and Ivelisse Velazquez
Andres Ventura ’07
Joseph Verdirame ’91
Dino Veronese
Geeta Vir
Helena Vislocka
Xerxes Vizcaino and Joyce Vizcaino
Minoo Wade ’04
Bunis Walker and Anastacia Prince-Walker
Dawn-Marie Walker
Gregg Walker
Thomas Walker IV ’13
Edward Wallach ’50
Nathaniel Walsh ’94
Tonghe Wang and Xiaoxiao Dong
Jack Wasserman ’54
Margaret Watson ’80
Kenneth Webb ’79
Katherine Wells
Shirley Welsh and Garth Elliott
Carol Weymuller
Tenny Wheatley, Jr. ’57
Wesley White and Sheena White
Argle Whitfield and Florence Whitfield
Keith Wiggs
Edwin Wigutoff ’62
Jamila Williams ’05
Peter Williams and Magda Williams
Walter Williamson ’56
Vonda Willoughby
Zene Willoughby ’19
Asha Wills ’13
Winston Wills and Yvette Hinds Wills
Monique Wilson ’05
Orrin Wilson and Kiva Williams-Wilson
Owen Wincig and Regina Wincig
Terra Windham
Devon Winfield
Ori Winitzer and Judy Winitzer
Ann Winston
Jared Winston
Andrew Wittenstein ’70
Jillian Wojcik
Douglas Wong
Georgia Wright
Alexander Wright-Johnson ’06
Christina Yan
Harry Yang and Jeeeun Chae
Hong Suk Yang and Inha Yang
Nick Yarmac and JP McCary
Harry Yates ’56
Shao Wah Yiu and Yi Yun Yiu
Craig Yoskowitz and Michelle Yoskowitz
Robert Younes ’55
Malcolm Young ’50
Christopher Zam and Gabrielle Roventini ’87
Heidi Zarou ’86
Brian Zipp and Martha Zipp
Bradley Zizmor and Susan Zizmor
Poly Prep is grateful to the following donors who initiated or made payments toward their pledges in support of capital and endowment initiatives during the last fiscal year.
PINNACLE SOCIETY
$2,000,000 and up
Sandi Feinberg AG
Tara Lipton AG
LEGACY CIRCLE
$500,000 to $1,999,999
Anonymous (2) AG
Robert Martinson ’59*
Robert Sabbagh ’87 and Dorotea Sabbagh AG
VISIONARY LEADERS
$100,000 to $499,999
Jonathan Aibel AG
Robert Goergen, Jr. and Stacey Goergen
Allen Grubman and Deborah Grubman AG
Jennifer Grubman AG
Jayaveera Kodali and Lara Marcon
Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez AG
Stephen Maharam and Camila Pastor AG
Michael Novogratz and Sukey Novogratz AG
Marvin Sears ’45
THE 1854 SOCIETY
$50,000 to $99,999
Anonymous
Michael Glassman and Jennifer Glassman
Howard Kaye and Wilma Kaye AG
John Madden, Jr. ’72 and Liz Cooke AG
Peter Malkin ’51
Meredith Marshall and Yolonda Marshall AG
Stephen Paluszek and Violeta Paluszek AG
Joseph Raccuia ’76
Jacek Wojtowicz and Jennifer Powers AG
John Zaremba ’95 and Nancy Zaremba AG
BLUE & GRAY
$25,000 to $49,999
Daniel Crowley and Heather Crowley AG
Lawrence Playford, Jr. and Ellen Playford AG
John Plym, Jr. and Kristin Plym AG
Kareem Raymond and Tene Raymond AG
Reardon Family Foundation
Daniel Rice and Christina Rice AG
David Rosenblatt and Laurie Rosenblatt AG
$10,000 to $24,999
Michael Gerling and Tina Petridis-Gerling AG
Jeremy Rosenberg and Cristina Rosenberg AG
Niles Stewart and Robin Bramwell-Stewart ’86 AG
Douglas Tiesi and Elissa Tiesi AG
David Wise and Vanessa Wise
$5,500 to $9,999
Dirk DeLaCour ’88
Russell DeLaCour ’90
Sophie DeLaCour ’97
Willis DeLaCour, Jr. and Sally Williams-Allen
Sean Desmond and Susan Cordaro AG
Joanna Gurley
TOWER LEVEL
$3,500 to $5,499
Mark Dehnert and Mindy Dehnert AG
Andrew Queen and Dana Queen
Simon Smith and Catherine Smith
Jonathan ten Oever and Nathalie ten Oever
OASIS CIRCLE
$1,000 to $3,499
Mark Abramowitz ’53 and Joan Abramowitz AG
Bruce H. Bernstein ’53 and Lita Moses
Bernstein
Mary Bozza Wise ’86
Andrew Gordon and Jennifer Gordon AG
Jared Hedglin ’09 AG
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio AG
Dino Veronese AG
David Youngblade ’55
COMMUNITY CIRCLE up to $999
Hekmat Abdelrahim
Arthur Bellinzoni, Jr. ’53
Harrison Bush ’65
Jerry Capeci and Barbara Capeci
Peter Cecere ’57
Michael Farkas and Laura Farkas AG
Richard Fearon ’53
Stephen Green ’62
Peter Liebert ’53 and Mary Ann Liebert
Samuel Parker ’70
Patsy Perpetua and Joy Perpetua
Elliott Rebhun ’75
Richard Rodgers and Kathleen Rodgers
Eugene Wheeler, Jr. ’53
We would like to recognize the contributions of Taek-Geun Kwon P’32 in his support of COVID-19 testing at Poly. His support made it possible, in large part, for our school community to come together in a safe and welcoming environment.
Children grow in wonderful and surprising ways when the Arts are a meaningful part of their education. They discover their voice. Develop self-confidence. And through meaningful engagement with the artistic process, learn to persist, collaborate, and problem solve. We witness this lifelong influence of the Arts every day at Poly Prep, and it’s why we’re committed to doing more to ensure our students have the space and resources needed to fully pursue their passions and talents. Play your part and support the new Poly Arts Center. polyprep.org/artscenter
We appreciate the enthusiastic support of current Poly families in helping us provide the best educational experience possible for their children.
79% Participation
Harsh Agarwal and Kathryn Jaxheimer AG
Serdjan Balach and Laura Balach AG
Alex Carter AG
Glenn Cochon and Nicole Cochon AG
Wassim Diab and Sara Ahmed AG
John Finley and Jamie Nestor AG
David Flumenbaum and Anna Dubenko AG
Josh Ho-Walker and Lillian Goldenthal AG
Peter Hungerford and Danielle Hungerford AG
Marcus Jones and Francis Yasharian AG
John Mann and Elizabeth Tuttle AG
Darren Moore and Uma Mantravadi AG
Joseph Palladino and Kerry Blum AG
Brooks Perlin and Marion Leydier AG
Robert Potter, Jr. and Lauren Leyden AG
Michael Ritter and Diana Breen AG
James Ryan III and Lauren Sands AG
Ryan Schafer and Hadley Schafer AG
Phillip Smith and Kristin Smith AG
Ben Sykes and Christine Han AG
Wesley White and Sheena White AG
Gihan Wickramaratne and Tammy Tieu AG
Christina Yan AG
74% Participation
Anonymous (2) AG
Brandon Birdwell and Emma Vadehra AG
Jason Caloras and Chloe Frank AG
Matthew Chyra and Hedy Peng AG
Colin Clarke and Yifan Clarke AG
Mario Coppola and Laura Coppola ’95 AG
J. Stratford Dennis and Ashley Alston AG
Stuart Downing and Melissa Downing AG
Ramon Estevanell and Katrin Wachs AG
Cameron Fairall and Jeehyun Yeo AG
Christopher Filburn and Jenny Filburn AG
Alex Greenbaum and Rose Greenbaum AG
Roshan Hariharan and Karen Hariharan AG
Ankit Jain and Rupal Jain AG
Joshua Margolin and Raji Margolin AG
Patrick Murray and Sanaa Rahman AG
Joseph Palladino and Kerry Blum AG
Seth Pouwels and Dana Pouwels AG
Gianluca Rivizzigno and Kimberly Davis Rivizzigno AG
Scott Rofey and Olivia Song AG
William Rosario and Amy Wong AG
Anand Sankaranarayanan and Nithya Venkatachalam AG
Timothy Shea and Marcela Guerrero AG
Winston Song and Amy Hsieh AG
Peter Soto ’01 and Elizabeth Soto AG
Walter Weil and Deirdre Dunn AG
William Williams and Mollie Williams AG
The Ziff Family AG
KINDERGARTEN
78% Participation Anonymous (1) AG
Amir Akhavan and Karin Akhavan AG
Kevin Briskey and Sameer Advani AG
Russell Capone and Courtney Dankworth AG
John Cochran IV and Danielle Cochran AG
Matthew Cohen and Julie Cohen AG
Olivier D’Meza and Bethany D’Meza AG
Stuart Downing and Melissa Downing AG
Zachary Fisher and Haley Fisher AG
David Flumenbaum and Anna Dubenko AG
Eric Freedgood ’99 and Rachael Freedgood AG
Rajeev Garg and Maria Garg ’97 AG
Donald Heiliger and Shannon Heiliger AG
Peter Hungerford and Danielle Hungerford AG
Earl Hunt II and Kristina Hunt AG
Daniel Korich and Vivian Korich AG
Andre Kursancew and Dalit Paradis AG
Greg Labuda and Sarah Labuda AG
Eric Leong and Shirley Leong AG
Suleman Malik and Shabari Nayak AG
Jerry Miko, Jr. and Anindya Basu AG
Francesco Noero and Juliana Obregon AG
Todd Rubin and Nicole Rubin AG
Craig Sabal and Jennifer Sabal AG
Alan Silver and Charlotte Jett AG
Renato Stabile ’88 and Magali Goossens AG
Mark Van Zandt and Lindsay Van Zandt AG
Wesley White and Sheena White AG
William Williams and Mollie Williams AG
GRADE 1
80% Participation
Brian Azara ’99 and Alexandra Azara ’00 AG
Elizabeth Bennett and Chaelon Costello AG
Monique Boston AG
Matthew Chyra and Hedy Peng AG
Colin Clarke and Yifan Clarke AG
Olivier D’Meza and Bethany D’Meza AG
Olympia De Castro AG
André Del Valle and Andrea Del Valle AG
J. Stratford Dennis and Ashley Alston AG
Wassim Diab and Sara Ahmed AG
Jacob Furst and Kate Furst AG
Bethany Gilmore AG
Mervyn Goddard and Natasha Goddard AG
Andrew Hughes ’94 and Sarah Hughes AG
Kevin King and Lindsey King AG
Christine Kromer-Bennett AG
Samuel McGovern and Elizabeth McGovern AG
John McPheters and Minya Oh AG
Darren Moore and Uma Mantravadi AG
Francesco Noero and Juliana Obregon AG
Craig Perkins and Sharon Perkins AG
Jackson Phillips, Jr. and Cristine Phillips AG
Kareem Raymond and Tene Raymond AG
Leland Richards, Jr. and LaTasha Richards AG
Steven Rodriguez and Natasha Rodriguez AG
Scott Rofey and Olivia Song AG
Ryan Schafer and Hadley Schafer AG
Aaron Silverstein and Kiera Gans AG
James Sinclair and Larkyn Sinclair AG
Winston Song and Amy Hsieh AG
Jerome Thomas and Cindy Brea AG
Bijan Treister and Negar Treister AG
Walter Weil and Deirdre Dunn AG
Nick Yarmac and JP McCary AG
GRADE 2
82% Participation
Anonymous (1) AG
Daniel Baranovsky and Yelena Baranovsky AG
Amelia Blissett AG
Vanessa Cantave AG
David Chitayat and Xhingyu Chen AG
Michael Clarfeld and Tamar Huberman AG
Stuart Downing and Melissa Downing AG
Ramon Estevanell and Katrin Wachs AG
Cameron Fairall and Jeehyun Yeo AG
Eric Freedgood ’99 and Rachael Freedgood AG
Jesse Gill and Marisa Yeres AG
Peter Hungerford and Danielle Hungerford AG
Earl Hunt II and Kristina Hunt AG
Taek-Geun Kwon AG
Joshua Margolin and Raji Margolin AG
Matthew Novogratz and Nadean Novogratz AG
Gregory Pessin and Jaime Pessin AG
Robert Potter, Jr. and Lauren Leyden AG
Julian Rampelmann and Lorena Ramirez Zapata AG
Steffen Reichold and Riham Shendy AG
Scott Rofey and Olivia Song AG
Anand Sankaranarayanan and Nithya
Venkatachalam AG
Adam Schlesinger and Elizabeth Schlesinger AG
Joseph Sollitto and Rebekah Sollitto AG
Winston Song and Amy Hsieh AG
Joe Steele and Niloo Steele AG
Matthew Tilove and Leslie Dubeck AG
Anthony Williams and Chrystal Williams AG
Hong Suk Yang and Inha Yang AG
GRADE 3
81% Participation
Lauren Allen AG
Cameron Arrington and Indhira Arrington AG
Johnson Asamoah and Cindy McField-Asamoah AG
Jennifer Bartels AG
Monique Boston AG
Kevin Byrne and Heidi Byrne AG
Russell Capone and Courtney Dankworth AG
Michele Caro AG
Robert China and Tia Breakley-China AG
Paul Crath and Sarah Robertson AG
Olympia De Castro AG
Anthony Frempong-Boadu and Gwendolyn
Frempong-Boadu AG
Sujay Jhaveri and Margo Flug Jhaveri AG
Bradley Johnson and Jennifer Johnson AG
Stephen Kempf and Mary Dixie Carter AG
Kevin Langlais and Kerri Langlais AG
Gideon Mendelson and Tom Tomeo AG
Ackneil Muldrow III and Dana Muldrow AG
Daniel Pelson and Jenny Pelson AG
Afshin Rafaat and Yasamin Shahamiri AG
Kareem Raymond and Tene Raymond AG
Leland Richards, Jr. and LaTasha Richards AG
William Rosario and Amy Wong AG
Lucas Rosen and Jennifer Kutsher Rosen AG
Reid Skibell and Tugba Colpan AG
Adam Smith AG
Alexander Tejani ’99 and Jillianne Tejani AG
Jerome Thomas and Cindy Brea AG
James Thompson and Stephanie Unwin AG
Harley Weber and Heather Weber AG
GRADE 4
58% Participation
Ibrahima Diagne and Anie Camille AG
Matthew Durando ’96 and Tina Durando AG
Jacob Furst and Kate Furst AG
Jesse Gill and Marisa Yeres AG
Angelo Grasso and Michiko Grasso AG
Eric Leong and Shirley Leong AG
Tony Pasquariello and Amy Pasquariello AG
Craig Perkins and Sharon Perkins AG
Jackson Phillips, Jr. and Cristine Phillips AG
Daniel Pipitone and Melissa Pipitone AG
Julian Rampelmann and Lorena Ramirez Zapata AG
Andrew Rendeiro and Marty Lentz AG
Scott Rofey and Olivia Song AG
Craig Sabal and Jennifer Sabal AG
Robert Sabbagh ’87 and Dorotea Sabbagh AG
Adam Schlesinger and Elizabeth Schlesinger AG
Timothy Shey and Rachel Garcia AG
Winston Song and Amy Hsieh AG
Matthew Tartaglia and April Tartaglia AG
Matthew Tilove and Leslie Dubeck AG
Bijan Treister and Negar Treister AG
Ime Udoka and Nia Long AG
Walter Weil and Deirdre Dunn AG
CLASS OF 2029
GRADE 5
83% Participation
Anonymous (1) AG
Cameron Arrington and Indhira Arrington AG
Gilbert Baird and Jaimie Baird AG
Sefer Balikci and Kesha Crichlow Balikci AG
Jennifer Bartels AG
Kevin Brandmeyer and Susan Brandmeyer AG
Keith Brenner and Jennifer Brenner AG
Kevin Byrne and Heidi Byrne AG
Orelia Camara and Karim Camara AG
Tommaso Cascella and Kathryn Matt AG
John Cochran IV and Danielle Cochran AG
Matthew Cohen and Julie Cohen AG
Mario Coppola and Laura Coppola ’95 AG
Olympia De Castro AG
André Del Valle and Andrea Del Valle AG
Andrew Foote and Blake Foote AG
Alexander Garner and Emma Garner AG
Bethany Gilmore AG
Robin Gray and Nancy Labiner AG
Tim Hill and Jenny Hill AG
Rei Inamoto and Amy Inamoto AG
Markus Kiersztan and Madeleine Kiersztan AG
Ajit Kumar and Jennifer Ecclestone AG
Kevin Langlais and Kerri Langlais AG
Brian Ling and Annisea Wong AG
Alexander Lyubarov and Susanna Chan AG
Samuel McGovern and Elizabeth McGovern AG
Gideon Mendelson and Tom Tomeo AG
Roland Merchant, Jr. and Jennifer Merchant AG
Steve Mierisch and Anita Foden AG
Guy Nesdale and Melissa Bullen AG
Leon Reyfman and Natalie Esterman AG
Leland Richards, Jr. and LaTasha Richards AG
Lucas Rosen and Jennifer Kutsher Rosen AG
Jim Schoenburg and Laurie Schoenburg AG
Josslyn Shapiro AG
Aaron Silverstein and Kiera Gans AG
Joseph Sollitto and Rebekah Sollitto AG
David Stein and Jill Stein AG
Dina Thakarar AG
Douglas Unis and Julia Jordan AG
Joseph Ward and Mireia Perez AG
John Zaremba ’95 and Nancy Zaremba AG
Xiao Zhang and Jun Kang AG
The Ziff Family AG
66% Participation
Anonymous (3) AG
Dwayne Archbold and Kyona Wilson-Archbold AG
Konstantinos Arniotis and Catherine Arrieta AG
Vincent Arzouian and Florence Liu AG
Johnson Asamoah and Cindy McField-Asamoah AG
Peter Bogaty and Erin Bogaty AG
Kurt Carrington and Denee Carrington AG
Walter Chamorro and Alice Neumann de Chamorro AG
Keath Chan and Cathy Wong AG
Ric Chaudoir and Winnie Lee AG
Robert China and Tia Breakley-China AG
Joshua Coleman and Carey Macaleer AG
John Cuti and Sarah Netburn AG
Daniel Ehrenhaft and Jessica Wollman AG
John Elefterakis ’02 and Kirsten Elefterakis AG
Alireza Esmaeilzadeh and Claudia Held AG
Jeffrey Fleishhacker and Jennifer Fleishhacker AG
David Hicks and Kim Hicks AG
Jared Hoffman and Cynthia Hoffman AG
Johannes Jacobs and Amber Jacobs AG
Arun Jayaram and Shashi Kumara AG
Charles Jigarjian and Michi Jigarjian AG
Chiwoniso Kaitano AG
William Kelly and Nicole Kelly AG
Stephen Kempf and Mary Dixie Carter AG
Kevin King and Lindsey King AG
Nils Krahe and Jennie Kim AG
Michael Lippert and Sarah Pearsall AG
Anthony Lorenzo and Karen Lorenzo AG
William Mahoney and Adrienne Saldana AG
John Merchant and Suzanna Baird AG
Michael Miarmi and Tatiana Rodriguez AG
Michael Neamonitakis and Meropi Neamonitakis AG
Matthew Nemeth and Tricia Kissinger AG
Brian Nowakowski and Natalia Artemyeva AG
Jeffrey Panzo and Kersten Stannard AG
Kirk Parks and Dina Paul-Parks AG
Tony Pasquariello and Amy Pasquariello AG
Daniel Pipitone and Melissa Pipitone AG
David Price AG
Michael Reddy and Jennifer May-Reddy AG
James Regan ’91 and Tamara Ling AG
Craig Sabal and Jennifer Sabal AG
Marc Savino ’92 and Hillary Savino AG
Adam Schlesinger and Elizabeth Schlesinger AG
Richard Schneider and Amy Tully AG
Arka Sengupta and Sohini Das AG
Seong Pan Si AG
Demond Simmons and Kaaryn Nailor Simmons AG
Daniel Spillane and Margaret Spillane AG
Gillian Steele AG
Paul Sylvain and Sabrina Bonne-Annee AG
Bijan Treister and Negar Treister AG
Andrew Waldman and Kathleen Madden AG
Matthew Warwick and Lauren Tese Warwick AG
Harley Weber and Heather Weber AG
Jacek Wojtowicz and Jennifer Powers AG
Harry Yang and Jeeeun Chae AG
62% Participation
Anonymous (2) AG
Marc Aberle and Theresa Aberle AG
Adeola Amory Spencer AG
Vadim Avdeychik and Marina Treybick AG
Mark Baillie AG
Gilbert Baird and Jaimie Baird AG
Headen Bartholomew and Michele Elliott Bartholomew AG
Raoul and Savitha Bhavnani AG
Karim Camara and Orelia Camara AG
Tommaso Cascella and Kathryn Matt AG
Simon Collier and Sarah Collier AG
Thomas Fahy and Tatyana Tsinberg AG
Stefano Filippazzo and Camille Fortunato AG
Andrew Foote and Blake Foote AG
Eric Frank and Lisa Frank AG
Alexander Garner and Emma Garner AG
Erik Geisler and Rachel Geisler AG
Brad Goldberg and Nicole Goldberg AG
Yi Gong AG
Joshua Greenberg and Mindy Greenberg AG
James Harris and Rachel Fishman AG
Benjamin Herzog and Emily Gardiner Herzog AG
Douglas Jaffe and Kristin Heavey AG
Daylon James and Maia James AG
Richelet Jean and Nathalie Jean AG
John Kenney and Lissa Kenney AG
Brandon Kessler AG
Brian Kinnane and Ellen Kinnane AG
Jason Kubica and Rosamund Green-Kubica AG
Joseph Lattinelli and Lauren Lattinelli ’97 AG
Christopher Lindquist and Proshat Mahjoubie AG
David Lindsay-Abaire and Christine Lindsay-Abaire AG
Dionicio Llano and Mayreni Acosta AG
Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez AG
Gregory Maltzman and Sandra Maltzman AG
Andrew McDonald and Sarah Zuercher AG
Roland Merchant, Jr. and Jennifer Merchant AG
Manny Miravete and Amy Givens AG
Chris Mischler and Juliane Kim AG
Constantine Nikitiades and Sophia Nikitiades ’95 AG
Ozodiukwe Onunaku and Chinyere Onunaku AG
Manos Paidarakis and Julie Paidarakis AG
David Pauls and Jane Pauls AG
Ambiorix Pimentel and Yahaira Rodriguez AG
Oleg Povetko and Deborah Cavalcante AG
Lee Quinones and Tamara Warren AG
Daniel Rice and Christina Rice AG
Jeremy Rosenberg and Cristina Rosenberg AG
Joseph Ruggie and Elizabeth Ruggie AG
John Ruocco and Eileen Reilly AG
Robert Sabbagh ’87 and Dorotea Sabbagh AG
John Saunders, Jr. and Elizabeth Nevins AG
Jeremy Shamos and Nina Hellman AG
Alexander Sion and Larisa Layug AG
Edward Smith and Alison Smith AG
Lourdes Smith AG
Kingsley Stanley and Onyinyechi Stanley AG
Justin Swartz and Joanna Weiner AG
Paul Sylvain and Sabrina Bonne-Annee AG
Gerald Taylor and Melanie Wilson-Taylor AG
James Thompson and Stephanie Unwin AG
Wendye VanBrakle AG
CLASS OF 2026
GRADE 8
63% Participation
Anonymous (5) AG
Anonymous (4) AG
Allyn Arden and Alison Besunder AG
Gilbert Baird and Jaimie Baird AG
Sefer Balikci and Kesha Crichlow Balikci AG
Charles Barbiere and Rosalie Castano-Barbiere AG
Seth Basham AG
David Blechman and Charlotte Blechman AG
Peter Bogaty and Erin Bogaty AG
Kevin Brandmeyer and Susan Brandmeyer AG
Michele Caro AG
Sean Casey and Emelie Kihlstrom AG
John Cochran IV and Danielle Cochran AG
Marvin Cochrane and Jeanette Cochrane AG
Enrico Corsalini and Flavia Corsalini AG
Daniel Crowley and Heather Crowley AG
Joe Daniels and Naomi Daniels AG
Lev Falikman and Irina Falikman AG
John Foley and Jill Foley AG
Anthony Frempong-Boadu and Gwendolyn
Frempong-Boadu AG
Benoit Garbe and Julia Lane AG
Michael Gerling and Tina Petridis-Gerling AG
Drausio Giacomelli and Fernanda Giacomelli AG
Robert Goergen, Jr. and Stacey Goergen
Tal Golomb and Ariella Golomb AG
John Hill and Shanna Hill AG
Timothy Howell and Elizabeth Howell AG
Rei Inamoto and Amy Inamoto AG
Kazuomi Iwai and Natsue Iwai AG
Paul Krieger and Christine Magdo AG
Jamie Lawson and Wendy Lawson AG
Tara Lipton AG
Wayne Margolies and Ann Palmer AG
Meredith Marshall and Yolonda Marshall AG
Hamede Martin and Petrice Leben-Martin AG
Lloyd Metz and Cassandra Metz AG
Fausto Monacelli and Sarah Grayson AG
Claire Moore AG
Andrew Morse and Ana Morse AG
Ackneil Muldrow III and Dana Muldrow AG
Guy Nesdale and Melissa Bullen AG
Jeffrey Panzo and Kersten Stannard AG
Gregory Pessin and Jaime Pessin AG
Ken Rapp and Michelle Rapp AG
Leland Richards, Jr. and LaTasha Richards AG
Andrew Robb and Kristen Robb AG
JP Rorech and Lucy Rorech AG
Albert Rosano and Josepha Kaufman AG
Ronald Sarcos and Soraya Sarcos AG
Jason Scott and Kippy Joseph AG
Amit Sethi and Judith Sethi AG
Russell Smith and Maria Guedes Smith AG
Mark Smith, Jr. and Valerie Smith AG
Adam Smith AG
Gregory Smith and Ana Nieto AG
Neil Sperling and Rose Sperling AG
Kingsley Stanley and Onyinyechi Stanley AG
The Stegich Family AG
Keyonte Sutherland ’03 AG
Stephen Swanson and Carina Hueber AG
Bill Thanopoulos and Anastasia Thanopoulos AG
Matthew Warwick and Lauren Tese Warwick AG
Ori Winitzer and Judy Winitzer AG
Jacek Wojtowicz and Jennifer Powers AG
Philippe Zrihen and Melanie Zrihen AG
54% Participation
Anonymous (3) AG
Jorge Aguilo and Alejandra Gonzalez AG
William Barrett and Sarah Barrett AG
Ira Bogner and Jennifer Bogner AG
John Brooks and Michelle Brooks AG
Christine Buckley AG
Karim Camara and Orelia Camara AG
Richard Campbell and Alix Campbell AG
Francisco Javier Caselles and Silvia Fernandez AG
Alice Cheng AG
Annette Clarke AG
Joshua Coleman and Carey Macaleer AG
John Cuti and Sarah Netburn AG
Rafael de Luque and Claudia Arango AG
Abbygale Dove AG
Fernando Ferre and Dana Ferre AG
Fredrica Ford AG
John Forsythe and Noellene Richards Forsythe AG
Frank Fusaro and Dori Raskin AG
Demetrios Gabriel II ’85 and Kalitsa Gabriel AG
Alexander Garner and Emma Garner AG
Erik Geisler and Rachel Geisler AG
Michael Gerling and Tina Petridis-Gerling AG
Michael Giles and Nanette Giles AG
James Glancy and Chantal Glancy AG
Brad Goldberg and Nicole Goldberg AG
Jennifer Grubman AG
Peter Hort and Jamie Hort AG
Jason Howell and Daniela Vitale-Howell AG
Sheldon Hyndman and Helen Khan-Hyndman AG
Ben Igoe and Heidi Igoe AG
George Incata and Elizabeth Incata AG
Sven Jacobson and Sonia Jacobson AG
Marc James and Melissa James AG
Richard James and Nakia Serrant-James AG
Ravi Kamble, MD and Prabha Bhandari AG
Brandon Kessler AG
Markus Kiersztan and Madeleine Kiersztan AG
Scott Leyton and Erin Leyton AG
Tara Lipton AG
Daniel Lobo-Berg AG
James Malley and Laura Torrado-Malley ’86 AG
Marc Mendelson and Tara Mendelson AG
Roland Merchant, Jr. and Jennifer Merchant AG
Sean Mullin AG
Fraser and Allison Musmand AG
Michael Neamonitakis and Meropi Neamonitakis AG
Courtney Ozer AG
Jodie Patterson AG
Daniel Pelson and Jenny Pelson AG
Joseph Penachio and Robyn Mazur AG
William Rodino and Jeanette Rodino AG
Dan Rootenberg and Shelby Rootenberg AG
JP Rorech and Lucy Rorech AG
Joshua Rosenberg and Karine Rosenberg AG
Matthew Roventini ’92 and Kathy Roventini AG
John Sarubbi and Catherine Sharkey AG
David Schoenberger and Stacy Fischer AG
Jeremy Shamos and Nina Hellman AG
Donald Shields and Raluca Shields AG
David Smetana and Lauren Smetana AG
Edward Smith and Alison Smith AG
Rui Song and Hongyu Zhang AG
Daniel Spillane and Margaret Spillane AG
Justin Swartz and Joanna Weiner AG
Christopher Taendler and Stephanie Taendler AG
Orlando Taylor and Ashley Taylor AG
Jonathan ten Oever and Nathalie ten Oever
Lu-Shawn Thompson AG
Andrew Waldman and Kathleen Madden AG
Gregg Walker AG
Bunis Walker and Anastacia Prince-Walker AG
St. John Walshe and Pamela Walshe AG
Harley Weber and Heather Weber AG
Peter Williams and Magda Williams AG
Yan Feng Wu and Jinhuan Yu AG
Feng Yao and Xiaopin Chen AG
Craig Yoskowitz and Michelle Yoskowitz AG
Christopher Zam and Gabrielle Roventini ’87 AG
John Zaremba ’95 and Nancy Zaremba AG
Xianjin Zhou and Juan Hu AG
53% Participation
Anonymous (1) AG
Paula Abreu and Bernardo Piquet AG
Michelle Adams and Laura Nelsen AG
Lauren Allen AG
Adam Ames and Elissa Levy AG
Reginald Auguste and Danielle Turner AG
Seth Basham AG
Anson Beard and Veronica Beard AG
Matthew Belford and Jean Belford AG
Warren Bieler and Ilene Fiszel Bieler AG
Irene Bosker and Susan Weigl AG
Kevin Brandmeyer and Susan Brandmeyer AG
Michele Caro AG
Walter Chamorro and Alice Neumann de Chamorro AG
JinE Chen AG
Alice Cheng AG
Peter Cohen and Ellen Cohen AG
Sean Desmond and Susan Cordaro AG
Justin Dorazio and Samantha Dunham AG
Joseph Farris II and Julie Farris AG
James Fitzpatrick and Melissa Fitzpatrick AG
Demetrios Gabriel II ’85 and Kalitsa Gabriel AG
Peter Genatt and Tasha Genatt AG
Dennis Glass and Shani Fielder-Glass AG
Michael Glassman and Jennifer Glassman
Kenneth Green and Shamier Green AG
Benjamin Herzog and Emily Gardiner Herzog AG
David Hicks and Kim Hicks AG
Peter Hort and Jamie Hort AG
Timothy Howell and Elizabeth Howell AG
Thomas Iannelli ’82 and Barbara Iannelli ’85 AG
German Jaramillo and Paola Mejia AG
Alexander Kagen and Susan Hashemi AG
William Klein and Michele Klein AG
John Kolz and Amy Kolz AG
Matt Kovaleski and Sarah Habibi AG
Marrisa Lall AG
Ladisun Majekodunmi and Olabisi Hodge AG
Meredith Marshall and Yolonda Marshall AG
Tom McAdam and Jill Schwartz AG
Andrew McDonald and Sarah Zuercher AG
David Neibart and Emma Murphy AG
Benjamin Neulander AG
Wing Ng and Siu Fun Chu - Ng AG
John Niccolai and Maria Gea Arredondo AG
Dinah Nissen and Elizabeth Apelles AG
Stephen Paluszek and Violeta Paluszek AG
David Pauls and Jane Pauls AG
Daniel Pelson and Jenny Pelson AG
Joseph Penachio and Robyn Mazur AG
Winett Phillips and Candace Grant AG
Lawrence Playford, Jr. and Ellen Playford AG
James Regan ’91 and Tamara Ling AG
David Rich AG
Andrew Robb and Kristen Robb AG
James Roberts and Lisa Starr AG
Anthony Robles and Eden Lopez-Robles AG
Richard Rosario and Haley Meade-Rosario AG
Todd Rose and Jill Rose AG
Jeremy Rosenberg and Cristina Rosenberg AG
Joseph Ruggie and Elizabeth Ruggie AG
Michael Saivetz and Amy Saivetz AG
Sunil Savkar and Stefanie Birkmann AG
Andrew Schilling and Margaret Schilling AG
Andrew Scholz and Lisa Wall ’88 AG
Jason Scott and Kippy Joseph AG
Mark Smith, Jr. and Valerie Smith AG
Adam Smith AG
Edward Stein and Victoria Misrock-Stein AG
Derek Stoldt and Amy Stoldt AG
David Taub and Leigh Taub AG
Stephanie Tooman-Dieme AG
Marcus Trent and Cyntra Trani AG
Marc Triola and Dushana Triola AG
Marc Turkewitz and Melissa Danenberg AG
Douglas Unis and Julia Jordan AG
Richard Usher, Jr. and Raymi Ramseur-Usher AG
Ann Winston AG
David Wise and Vanessa Wise
Peiying Xiao and Yanqiong Liu AG
Kenneth Yaffe and Susan Hitzig AG
John Zaremba ’95 and Nancy Zaremba AG
GRADE 11
64% Participation
Anonymous (5) AG
Brad Agate and Christine Agate AG
Paul Arnsten and Pamela Arnsten AG
Headen Bartholomew and Michele Elliott
Bartholomew AG
Matthew Bogdanos and Claudia Bogdanos AG
Donald Burke and Heidi Burke AG
Marco Caffuzzi and Nicole Gagnon AG
Dexter Campbell and Anyely Campbell AG
Johnny Cavaliero and Mindy Wigutow AG
Jay Clayton and Gretchen Clayton AG
Simon Collier and Sarah Collier AG
Anthony Contessa and Molly Choi AG
Daniel Crowley and Heather Crowley AG
John Culmine ’85 and Louise Fasano-Culmine AG
Joe Daniels and Naomi Daniels AG
Rafael de Luque and Claudia Arango AG
Mark Dehnert and Mindy Dehnert AG
Donald Demay, Jr. and Miyoko Demay AG
Steven DiBlasio and Donna DiBlasio AG
Maria DiCarlo AG
Antoine Drye and Jacqueline Moline AG
Stephen Durso and Barrie Ringelheim AG
Eric Edwards, Sr. and Delia Edwards AG
Leonard Ellis and Nicky Ellis AG
John Emy and Kristin Emy AG
George Evans AG
Joseph Finnerty III AG
Qiang Fu and Xun Yao AG
Leopold Garcia, Jr. and Nilmeyda Fulgencio AG
Anthony Gini and Catherine Torigian AG
Glenn Gittens, Jr. and Angela Gittens AG
Andrew Gordon and Jennifer Gordon AG
Nicholas Gravante, Jr. ’78 and Jacqueline Gravante AG
Dan Horan and Julie Beglin AG
Brandon Hornbeck and Yvonne Lee AG
Peter Hort and Jamie Hort AG
Jason Howell and Daniela Vitale-Howell AG
Ken Hudes and Hiroko Otani AG
Daniel Hunter and Dana Rathkopf AG
Ben Igoe and Heidi Igoe AG
Suli Jiang and Jenna Anilee AG
Bruce Kimmelman and Amy Kimmelman AG
Geoffrey Kloske and Jennifer Braunschweiger AG
Kwokhung Kwan and Jiwen Chen AG
Sumit Laddha and Hansika Malkani AG
Morgan Lawrence III and Nicole Lawrence AG
Jeffrey Lewis and Lisa Fields AG
Matthew Lissak and Zanthe Taylor AG
Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez AG
Nicolas Lopez-Muniz and Jeane Lopez-Muniz AG
Morris Macleod and Susan Macleod AG
William Manny and Jill Manny AG
Christopher Mansfield and Sang Lee AG
Barbara Marino AG
Joseph McCusker and Frances McCusker AG
Adrian Mondesir* and Venice Mondesir AG
Donna Paparella AG
Antony Pfaffle ’81 and Linda Pfaffle AG
John Plym, Jr. and Kristin Plym AG
Gayle Pollack AG
Ronald Pope and Annunciate Hopkins-Pope AG
Andrew Queen and Dana Queen
Mark Reed and Daria Ilunga AG
Leon Reyfman and Natalie Esterman AG
Richard Rizzo and Louise Rizzo AG
JP Rorech and Lucy Rorech AG
David Rosenblatt and Laurie Rosenblatt AG
Gregg Rothkin and Jennifer Rothkin AG
David Schoenberger and Stacy Fischer AG
Scott Sergeant and Cristina Soto AG
Genel Simeon AG
Alexander Slotwiner and Rachel Stevens AG
Robert Stamicar and Mona Thong AG
Alexander Stein and Helayne Schiff AG
Don Stephenson IV and Emily Stephenson AG
Armin Tehrany ’87 and Valerie Tehrany AG
Jonathan ten Oever and Nathalie ten Oever
Bill Thanopoulos and Anastasia Thanopoulos AG
Douglas Tiesi and Elissa Tiesi AG
Michael Troncale and Harriet Troncale AG
Jose Velazquez, Sr. and Ivelisse Velazquez AG
St. John Walshe and Pamela Walshe AG
Tonghe Wang and Xiaoxiao Dong AG
John Wells and Joo-Yung Lee AG
Peter Williams and Magda Williams AG
Bradd Williamson and Amerika Williamson AG
Christian Zebicoff and Elizabeth Mulholland AG
Bradley Zizmor and Susan Zizmor AG
GRADE 12
41% Participation
Anonymous (3) AG
Joceline Arseneault and Carol Fiore AG
Anson Beard and Veronica Beard AG
Ron Beit and Nicole Beit AG
Jennifer Brown and Noelle Leonard AG
Steve Chiaino and Angela Chiaino AG
Enrico Corsalini and Flavia Corsalini AG
Marcel Deans and Sherrie Deans AG
Stephen Dembitzer and Sarah Maher AG
Laurence Doty IV and Constance Doty AG
Tony Exuma and Rolande Exuma AG
Michael Farkas and Laura Farkas AG
Cliff Fonstein and Nadia Burgard AG
Keane Gibson AG
Josh Gilbert and Ileane Santana-Gilbert AG
Arthur Greco and Allene Chung AG
Byron Jackson and Jennifer Jackson AG
Sven Jacobson and Sonia Jacobson AG
Anik Khambhla and Angela Ortiz AG
Yonghwi Kim and Bokyoung Kim AG
Brian Kinnane and Ellen Kinnane AG
Jayaveera Kodali and Lara Marcon
Gwen Libstag AG
Tara Lipton AG
Yao Lu and Michelle Xie AG
Christopher Mansfield and Sang Lee AG
Florentina Mark AG
Jeff Melcer and Jodi Hecht AG
John Meyer and Nina Harkrader AG
Bradford Mulder and Marisa Marinelli AG
William Rodino and Jeanette Rodino AG
Joseph Roller and Holly Williams-Roller AG
Joshua Rosenberg and Karine Rosenberg AG
Harry Schessel and Risa Schessel AG
Andrew Schilling and Margaret Schilling AG
Irwin Simon and Daryl Simon AG
Frank Snider and Amy Fusselman AG
Chandragupta Sooran and Angie Karna AG
Neil Sperling and Rose Sperling AG
Derek Stoldt and Amy Stoldt AG
Katherine Wells AG
Georgia Wright AG
Baolin Yan and Ting Zhang AG
Heidi Zarou ’86 AG
Philippe Zrihen and Melanie Zrihen AG *deceased
e are grateful for the generosity of our alumni, which helps to ensure an outstanding educational experience for the Poly students of today.
CLASS OF 1942
Melvin Fraiman AG
CLASS OF 1943
James Landis AG
CLASS OF 1944
William Burdick AG
CLASS OF 1945
Lewis Miller AG
WMarvin Sears
Bernard Spence, Jr. AG
CLASS OF 1946
Wilbur Davis AG
William Kramer AG
CLASS OF 1947
Richard Berg
James Blundell, Jr. AG
Robert Fraiman AG
Joseph McElroy AG
CLASS OF 1948
Richard Debs AG
Alan Roland AG
George Smyth, Jr. AG
CLASS OF 1949
Homer Eckerson AG
Peter Fauci, Jr. AG
Richard Greenberg AG
David Kramer AG
Robert Magnus, Jr. AG
Otis Pearsall AG
Robert Schoepflin AG
Mark Smoller AG
CLASS OF 1950
Robert Briskman AG
Andrew Davis AG
Charles Kalina AG
Bob Lonshein AG
Philip Moyles AG
Matthew Scharff AG
Arnold Tolkin AG
Edward Wallach AG
Malcolm Young AG
CLASS OF 1951
David Bell AG
Michael Lamm AG
Robert Lehrman AG
Richard Louis AG
Peter Malkin
Richard Marlin AG
Robert Stern AG
CLASS OF 1952
Anthony Besthoff AG
John Bissell AG
Edgar Blohm AG
Frank Exline, Jr. AG
Robert Hillman AG
Michael Rabbino AG
CLASS OF 1953
Mark Abramowitz AG
Arthur Bellinzoni, Jr.
Bruce Bernstein AG
Howard Cohen AG
Richard Fearon
William Gershell AG
Michael Glick AG
Robert Harwood AG
Peter Liebert
Richard Merhige AG
Michael Press AG
Eugene Wheeler, Jr.
CLASS OF 1954
Ira Ames AG
Stanley Bogen AG
Alan Davidson AG
Steven Ducker AG
Eugene Flamm AG
Joel Greeley AG
Ralph Groskoph AG
Owen Hoberman AG
Leslie Silverstein AG
Jack Wasserman AG
CLASS OF 1955
Paul Brown AG
Michael Gold AG
Charles Kalison AG
Stuart Mackler AG
Ira Merritt AG
Richard Perlman AG
Harry Petchesky AG
Peter G. Stone AG
Michael Sussman AG
Robert Younes AG
David Youngblade
CLASS OF 1956
Arthur Delmhorst AG
Justus Doenecke AG
Bruce Ducker AG
Michael Freund AG
David Goldman AG
Jerome Howie AG
Stephen Krass AG
George Marks AG
Landy Nelson AG
Richard Press AG
Michael Rosen AG
Robert Schoenemann AG
Daniel Schwartz AG
Walter Williamson AG
Harry Yates AG
CLASS OF 1957
Roger Bermas AG
Peter Cecere
Thomas Hunter AG
George Malin AG
Robert Pickens AG
Victor Rich AG
David Sherman AG
Peter Siviglia AG
Tenny Wheatley, Jr. AG
CLASS OF 1958
Dave Elligers AG
Joseph Giardina AG
Mark Groothuis AG
Edward Jeffer AG
Michael Kay AG
Marvin Lerman AG
Alan Newman AG
Joel Pokorny AG
Arthur Rebell AG
Edward Reiss AG
John Sands AG
CLASS OF 1959
Thomas Goddard AG
David Lichtman AG
Robert Martinson*
Leonard Sayles AG
Norman Silberdick, Jr. AG
Anthony Sirianni AG
CLASS OF 1960
Michael Cagan AG
Michael Groothuis AG
Seth Kaufman AG
Richard Mizrack AG
CLASS OF 1961
Peter Bloom AG
Robert Chiteman AG
John Grayzel AG
Francis Love AG
Robert Meringolo AG
Stephen Pearlman AG
Michael Rebell AG
Peter Richtmyer AG
CLASS OF 1962
James Blumstein AG
Henry Gardstein, Jr. AG
Stephen Green
Alan Hoffman AG
Delmont Irving AG
Richard Jensen AG
Kenneth Kasses AG
Mark Kozinn AG
Robert Shack AG
Richard Spiegel AG
Edwin Wigutoff AG
CLASS OF 1963
Warren Appleman AG
Larry Denmark AG
Thomas Fanta AG
Henry Fayne AG
Michael Krinsky AG
Peter Love AG
Bruce Pindyck AG
Richard Ratzan AG
Arthur Richman AG
Yaroslav Sochynsky AG
CLASS OF 1964
Jonathan Axelrod AG
Robert Cort AG
Bruce Merhige AG
Eric Ruby AG
Rob Schenck AG
CLASS OF 1965
Patrick Burger AG
Harrison Bush
Roger Heymann AG
Ronald Mason AG
Andrew Mogelof AG
CLASS OF 1966
Andrew Benjamin AG
Mitchell Bernstein AG
Frederick Haddad AG
David Johnson III AG
Lee Saltzman AG
Michael Terrin AG
CLASS OF 1967
Jeffrey Baloutine AG
Andrew Gowa AG
James Hennessy, Jr. AG
David Neigus AG
Lawrence Pincus AG
CLASS OF 1968
Joseph Hanson AG
Anonymous (1) AG
Robert Jacob AG
Bruce Johannessen AG
Russell Panetta AG
Peter Sessa AG
Ira Turret AG
Vincent Vigorita AG
CLASS OF 1969
Salvatore Cumella AG
Mark Evans AG
Stewart Fleisig AG
Lester Kritzer AG
Howard Levine AG
Mark Liss AG
Michael Rogers AG
CLASS OF 1970
Robert Arcaro AG
Richard Daidone AG
James Dreyfus AG
Timothy Johnson AG
Antonio Magliocco, Jr. AG
Lennox Montrose AG
Samuel Parker
Michael Price AG
Roy Rifkin AG
Robert Slack AG
James Stirn AG
Bruce Terrin AG
Andrew Wittenstein AG
CLASS OF 1971
Michael Junsch AG
Stephen LoRusso AG
David Pollack AG
CLASS OF 1972
James Allen AG
Bruce Doll AG
Paul Gilson AG
M. Robert Gumer AG
John Madden, Jr. AG
Douglas Miller AG
Jerrold Newman AG
Joel Rush AG
David Troyansky AG
Henry Warshaw AG
CLASS OF 1973
Jeffrey Rifkin AG
Richard Saltzman AG
Richard Shapiro AG
Robert Spatt AG
CLASS OF 1974
Frank Bernieri AG
Nicholas Harris AG
Peter Madden AG
Robert Messina AG
John Morris, Jr. AG
Hal Rose AG
Anthony Sgarlato AG
CLASS OF 1975
Michael Adesman AG
Charles Birenbaum AG
George Bittar AG
Allen Flores AG
Steven Froot AG
Elliott Rebhun
David Schlecker AG
Scott Smith AG
CLASS OF 1976
Ira Checkla AG
Kenneth Dashow AG
Charles Kreines AG
Joseph Raccuia
Frank Sinatra AG
Howard Smith, Jr. AG
CLASS OF 1977
Darren Gitelman AG
Edward Katz AG
CLASS OF 1978
Lawrence Brandman AG
Frank Galtieri AG
Nicholas Gravante, Jr. AG
Steven Herman AG
Peter Latson AG
Steve Levitan AG
CLASS OF 1979
Jeffrey Bamonte AG
Stephen Kochman AG
Mark Levine AG
Kenneth Webb AG
CLASS OF 1980
Howard Dicker AG
Margaret Watson AG
CLASS OF 1981
Antony Pfaffle AG
Martin Valk AG
CLASS OF 1982
Anonymous (1) AG
Thomas Iannelli AG
Nadine Kennedy AG
Philip Sawyer AG
CLASS OF 1983
Ken Dupee AG
CLASS OF 1984
Jeanne Cloppse AG
Gigi Georges AG
Gordon Jensen AG
Arnold Mascali AG
Michael Osso AG
CLASS OF 1985
John Culmine AG
Demetrios Gabriel II AG
Bernard Gancarz AG
Barbara Ippolito Iannelli AG
CLASS OF 1986
Jennifer McAvey Baker AG
Mary Picarello Bozza Wise
Robin Bramwell-Stewart AG
Eric Gural AG
Kelly Lynch Papa AG
Gabrielle Scarpaci AG
Carla Sinatra AG
Laura Torrado-Malley AG
Heidi Zarou AG
CLASS OF 1987
Michael Correra AG
Catherine Curley Lee AG
Jamal Hayden AG
Neeta Kantu Smith AG
Robert Minutello AG
Samuel Perlman AG
Gabrielle Roventini AG
Robert Sabbagh AG
Gayle Hamwi Steinhacker AG
Armin Tehrany AG
CLASS OF 1988
Cynthia Cheswick Capone AG
Dirk DeLaCour
Jeanine Smartt Liburd AG
Todd Prager AG
Renato Stabile AG
Lisa Wall AG
CLASS OF 1989
Michael Pollack AG
Christopher Richardson AG
CLASS OF 1990
Lee Cohen AG
Russell DeLaCour
John Merhige AG
CLASS OF 1991
Nnamdi Orakwue AG
James Regan AG
Joseph Verdirame AG
CLASS OF 1992
Corey Modeste AG
Richard Naddeo AG
Jennifer Kunz Rice AG
Matthew Roventini AG
Marc Savino AG
Todd Vitolo AG
CLASS OF 1994
Jaime Blanc AG
Justin Ferrelli AG
Katherine Greig AG
Andrew Hughes AG
Joseph Pabon AG
Nathaniel Walsh AG
CLASS OF 1995
Kate Bernstein AG
Laura Beiles Coppola AG
Jonathan Krasner AG
Stephen Lee AG
Sophia Marinakis Nikitiades AG
Kristerfor Mastronardi AG
Wade Saadi, Jr. AG
Anthony Tortora AG
John Zaremba AG
CLASS OF 1996
Matthew Durando AG
Nathan Finkel AG
Henry Lau AG
Jennifer Myers Pulidore AG
Page Travelstead AG
Melanie Wilson-Taylor AG
CLASS OF 1997
David Alperin AG
Tara Anant Kando AG
Karl Boulware AG
Jason Daras AG
Sophie DeLaCour
Keith Foss AG
Maria Haymandou Garg AG
Richard Kando AG
Lauren Mancuso Lattinelli AG
Derek Lee AG
Jill Rudnick AG
CLASS OF 1998
Courtney Archer-Buckmire AG
Denise Regan Baker AG
Justin Pagan AG
CLASS OF 1999
Brian Azara AG
Eric Freedgood AG
David Giancola AG
Leslie Grinage AG
Carolyn Razzano AG
Alexander Tejani AG
CLASS OF 2000
Noah Aberlin AG
Alexandra Maresca Azara AG
Wilson Calle AG
Brian Cantor AG
Jasmin Rivera AG
Johanna Rodriguez AG
Joseph Seggio AG
John Verzosa AG
CLASS OF 2001
Eileen Ahasic AG
Marissa Beck AG
Ana Calle AG
Julian Holder AG
Margo Rivera Power AG
Hector Santiago AG
Peter Soto AG
CLASS OF 2002
John Elefterakis AG
Alissa Bello McGrisken AG
Daniel Messing AG
CLASS OF 2003
Elizabeth Becker Schires AG
Shanell Bryan AG
Matthew Dresher AG
Peter Rocco AG
Keyonte Sutherland AG
CLASS OF 2004
Jonathan Feinberg AG
Alexander Greeley AG
Runako Gulstone AG
Daniel Ricciardi AG
Minoo Fadaifard Wade AG
CLASS OF 2005
Cristina Cote AG
Adam Garson AG
Keith Hernandez AG
Griffin Humphreys AG
John Kefer AG
Laura Mumm AG
Juliette Pannone AG
Akili Tommasino AG
Jamila Williams AG
Monique Wilson AG
CLASS OF 2006
Reed Katz AG
Catherine LaRocca AG
Samuel Polifka AG
Alexander Wright-Johnson AG
CLASS OF 2007
Deana Belvedere AG
Anastasia Cembrovska AG
Thana-Ashley Charles AG
Andrew Goldfarb AG
Ryan Hyland AG
Alfred Miller AG
Christina Sapega AG
Andres Ventura AG
CLASS OF 2008
Courtney Nolan AG
CLASS OF 2009
Anonymous (1) AG
Pearce Erensel AG
Jared Hedglin AG
CLASS OF 2010
Alana Lawson Althans AG
Justin Curtis AG
Katherine Greissman AG
Jason Griffiths AG
William Hochman AG
Terrence Hyland AG
Karina Krainchich AG
Morgan Raff AG
Colin Sheridan AG
Andrew Silverman AG
CLASS OF 2011
Kadaicia-Loi Dunkley
Abouelnaga AG
Anonymous (1) AG
Qadir Forbes AG
Travis Hutchinson AG
Vincent Licata AG
Anecia Richards AG
CLASS OF 2012
Christopher Andrade AG
Ayisha McHugh AG
Christopher Patacsil AG
Jordyn Silverstein AG
CLASS OF 2013
Christine Croasdaile AG
Kiera French AG
Kameron Hutchinson AG
Tara Muoio AG
Thomas Walker IV AG
Asha Wills AG
CLASS OF 2014
Drew Lewis AG
CLASS OF 2015
Grace Accetta AG
Alyssa Brown AG
Ariana Luksh AG
Rodney Miller, Jr. AG
Cassie Moriarty AG
CLASS OF 2016
David Dixon AG
Briana Riley AG
Micaela Rodriguez AG
CLASS OF 2017
Kayla Glemaud AG
Kyle Mooney AG
Eric Muoio AG
CLASS OF 2018
Ellen Gaffney AG
Mayin Hinduja AG
CLASS OF 2019
Shania Smith AG
Chloe Sun AG
Zene Willoughby AG
CLASS OF 2020
Jenna Denaver AG
Jordan Denaver AG
Many thanks to the Poly grandparents who contributed during the 2021-2022 fiscal year.
Maxine Armstrong AG
Arvydas Barzdukas and Daiva Barzdukas AG
Susan Beiles AG
Fern Berenberg AG
Alleen Bratton AG
Renee Cantave and Herve Cantave AG
John Carty and Jane Carty AG
Hin Chan and Wing Chan AG
John Cochran III and Patricia Cochran AG
Willis DeLaCour, Jr. and Sally Williams-Allen
John Dubeck and Susan Hotine AG
Paul Durando and Marie Durando AG
Sandi Feinberg AG
Phil Foote and Mary Foote AG
Edward Freedgood and Electra Freedgood AG
Lynda Freeman AG
Marjorie Greenberg AG
Allen Grubman and Deborah Grubman AG
Jeffrey Gural and Paula Gural AG
Pat Harrigan AG
Judy Hicks AG
Elicia Hunter AG
John Hunter and Jayne Hunter AG
Howard Kaye and Wilma Kaye AG
Diane Leyden and Brian Leyden AG
Frank Lopez AG
Stuart Mackler ’55 and Judy Mackler AG
Ken Mandelbaum and Susie Mandelbaum AG
Richard Marlin ’51 and Caroline Marlin AG
Michael McGovern and Joyce McGovern AG
Rebecca McPheters AG
Yvonne Pollack AG
Michael Rebell ’61 and Sharon Rebell AG
Frank Rogers AG
Jane Selzer AG
David Scott and Judith Scott AG
Anthony Sollitto and Dolores Sollitto AG
Susan Solomon AG
Goodrich Stokes and Joyce Stokes AG
Christina VanBrakle and Bryant VanBrakle AG
Shirley Welsh and Garth Elliott AG
Thank you to the parents of alumni and friends of the school who contributed to Poly Prep this fiscal year.
Anonymous (10) AG
Paata Abjandadze and Maka Gogilashvili AG
Mark Abramowitz and Joan Abramowitz AG
Jonathan Aibel AG
David Akselrad and Jacqueline Akselrad AG
Heath Aldridge AG
Adeola Amory Spencer AG
Gaudencio Andrade and Laura Andrade AG
Anonymous Donor AG
Douglas Arbuckle AG
Luigi Arlia and Cynthia Arlia AG
M. Anthony Baker and Diana Baker AG
Peter Bakst AG
Bradley Balliet AG
Lorie Bartley AG
Audrius Barzdukas AG
The Rev. William Baum and The Rev. Brooke Swertfager AG
Susan Beiles AG
Bruce Bernstein ’53 and Lita Moses Bernstein AG
Burkhard Bilger and Jennifer Nelson AG
Russell Boardman and Lynn Boardman AG
Jim Boland and Fran Boland AG
Carol Bongiorni AG
Lawrence Brandman ’78 and Deborah Brandman AG
Steven Brescia and Ilene Shaw-Brescia AG
Margaret Brown AG
Peter Brown and Monica McKain-Brown AG
Sylvia Buono AG
Rosalind Campbell AG
Jerry Capeci and Barbara Capeci
Joseph Capone and Cynthia Capone AG
Carolyn Castellano AG
Yi-Jen Chiang and Sophie Hsu AG
Michael Chirdo and Catherine Chirdo AG
Lola Clarke AG
John Commaratto and Louise Commaratto AG
Joseph Coplin and Jenna Coplin AG
Robert Cort ’64 and Rosalie Swedlin AG
Olivier D’Meza and Bethany D’Meza AG
Willis DeLaCour, Jr. and Sally Williams-Allen
Dennis DePietro AG
Guy Devyatkin and Natalia Devyatkin AG
Alfred DiGrazia and Alison Morea AG
Kevin Doherty* AG
Peggy Doherty AG
John Dreyer and Carmen Dreyer AG
Paul Durando and Marie Durando AG
Jason Edwards and Terell Cooper-Edwards AG
Robert Falotico and Catherine Burgos AG
Joseph Farris II and Julie Farris AG
Barbara B. Feldman AG
Jean Paul Fils-Aime and Jacqueline Celestin FilsAime AG
Brian Fitzgerald and Erin Patton AG
Lloyd Ford and Jacqueline Ford AG
Lecia Foster AG
Edward Freedgood and Electra Freedgood AG
Christopher French and Mary Carroll French AG
Lisa Friel AG
Raymundo Garcia and Rosa Garcia AG
Janet Garnjost AG
Brit Geiger AG
Scott Glass and JJ Ramberg AG
Thomas Goddard ’59 and Laura Goddard AG
Mitchel Gray and Kathleen Gray AG
Eustace Greaves, Jr. AG
Jeffrey Gural and Paula Gural AG
Eric Gural ’86 and Nancy Gural AG
Joanna Gurley
Janine Guzzone AG
Michelle Haire AG
David Harman and Kristin Harman AG
Pat Harrigan AG
Robert Harwood and Gwendolyn Harwood AG
Zia Hassan and Jurate Hassan AG
Milton Hedglin and Denise Hedglin AG
Bruce Henry and Patricia Henry AG
David Higham and Toni-Leslie James AG
Betsy Humes AG
Noel Humphreys AG
Stacy Hunter AG
Maite Iracheta AG
Michael Junsch ’71 and Adrienne Junsch AG
Jane Karlin AG
Nels Kauppila and Pamela Kauppila AG
Paul Kefer and Patricia Sullivan AG
Milan Krainchich and Gina Krainchich AG
Charles Kreines ’76 and Rosanne DiFazio AG
Khieng Lay and Milagros Tantoco-Lay AG
Steven Lefkowitz and Jacqueline Bausch AG
Nicholas Lettieri AG
Deirdre Lewis AG
Warner Lewis and Christina Porter AG
Michael Liburd and Jeanine Liburd ’88 AG
Michael Licata and Catherine Licata AG
John Lowe and Marissa Alperin AG
Scott Luksh and Sofia Haberman AG
Arthur Magnus and Caroline Magnus AG
Stephen Maharam and Camila Pastor AG
Mary Malhame AG
Nancy Mangus AG
Jose Martinez and Ellen Martinez AG
Donald McHugh and Jean McHugh AG
Carol McLaughlin AG
Mark Melamed and Helen Melamed AG
Richard Merhige ’53 and Jacqueline Merhige AG
Richard Mizrack ’60 AG
Richard Morris and Jessica Morris AG
Loren Munk and Kate Munk AG
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio AG
Albert Nocella III and Tina Georgoulakos AG
Richard Nolan and Eileen Nolan AG
Michael Novogratz and Sukey Novogratz AG
Brian Nowakowski and Natalia Artemyeva AG
David Nuzum and Olivia Herman AG
Alyssa O’Reilly AG
Clarence Olmstead and Kathleen Heenan AG
Refael Olya and Teresa Olya AG
Rowland Orakwue and Pearl Orakwue AG
Brenton Palmer and Jacqueline Palmer AG
Elie Pariente and Suzann Pariente AG
Scott Parson and Lisa Parson AG
James Pattison and Katherine Pattison AG
Patsy Perpetua and Joy Perpetua
Bruce Pindyck and Mary Ellen Pindyck AG
Steven Pisano and Lisa Meyer AG
Charles Polizano and Dianna Polizano AG
Peter Puleo and Lisa Puleo AG
Fredrick Pytlak and Edna Pytlak AG
Ganesh Rao and Patrick Campbell AG
John Rearick, Jr. and Elizabeth Schnee AG
Peter Redell and Lori Redell AG
Edward Reitler and Joyce Reitler AG
Daniel Ricciardi and Peggy Ricciardi AG
William Rice, Jr. AG
Mario Richards AG
Richard Rodgers and Kathleen Rodgers
Hal Rose ’74 and Lisa Rose AG
James Rossman and Eliza Rossman AG
Edward Ruck and Diane Ruck AG
Thomas Russo and Linda Russo AG
Richard Saltzman ’73 and Bette Saltzman AG
Michael Segal AG
James Signorelli and Patricia Smith AG
Irwin Simon and Daryl Simon AG
Laurie Silverman AG
Greg Simpson and Elaine Simpson AG
Chad Slawner and Hyo Yeon AG
Marc Sloane and Linda Sloane AG
Simon Smith and Catherine Smith
Howard Smith, Jr. ’76 and Pamela Smith AG
Scott Smith ’75 and Heidi Smith AG
Pamela Smyth AG
Robert Spatt ’73 and Lisa Spatt AG
Michael Stelzer and Natalie Stelzer AG
Niles Stewart and Robin Bramwell-Stewart ’86 AG
Caleb Terry and Sherri-Ann Terry AG
Alfred Terry III and Leslie Goldfarb Terry AG
Geoffrey Troy and Jane Troy AG
Dino Veronese AG
Vincent Vigorita ’68 and Patricia Vigorita AG
Thomas Walker III and Danielle Walker AG
Dawn-Marie Walker AG
James Wallick and Catherine Wallick AG
Paul Weinstein and Michal Hershkovitz AG
Carol Weymuller AG
Argle Whitfield and Florence Whitfield AG
Elizabeth Wiatt AG
Vonda Willoughby AG
Winston Wills and Yvette Hinds Wills AG
Owen Wincig and Regina Wincig AG
Shao Wah Yiu and Yi Yun Yiu AG
Lorenz Zimmerman, Jr. and Anne Zimmerman AG
Brian Zipp and Martha Zipp AG
Thank you to the Poly faculty and staff who contributed financially to support Poly Prep this fiscal year.
Anonymous (8) AG
Hekmat Abdelrahim AG
Victoria Abdulahad AG
Richard Alberino AG
Angel Alvarado AG
Christopher Andrade ’12 AG
Gaudencio Andrade AG
Andre Antoine AG
Alicia Antonelli AG
Robert Aston AG
Jason Augustine AG
Konstantin Avdeev AG
Audrius Barzdukas AG
Sarah Bates AG
Stephen Bates AG
Renae Beauchman AG
Susan Beiles AG
Jean Belford AG
Lisa Beltramello AG
Adam Benay AG
Adam Bisceglia AG
AJ Blandford AG
Salvatore Bonaventura AG
Lauren Bonaventura AG
Sarah Bond AG
Carol Bongiorni AG
Monique Boston AG
Susie Brandmeyer AG
Faith Brown AG
Sylvia Buono AG
Linda Busetti AG
Teresa Calvo AG
Jose Camargo AG
Louis Candel AG
Kristin Cannon AG
Alia Carponter-Walker AG
Dustin Carr AG
Juan Carrillo AG
Alex Carter AG
Lynda Casarella AG
James Catapano AG
Pasquale Cioffi AG
Julio Colon AG
Peggy Cook AG
Courtney Cooke AG
Laura Coppola ’95 AG
Richard Corso AG
Daniel Costello AG
Edwin Craig AG
David Cruz AG
Zoi Cuko AG
Kim Davis AG
Kimberly Davis Rivizzigno AG
Shirley Dayes AG
André Del Valle AG
Andrea Del Valle AG
Helen Delamarter AG
Lawrence Dessi AG
Maria DiCarlo AG
Virginia Dillon AG
Daniel Doughty AG
Carrie Dowell AG
Carmen Dreyer AG
Matthew Durando ’96 AG
David Edwards AG
Sarah Ely AG
Ira Feldman AG
Edward Fitzgerald AG
Charles Fleming AG
Denise Fraifeld AG
Haden Francis AG
Jase Franklyn AG
Rosa Garcia AG
Emily Gardiner Herzog AG
Michael Gentile AG
Anthony Gini AG
Kristin Ginty-Parra AG
Angela Gittens AG
Peter Gorman AG
Michael Goslar AG
Kathleen Graf AG
Kyle Graham AG
Laura Grimm AG
Judette Guerrier AG
Kristen Guynn AG
Ashley Hacker AG
Kenneth Hamilton, Jr. AG
Amy Hao AG
Pat Harrigan AG
Michal Hershkovitz AG
David Higham AG
Malory Hom AG
Gail Horowitz AG
Erin Hughes AG
Stacy Hunter AG
Jack Hyman AG
Maite Iracheta AG
Teyana Irving AG
Rosemarie Izzo AG
Richard James AG
Michael Junsch ’71 AG
Kai Kang AG
Majid Khan AG
Bokyoung Kim AG
Yonghwi Kim AG
Ellen Kinnane AG
Mary Klonis AG
Ladislav Kravar AG
Opeyemi Laniyonu AG
Carmelo Larose AG
Ramesh Laungani AG
Julie Lee AG
Kent Leeklymenko AG
Jeremi Lewis AG
Emily Liao AG
Paola Ligonde AG
Tamara Ling AG
Shihan Liu AG
Vivian Liu AG
Kristen Lizzi AG
Caitlin Loi AG
Elisabeth Mansfield AG
Lee Marcus AG
Vincent Margiotta AG
Andrew Marinos AG
Ellen Martinez AG
William McNally AG
James Megahan AG
Devon Mennella AG
Alex Millan AG
Christian Morehouse AG
Juliet Moretti AG
Cliff Morrison AG
Margaret Moslander AG
Sean Mullin AG
Donna Muoio AG
Jennifer Nelson AG
Jamie Nestor AG
Richard Nolan AG
Peter Nowakoski AG
Ronny Nunez AG
James Ogilvie AG
Rachel Olinyk AG
Theresa O’Sullivan AG
Jason Parrish AG
Jenna Peet AG
Marissa Pennington AG
Alexis Perez AG
Rosemarie Pico AG
Charles Polizano AG
Dianna Polizano AG
Emily Prior AG
Lisa Puleo AG
Meredeth Quick AG
Carolyn Quigley AG
Ruba Rabah AG
Yusimir Ramirez AG
John Rankin AG
Danielle Rauch AG
John Rearick, Jr. AG
Lori Redell AG
David Reid AG
Eileen Reilly AG
Mary Rice AG
LaTasha Richards AG
Karen Richardson AG
Kristen Robb AG
Michael Robinson AG
William Rosario AG
Amanda Rose AG
Matthew Roventini ’92 AG
Linda Russo AG
Vincent Rutuelo AG
Matthew Sagotsky AG
Aminta Salmeron AG
Vanessa Santana AG
Epiphania Santana AG
Ronald Sarcos AG
Jason Savarese AG
Adina Scherer AG
Addie Schoenberger AG
Clare Seidel AG
Gyanesh Sharma AG
Timothy Shea AG
Elijah Sivin AG
Jennifer Slomack AG
Patricia Smith AG
Rebekah Sollitto AG
Elizabeth Soto AG
Peter Soto ’01 AG
Victoria Stawowy-Mokos AG
Matthew Stelluto AG
Jillianne Tejani AG
Christopher Tutolo AG
Debbie Van Ryn AG
Geeta Vir AG
Helena Vislocka AG
Xerxes Vizcaino AG
Keith Wiggs AG
Orrin Wilson AG
Terra Windham AG
Devon Winfield AG
Jared Winston AG
Jillian Wojcik AG
Douglas Wong AG
Inha Yang AG
Francis Yasharian AG
Heidi Zarou ’86 AG
Courtney Archer-Buckmire ’98 AG
Marie August AG
Deborah Cavalcante AG
Louise Commaratto AG
Terell Cooper-Edwards AG
Thomas Cutler AG
Guy Devyatkin AG
Robert Falotico AG
David Harman AG
Kristin Harman AG
Paul Raso AG
Jesse Reiner AG
Kathleen Rienzi AG
Margo Rivera Power ’01 AG
Johanna Rodriguez ’00 AG
Edward Ruck AG
Nikole Smith AG
Bobbie Swain AG
Devon Whalen AG
Sarah Zuercher AG
In Honor of Catherine Biesty ’02
William Biesty and Maureen Biesty
In Honor of Liam Biesty ’04
William Biesty and Maureen Biesty
In Honor of Sean Biesty ’99
William Biesty and Maureen Biesty
In Honor of Zoë Campbell ’25
Fern Berenberg
In Honor of Brian Chiang ’18
Yi-Jen Chiang and Sophie Hsu
In Honor of Christine Croasdaile ’13
Lola Clarke
In Honor of Jackson Deans ’22
Marcel Deans and Sherrie Deans
In Honor of Guy P. Devyatkin
Pamela Smyth
In Honor of Aminata Diagne ’30
Ibrahima Diagne and Anie Camille
In Honor of Emmett Doty ’22
Heidi Zarou ’86
In Honor of Madeline Doty ’22
Heidi Zarou ’86
In Honor of Rose A. Filippazzo
Stefano Filippazzo and Camille Fortunato
In Honor of Brian Flores ’99
Dennis DePietro
Michelle Haire
Alyssa O’Reilly
In Honor of Erika Freeman
Courtney Archer-Buckmire ’98
In Honor of Lauren Gallo White ’04
David Harman and Kristin Harman
In Honor of Max Gallo ’06
David Harman and Kristin Harman
In Honor of Jordan Greenberg ’27
Marjorie Greenberg
In Honor of Noah Greenberg ’23
Marjorie Greenberg
In Honor of Erin Hughes
Carolyn Castellano
Janine Guzzone
In Honor of Michael Junsch ’71
William McNally
In Honor of Sabina Laricchia
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Honor of Tamara Ling
Matthew Tartaglia and April Tartaglia
In Honor of Jennifer Nelson
Ramon Estevanell and Katrin Wachs
David Nuzum and Olivia Herman
In Honor of Phileep Nowakowski ’28
Brian Nowakowski and Natalia Artemyeva
In Honor of Connor Pisano ’14
Steven Pisano and Lisa Meyer
In Honor of The Poly Prep Annual Giving Team
Vincent Margiotta
In Honor of Jack Potter ’32
Diane Leyden and Brian Leyden
In Honor of Shane Potter ’36
Diane Leyden and Brian Leyden
In Honor of Julianna Puleo ’15
Peter Puleo and Lisa Puleo
In Honor of Peter Puleo ’13
Peter Puleo and Lisa Puleo
In Honor of Daniel Ricciardi ’04
Daniel Ricciardi and Peggy Ricciardi
In Honor of Robert Sabbagh ’87
Vincent Vigorita ’68 and Patricia Vigorita
In Honor of Graziella Sidoli
Kevin Power and Margo Rivera Power ’01
In Honor of Charles Sollitto ’32
Anthony Sollitto and Dolores Sollitto
In Honor of Rosalie Sollitto ’29
Anthony Sollitto and Dolores Sollitto
In Honor of Max H. Stein ’29
Jane Selzer
In Honor of Stephen J. Taylor
Ramon Estevanell and Katrin Wachs
In Honor of Sophia Wallick ’20
James Wallick and Catherine Wallick
In Honor of Tessa Weber ’25
Harley Weber and Heather Weber
In Honor of Circe T. Weber
Harley Weber and Heather Weber
In Honor of Desmond H. Weber
Harley Weber and Heather Weber
In Honor of Kyle Williams ’23
Magda Williams and Peter Williams
In Honor of Ana Clara Wisk ’29
Patricia Wisk
In Honor of Isabela Wisk ’36
Patricia Wisk
In Honor of Douglas Wong
Barbara Marino
In Memory of Andrew Abate ’82
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Memory of Vincent Abate ’79
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Memory of L. Davis Arbuckle, Jr. ’51
Douglas Arbuckle
Nancy Mangus
In Memory of Timothy Boardman ’04
Russell Boardman and Lynn Boardman
In Memory of Robert Brower ’58
Mark Groothuis ’58
In Memory of George Brown ’43
Margaret Brown
In Memory of Dudley Campbell, Jr. ’42
Rosalind Campbell
In Memory of Anthony Davidson ’62
Stephen Green ’62
In Memory of Joseph Della Pietra ’95
James Hennessy, Jr. ’67
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Memory of Joseph DePaola ’50
Michael DePaola
In Memory of Liane Dougherty
Leslie Grinage ’99
Leonard Rienzi and Kathleen Rienzi
Monique Wilson ’05
In Memory of Gilbert Feldman ’42
Marie August
Jeffrey Bamonte ’79
Michael Cagan ’60
Salvatore Cumella ’69
James Dreyfus ’70
Andrew Gowa ’67
Michael Groothuis ’60
Michael Junsch ’71 and Adrienne Junsch
Douglas Miller ’72
Jerrold Newman ’72
Michael Pollack ’89
Philip Sawyer ’82
Robert Shack ’62
Martin Valk ’81
Vincent Vigorita ’68 and Patricia Vigorita
In Memory of Dieudonne and Evans Fils-Aime
Jean Paul Fils-Aime and Jacqueline Celestin Fils-Aime
In Memory of Mikhail Finkel
Nathan Finkel ’96
In Memory of Nathan Fleisig
Stewart Fleisig ’69
In Memory of Louise J. Forsyth
Elijah Sivin
In Memory of Arnold Fraiman ’43
Robert Fraiman ’47
In Memory of Janine Fuentes
Justin Pagan ’98
In Memory of Terence Gazzani ’95
Jerry Capeci and Barbara Capeci
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
Patsy Perpetua and Joy Perpetua
Richard Rodgers and Kathleen Rodgers
In Memory of Christopher Grady ’80
Jared Hedglin ’09
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Memory of Grant H. Greeley
Alexander Greeley ’04
In Memory of George Greenberg
Marjorie Greenberg
In Memory of Donald Gross ’52
Michael Rabbino ’52
In Memory of Monroe H. Gumer
M. Robert Gumer ’72
In Memory of Michael Halperin ’59
Paul Gilson ’72
In Memory of Jon Hammer ’52
Michael Rabbino ’52
In Memory of Joseph Hasson III ’85
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Memory of Michael Heitner ’56
Arthur Delmhorst ’56
Stephen Krass ’56
In Memory of Ralph Herreros
Jennifer Baker ’86
In Memory of Mark Hindy ’91
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Memory of Gordon Innes ’67
Brian Innes ’68
In Memory of Arthur Kananack ’51
Richard Marlin ’51 and Caroline Marlin
In Memory of Jay Kane ’49
Peter Fauci, Jr. ’49
In Memory of Miles Kastendieck ’23
Peter Cecere ’57
In Memory of Gail Knutsen
Bruce Ducker ’56
In Memory of Katherine Lowe Lopez
Frank Lopez
In Memory of Francis Love
Francis Love ’61
In Memory of Roman Lyubarov
Alexander Lyubarov and Susanna Chan
In Memory of Florence and Harry Mackler
Stuart Mackler ’55 and Judy Mackler
In Memory of John Malhame ’56
Mary Malhame
In Memory of Sol Margolies
Wayne Margolies and Ann Palmer
In Memory of Brian Pariente ’00
Elie Pariente and Suzann Pariente
In Memory of Harlow Parker
David Johnson III ’66
Matthew Roventini ’92 and Kathy Roventini
In Memory of William Peterson ’72
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Memory of Lars Qualben ’69
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Memory of Allan Rosenbloom ’61
Brit Geiger
In Memory of Andrew Rosenblum ’74
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
In Memory of Dennis Roventini
Christopher Zam and Gabrielle Roventini ’87
In Memory of Robert J. Sabbagh
Vincent Vigorita ’68 and Patricia Vigorita
In Memory of Harvey Scheff ’57
Victor Rich ’57
In Memory of Edward Schoenfeld ’67
James Hennessy, Jr. ’67
In Memory of September 11th
Roger Heymann ’65
In Memory of Warren Sherman ’52
Michael Rabbino ’52
In Memory of Kandace Simmons ’84
Gordon Jensen ’84
In Memory of Alan Steinberg ’66
Andrew Benjamin ’66
In Memory of Sandra Stone
Robert Minutello ’87
In Memory of John Vigorita ’15
Carol McLaughlin
In Memory of Giselle Warshawsky
Steven Brescia and Ilene Shaw-Brescia
In Memory of Dr. Mark H. Wellman
Mario Richards
In Memory of Brennan Wickramaratne
Michael Clarfeld and Tamar Huberman
In Memory of Martin Zuckerman ’60
Michael Cagan ’60
The Joseph Dana Allen Society honors supporters of Poly Prep who have made a provision for the school in their estate or other gift plans.
Courtney Archer-Buckmire ’98
Clifford Barr ’48
Susan Beiles
Arthur Bellinzoni, Jr. ’53
Bruce Bernstein ’53
Anthony Besthoff ’52
Michael David ’66
Richard Debs ’48
William Drucker ’58
Ira Feldman ’75
Dennis Fox ’56
Peter Fyfe ’47
Michael Gold ’55
Richard Greenberg ’49
Joseph Hanson ’68
Hugh Hermann ’46*
Donald Higgins ’52
Owen Hoberman ’54
Warren Jacobs ’51
Michael Jacobs ’68
David Kramer ’49
Arthur Levitt, Jr. ’48
Peter Liebert ’53
John Madden, Jr. ’72
Peter Malkin ’51
David Marrus ’48
Richard Merhige ’53
Marc Miller ’75
Richard Mizrack ’60
Paul Muoio and Donna Muoio
Mallard Owen ’72
Harry Petchesky ’55
Elliott Rebhun ’75
Peter Redell and Lori Redell
Aamir Rehman ’95
Eric Ruby ’64
William Schiazza ’82
Marvin Sears ’45
Harlan Stone II ’53
Louis Vigorita ’65
Fred Werner ’54
William Williams, Headmaster Emeritus and Linda Williams
Paul Zola ’53
Anonymous
AbbVie
AIG Matching Grants Program
American Century Investments Foundation
American Endowment Foundation
American Express Foundation
Ameriprise Financial
Anchor Capital Advisors LLC
Bank of America Charitable Foundation
Bank of America Charitable Gift Fund
Barclays Educational Barings
BlackRock
Brooklyn Community Foundation
Chubb Charitable Foundation
DeLaCour Family Foundation
Disney Digital Network
Dorsey & Whitney Foundation
Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund
First Eagle Investments Foundation
Fitch Ratings, Inc.
Fribourg Family Foundation
Goldman Sachs Gives
Goldman Sachs Philanthopy Fund
Goldman, Sachs & Co. Matching Gift Program
Google Inc.
Herbert Feinberg Family Foundation
Investors Foundation
Italian American Committee on Education
Jewish Communal Fund
Jewish Community Federation
Jewish Federation of Greater Atlanta
Morgan Stanley Global Impact Funding Trust, Inc.
National Philanthropic Trust
Nomura
Paluszek Family Foundation
PayPal
Pfizer Inc.
Prudential Insurance Company
Reardon Family Foundation
Renaissance Charitable Foundation
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
S&P Global Ratings Services
Schwab Charitable
Segal Family - United World Foundation
The Ames Family Foundation
The Benevity Community Impact Fund
The Glenmede Trust Company
The Goergen Foundation, Inc.
The Howard and Katherine Aibel Foundation, Inc.
The Melvin and Beatrice Fraiman Charitable Foundation
The New York Community Trust
The Options Clearing Corporation
The Puder Foundation
Tisbest Philanthropy
Travelers
UBS
UBS Financial Services, Inc.
Vanguard Charitable
Viacom Media Networks
Wells Fargo Foundation
YourCause, LLC
Zubatkin Owner Representation, LLC
Estate of John T. Garnjost ’52
Estate of Mr. Raymond Herrmann, Jr. ’38
Estate of Martin H. Renken, Jr. ’39
Estate of Nathan K. Trynin ’48
Estate of Douglas M. Wallace ’46
Planned Giving is simpler than you think, especially at Poly Prep. If your goal is to conserve your estate, create life income, or reduce future tax liabilities for heirs, it’s time to consider the Joseph Dana Allen Society
Named in honor of Poly’s longest serving head of school, the JDA Society recognizes donors who have named the school as a beneficiary in their will, insurance policy, or retirement account. Charitable gift annuities, charitable remainder trusts, and the donation of non-cash assets are also practical options for alumni and friends.
Working with your financial planner, we can structure a legacy gift that will memorialize the values most important to you, maximize your philanthropic giving, and make a smart plan for the future. If you’ve already included Poly Prep in a bequest or other planned gift, please let us know so we can express our gratitude and recognize you for your generosity as a member of the JDA Society.
We’re happy to help you get started on a legacy gift to Poly Prep. Go to polyprep.mylegacygift.org or contact:
Peggy Cook, Chief Advancement Officer pcook@polyprep.org (347) 394-1169
Donna Muoio P’13, ’17, Director of Alumni Relations dmuoio@polyprep.org (718) 663-6031
Keith Wiggs, Director of Major Gifts kwiggs@polyprep.org (347) 394-1164
Year four of Party Book offered an opportunity for the community to get back to in-person partying for the first time in years.
There were many exciting opportunities for families to gather with old and new friends alike, with 30 events spread out over the spring. Highlights included: An Evening at Hudson Yards, a Moonlight Catacombs Tour, a Cinco de Mayo dinner and tequila tasting, a night at Threes Brewing with Francis Yasharian, tennis fun with Coach Jeff, and a Harry Potter Potions class.
Our success this year proved how happy the community was to participate in Party Book and come together in person while celebrating our diversity and all that Brooklyn and New York City have to offer. Our sincere thanks to the hosts, attendees, faculty, and all the supporters of Party Book for making it happen once again!
Michele Klein
Jennifer Rosen
Kobi Abayomi
Cameron Arrington and Indhira Arrington
Vittorio Assante and Lisa Assante
Brian Azara ’99 and Alexandra Azara ’00
Daniel Baranovsky and Yelena Baranovsky
Charles Barbiere and Rosalie Castano-Barbiere
Anson Beard and Veronica Beard
Craig Berkley and Judy Artime
David Chitayat and Xhingyu Chen
Christopher Cirillo and John Coffey
Colin Clarke and Yifan Clarke
Matthew Cohen and Julie Cohen
Peter Cohen and Ellen Cohen
Michael Correra ’87
Wassim Diab and Sara Ahmed
Olivier D’Meza and Bethany D’Meza
Joshua Dubin and Gillian Dubin
Roberto Falck Studio
James Fitzpatrick and Melissa Fitzpatrick
Andrew Foote and Blake Foote
Jacob Furst and Kate Furst
Ralph Gorham and Susan Povich
Jeremy Shamos and Nina Hellman
Richard James and Nakia Serrant-James
Stephen Kempf and Mary Dixie Carter
Jeffrey Lewis and Lisa Fields
David Lindsay-Abaire and Christine Lindsay-Abaire
Michael Lippert and Sarah Pearsall
Daniel Kim and Shihan Liu
Joshua Coleman and Carey Macaleer
James MacCurtain and Rebecca MacCurtain
John Mann and Elizabeth Tuttle
Jayaveera Kodali and Lara Marcon
Michael Reddy and Jennifer May-Reddy
Ackneil Muldrow III and Dana Muldrow
David McMurray and Jessica Murray
Ayana Partee
Gregory Pessin and Jaime Pessin
Jackson Phillips, Jr. and Cristine Phillips
Lee Quiñones
Julian Rampelmann and Lorena Ramirez Zapata
Steffen Reichold and Riham Shendy
Leland Richards, Jr. and LaTasha Richards
Steven Rodriguez and Natasha Rodriguez
Lucas Rosen and Jennifer Kutsher Rosen
Ryan Schafer and Hadley Schafer
Andrew Schilling and Margaret Schilling
Winston Song and Amy Hsieh
David Taub and Leigh Taub
Alexander Tejani ’99 and Jillianne Tejani
Jerome Thomas and Cindy Brea
Mark Van Zandt and Lindsay Van Zandt
Andrew Waldman and Kathleen Madden
Jennifer Waverek
Jillian Wojcik
John Zaremba ’95 and Nancy Zaremba
Dmitry Pankov and Leslie Ziff
EXECUTIVE BOARD
LOWER SCHOOL ADMISSIONS & NEW FAMILY COORDINATOR
Shirley Leong
Sharon Y. Perkins
LOWER SCHOOL
CORRESPONDING SECRETARY
Donald L. Heiliger
LOWER SCHOOL MEMBER-AT-LARGE
John McCary
LOWER SCHOOL VICE PRESIDENT
Ashley M. Alston
Yifan Clarke
MIDDLE SCHOOL ADMISSIONS & NEW FAMILY COORDINATOR
Zhana Londoner
MIDDLE SCHOOL MEMBER-AT-LARGE
Sabrina L. Bonne-Annee
MIDDLE SCHOOL VICE PRESIDENT
Blake W. Foote
Annisea Wong
UPPER SCHOOL ADMISSIONS & NEW FAMILY COORDINATOR
Rashmi Budhram
UPPER SCHOOL MEMBER-AT-LARGE
Marion Roaman
UPPER SCHOOL VICE PRESIDENT
Nicole M. Gagnon
Leigh B. Taub
PRESIDENT
Lucy Rorech
RECORDING SECRETARY
Mindy R. Wigutow
TREASURER
Leslie B. Dubeck
Lisa L. Lambert
GENERAL SECRETARY
Jeanette Cochrane
GRADE REPRESENTATIVES
NURSERY
Sara Ahmed
Dayna H. Carter
Darren J. Moore
Elizabeth A. Tuttle
PRE-K
Paul Kropfl
Sheila Peluso Benjamin
Sandeep Ramesh
William J. Williams
KINDERGARTEN
Kristina I. Hunt
Charlotte M. Jett
Sarah K. Labuda
Shabari S. Nayak
Mollie K. Williams
GRADE 1
Alexandra T. Azara
Christine Kromer-Bennett
Uma M. Mantravadi
Minya Oh
Hedy Peng
Steven S. Rodriguez
Nikita Shetty
GRADE 2
Tamar Huberman
Jaime L. Pessin
Nithya Venkatachalam
Jeehyun J. Yeo
GRADE 3
Lauren Allen
Sarah Robertson
James W. Thompson
GRADE 4
Rachel Garcia
Lorena F. Ramirez Zapata
GRADE 5
Susanna Chan
Julie I. Cohen
Nancy M. Zaremba
GRADE 6
Diane H. Anderson
Catherine Arrieta
Lauren S. Tese Warwick
Heather T. Weber
GRADE 7
Harpreet K. Bhandari
Orelia E. Camara
Tamara Warren
GRADE 8
Melissa C. Bullen
Judy L. Winitzer
GRADE 9
Doria J. Lavagnino
Kathleen A. Madden
Quynh D. Mai
GRADE 10
Alyse Dosik
Barbara A. Iannelli
Karina M. Steiner
GRADE 11
Amerika A. Williamson
Doria J. Lavagnino
GRADE 12
Rachel T. Moskowitz
Karine Rosenberg
Emily Ades
Poly’s Annual Giving Volunteers serve as ambassadors to the greater Poly community and work throughout the school year to help secure vital financial support for our school. The continued success of Annual Giving can be greatly credited to the dedication and determined effort of our volunteers. The Office of Advancement extends their deepest appreciation to everyone involved in making our work both rewarding for us and a success for the school.
Gifty Colasante
Kirsten Elefterakis
Lillian Goldenthal
James Harris
Tim Hill
Josh Ho-Walker
Lauren Leyden
Dana Muldrow
Brian Nowakowski
Jaime Pessin
Antony Pfaffle ’81
Jackson Phillips, Jr.
Christina Rice
Anand Sankaranarayanan
Christina Yan
Qadir Forbes ’11
President
Jared Hedglin ’09 Vice President
Ayisha McHugh Nelson ’12 Secretary
Eileen Ahasic ’01
Alexandra Azara ’00
William Basso ’89
Jonathon Beckles ’09
Anastasia Cembrovska ’07
Jacqueline Chirdo ’13
Cristina Cote ’05
Matthew Durando ’96
Adam Garson ’05
Jonathan Krasner ’95
Lauren Lattinelli ’97
Justin Pagan ’98
Christopher Patacsil ’12
Hal Rose ’74
Matthew Roventini ’92
Anthony Sgarlato ’74
Peter Soto ’01
Keyonte Sutherland ’03
Akili Tommasino ’05
Todd Vitolo ’92
Bernard Spence, Jr. ’45
Peter Fyfe ’47
George Smyth, Jr. ’48
Malcolm Bell ’49
Peter Malkin ’51
Bruce Bernstein ’53
Richard Merhige ’53
Harlan Stone II ’53
Harry Petchesky ’55
Peter G. Stone ’55
Edward Fuller II ’56
George Marks ’56
George Malin ’57
Joseph Giardina ’58
Mark Groothuis ’58
Marvin Lerman ’58
Arthur Rebell ’58
Norman Silberdick, Jr. ’59
Ron Wilson, Jr. ’59
Paul Feinstein ’61
Stephen Pearlman ’61
Robert Aberlin ’62
Robert Shack ’62
Douglas Crawford ’63
Eric Ruby ’64
Andrew Salzman ’64
John Artise ’65
Louis Vigorita ’65
Mitchell Bernstein ’66
Stephen Ellman ’67
Harry Ottaway, Jr. ’68
Peter Sessa ’68
Robert Shelala ’68
Ira Turret ’68
Vincent Vigorita ’68
Salvatore Cumella ’69
Lawrence DiGiovanna ’69
Robert Arcaro ’70
John Ferrari ’70
Michael Junsch ’71
Vincent Pantuso, Jr. ’71
M. Robert Gumer ’72
Douglas Miller ’72
George Brown ’73
Kevin Kelly ’73
James Oussani, Jr. ’73
John Gallo ’74
Hal Rose ’74
Steven Froot ’75
Elliott Rebhun ’75
Kenneth Dashow ’76
Charles Kreines ’76
Frank Sinatra ’76
Henry Camuso ’77
Lawrence Brandman ’78
Nicholas Gravante, Jr. ’78
Peter Latson ’78
Joseph Ferrara, Jr. ’79
Antony Pfaffle ’81
Martin Valk ’81
Michael Solomon ’82
Peter Sperry ’82
Edward Antonio III ’83
Robyn Bayne ’83
Evan Marquit ’83
Karen Schaepe ’83
Amy Schlansky ’83
Jeanne Cloppse ’84
Gary Hanna ’84
Douglas Jabara ’84
Arnold Mascali ’84
Derrick Ades ’85
Arthur Aidala ’85
Christopher Della Pietra ’85
Eric Gural ’86
Laura Torrado-Malley ’86
Andrew Brandman ’87
Michael Correra ’87
Catherine Curley Lee ’87
Jamal Hayden ’87
Stella Angelakos ’88
Erika Farrell ’88
William Basso ’89
Marco Mancuso ’89
Stella Moniaros ’89
Stellene Volandes ’89
Raquel Manning ’90
Timothy Harkins ’91
Philip Kelly ’91
Corey Modeste ’92
Richard Naddeo ’92
Matthew Roventini ’92
Nicole Bonica ’93
Kris Harner ’93
Lauren Kelly ’93
James Loonam ’93
Christian Rutherford ’93
Christine Szabo ’93
Marianne Bertuna ’94
Jaime Blanc ’94
Lori-Anne Brogdon ’95
Kristerfor Mastronardi ’95
Aamir Rehman ’95
Wade Saadi, Jr. ’95
Anitra Haskopoulos ’96
Shruti Ramesh ’97
Adam Dumey ’98
Richard Greene III ’98
Justin Pagan ’98
Shavonne Pegues-Gibson ’98
Marilyn Wilson ’98
Matthew Cronin ’99
Danielle Hatzipetros ’99
Carolyn Razzano ’99
Alexandra Azara ’00
Raymund Lansigan ’00
Johanna Rodriguez ’00
Joseph Tringali ’00
Eileen Ahasic ’01
Margo Rivera Power ’01
Victoria Perrotta Keller ’02
Christian Zaino ’02
Matthew Dresher ’03
Nicholas Elefterakis ’03
Robert Francis ’03
David Herbert ’03
John Polignone ’03
Joann Rizzo ’03
Susan Sapega Randall ’03
Leigh Taublib-Kiriat ’03
Dina Atallah ’04
Dominique Sharpton ’04
Cristina Cote ’05
Francis Florio ’05
Adam Garson ’05
Juliette Pannone ’05
Loretta Cacace ’06
Kaitlin Donohue ’06
Kathleen Boardman ’07
Thana-Ashley Charles ’07
Candice Clark ’07
Alfred Miller ’07
Elijah Frazier ’08
Matthew Harnisch ’08
Courtney Nolan ’08
Daniel Lempert ’09
Anne Levine ’09
Shannon Cohall ’10
Emily Hochman ’10
Terrence Hyland ’10
Olivia Kalban ’10
Qadir Forbes ’11
Morgan Mathiesen ’11
Rolanda Evelyn ’12
Ashley Greaves ’12
Ayisha McHugh ’12
Christopher Patacsil ’12
Ben Smith ’12
Jacqueline Chirdo ’13
Christine Croasdaile ’13
Kiera French ’13
Kuvonn Richardson ’13
Renangie Alcantara-Polanco ’14
Drew Lewis ’14
Denzel Munroe ’14
Zakiya Baptiste ’15
Alyssa Brown ’15
Jacob Small ’15
Fiona Brandman ’16
Shauna Brandman ’16
Khail Bryant ’17
Adia Gist ’17
Ellen Gaffney ’18
Lotoya Francis ’18
Michael Licata, Jr. ’19
Kayla Nejat ’19
Joseph Palermo ’19
John Walker ’19
Talisha Ward ’19
Alexandra Nava-Baltimore ’20
Molly O’Connor ’20
Nicholas Perez ’20
Austin Somers ’20
Nyla Welch ’20
Taejun Kim-Grant ’21
Kadyn Liburd ’21
Robert Magnus ’21
Talia Marash ’21
Gauri Purohit ’21
We are truly grateful for our alumni volunteers who engage and connect fellow alumni with Poly.
2021-2022
Officers
Andrew Foote P’27, ’29
Chair
Arnold F. Mascali ’84 Vice Chair
Robin L. Bramwell-Stewart ’86, P’16 Treasurer
Cassandra Metz P’26 Secretary
Trustees
Indhira Arrington P’29, ’31
Jeanne M. Cloppse ’84
Michael A. Correra ’87
Nicholas Gravante, Esq. ’78, P’20, ’23
Gary E. Hanna, Esq. ’84, P’22, ’22
Hans Humes P’12, ’15, ’21, ’35
Thomas Iannelli ’82, P’18, ’19, ’24
Taek-Geun Kwon P’32
Sang Lee P’22, ’23
Michael Liburd P’21, ’24
Stephen Maharam
Jennifer Powers P’26, ’28
Jennifer J. Ramberg
Kareem Raymond P’31, ’33
Laurie T. Rosenblatt P’23
Wade E. Saadi, Jr. ’95
Elizabeth R. Schlesinger P’28, ’30, ’32
Irwin Simon P’18, ’22
Daniela Vitale-Howell P’20, ’23, ’25
Elizabeth Wiatt
Maxwell T. Wiley P’18, ’21
Qadir Forbes ’11 (President Alumni Association Board of Governors)
Trustees Emeriti
Clifford Barr, Esq. ’48
Dr. Karen Burke Goulandris P’15
Harry J. Petchesky, Esq. ’55
Advancement Staff
Peggy P. Cook
Chief Advancement Officer
Lauren Bonaventura
Director of Advancement Services
Erin Hughes
Campaign Manager
Opeyemi Laniyonu
Director of Annual Giving
Vincent Margiotta
Advancement Services Manager
Donna Muoio
Director of Alumni Relations
Keith Wiggs
Director of Major Gifts
ANDREW FOOTE P’27, ’29 Chair MICHAEL A. CORRERA ’87 Vice Chair KAREEM RAYMOND P’31, 33 TreasurerYOUR GIFT TO ANNUAL GIVING MATTERS AT POLY PREP. Contributions of any size provide a collective stream of support that nurtures possibilities for every Poly student, today and for generations to come. Together, we can ensure Poly students have everything they need—exceptional teachers, first-rate academic programs, robust arts, athletics, and more—to reach their fullest potential.